Rhode Island Code of Regulations
Title 200 - Board of Education
Chapter 20 - Council on Elementary and Secondary Education
Subchapter 30 - Student Supports
Part 3 - Regulations Governing the Education of English Language Learners
Section 200-RICR-20-30-3.2 - Definitions
Universal Citation: 200 RI Code of Rules 20 30 3.2
Current through September 18, 2024
A. For the purposes of these regulations, the following terms have the following meanings:
1. Parents and Students
a. "English language learner" means a
student:
(1) whose first language is not
English or who speaks a variety of English, as used in a foreign country or
U.S. possession, that is so distinct that ELL instruction is
necessary,
(2) who is now learning
English, but
(3) who has not yet
attained enough proficiency in English to allow him or her to fully profit from
content area instruction conducted only in English.
b. "Parent", for the purposes of this Part,
means the guardian of a child, anyone acting as a parent of a child, and anyone
having control over a child, as defined in the compulsory-attendance laws of
this state.
2.
Administrative Terms
a. "High-incidence LEA"
means an LEA with a total of one hundred fifty (150) or more English Language
Learners.
b. "Low-incidence LEA"
means an LEA with fewer than one hundred fifty (150) English Language
Learners.
c. "Rhode Island
Department of Elementary and Secondary Education" or "RIDE" means the executive
agent of the Rhode Island Council on Elementary and Secondary Education. RIDE
is charged with the implementation of Council policies and
regulations.
d. "World Class
Instructional Design and Assessment Consortium" or "WIDA consortium" means a
consortium of states, including Rhode Island, that has developed English
language proficiency standards and English language proficiency
tests.
3. "Local
educational agency" or "LEA" means:
a. a
public board of education or other public authority legally constituted within
the State for either administrative control or direction of, or to perform a
service function for, public elementary or secondary schools in a city, county,
township, LEA, or other political subdivision of the State, or for a
combination of LEAs or counties as are recognized in the State as an
administrative agency for its public elementary or secondary schools;
and/or
b. an educational service
agency or other public institution or agency that is authorized by State law to
develop, manage, and provide services or programs to any of the entities in
§
3.2(A)(3)(a)
of this Part, above, that is recognized as an administrative agency for
purposes of providing special education and related services within public
elementary and secondary schools of the State; and/or
c. educational collaboratives, educational
service agencies and/or non-profit public charter schools that are not
otherwise included and are not a school of an LEA or educational service
agency; and/or
d. any other public
institution or agency having administrative control and direction of a public
elementary or secondary school, including:
(1)
The Rhode Island Training School for Youth;
(2) any public non-profit charter school
established under State law; and/or
(3) any entity that meets the definition of
intermediate educational unit in §602(23) of the federal Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act as in effect prior to June 4, 1997.
4. Personnel
a. "Administrator of programs for English
language learners" means an individual certified as a principal or LEA-level
administrator who is responsible for the District's English Language Learner
program. In a high-incidence LEA, the ELL Administrator must have experience in
teaching English Language Learners and an English as a Second Language teaching
("ESL") certificate or a bilingual endorsement on another teaching certificate.
In low-incidence LEAs, an ELL program administrator who does not have English
Language Learner teaching experience, or an ESL certificate or endorsement,
must have demonstrated professional development in the education of English
Language Learners.
b. "Assessor"
means a person who has been WIDA certified to administer prescribed ELL
assessment tools and who is qualified to evaluate the results of these
assessments. This person must have knowledge concerning the ways English
Language Learners acquire English as a second language.
c. "ELL coordinator" means an administrator
or a teacher designated by an LEA to coordinate the day-to-day operations of
the LEA's English Language Learner program. The ELL Coordinator must have
English Language Learner teaching experience and an ESL or bilingual
endorsement. The workday of a teacher or administrator who also serves as an
ELL Coordinator must include enough time dedicated to coordinator duties to
ensure that these duties are adequately carried out.
d. "ELL teacher" means an elementary or
secondary teacher who holds:
(1) a Rhode
Island certificate for the level and subject in which he or she teaches, and a
Rhode Island endorsement as an ESL teacher or Bilingual teacher or Content Area
teacher of ELLs; or
(2) the Rhode
Island ESL certificate.
e. "ELL teacher assistant" means a teaching
assistant who works under the supervision of an ELL teacher and an ELL
Coordinator or Administrator. ELL teacher assistants must demonstrate
proficiency in English on the state paraprofessional test as well as
proficiency in at least one of the predominant languages of the LEA's ELL
student population. Demonstrated training in culturally responsive education
practices may be substituted for proficiency in at least one of the predominant
languages of the ELL student population.
