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| | 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022 HB4202 Introduced 1/5/2022, by Rep. Jonathan Carroll SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED: |
| 105 ILCS 5/2-3.161 | | 105 ILCS 5/10-20.82 new | | 105 ILCS 5/34-18.77 new | |
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Amends the School Code. Provides for dyslexia screening guidelines and rules. Requires the State Board of Education to employ at least 5 dyslexia specialists or dyslexia therapists with a minimum of 5 years of field experience in screening, identifying, and treating dyslexia and related disorders to provide technical assistance and training. Provides that, beginning with the 2022-2023 school year, each school district must screen students in grades kindergarten through second (and in higher grades under certain circumstances) for the risk factors of dyslexia using a universal screener approved by the State Board. Sets forth what the screening must include. Provides for additional screening for a student who is determined to be at risk, or at some risk, for dyslexia to determine if a student has the characteristics of dyslexia. Requires the use of a multi-tiered system of support framework if screening indicates that a student has some risk factors for dyslexia or has the characteristics of dyslexia. Sets forth provisions concerning exceptions to screening, dyslexia intervention services, and reporting. Effective July 1, 2022.
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| | FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY | | STATE MANDATES ACT MAY REQUIRE REIMBURSEMENT |
| | A BILL FOR |
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| | HB4202 | | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | AN ACT concerning education.
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2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | | Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section |
5 | | 2-3.161 and by adding Sections 10-20.82 and 34-18.77 as |
6 | | follows: |
7 | | (105 ILCS 5/2-3.161) |
8 | | Sec. 2-3.161. Definition of dyslexia; reading instruction |
9 | | advisory group; handbook ; screening rules; employment of |
10 | | specialists . |
11 | | (a) The State Board of Education shall incorporate, in |
12 | | both general education and special education, the following |
13 | | definition of dyslexia: |
14 | | Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that is |
15 | | neurobiological in origin.
Dyslexia is characterized by |
16 | | difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word
recognition |
17 | | and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These |
18 | | difficulties
typically result from a deficit in the |
19 | | phonological component of language
that is often |
20 | | unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and |
21 | | the
provision of effective classroom instruction. |
22 | | Secondary consequences may
include problems in reading |
23 | | comprehension and reduced reading experience that
can |
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| | HB4202 | - 2 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | impede growth of vocabulary and background knowledge. |
2 | | (b) (Blank).
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3 | | (c) The State Board of Education shall develop and |
4 | | maintain a handbook to be made available on its Internet |
5 | | website that provides guidance for pupils, parents or |
6 | | guardians, and teachers on the subject of dyslexia. The |
7 | | handbook shall include, but is not limited to: |
8 | | (1) guidelines for teachers and parents or guardians |
9 | | on how to identify signs of dyslexia; |
10 | | (2) a description of educational strategies that have |
11 | | been shown to improve the academic performance of pupils |
12 | | with dyslexia; and |
13 | | (3) a description of resources and services available |
14 | | to pupils with dyslexia, parents or guardians of pupils |
15 | | with dyslexia, and teachers ; and . |
16 | | (4) guidelines on the administration of a universal |
17 | | screener and Level I dyslexia screening, the |
18 | | interpretation of data from these screeners, and the |
19 | | resulting appropriate instruction within a multi-tiered |
20 | | system of support (MTSS) framework. |
21 | | The State Board shall review the handbook on or before |
22 | | January 1, 2023 and at least once every 4 years thereafter to |
23 | | update , if necessary, the guidelines, educational strategies, |
24 | | or resources and services made available in the handbook. |
25 | | (d) The State Board of Education shall adopt any rules |
26 | | necessary to ensure that a student will be screened, as |
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| | HB4202 | - 3 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | provided under Section 10-20.82 or 34-18.77, for the risk |
2 | | factors of dyslexia using a universal screener: |
3 | | (1) if a student is in any of grades kindergarten |
4 | | through second in the public schools; |
5 | | (2) if a student in any of grades kindergarten through |
6 | | second: |
7 | | (A) transfers to a new public school; and |
8 | | (B) has not been screened previously during the |
9 | | school year; |
10 | | (3) if a student in grade 3 or higher in the public |
11 | | schools has difficulty, as determined by a classroom |
