Oklahoma 2025 2025 Regular Session

Oklahoma House Bill HB1981 Introduced / Bill

Filed 01/16/2025

                     
 
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STATE OF OKLAHOMA 
 
1st Session of the 60th Legislature (2025) 
 
HOUSE BILL 1981 	By: Ranson 
 
 
 
 
 
AS INTRODUCED 
 
An Act relating to schools; amending 70 O.S. 2021, 
Section 1210.508C, as amended by Section 5, Chapter 
411, O.S.L. 2024 (70 O.S. Supp. 20 24, Section 
1210.508C), which relates to the Strong Readers Act; 
changing the number and timing of reading screenings 
for kindergarten students; modifying the number and 
timing of screening instruments used for kindergarten 
students; providing an effective date; and declaring 
an emergency. 
 
 
 
BE IT ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF TH E STATE OF OKLAHOMA: 
SECTION 1.     AMENDATORY     70 O.S. 2021, Section 1210.508C, 
as amended by Section 5, Chapter 411, O.S.L. 2024 (70 O.S. Supp. 
2024, Section 1210.508C), is amended to read as follows: 
Section 1210.508C. A.  To identify students who have a reading 
deficiency including identifying students with characteristics of 
dyslexia, each student enrolled in kindergarten and first, second, 
and third grade in a public school in this state shall be screened 
at the beginning, middle , and end of each school year for reading 
skills including, but not limited to, phonological awareness, 
decoding, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.  Kindergarten 
students shall be screened at the middle and end of the school year,   
 
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with the first screening provided no later than December.  First, 
second, and third grade students shall be screened at the beginning, 
middle, and end of each school year.  A screening instrument 
approved by the State Board of Education, in consultation with the 
Commission for Educational Quality and Accountability and the 
Secretary of Education, shall be utilized for the purposes of this 
section.  In determining which screening instrument to approv e, the 
State Board of Education, the Commission for Educational Quality and 
Accountability, and the Secretary of Education shall take into 
consideration at a minimum the following factors: 
1.  The time required to conduct the screening instrument with 
the intention of minimizing the impact on instructional time; 
2.  The timeliness i n reporting screening instrument results to 
teachers, administrators, and parents and legal guardians of 
students; and 
3.  The integration of the screening instrument into readin g 
curriculum. 
B.  Beginning in the 2025 -2026 school year, the State Board of 
Education shall approve no fewer than two (2) screening instruments 
for use at the middle and end of the school year for kindergarten 
students and no fewer than three (3) screening instruments for use 
at the beginning, middle, and end of the school year for first, 
second, and third grade students for monitoring of progress and for 
measurement of reading skills as required in subsection A of this   
 
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section.  The screening instruments shall meet the following 
criteria: 
1.  Assess for phonological awareness, decoding, fluency, 
vocabulary, and comprehension; 
2.  Document the validity and reliability of each assessment; 
3.  Can be used for identifying students who are at risk for 
reading deficiency and progress monitoring throughout the school 
year; 
4.  Can be used to assess students with disabilities and English 
language learners; and 
5.  Accompanied by a data management system that provides 
profiles of students, class, grade level, and sc hool building.  The 
profiles shall identify each student 's instructional point of need 
and reading achievement level.  The State Board shall also determine 
other comparable reading assessments for diagnostic purposes to be 
used for students at risk of read ing failure. 
C.  1.  Exemptions to the screening requirements of this section 
may be provided to students who have documented evidence that they 
meet at least one of the following criteria as related to the 
provision of classroom instruction: 
a. the student participates in the Oklahoma Alternate 
Assessment Program (OAAP) and is taught using 
alternate methods,   
 
