California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2465 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate June 23, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2465Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Coauthor: Assembly Member Chen)(Coauthors: Senators Cortese and Hueso)February 17, 2022An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2465, as amended, Mia Bonta. Pupil instruction: third-grade literacy: literacy grant program.Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of up to $1,900,000 each to at least 25 local educational agencies that conduct a needs assessment and analysis, and design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. The bill would require grant recipients to provide annual progress reports to the department, and would require the department to contract with an external evaluator to develop a final report and evaluate program effectiveness, as provided.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status. SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
1+Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2465Introduced by Assembly Member Mia BontaFebruary 17, 2022An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction, and making an appropriation therefor. instruction.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2465, as amended, Mia Bonta. Pupil instruction: third-grade literacy: literacy grant program.Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would appropriate $47,500,000 from the General Fund to the department for establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of $1,900,000 each to 25 local educational agencies that design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. Funds appropriated by this bill would be applied toward the minimum funding requirements for school districts and community college districts imposed by Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YESNO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status. SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
22
3- Amended IN Senate June 23, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2465Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Coauthor: Assembly Member Chen)(Coauthors: Senators Cortese and Hueso)February 17, 2022An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2465, as amended, Mia Bonta. Pupil instruction: third-grade literacy: literacy grant program.Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of up to $1,900,000 each to at least 25 local educational agencies that conduct a needs assessment and analysis, and design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. The bill would require grant recipients to provide annual progress reports to the department, and would require the department to contract with an external evaluator to develop a final report and evaluate program effectiveness, as provided.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2465Introduced by Assembly Member Mia BontaFebruary 17, 2022An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction, and making an appropriation therefor. instruction.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2465, as amended, Mia Bonta. Pupil instruction: third-grade literacy: literacy grant program.Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would appropriate $47,500,000 from the General Fund to the department for establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of $1,900,000 each to 25 local educational agencies that design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. Funds appropriated by this bill would be applied toward the minimum funding requirements for school districts and community college districts imposed by Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YESNO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Senate June 23, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
5+ Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
66
7-Amended IN Senate June 23, 2022
87 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022
98 Amended IN Assembly April 28, 2022
109 Amended IN Assembly April 25, 2022
1110 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
1211
1312 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
1413
1514 Assembly Bill
1615
1716 No. 2465
1817
19-Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Coauthor: Assembly Member Chen)(Coauthors: Senators Cortese and Hueso)February 17, 2022
18+Introduced by Assembly Member Mia BontaFebruary 17, 2022
2019
21-Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Coauthor: Assembly Member Chen)(Coauthors: Senators Cortese and Hueso)
20+Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta
2221 February 17, 2022
2322
24-An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction.
23+An act to add Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, relating to pupil instruction, and making an appropriation therefor. instruction.
2524
2625 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2726
2827 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2928
3029 AB 2465, as amended, Mia Bonta. Pupil instruction: third-grade literacy: literacy grant program.
3130
32-Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of up to $1,900,000 each to at least 25 local educational agencies that conduct a needs assessment and analysis, and design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. The bill would require grant recipients to provide annual progress reports to the department, and would require the department to contract with an external evaluator to develop a final report and evaluate program effectiveness, as provided.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
31+Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.This bill would appropriate $47,500,000 from the General Fund to the department for establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of $1,900,000 each to 25 local educational agencies that design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. Funds appropriated by this bill would be applied toward the minimum funding requirements for school districts and community college districts imposed by Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
3332
3433 Existing law requires the adopted course of study for grades 1 to 6, inclusive, to include certain areas of study, including English, mathematics, social sciences, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education, as specified. Existing law requires the study of English to include knowledge of and appreciation for literature and the language, as well as the skills of speaking, reading, listening, spelling, handwriting, and composition.
3534
3635 This bill would create the Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process. The bill would require the department to award competitive grants from the California Family Literacy Innovation Project to local educational agencies, as provided.
3736
38-This bill would establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of up to $1,900,000 each to at least 25 local educational agencies that conduct a needs assessment and analysis, and design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided. The bill would require grant recipients to provide annual progress reports to the department, and would require the department to contract with an external evaluator to develop a final report and evaluate program effectiveness, as provided.
37+This bill would appropriate $47,500,000 from the General Fund to the department for establish the California Family Literacy Innovation Project Project, under the administration of the department, in order to support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The bill would require the department to award grants of $1,900,000 each to 25 local educational agencies that design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan, as provided.
38+
39+ Funds appropriated by this bill would be applied toward the minimum funding requirements for school districts and community college districts imposed by Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.
