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HB18-1393

Effective Implementation Of Colorado Reading To Ensure Academic Development Act

Concerning measures to support effective implementation of the "Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act" for all students who receive services pursuant to READ plans, and, in connection therewith, making an appropriation.
Session:
2018 Regular Session
Subject:
Education & School Finance (Pre & K-12)
Bill Summary

Early literacy education - READ act - per-pupil intervention money - early literacy grant program - appropriation. Before passage of the act, the state board of education (state board) was required to adopt an approved list of reading assessments, and the department of education (department) was required to adopt advisory lists of literacy programming and professional development in literacy. With regard to the list of approved assessments and the advisory lists, the act:

  • Clarifies that the assessments and literacy programming must be evidence-based or scientifically based and must be aligned with the state academic standards;
  • Directs the state board and the department to review the approved list of assessments every 4 years and the advisory lists of literacy programming and professional development programs every 2 years;
  • Requires the process for appealing the materials placed on the assessment list or the advisory lists to include appeals by school districts, boards of cooperative services, and charter schools (local education providers) and directs the department to consider certain materials provided by appellants; and
  • Requires the department to ensure that the process for reviewing and adding assessments to the approved list and materials to the advisory lists must include consultation with local education providers and be transparent.

The statutes existing before passage of the act specify the portion of the early literacy fund that the department must distribute as grants through the early literacy grant program. The act allows for an increase in the amount distributed through the early literacy grant program.

The act requires a local education provider, at the department's request, to provide specific information explaining how the local education provider spent the per-pupil intervention money it received. The act expands the purposes for which a local education provider may use the per-pupil intervention money and requires the local education provider to use the money for early-grade reading initiatives rather than replacing money received from other sources.

The act directs the state board, in adopting rules for applying for grants through the early literacy grant program, to ensure that rural school districts and small rural school districts, and district and institute charter schools located within rural and small rural school districts, can submit simplified grant applications. The act directs the state board to award specified percentages of the total amount allocated for the grant program to applications for certain types of programs.

The act directs the commissioner of education (commissioner), by September 1, 2018, to convene a working group to review the creation and use of reading-to-ensure-academic-development (READ) plans by local education providers and to recommend any necessary regulatory or implementation changes to continue and improve the use and effectiveness of READ plans. The commissioner must submit a report of the findings and recommendations to the state board and the education committees of the general assembly by February 1, 2020.

For the 2018-19 fiscal year, the act appropriates $1,000,000 from the marijuana tax cash fund to the department to distribute through the early literacy grant program.


(Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Status

Introduced
Passed
Became Law

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