Rhode Island Code of Regulations
Title 200 - Board of Education
Chapter 20 - Council on Elementary and Secondary Education
Subchapter 10 - Academic Standards, Programs and Operations
Part 1 - Basic Education Program (200-RICR-20-10-1)
Section 200-RICR-20-10-1.3 - Safe, Healthy, and Supportive Learning Environment
Universal Citation: 200 RI Code of Rules 20 10 1.3
Current through September 18, 2024
1.3.1 Academic Supports and Interventions
A. Academic Supports and
Interventions for All Students
1. Each LEA
shall ensure that all students have the opportunity and skills necessary to
access the systems of developmentally appropriate, targeted, and responsive
academic supports and interventions for learning that they need to become
college, work, and career ready. These supports and interventions enable the
LEA to address the following functions: Foster Safe and Supportive Environments
for Students and Staff, Engage Families and the Community, and Use Information
for Planning and Accountability.
2.
Each LEA shall provide supplemental academic supports and interventions that
are evidence-based in the areas of literacy, numeracy, science, social studies,
history, and speech and English language acquisition. Such supplemental
academic supports and interventions shall be provided to students in K-12 when
students are determined, through an LEA systematic problem-solving approach, to
be at risk of not successfully achieving proficiency on state assessments
and/or Proficiency-Based Graduation Requirements.
3. The academic supports and interventions of
each LEA shall:
a. Coordinate with and
supplement instruction in the guaranteed and viable comprehensive program of
study;
b. Provide sufficient
instructional time to enable all students to achieve proficiency in the GLEs or
GSEs or alternate GSEs in any area required for graduation, as well as to meet
LEA-established standards for promotion;
c. Apply uniform entrance and exit
criteria;
d. Address cultural and
linguistic needs of students; and
e. Include student progress monitoring
through the LEA systematic problem-solving approach.
4. For each student receiving or
discontinuing an academic support or intervention, the LEA shall provide
written notice to the parent(s) or guardian(s) that must:
a. Describe the academic support or
intervention being delivered or discontinued;
b. Describe the systematic problem-solving
approach used to identify the student's need for support or
intervention;
c. Describe the exit
criteria for the support or intervention; and
d. Be provided in the parent's native
language.
5. Each LEA
shall provide for students who are homebound, hospitalized, or capable of only
intermittent school attendance for medical reasons, a sufficient degree of
academic support, including tutoring if necessary, to allow for regular
academic progress in the student's program of study. These supports shall
commence when the LEA becomes aware that the student's sustained or
intermittent absence will result in a significant regression in academic
progress.
B. Supports
and Interventions through Systematic Problem Solving
1. Each LEA shall provide student-centered,
data-driven supports and interventions utilizing a problem-solving process,
building on the foundation of a guaranteed and viable comprehensive program of
study. This process shall be comprehensive and systematic and focused at the
individual student level in order to provide access to supports and
interventions as may be necessary at the classroom, school, and district levels
to ensure that each student is provided with supports and interventions
designed to enable that student to achieve academic success. The LEA shall
provide a full continuum of universal, targeted, and intensive supports that
are culturally and linguistically appropriate, research-based, and designed to
respond to student needs in compliance with the specific requirements for
support services described herein.
2. Each LEA shall develop school and district
level data-based, decision-making teams. These teams shall review comprehensive
assessment data to develop, evaluate and modify academic instruction and
support services. Descriptions of such teams shall include the purpose of each
team, team composition, and the frequency with which each team meets.
3. The LEA's problem-solving approach to
determine appropriate levels of support and intervention must include
identification of student-based issues (specifying both target and actual
performance), identification of supports and interventions developed to address
those issues, measurements designed to evaluate responsiveness, and the
identification of responsible LEA staff.
C. Personalized Learning Environment
1. Each LEA shall ensure that schools will
implement strategies for creating personalized environments to optimize
learning. Each LEA shall:
a. Establish PK-12
protocols for communication and record sharing that will facilitate successful
transition from grade to grade, school to school, district to district, and
high school to postsecondary opportunities;
b. Establish structures by which every
student is assigned a responsible adult, in addition to a school counselor
(where applicable), who is knowledgeable about that student's academic, career,
and social and personal goals; and
c. Establish protocols for the development,
implementation and student-based monitoring of Individual Learning
Plans.
D.