12 | | teacher, in: |
13 | | (A) phonological and phonemic awareness; |
14 | | (B) sound symbol recognition; |
15 | | (C) alphabet knowledge; |
16 | | (D) decoding skills; |
17 | | (E) rapid naming skills; |
18 | | (F) encoding skills; or |
19 | | (G) oral reading fluency; and |
20 | | (4) if a student from another state enrolls for the |
21 | | first time in any of grades kindergarten through second in |
22 | | a school district in this State, unless the student |
23 | | presents documentation that the student: |
24 | | (A) had the dyslexia screening or a similar |
25 | | screening during the school year; or |
26 | | (B) is exempt from screening. |
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| | HB4202 | - 4 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | (e) The State Board of Education shall adopt any rules |
2 | | necessary to ensure that a student receives dyslexia |
3 | | intervention services under Section 10-20.82 or 34-18.77. |
4 | | (f) No later than January 1, 2023, the State Board of |
5 | | Education shall employ at least 5 dyslexia specialists or |
6 | | dyslexia therapists with a minimum of 5 years of field |
7 | | experience in screening, identifying, and treating dyslexia |
8 | | and related disorders to provide both of the following: |
9 | | (1) Technical assistance for dyslexia and related |
10 | | disorders to the State Board and school districts. |
11 | | (2) Training to school district employees in: |
12 | | (A) administering a universal screener and Level I |
13 | | dyslexia screening; |
14 | | (B) analyzing and interpreting screening data; and |
15 | | (C) determining, within the MTSS framework, |
16 | | appropriate dyslexia intervention services under |
17 | | Section 10-20.82 or 34-18.77. |
18 | | (Source: P.A. 102-539, eff. 8-20-21.) |
19 | | (105 ILCS 5/10-20.82 new) |
20 | | Sec. 10-20.82. Dyslexia screening and support required. |
21 | | (a) In this Section: |
22 | | "Level I dyslexia screening" means a process, as |
23 | | determined by the school district, for gathering additional |
24 | | information to determine if the characteristics of dyslexia |
25 | | are present. |
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| | HB4202 | - 5 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | "Universal screener" means an assessment used to aid |
2 | | educators in understanding the causes for student performance, |
3 | | learning strengths, and the needs that underlie student |
4 | | performance. The assessment is conducted to identify or |
5 | | predict students who may be at risk for poor learning outcomes |
6 | | and is typically brief and conducted with all students at a |
7 | | particular grade level. |
8 | | (b) Beginning with the 2022-2023 school year, each school |
9 | | district must screen students in grades kindergarten through |
10 | | second for the risk factors of dyslexia using a universal |
11 | | screener approved by the State Board of Education. The |
12 | | screening of students must include, as developmentally |
13 | | appropriate, all of the following: |
14 | | (1) Phonological and phonemic awareness. |
15 | | (2) Sound symbol recognition. |
16 | | (3) Alphabet knowledge. |
17 | | (4) Decoding skills. |
18 | | (5) Rapid naming skills. |
19 | | (6) Encoding skills. |
20 | | (7) Oral reading fluency. |
21 | | (c) If a student is determined to be at risk, or at some |
22 | | risk, for dyslexia after the universal screener has been |
23 | | administered under subsection (b), the school district must |
24 | | administer a Level I dyslexia screening of the student. |
25 | | Through the Level I dyslexia screening, the school district |
26 | | must gather additional information to determine if the student |
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| | HB4202 | - 6 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | has the characteristics of dyslexia. The additional |
2 | | information may include, but is not limited to, information |
3 | | from progress monitoring data, work samples, additional age |
4 | | and grade-appropriate assessments related to dyslexia, teacher |
5 | | questionnaires, parent interviews, information regarding the |
6 | | student's family history related to dyslexia, and speech and |
7 | | language assessments. |
8 | | (d) If the universal screener or the Level I dyslexia |
9 | | screening indicates that a student has some risk factors for |
10 | | dyslexia or the characteristics of dyslexia, the school must |
11 | | use a multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) framework to |
12 | | address the needs of the student. |
13 | | (e) Before a school district administers a Level I |
14 | | dyslexia screening to a student, the parent or guardian of the |
15 | | student must consent to the screening. A school district is |
16 | | not required to administer a Level I dyslexia screening to a |
17 | | student if: |
18 | | (1) the parent or guardian of the student objects to |
19 | | the screening; or |
20 | | (2) the student is receiving dyslexia intervention |
21 | | services. |
22 | | (f) If a student's performance on a Level I dyslexia |
23 | | screening indicates a need for dyslexia intervention services, |
24 | | the school district must do both of the following: |
25 | | (1) Notify the student's parent or guardian of the |
26 | | results of all screenings. |