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b. the student's primary expressive or receptive 
communication is sign language, 
c. the student's primary form of written or read text is 
Braille, or 
d. the student's primary expressive or receptive language 
is not English, the student is identified as an 
English learner using a state -approved identification 
assessment, and the student has had less than one (1) 
school year of instruction in an English -learner 
program. 
2.  A public school that grants an exemption pursuant to 
paragraph 1 of this subsection shall provide ongoing evidence of 
student progression toward English language acquisition with the 
same frequency as administration of screening assessm ents.  Evidence 
may include, but not be limited to, student progression toward OAAP 
reading essential elements, proficiency in sign language and reading 
comprehension, and proficiency in Braille and reading comprehension. 
D.  1.  Students who are administe red a screening instrument 
pursuant to subsection A of this section and are found not to be 
meeting grade-level targets shall be provided a program of reading 
instruction designed to enable students to acquire the appropriate 
grade-level reading skills.  T he program of reading instruction 
shall be based on scientific reading researc h and align with the   
 
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subject matter standards adopted by the State Board of Education.  A 
program of reading instruction shall include: 
a. sufficient additional in -school instructional time for 
the acquisition of phonological awareness, decoding, 
fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension, 
b. if necessary and if funding is available, tutorial 
instruction after regular school hours, on Saturdays, 
and during summer; however, such instru ction may not 
be counted toward the one -hundred-eighty-day or one-
thousand-eighty-hour school year required in Section 
1-109 of this title, 
c. assessments identified for diagnostic purposes and 
periodic monitoring to measure the acquisition of 
reading skills including, but not limited to, 
phonological awareness, decoding, fluency, vocabulary, 
and comprehension, as identified in the student 's 
program of reading instruction, 
d. high-quality instructional materials grounded in 
scientifically based reading rese arch, and 
e. a means of providing every family of a student in 
prekindergarten, kindergarten, and first, second, and 
third grade access to free online evidence -based 
literacy instruction resources to support the 
student's literacy development at home.   
 
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2.  A student enrolled in kindergarten or first, second, or 
third grade who exhibits a deficiency in reading at any time based 
on the screening instrument administered pursuant to subsection A of 
this section shall receive an individual reading intervention pl an 
no later than thirty (30) days after the identification of the 
deficiency in reading.  The reading intervention plan shall be 
provided in addition to core reading instruction that is provided to 
all students.  The reading intervention plan shall: 
a. describe the research-based reading intervention 
services the student will receive to remedy the 
deficiency in reading, 
b. provide explicit and systematic instruction in 
phonological awareness, decoding, fluency, vocabulary, 
and comprehension, as applicable, 
c. monitor the reading progress of each student 's reading 
skills throughout th e school year and adjust 
instruction according to the student 's needs, and 
d. continue until the student is determined to be meeting 
grade-level targets in reading based on scree ning 
instruments administered pursuant to subsection A of 
this section or assessments identified for diagnostic 
purposes and periodic monitoring pursuant to 
subparagraph c of paragraph 1 of this subsection.   
 
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3.  The reading intervention plan for each studen t identified 
with a deficiency in reading shall be developed by a Student Read ing 
Proficiency Team and shall include supplemental instructional 
services and supports.  Each team shall be composed of: 
a. the parent or legal guardian of the student, 
b. the teacher assigned to the student who had 
responsibility for reading instruction in that 
academic year, 
c. a teacher who is responsible for reading instruction 
and is assigned to teach in the next grade level of 
the student, and 
d. a certified reading special ist, if one is available. 
4.  A school district shall notify the parent or leg al guardian 
of any student in kindergarten or first, second, or third grade who 
exhibits a deficiency in reading at any time based on the screening 
instrument administered pursua nt to subsection A of this section.  
The notification shall occur no later than thirty (30) days after 
the identification of the deficiency in reading. 
E.  1.  Every school district shall adopt and implement a 
district strong readers plan which has had inp ut from school 
administrators, teachers, and parents and legal guardians and i f 
possible a reading specialist, and which shall be submitted 
electronically to and approved by the State Board of Education.  The 
plan shall be updated annually.  School distric ts shall not be   
 