40+
41+
3942
4043 This bill would make the implementation of its provisions contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
4144
4245 ## Digest Key
4346
4447 ## Bill Text
4548
46-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status. SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
49+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status. SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
4750
4851 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4952
5053 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5154
5255 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status.
5356
5457 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.(b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade. (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.(d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills. (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.(f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.(g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.(h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.(i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.(j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators. (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week. (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.(m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.(n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer. (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status.
5558
5659 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares the following:
5760
5861 ### SECTION 1.
5962
6063 (a) Early literacy has proven to have a significant relationship to graduation rates because early literacy interacts with many other factors that contribute to academic success. According to research, third graders who are not reading at grade level are among the most vulnerable to dropping out of school later.
6164
6265 (b) A long-term study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that pupils who were not proficient in reading by the end of third grade were four times more likely to drop out of high school than proficient readers. In fact, 88 percent of pupils who failed to earn a high school diploma were struggling readers in third grade.
6366
6467 (c) Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read, after which pupils are reading to learn. If they are not proficient readers when they begin fourth grade, as much as one-half of the curriculum they will be taught will be incomprehensible.
6568
6669 (d) High-quality early education programs provide an opportunity to get children on the right track by building a strong foundation for prereading and school readiness skills.
6770
6871 (e) Research documents the importance of early experiences on brain development, and educators and policymakers now have a deeper understanding of how to best foster young childrens learning. Research shows that participation in high-quality early care and education programs, including transitional kindergarten, prekindergarten, Head Start, and Early Head Start, can increase childrens language and literacy skills before school entry.
6972
7073 (f) There are many strategies for addressing early literacy, including aligning standards to enhance kindergarten readiness, improving instruction and teacher preparation, and using developmentally and linguistically appropriate assessment and interventions, such as pupil interviews.
7174
7275 (g) Teacher librarians are the backbone of literacy in California, yet only 9 percent of schools have prioritized funding to maintain a full-time teacher librarian position as a resource to both teachers and pupils. Teacher librarians play a pivotal role in empowering and guiding pupils to use educational resources and become critical thinkers and competent researchers.
7376
7477 (h) Multilingual programs prepare pupils for linguistic and academic proficiency in English and additional languages, and require thoughtful design. Multilingual programs are based on research that demonstrates the program models effectiveness at leading pupils toward linguistic fluency and academic achievement in more than one language.
7578
7679 (i) One mission of the State Department of Education is to equip pupils with world language skills to better appreciate and more fully engage with the diverse mixture of cultures, heritages, and languages found in California and the world, while also preparing them to succeed in the global economy. The department has set specific goals in the Global California 2030 Initiative. By 2030, one-half of all kindergarten through grade 12 pupils will participate in programs leading to proficiency in two or more languages, either through a class, a program, or an experience. By 2040, three out of four pupils will be proficient in one or more languages, earning them a State Seal of Biliteracy.
7780
7881 (j) Career ladder and apprenticeship programs have demonstrated strong efficacy in recruiting, training, and strengthening new members of the workforce across different employment sectors. In the education sector, several local educational agencies have used these approaches to grow their workforce in high-needs areas and retain highly qualified bilingual educators.
7982
8083 (k) The health policy brief, titled Parental Reading and Singing to Californias Young Children Trends, Predictors, and Association with the Talk. Read. Sing. Campaign, indicates nearly 90 percent of parents read and sing to their children three times or more per week.
8184
8285 (l) The Talk. Read. Sing. campaign promotes and encourages the engagement of parents and caregivers to talk, read, and sing with their babies from birth. Brain science confirms babies learn from day one and build billions of neural connections by stimulating their brains through experiences, such as when others are talking, reading, and singing with them.
8386
8487 (m) A main mission of a public library is to support literacy. It is to everyones benefit that we have a literate society, and one way to help achieve this is to encourage pupils to read and to remove as many barriers to their using local public libraries as possible.
8588
8689 (n) When school libraries close, either due to COVID-19, summer vacation, or any other reason, kids still need and deserve access to e-books, books, periodicals, and the wealth of other online resources libraries have to offer.
8790
8891 (o) All pupils should have equal access to all library resources to level the educational playing field. They should not be penalized due to where they live or the income level of their parents. It is the intent of the Legislature to support programs that will allow thousands of pupils presently denied equal access to have the same access to library materials as all other pupils. Public libraries represent a crucial public service for all of California pupils and families regardless of immigrant status.
8992
90-SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
93+SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read: CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
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9295 SEC. 2. Chapter 15.5 (commencing with Section 53007) is added to Part 28 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Education Code, to read:
9396
9497 ### SEC. 2.