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| | HB4202 | - 7 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | (2) Provide the student's parent or guardian with |
2 | | information and resource material that includes all of the |
3 | | following: |
4 | | (A) The characteristics of dyslexia. |
5 | | (B) The appropriate classroom interventions and |
6 | | accommodations for students with dyslexia. |
7 | | (C) A statement that the parent or guardian may |
8 | | elect to have the student receive an educational |
9 | | evaluation by the school. |
10 | | (g) If the student's Level I dyslexia screening indicates |
11 | | that the student has characteristics of dyslexia and needs |
12 | | dyslexia intervention services, the dyslexia intervention |
13 | | services provided to the student must be implemented using |
14 | | diagnostic teaching guidelines outlined in the Knowledge and |
15 | | Practice Standards for Teachers of Reading created by the |
16 | | International Dyslexia Association. The dyslexia intervention |
17 | | services must: |
18 | | (1) provide explicit, direct, systematic, sequential, |
19 | | and cumulative instruction that adheres to a logical plan |
20 | | about the alphabetic principle and is designed to |
21 | | accommodate the needs of each individual student without |
22 | | presuming prior skills or knowledge; each teaching plan |
23 | | must be flexible, must be based on the individualized |
24 | | instructional needs of the student through continuous |
25 | | assessment, and must include a periodic evaluation of the |
26 | | student's progress; |
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| | HB4202 | - 8 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | (2) implement evidence-based practices that have been |
2 | | proven effective in the treatment of dyslexia; |
3 | | (3) engage the student in multi-sensory and hands-on |
4 | | activities; |
5 | | (4) include phonemic awareness activities to enable |
6 | | the student to detect, segment, blend, and manipulate |
7 | | sounds in the spoken language; |
8 | | (5) provide graphophonemic knowledge for teaching the |
9 | | letter sound plan of the English language; |
10 | | (6) teach the structure and patterns of the English |
11 | | language, including linguistic instruction in morphology, |
12 | | semantics, syntax, and pragmatics, that is directed toward |
13 | | proficiency and fluency with the patterns of language so |
14 | | that words and sentences are the carriers of meaning; |
15 | | (7) develop strategies that advance the student's |
16 | | ability in decoding, encoding, word recognition, fluency, |
17 | | and comprehension; and |
18 | | (8) provide meaning-based instruction directed at |
19 | | purposeful reading and writing, with an emphasis on |
20 | | comprehension and composition. |
21 | | (h) On or before July 1, 2023 and on or before each July 1 |
22 | | thereafter, each school district must report to the State |
23 | | Board of Education the number of students who were: |
24 | | (1) administered a universal screener during the |
25 | | school year; and |
26 | | (2) determined to be at risk, or at some risk, for |
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| | HB4202 | - 9 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | dyslexia. |
2 | | (i) On or before July 1, 2023 and on or before each July 1 |
3 | | thereafter, each school district must report on its Internet |
4 | | website all of the following information: |
5 | | (1) The dyslexia intervention services that were used |
6 | | during the previous school year to assist students with |
7 | | dyslexia. |
8 | | (2) The number of students during the previous school |
9 | | year who received dyslexia intervention services under |
10 | | this Section. |
11 | | (3) The total number of students identified with the |
12 | | characteristics of dyslexia during the school year. |
13 | | (105 ILCS 5/34-18.77 new) |
14 | | Sec. 34-18.77. Dyslexia screening and support required. |
15 | | (a) In this Section: |
16 | | "Level I dyslexia screening" means a process, as |
17 | | determined by the school district, for gathering additional |
18 | | information to determine if the characteristics of dyslexia |
19 | | are present. |
20 | | "Universal screener" means an assessment used to aid |
21 | | educators in understanding the causes for student performance, |
22 | | learning strengths, and the needs that underlie student |
23 | | performance. The assessment is conducted to identify or |
24 | | predict students who may be at risk for poor learning outcomes |
25 | | and is typically brief and conducted with all students at a |
|
| | HB4202 | - 10 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | particular grade level. |
2 | | (b) Beginning with the 2022-2023 school year, the school |
3 | | district must screen students in grades kindergarten through |
4 | | second for the risk factors of dyslexia using a universal |
5 | | screener approved by the State Board of Education. The |
6 | | screening of students must include, as developmentally |
7 | | appropriate, all of the following: |
8 | | (1) Phonological and phonemic awareness. |
9 | | (2) Sound symbol recognition. |
10 | | (3) Alphabet knowledge. |
11 | | (4) Decoding skills. |
12 | | (5) Rapid naming skills. |
13 | | (6) Encoding skills. |
14 | | (7) Oral reading fluency. |
15 | | (c) If a student is determined to be at risk, or at some |
16 | | risk, for dyslexia after the universal screener has been |