Comprehensive Guidance
1. Each LEA shall
establish and maintain a Comprehensive School Counseling Guidance (CSC)
Program, including guidance and counseling services, available to all students
in grades K-12. Each LEA shall ensure that the CSC Guidance program shall:
a. Be developed and delivered in accordance
with the Rhode Island Framework for Comprehensive K-12 School Counseling
Programs;
b. Support each student
in meeting the American School Counselor Association (ASCA) standards in the
academic, career, and personal and social domains;
c. Be a coordinated effort among the
professional counseling staff and the rest of the educational community;
and
d. Include services to be
provided to students at each developmental stage and specify how the services
will be provided to all students.
E. Multiple Opportunities for Achieving and
Exceeding Proficiency Standards
1. Each LEA
shall provide all students with multiple learning opportunities that support
meeting proficiency. Each LEA shall:
a.
Establish pathways that represent a set of courses and other programs within
its guaranteed and viable comprehensive course of study and that provide
students with the means to meet their academic and career goals. These pathways
shall include Advanced Placement (AP) courses, career and technical programs,
dual enrollment, and opportunities for extended applied learning (e.g.,
internships, job shadowing, and community service learning);
b. Establish processes to ensure that all
pathways maintain high expectations for all students and provide all students
with the same level of academic rigor;
c. Establish, or provide access to, before
and after school programs that provide additional supports and interventions
for attaining proficiency; and
d.
Establish alternate programs for graduation for youth at-risk, including those
students entering LEAs as latecomers. These alternate programs will require a
comprehensive and coordinated effort between the LEA and community agencies and
must include strategies differing from traditional programs in their use of
material, instructional approaches, or concentration of time on skills.
Alternate programs may include, but are not limited to, on-line or
correspondence courses, day and evening academies, workforce training programs,
and adult education.
1.3.2 Supportive and Nurturing School Community
A. Each LEA shall ensure that
schools create a climate of safety, security and belonging for all students and
adults, thereby establishing an environment that builds respectful
relationships, enhances productive learning and teaching, promotes school
engagement, and promotes academic success. Each LEA shall accomplish this goal
by ensuring that each school:
1. Is safe,
respectful, and free of discrimination;
2. Establishes protocols for on-going
student, family, and community engagement; and
3. Provides expanded learning opportunities
and academic enrichment.
B. Safe and Respectful Environment
1. Each LEA shall build a safe and respectful
learning environment by addressing the components described in
§§1.3.2(A) through (F) of this Part.
C. Freedom from Discrimination
1. Each LEA shall identify and remove
barriers to students and adults that are based on their race, ethnicity,
national origin, language, gender, religion, economic status, disability, or
sexual orientation.
2. Each LEA
shall comply with all relevant state and federal statutes and regulations
regarding discrimination.
D. Right to a Safe School
1. Each LEA shall ensure that students who
are on school grounds before, during, and after school, during recess, and
during other intermissions are appropriately supervised by adults.
2. Each LEA shall follow state statute that
states that each student and staff member has a right to attend or work at a
school that is safe and secure, that is conducive to learning, and that is free
from the threat, actual or implied, of physical harm.
E. Prevention of Bullying, Harassment,
Hazing, Teen Dating Violence, and Sexual Violence.
1. Each LEA shall:
a. Prevent and respond appropriately to
incidents of bullying, hazing, teen dating violence, sexual violence, and
related issues;
b. Promote
nonviolent conflict resolution techniques in order to encourage attitudes and
behaviors that foster harmonious relations;
c. Provide professional development,
training, resources, and other means to assist students, staff, and other
adults in the school building or at school sponsored activities in carrying out
these responsibilities; and
d.
Comply with relevant state and federal statutes regarding these
issues.
F.
Positive Behavioral Supports and Discipline
1.
Each LEA shall ensure that schools promote a positive climate with emphasis on
mutual respect, self-control, good attendance, order and organization, and
proper security. Each LEA shall develop protocols that define a set of
discipline strategies and constructs that ensure that students and adults make
positive behavioral choices and that are conducive to a safe and nurturing
environment that promotes academic success.
2. Each LEA shall ensure that:
a. Schools engage in a participatory process
(involving students and staff) to assess periodically the school climate and to
adopt or develop strategies to improve conditions (see the Board of Education
Policy Statement on Student Rights);
b. Students and parents/guardians are
notified of district and school rules related to conduct and shall receive
regular instruction regarding these rules. In addition, parents/guardians, and
students shall be provided with information about early warning signs of
harassing and intimidating behaviors, such as bullying, as well as prevention
and intervention strategies;
c.
Schools provide a structure of incentives that adequately reward students for
their efforts and achievements. Attention shall be given to rewarding a
diversity of accomplishments and to broadening the availability of
rewards;
d. Schools have a clearly
delineated system for ensuring compulsory attendance for children six (6) to
sixteen (16) that includes:
(1) Procedures for
noting daily absenteeism and investigating unexcused absences;
(2) Procedures for noting the required period
of attendance of students attending at- home instruction approved by the school
committee or at a private day school approved by the Commissioner of Education;
and
(3) The appointment of truant
(or attendance) officers whose duties shall include referring truant students
to appropriate school support services and procedures for enforcing any given
case through civil action filed in Family Court;
e. Disciplinary actions are fairly
administered for all students and comply with state laws mandating that certain
violations be considered on a case by case basis; recognizing that there is no
mechanism in Rhode Island law for expulsion of students; and
f. Schools shall provide a continuum of
interim alternative educational placement options to continue a student's
education while suspended that ensure the safety of the student and the school
community.
G. Student, Family, and Community Engagement
1. Students can offer viable solutions to
some of the policy, program, and funding challenges our changing schools face.
In addition, it is both possible and desirable to create structures and
processes to facilitate student engagement at the district and school levels.
Each LEA, therefore, shall:
a. Establish
policies, processes, and procedures that facilitate regular (i.e., at least
quarterly) participation of a representative group of school youth in
discussions regarding how to improve the school environment, curriculum, and
instruction to ensure increased access to challenging, hands-on learning
experiences and supports and to ensure student success on state and local
achievement measures;
b. Document
the process of selection and orientation of these youth as well as the
proposals that they put forth, how these proposals were evaluated, and the
extent to which they were incorporated in LEA decision-making; and
c. Authorize and support youth led events to
solicit input from and provide feedback to the larger school
community.
2. Each LEA
shall provide a broad spectrum of activities, programs, and services that
directly involve families in their children's education and personally engage
families in the school. Therefore, each LEA shall adopt the national
Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) Standards for Parent/Family Involvement
Programs, which state:
a. Communication:
Communication between home and school is regular, two-way, and
meaningful;
b. Parenting: Parenting
skills are promoted and supported;
c. Student Learning: Parents play an integral
role in assisting student learning;
d. Volunteering: Parents are welcome in the
school, and their support and assistance are sought; and
e. School Decision Making and Advocacy:
Parents are full partners in the decisions that affect children and
families.
3. Each LEA
shall facilitate partnerships with community organizations and agencies,
municipal entities, and businesses to meet the needs of students and families.
Therefore, each LEA shall establish communication strategies that will engage
community partners, including:
a. Ensuring
community representation on the school improvement team or other
decision-making teams;
b.
Identifying and recruiting businesses to provide career exploration activities
for students;
c. Soliciting
community organizations or business members to mentor students;
d. Facilitating on-site services of local
organizations at the school, e.g. counseling, food pantry, tax assistance,
legal aid; and
e. Recruiting
volunteers from community organizations and businesses.
H. Expanded Learning
Opportunities, Academic Enrichment and Adult Education
1. Each LEA shall develop a system for the
provision of a broad array of high quality expanded learning opportunities that
will that strengthen school engagement, support academic success, and expand
all students' educational experiences. Academic enrichment opportunities shall
address diverse learning needs and capabilities, individual interests,
connections to the community, and engagement in activities beyond what is
provided during the regular school day. These opportunities shall include
strategies that differ from those in the regular program either in use of
material, instructional strategies or concentration of time on skills.
Therefore, each LEA shall:
a. Develop and
implement policies and protocols that allow out-of-school time for activities
that meet rigorous criteria to fulfill academic, graduation, or credit
requirements;
b. Provide students
with opportunities for experiential learning, community service, and skill
building;
c. Create and maintain
working partnerships to ensure that dropouts and youth at risk of dropping out
will achieve a high school credential and be ready for work and/or
postsecondary education and training or apprenticeship. These shall include,
but not be limited to, partnerships with a Department of Labor and Training
approved Youth Center, a RIDE approved adult education program, and a state
approved provider of wrap-around support services; and
d. Create and maintain an active partnership
with a RIDE approved and high performing adult English for Speakers of Other
Languages (ESOL) program. The purpose of this partnership is to ensure that
older English Language Learners who cannot graduate with their age cohort must
have age appropriate opportunities until age twenty-four to complete their
secondary education and become proficient in English.
1.3.3 Health and Social Service Supports
A. Health,
mental health, and social service needs of children and their families may be
barriers to academic success. Each LEA shall therefore provide and/or
facilitate partnerships with community agencies to provide, on site or through
referral, a broad array of services and supports to meet these needs.
B. Health Services
1. Each LEA shall implement and comply with
the requirements of the Health Services section of the Rules and Regulations
for School Health Programs, addressing school health staff, health and dental
screenings, physical examinations, records review and maintenance, medication
administration, emergency care, chronic disease care, compliance with
immunization regulations, and compliance with any other state or federal health
related regulations and statutes.
C. Psychological and Mental Health Services
1. Mental and emotional health issues
directly impede students' abilities to learn. Such issues include bullying,
alcohol and drug abuse, depression, anxiety, and domestic violence, as well as
psychiatric disorders.
2.
Therefore, each LEA shall:
a. Ensure that
students have access to a coordinated program of culturally and linguistically
responsive psychological and mental health services, on site or through
effective referral systems;
b.
Ensure that school psychological and mental health services will be provided by
appropriately credentialed, high quality staff. Services must provide for
identification of risks and assessment of service needs; primary prevention;
individual, family, and group counseling; consultative services; and resource
and service coordination; and
c. To
the extent practicable, ensure that schools coordinate with community youth
development, prevention, and treatment efforts.
D. Social Services
1. Research indicates that when families'
basic needs are met, there is a higher likelihood that the students will
succeed in school. Therefore, each LEA shall ensure that effective outreach
strategies will be utilized to support families' access to health and social
services through on-site services and/or through effective referral systems to.
These strategies shall:
a. Be driven by needs
identified through school and community data;
b. Be family centered;
c. Be provided in a respectful and culturally
responsive manner;
d. Be provided
in the family's native language, to the extent practicable;
e. Address a comprehensive array of issues,
including but not limited to hunger, housing, homelessness, health insurance,
employment, pregnant and parenting teens, family illness, child abuse and
domestic violence, legal issues, and issues related to foster care and
Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) custody; and
f. Help families to navigate social service
systems and access community resources.
E. Physical Activity and Nutrition Services
1. Research shows that students are better
able to learn when they are engaged in regular physical activity and receive
adequate and proper nutrition. Therefore, each LEA shall:
a. Ensure the provision of statutorily
required, standards-based instruction in physical education;
b. Implement a policy for physical activity
and nutrition and a plan to address the physical activity and nutrition needs
of students;
c. Provide daily
recess opportunities for students in grades Kindergarten through grade
5;
d. Provide a variety of physical
activity opportunities to students in grades 6 through 12, such as stretch
breaks, dance programs or classes, intramural athletics, interscholastic
athletics, or other activities; and
e. Ensure that schools implement and comply
with state and federal statutes and regulations that promote good nutrition,
including those related to school food service programs and snacks.
F. School Safety
Planning and Emergency Procedures
1. Each LEA
shall protect the health and safety of students and staff, through the
implementation of comprehensive school safety planning and the development of
emergency procedures to address a wide range of potential emergency situations,
including, but not limited to, incidents of fire, natural disasters, violence,
disease related crises or epidemics, terrorism, and hazardous material
spills.
2. Each LEA shall develop
plans that include prevention, planning, communication, response, and recovery.
School and district personnel shall work with state and local emergency
personnel, as appropriate, in the planning and implementation of safety
plans.
1.3.4 Safe and Healthy Physical Environment
A. The school facilities -- consisting of the
site, building, equipment, and utilities - are major factors in the functioning
of the educational program. The facilities provide more than a place for
instruction; they assist or limit the potential for student achievement of
desirable learning outcomes. High performing schools provide high quality
learning environments, conserve natural resources, consume less energy, are
easier to maintain, and provide an enhanced community resource. Above all, a
high performing school provides an environment that enhances the primary
mission of schools: the education of future citizens.
B. Each LEA shall recognize and promote the
belief that 21st century high performing school facilities must provide a
physical environment that contributes to the successful conduct of the program
that has been designed to meet the educational needs of students. This
requirement encompasses provisions for a variety of areas for instruction and
for extra class, recreational, and community activities.
C. Each LEA shall ensure that buildings are
adequate to meet current demands as required by the Rhode Island Standards for
School Buildings and Facilities ("SBC- 13 ") and §1.4.2(D) of this Part.
The spaces within each building should be sufficiently flexible to provide for
multiple uses of the area in the overall educational and activity programs. The
facilities shall have adequate space with respect to student enrollment, the
instructional program, and necessary administrative and supporting services. As
such:
1. Each classroom or laboratory shall be
adequate to serve the specific purpose for which it is intended and shall have
sufficient area to accommodate each student.
2. Each school shall maintain a designated
area that affords access to library-media resources, as appropriate to the age
of students in the school.
3.
Storage space, such as a safe-designated area, shall be provided so that
materials and equipment may be securely stored in a space other than in student
instructional areas. Storage of hazardous materials shall be in accordance with
OSHA requirements.
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