Minnesota Administrative Rules
Agency 129 - Education Department
Chapter 3512 - LICENSURE OF SCHOOL PERSONNEL
SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICE PROVIDERS
Part 3512.5400 - EXPIRED, 28 SR 271
Universal Citation: MN Rules 3512.5400
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1. Provider requirements.
A provider of supplemental educational services must be a nonprofit entity, a for-profit entity, or a local educational agency, and may include public or private schools, public or private postsecondary institutions, and faith-based organizations. A provider:
A. has a tutorial program with a demonstrated
record of effectiveness in increasing student academic achievement;
B. can document that its instructional
strategies are of high quality, based upon research, and designed to increase
student academic achievement;
C. is
capable of providing supplemental educational services that are aligned with
state academic standards and demonstrate an understanding of the instructional
program of the local educational agency; and
D. is financially sound.
Subp. 2. Application.
A. Providers applying to the commissioner of
education must complete a written application provided by the commissioner
which must include that the provider will:
(1) provide parents of children receiving
supplemental educational services under this part and the appropriate local
educational agency with information on the progress of the children in
increasing achievement, in a format, and to the extent practicable, a language
that the parents can understand;
(2) ensure that the instruction provided and
content used by the provider are aligned with state academic standards and
demonstrate an understanding of the instruction provided and content used by
the local educational agency;
(3)
meet all applicable federal, state, and local health, safety, and civil rights
laws;
(4) ensure that all
instruction and content under this part are secular, neutral, and
nonideological; and
(5) meet the
federal requirement that supplemental educational services are delivered in
addition to instruction provided during the school day.
B. A potential provider also must inform the
commissioner of education of:
(1) the subject
areas in which the provider plans to provide instruction, in addition to the
required areas of language arts, mathematics, or both;
(2) the provider's approach or model of
instruction;
(3) how a standard
tutoring session will be structured, in terms of number of minutes and times
per week;
(4) how student needs are
assessed or diagnosed and how an instructional program is prescribed based on
the student's individual needs;
(5)
how services offered will help academically at-risk students improve their
achievement;
(6) the specific
strategies the provider uses to work with parents and families;
(7) the facilities, equipment, and materials
used and supplied by the provider and used and supplied by the student;
and
(8) the recruitment and
development of staff to deliver the high-quality program required by the No
Child Left Behind Act of 2001, United States Code, title 20, section 6301, et
seq.
Subp. 3. Application review and approval.
A. The commissioner of education shall
approve applications based on evidence of:
(1) a high-quality research base;
(2) program effectiveness in increasing
student achievement;
(3) alignment
with Minnesota academic standards in language arts, mathematics, or both, and a
demonstrated understanding of the instructional program of the local
educational agency;
(4) capability
and willingness to provide educational services for children with disabilities
consistent with the child's individualized education program and with the need
for accommodations for the child's disabilities;
(5) evaluation of student progress;
(6) communication with parents and school
staff;
(7) quality of instructional
staff;
(8) financial and
organizational capacity; and
(9)
compliance with health, safety, and civil rights laws, rules, and
regulations.
B. An
application must be reviewed and scored by a team of three individuals.
Reviewers will be selected from the Department of Education, school districts,
Title I programs, and public and private organizations that have experience in
the area of providing supplemental services.
C. A quality threshold score of 70 points out
of 100 possible points on the application is required for a provider to be on
the state's approved list. To ensure the merits of each applicant's responses
are discussed, reviewers must reach consensus within three points on each
section.
D. A successful applicant
shall remain on the approved list for three school years, beginning with the
next school year after the application is reviewed, unless the provider does
not meet the requirements under subpart 2 or the provider requests to be
removed from the list. A provider whose application is not approved may
resubmit an application in the next round of applications.
E. The application and approval process must
be repeated annually, with the timeline to be modified by the commissioner of
education if warranted by the need for additional providers.
Statutory Authority: MS s 14.388
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Minnesota may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.