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required to electronically submit the annual updates to the Board if 
the last plan submitted to the Board was approved and expenditures 
for the program include only expenses relating to individual and 
small group tutoring, purchase of and t raining in the use of 
screening and assessment measures, summer school program s, and 
Saturday school programs.  If any expenditure for the program is 
deleted or changed or any other type of expenditure for the program 
is implemented, the school district sh all be required to submit the 
latest annual update to the Board for approval.  The district strong 
readers plan shall include a plan for each site which includes an 
analysis of the data provided by the Oklahoma School Testing Program 
and other reading asse ssments utilized as required in this section, 
and which outlines how each scho ol site will comply with the 
provisions of the Strong Readers Act. 
2.  The State Board of Education shall adopt rules for the 
implementation and evaluation of the provisions of t he Strong 
Readers Act.  The evaluation shall include, but not be limited to, 
an analysis of the data required in subsection L of this section. 
F.  1.  Any first-grade, second-grade, or third-grade student 
who demonstrates proficiency in reading through a g rade-level 
appropriate screening instrument approved pursuant to subsection B 
of this section shall not require a program of reading instruction 
or an individual reading intervention plan.  After a student has 
demonstrated proficiency through a screening i nstrument, the   
 
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district shall provide notification to the parent or legal guardian 
of the student that he or she has satisfied the requirements of the 
Strong Readers Act.  The district shall continue to monitor the 
student in the next successive grade leve l to ensure he or she 
maintains proficiency. 
2.  Beginning with the 2025 -2026 school year, if a third -grade 
student is identified at any point of the academic year as having a 
significant reading deficiency, which shall be defined as not 
meeting grade-level targets on a screening instrument administered 
pursuant to subsection A of this section, the district shall provide 
the student with intensive intervention services for the appropriate 
amount of the instructional day consistent with the individual 
reading intervention plan developed pursuant to paragraph 2 of 
subsection D of this section and as determined by the Student 
Reading Proficiency Team.  Intensive intervention services shall 
continue until the student demonstrates proficiency at his or her 
grade level based on a screening instrument administered pursuant to 
subsection A of this section. 
G.  Each school district shall annually report in an electronic 
format to the State Department of Education, the Office of 
Educational Quality and Accountability, and the Secretary of 
Education the number of students in kindergarten through third grade 
per grade level who exhibit grade -level reading proficiency, the 
number of students per grade level who received intensive   
 
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intervention services pursuant to paragraph 2 of subsection F of 
this section, the number of students per grade level who attended a 
summer academy as provided for in Section 1210.508E of this title, 
the number of students per grade level who exhibited improved 
reading proficiency after completion of intensive intervention 
services, and the number of students per grade level who are still 
in need of intensive intervention services.  The State Department of 
Education shall publicly report the aggregate and district -specific 
numbers submitted pursuant to this subsection on its website and 
shall provide electronic copies of the report to the Governor, 
Secretary of Education, President Pro Tempore of the Senate, Speaker 
of the House of Representatives, and to the respective chairs of the 
committees with responsibility for common education policy in each 
legislative chamber. 
H.  The parent of any student who is found to have a reading 
deficiency and is not meeting grade -level reading targets and has 
been provided a program of reading instruction as provide d for in 
paragraph 1 of subsection D of this section shall be notified in 
writing of the following: 
1.  That the student has been identified as having a substantial 
deficiency in reading; 
2.  A description of the current services that are provided to 
the student pursuant to subsection D of this section;   
 
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3.  A description of the prop osed intensive intervention 
services and supports that will be provided to the student that are 
designed to remediate the identified area of reading deficiency as 
provided for in paragraph 2 of subsection F of this section; 
4.  That a student who is promoted to the fourth grade shall 
receive supplemental intensive intervention services; 
5.  Strategies for parents to use in helping their child succeed 
in reading proficiency; and 
6. The grade-level performance scores of the student. 
I.  No student may be ass igned to a grade level based solely on 
age or other factors that constitute social promotion. 
J.  1.  Each school district board of education shall annually 
publish on the school website and report electronically to the State 
Department of Education, the Office of Educational Quality and 
Accountability, and the Secretary of Education by September 1 of 
each year the following information on the prior school year: 
a. the policies and procedures adopted by the school 
district board of education to implement th e 
provisions of this section.  The information submitted 
shall include expenditures related to implementing the 
provisions of this section, the number of staff 
implementing the provisions of this section, and 
average daily classroom time devoted to implementing 
the provisions of this section,   
 