17 | | administered under subsection (b), the school district must |
18 | | administer a Level I dyslexia screening of the student. |
19 | | Through the Level I dyslexia screening, the school district |
20 | | must gather additional information to determine if the student |
21 | | has the characteristics of dyslexia. The additional |
22 | | information may include, but is not limited to, information |
23 | | from progress monitoring data, work samples, additional age |
24 | | and grade-appropriate assessments related to dyslexia, teacher |
25 | | questionnaires, parent interviews, information regarding the |
26 | | student's family history related to dyslexia, and speech and |
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| | HB4202 | - 11 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | language assessments. |
2 | | (d) If the universal screener or the Level I dyslexia |
3 | | screening indicates that a student has some risk factors for |
4 | | dyslexia or the characteristics of dyslexia, the school must |
5 | | use a multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) framework to |
6 | | address the needs of the student. |
7 | | (e) Before a school district administers a Level I |
8 | | dyslexia screening to a student, the parent or guardian of the |
9 | | student must consent to the screening. The school district is |
10 | | not required to administer a Level I dyslexia screening to a |
11 | | student if: |
12 | | (1) the parent or guardian of the student objects to |
13 | | the screening; or |
14 | | (2) the student is receiving dyslexia intervention |
15 | | services. |
16 | | (f) If a student's performance on a Level I dyslexia |
17 | | screening indicates a need for dyslexia intervention services, |
18 | | the school district must do both of the following: |
19 | | (1) Notify the student's parent or guardian of the |
20 | | results of all screenings. |
21 | | (2) Provide the student's parent or guardian with |
22 | | information and resource material that includes all of the |
23 | | following: |
24 | | (A) The characteristics of dyslexia. |
25 | | (B) The appropriate classroom interventions and |
26 | | accommodations for students with dyslexia. |
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| | HB4202 | - 12 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | (C) A statement that the parent or guardian may |
2 | | elect to have the student receive an educational |
3 | | evaluation by the school. |
4 | | (g) If the student's Level I dyslexia screening indicates |
5 | | that the student has characteristics of dyslexia and needs |
6 | | dyslexia intervention services, the dyslexia intervention |
7 | | services provided to the student must be implemented using |
8 | | diagnostic teaching guidelines outlined in the Knowledge and |
9 | | Practice Standards for Teachers of Reading created by the |
10 | | International Dyslexia Association. The dyslexia intervention |
11 | | services must: |
12 | | (1) provide explicit, direct, systematic, sequential, |
13 | | and cumulative instruction that adheres to a logical plan |
14 | | about the alphabetic principle and is designed to |
15 | | accommodate the needs of each individual student without |
16 | | presuming prior skills or knowledge; each teaching plan |
17 | | must be flexible, must be based on the individualized |
18 | | instructional needs of the student through continuous |
19 | | assessment, and must include a periodic evaluation of the |
20 | | student's progress; |
21 | | (2) implement evidence-based practices that have been |
22 | | proven effective in the treatment of dyslexia; |
23 | | (3) engage the student in multi-sensory and hands-on |
24 | | activities; |
25 | | (4) include phonemic awareness activities to enable |
26 | | the student to detect, segment, blend, and manipulate |
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| | HB4202 | - 13 - | LRB102 19897 CMG 28673 b |
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1 | | sounds in the spoken language; |
2 | | (5) provide graphophonemic knowledge for teaching the |
3 | | letter sound plan of the English language; |
4 | | (6) teach the structure and patterns of the English |
5 | | language, including linguistic instruction in morphology, |
6 | | semantics, syntax, and pragmatics, that is directed toward |
7 | | proficiency and fluency with the patterns of language so |
8 | | that words and sentences are the carriers of meaning; |
9 | | (7) develop strategies that advance the student's |
10 | | ability in decoding, encoding, word recognition, fluency, |
11 | | and comprehension; and |
12 | | (8) provide meaning-based instruction directed at |
13 | | purposeful reading and writing, with an emphasis on |
14 | | comprehension and composition. |
15 | | (h) On or before July 1, 2023 and on or before each July 1 |
16 | | thereafter, the school district must report to the State Board |
17 | | of Education the number of students who were: |
18 | | (1) administered a universal screener during the |
19 | | school year; and |
20 | | (2) determined to be at risk, or at some risk, for |
21 | | dyslexia. |
22 | | (i) On or before July 1, 2023 and on or before each July 1 |
23 | | thereafter, the school district must report on its Internet |
24 | | website all of the following information: |
25 | | (1) The dyslexia intervention services that were used |
26 | | during the previous school year to assist students with |