f. "Guidance counselor for English language
learners" means a person who has a Rhode Island guidance counselor certificate
who, in addition, is:
(1) proficient in at
least one of the predominant language(s) of the School LEA's ELL student
population; or
(2) who has received
training in second-language acquisition and cultural competency.
g. "School and community liaison"
means a person who
(1) facilitates
communication with, and provides information to, the parents or families of an
LEA's ELL student population and who
(2) encourages involvement between the school
and parents and among agencies, churches, and community groups. This liaison
must have knowledge of the culture(s) of the LEA's ELL student population or
have received cultural-competency training to enable him or her to carry out
the duties of a school & community liaison.
h. "Cultural competence" means the ability of
individuals and organizations to understand, communicate, operate, and provide
effective services to people who differ from them culturally and
linguistically.
i. "English
language instructional program" means any program for English Language Learners
employing one of the methods of instruction listed in §
3.2(A)(5) of
this Part.
5. Methods of
Instruction and Assessment
a. "Bilingual
education" means a method of instruction that provides literacy and
content-area instruction in a student's native language and English as a Second
Language instruction at all proficiency levels. Bilingual-education teachers
must meet state certification requirements, be highly qualified in their
content area, and demonstrate proficiency in both English and the other
language used in instruction.
b.
"Collaborative ESL instruction" means a method of instruction that provides
English Language Learners with ESL instruction taught by a certified and/or
endorsed ESL teacher and content instruction provided through the school's
general-education program. The certified and/or endorsed ESL teacher works in
close collaboration with the general-education teachers in delivering content
instruction for ELLs.
c. "English
as a second language" means a method of instruction that develops an English
Language Learner's social, instructional, and academic proficiency in English
in order to prepare the English Language Learner to succeed in a school's
general education program. ELL program objectives and curriculum for English
Language Learners in grades K-12 must be aligned with WIDA standards, language
domains, proficiency levels, and performance indicators. The core curriculum is
to include English-language instruction in listening, speaking, reading, and
writing that incorporates content knowledge and concepts aligned to Common Core
State Standards (July, 2010) . Teachers must meet Rhode Island certification
and/or endorsement requirements for ESL instruction.
d. "Newcomer instruction" means a program of
instruction designed to educate students who have recently immigrated to the
United States who have had little or no formal schooling. Newcomer Instruction
provides a special academic environment that addresses gaps in the newcomer's
schooling through intensive instruction in English literacy, numeracy, and
participation in sheltered content instruction. Teachers must meet state
certification requirements in ESL and/or content-area instruction for English
Language Learners and be highly qualified, as defined by RIDE.
e. "Sheltered content instruction" means a
method of instruction that provides a comprehensive set of grade-level core
academic courses aligned with the WIDA ELP standards and Rhode Island's Common
Core State Standards (July, 2010) . These classes make their content
comprehensible to English Language Learners through scaffolded and
differentiated instruction in English and they help English Language Learners
to become competent in the use of academic English in all language domains.
Teachers must:
(1) meet appropriate
state-certification requirements,
(2) be highly qualified in their content area
as defined by RIDE, and
(3)
participate in specialized training in ESL methods and techniques.
f. "Two-way/dual language" means a
method of instruction that promotes a student's full proficiency in all aspects
of English and another language. These programs educate English Language
Learners using both English and a target language for academic instruction,
usually dividing the day or week by language of instruction. Two-way bilingual
programs teach students who are learning English alongside students who are
native English-speakers who are learning the target language. Teachers must
meet appropriate state certification requirements and be highly qualified as
defined by RIDE in their content area.
g. "WIDA access placement test" or "W-APT"
means an initial screening instrument developed by the WIDA Consortium to
measure a student's ability to understand, speak, and read English at a level
appropriate to the student's age and grade placement.
h. "ACCESS (ELP Assessment) ELLs" stands for
Assessing Comprehension and Communications in English State-to-State for
English Language Learners. This WIDA-developed assessment instrument is
administered annually and measures the social and academic English language
proficiency of English Language Learners in four domains: speaking, listening,
reading, and writing.
i. "Home or
native language" means the language or languages that a child first learns or
uses in the home and/or for daily communication, as recorded on file in the
student's permanent-record file.
j.
"Home language survey" means a survey instrument created by RIDE used to
identify English Language Learners.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Rhode Island 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.
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