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b. by grade, the number and percentage of all students in 
kindergarten through third grade who did not meet 
grade-level targets based on a s creening instrument 
administered pursuant to subsection A of this section, 
c. by grade, the number and percentage of all students in 
kindergarten through third grade who have been 
enrolled in the district for fewer than two (2) years, 
d. by grade, the number and percentage of students in 
kindergarten through third grade who demonstrated 
grade-level proficiency based on a screening 
instrument administered pursuant to subsection A of 
this section, and 
e. by grade, the number and percentage of students in 
kindergarten through third grade who are on an 
individualized education program (I EP) in accordance 
with the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act 
(IDEA) and who demonstrated grade -level proficiency 
based on a screening instrument administered pursuant 
to subsection A of this section or an alternative 
assessment prescribed by the student 's IEP. 
2.  The State Department of Education shall establish a uniform 
format for school districts to report the information required in 
this subsection.  The format shal l be developed with input from 
school districts and shall be provided not late r than ninety (90)   
 
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days prior to the annual due date.  The Department shall annually 
compile the information required, along with state -level summary 
information, and electronica lly report the information to the 
public, the Governor, the Secretary of Education, the President Pro 
Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of 
Representatives. 
K.  The State Department of Education shall provide technical 
assistance as needed to aid school districts in administering the 
provisions of the Strong Readers Act. 
L.  On or before January 31 of each year, the State Department 
of Education shall electronically submit to the Governor, the 
President Pro Tempore of the Senate, the Speake r of the House of 
Representatives, and members of the committees with responsibility 
over common education in both houses of the Legislature a Strong 
Readers Report which shall include, but is not limited to, trend 
data detailing three (3) years of data, d isaggregated by student 
subgroups to include economically disadvantaged, major racial or 
ethnic groups, students with disabilities, and English language 
learners, as appropriate for the following: 
1.  The statewide aggregate number and percentage of studen ts in 
kindergarten through third grade determined to be at risk for 
reading difficulties compared to the total number of students 
enrolled in each grade;   
 
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2.  The statewide aggregate number and percentage of students in 
kindergarten who continue to be at ri sk for reading difficulties as 
determined by the year -end administration of th e screening 
instrument required subsection A of this section; 
3.  The statewide aggregate number and percentage of students in 
kindergarten through third grade who have successfu lly completed 
their program of reading instruction and are reading on grade level 
as determined by the results of screening instruments administered 
pursuant to subsection A of this section; 
4.  The statewide aggregate and district -specific number and 
percentage of students that meet or do not meet grade -level targets 
for reading based on screening instruments administered pursuant to 
subsection A of this section; 
5.  The amount of funds received by each district for 
implementation of the Strong Readers Act ; 
6.  An evaluation and narrative interpretation of the report 
data analyzing the impact of the Strong Readers Act on students ' 
ability to read at grade level; 
7.  The type of reading instruction practices and methods 
currently being used by school distric ts in the state; 
8.  Socioeconomic information, access to reading resources 
outside of school, and screening for and identification of learning 
disabilities for students not reading at the appropriate grade level 
in kindergarten and first through third gra de;   
 
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9.  By grade level, the types of intensive intervention efforts 
being conducted by school districts for students who are not on an 
IEP and who are not reading at the appropriate grade level and for 
students who are on an IEP and who are not reading at the 
appropriate grade level; and 
10.  Any recommendations for improvements or amendments to the 
Strong Readers Act. 
The State Department of Education may contract with an 
independent entity for the reporting and analysis requirements of 
this subsection. 
M. Copies of the results of the screening instruments 
administered pursuant to subsection A of this section shall be made 
a part of the permanent record of each student. 
SECTION 2.  This act shall become effective July 1, 2025. 
SECTION 3.  It being immediately necessary for the preservation 
of the public peace, health or safety, an emergency is hereby 
declared to exist, by reason whereof this act shall take effect and 
be in full force from and after its passage and approval. 
 
60-1-11161 SW 01/11/25