Local education providers - procedures - plans - training.

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(1) Each local education provider shall adopt the procedures necessary to comply with the requirements specified in this part 12. In adopting procedures, a local education provider shall comply with and may exceed the requirements of this part 12. Procedures may include, but need not be limited to, procedures for:

  1. Creating a READ plan and the contents of a READ plan;

  2. Effectively communicating with parents concerning the creation, contents, and implementation of READ plans; and

  3. Determining whether a student who has a significant reading deficiency will advanceto the next grade level.

  1. A local education provider is not required to start a READ plan or convert an individual literacy plan to a READ plan for a student who is enrolled in fourth grade or higher as of the 2013-14 school year.

  2. Each local education provider is encouraged to report to the department the strategiesand intervention instruction that the local education provider finds effective in assisting students to attain reading competency and to provide copies of effective materials to the department to assist the department in sharing with local education providers best practices in assisting students to attain reading competency.

  3. Local education providers are encouraged to provide parents opportunities to participate in parent reading workshops throughout the school year to assist parents in developing their own reading skills and in developing the skills necessary to assist their children in reading.

  4. (a) Beginning with the plans adopted for the 2020-21 school year, the plan that a local education provider must adopt based on its accreditation category pursuant to section 2211-208 or as required pursuant to section 22-11-210, whichever is applicable, must include the following information concerning implementation of this part 12 as it applies to each of the schools operated by the local education provider:

  1. The core and supplemental reading curriculum used at each grade level, includingkindergarten for each school that includes a kindergarten educational program. The core and supplemental reading curriculum must be designed around teaching the foundational reading skills of phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary development, reading fluency including oral skills, and reading comprehension.

  2. The targeted, evidence-based or scientifically based core and supplemental readinginstructional programs and intervention reading instruction, services, and other supports, including those available through the multi-tiered systems of supports or a comparable intervention system implemented by the local education provider, that each school provides to students who are identified as having a significant reading deficiency or as reading below grade level;

  3. The assessments that each school uses at each grade level to meet the requirementsspecified in section 22-7-1205 (1); and

  4. If the local education provider receives and uses per-pupil intervention money ormoney received through the early literacy grant program for professional development, the local education provider's plan for providing the professional development, which development must be targeted, evidence based or scientifically based, and aligned with the instruction, services, and other supports provided to students who are identified as having a significant reading deficiency or as reading below grade level.

(b) If a local education provider is authorized pursuant to section 22-11-303 (4) or 2211-403 (5) to adopt and submit a plan every two years, the local education provider shall submit to the department the information described in subsection (5)(a) of this section annually.

(6) (a) By the beginning of the 2021-22 school year and continuing for each school year thereafter, each local education provider that receives per-pupil intervention money or a grant through the early literacy grant program in any budget year starting with the 2019-20 budget year shall ensure that each teacher employed to teach kindergarten or any of grades one through three successfully completes or has successfully completed evidence-based training in teaching reading. To comply with this subsection (6)(a), a local education provider must submit evidence, as described in subsection (6)(b) of this section, that each teacher employed to teach kindergarten or any of grades one through three has successfully completed evidence-based training in teaching reading that is:

  1. Included as a course in an approved program of preparation, as defined in section 22-

60.5-103 (8), or an alternative teacher program, as defined in section 22-60.5-103 (5);

  1. Included as a course in a post-graduate degree program in teaching reading or literacy;

  2. Provided by the department or included on the advisory list of professional development programs provided by the department pursuant to section 22-7-1209 (2)(c); or

  3. Provided by a local education provider or is appropriate for license renewal pursuant to section 22-60.5-110 (3).

  1. A teacher is deemed to have successfully completed evidence-based training in teaching reading if the local education provider submits to the department evidence that the teacher passed an end-of-course assessment of learning at the completion of the evidence-based training.

  2. At the request of a local education provider, the department shall provide, at no costto the local education provider, evidence-based training in teaching reading to one or more of the teachers employed by the local education provider to teach kindergarten or any of grades one through three.

  3. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (6)(a) of this section, a local educationprovider that is not in compliance with the requirements of this subsection (6) as of the beginning of the 2021-22 school year or for a subsequent school year may request a one-year extension from the department based on a demonstration of good cause for inability to comply.

  4. A local education provider is strongly encouraged to make evidence-based training inteaching reading available to parents and members of the community in order to effectively partner with them in teaching early-grade reading.

  5. The state board may adopt rules as necessary to specify the time frames and procedures for complying with the requirements specified in subsection (6)(a) of this section and for applying for an extension pursuant to subsection (6)(d) of this section and the form in which a local education provider must submit evidence of the completion of an end-of-course assessment of learning as required in subsection (6)(b) of this section.

(7) Each local education provider is strongly encouraged to partner with adjacent public libraries to enhance the instructional programming and services in literacy provided by the local education provider and to provide access for students and their parents to reading materials for out-of-school literacy development.

Source: L. 2012: Entire part added, (HB 12-1238), ch. 180, p. 657, § 2, effective July 1. L. 2019: (5) to (7) added, (SB 19-199), ch. 154, p. 1825, § 6, effective May 10.


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