9598
96- CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
99+ CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
97100
98- CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
101+ CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant. 53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
99102
100103 CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program
101104
102105 CHAPTER 15.5. Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program
103106
104-53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant.
107+53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.(b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant.
105108
106109
107110
108111 53007. (a) For purposes of this chapter, local educational agency means a school district, county office of education, or charter school.
109112
110113 (b) The Family and Community Literacy: Supporting Literacy and Biliteracy in Schools, Families, and Communities Grant Program is hereby established for the purpose of supporting the goal of all of Californias pupils reading at grade level by third grade and engaging families at every stage of that process.
111114
112-(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, a plan for evaluating program impact, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant.
115+(c) The department shall award a competitive grant to local educational agencies pursuant to this chapter. A grant application shall include, at minimum, the particular context in which the local educational agency is operating, including the assets of, and challenges faced by, the local educational agency, and the number of pupils that would be impacted by the program, resources, or activities funded by the grant.
113116
114-53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1)(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2)(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3)(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4)(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5)(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.
117+53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:(1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.(2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies: (1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals. (3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy. (4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.(d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.(e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.
115118
116119
117120
118-53007.5. (a) The California Family Literacy Innovation Project is hereby established under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.
121+53007.5. (a) The sum of forty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars ($47,500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General Fund to the department for the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, which Project is hereby established in the department. under the administration of the department as a competitive grant program.
119122
120-(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of up to one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to at least 25 local educational agencies agencies, with consideration given to geographic diversity, that meet all of the following criteria:
123+(b) In developing and implementing the California Family Literacy Innovation Project, the department shall support community literacy and educational enrichment by supporting local educational agencies to engage families to improve literacy and biliteracy outcomes. The department shall award grants in the amount of one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) each to 25 local educational agencies that meet all of the following criteria:
121124
122125 (1) Seventy-five percent or more of pupils enrolled in the local educational agency meet the definition of unduplicated pupil pursuant to Section 2574 or 42238.02.
123126
124127 (2) The local educational agency has the highest percentage of third grade pupils scoring in Level one, Standard Not Met, on the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress for English language arts/literacy.
125128
126-(c) (1) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design conduct a needs assessment and analysis that identifies assets, barriers, and goals for use of the funds.
129+(c) Those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies:
127130
128-(2) Based on the needs assessment and analysis conducted pursuant to paragraph (1), those local educational agencies applying for grant funds shall design an evidence-based Family Literacy and Biliteracy Innovation Plan that includes at least three of the following five strategies:
131+(1) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.
129132
130-(1)
133+(2) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals.
131134
135+(3) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy.
132136
137+(4) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.
133138
134-(A) Family literacy plans that identify literacy and biliteracy goals, benchmarks, and roles for all family members. Family literacy plans shall be developed by teachers and literacy coaches at the schoolsite in collaborative meetings with families. Every family member shall have specific roles and benchmarks in both supporting their pupils and advancing their own educational goals.
135-
136-(2)
137-
138-
139-
140-(B) Family literacy home visiting programs. Local educational agencies shall establish literacy and biliteracy home visits to engage families in how to best support their pupils and every family member in reaching their literacy goals.
141-
142-(3)
143-
144-
145-
146-(C) Bilingual Family literacy promoters, also known as promotoras, or literacy outreach coordinators. This strategy shall include professional learning for specific support staff training in family and community engagement for literacy and biliteracy.
147-
148-(4)
149-
150-
151-
152-(D) Extended-day, summer, or weekend family institutes related to literacy and biliteracy. Local educational agencies shall work with in-house expanded learning programs to establish literacy and biliteracy support programs and literacy enrichment programs during after school, weekend, and summer hours.
153-
154-(5)
155-
156-
157-
158-(E) Public library family literacy partnerships.
139+(5) Public library family literacy partnerships.
159140
160141 (d) Local educational agencies receiving funds pursuant to subdivision (b) may use up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) of the grant award for the purchase of, training on, and use of digital tools to promote family literacy.
161142
162143 (e) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall have three years to spend the funds.
163-
164-(f) (1) Local educational agencies receiving grant funds pursuant to this section shall submit annual progress reports to the department until funds are fully expended.
165-
166-(2) The department may use up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) of the funds appropriated for purposes of this chapter to contract with an external evaluator to do both of the following:
167-
168-(A) Develop a final report derived from the required reports described in paragraph (1).
169-
170-(B) Evaluate program effectiveness.
171144
172145 53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.
173146
174147
175148
176149 53007.9. The implementation of this chapter is contingent upon an appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute.