LRB-4650/1
KRP:wlj/ekg/cdc
2021 - 2022 LEGISLATURE
February 8, 2022 - Introduced by Representative Wittke. Referred to Committee
on Education.
AB971,2,2
1An Act to repeal 118.016 (1) (a) and 118.44 (6) (a);
to renumber 118.016 (1) (b);
2to renumber and amend 118.016 (1) (c) and 118.016 (1r);
to amend 20.255
3(2) (cu), 118.016 (2), 118.44 (3), 118.44 (5) (a), 118.44 (6) (bm) (intro.), 118.44 (6)
4(bm) 3., 118.60 (7) (e) and 119.23 (7) (e); and
to create 118.015 (4) (e), 118.016
5(1b), 118.016 (1e) (title), 118.016 (1e) (d), 118.016 (1g) (title), 118.016 (1r) (title),
6118.016 (1r) (b) and (c), 118.016 (3) and (4), 118.33 (7), 118.40 (2r) (b) 2. m.,
7118.40 (2r) (d) 3., 118.40 (2x) (b) 2. m., 118.40 (2x) (d) 3., 118.44 (5) (c), 118.44
8(6) (br) and (bw), 118.60 (2) (a) 10., 119.23 (2) (a) 10. and 121.02 (1t) of the
9statutes;
relating to: promotion of pupils from the third grade to the fourth
10grade based on passage of the standardized reading test; reading readiness
11assessments in public schools; grants to increase licensure of reading teachers;
12sunsetting the Achievement Gap Reduction program; programs to identify and
1address pupils with dyslexia; parental opt-out of pupils in grades kindergarten
2to three from statewide examinations; and making an appropriation.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill 1) limits the authority of certain schools to promote a pupil from the
third grade to the fourth grade based on passage of the standardized reading
assessment; 2) makes various changes to the current reading readiness assessment
program for public school pupils enrolled in four-year-old kindergarten to second
grade; 3) creates a grant program for the 2023-24 school year to increase licensure
of reading teachers; 4) sunsets the Achievement Gap Reduction program; 5) requires
certain schools to develop or adopt programs to identify and address pupils with
dyslexia; and 6) prohibits parents of pupils in grades kindergarten to three from
excusing their pupils from taking standardized tests.
Promotion of pupils from the third grade to the fourth grade
Under current law, school districts, independent charter schools, and private
schools participating in parental choice programs must administer a standardized
reading test to certain third grade pupils. Under the bill, 1) a school board may not
promote a third grade pupil enrolled in the school district, including a pupil enrolled
in a charter school located in the school district, to the fourth grade unless the pupil
scores proficient or higher on the test; 2) the operator of an independent charter
school may not promote a third grade pupil attending the charter school to the fourth
grade unless the pupil scores proficient or higher on the test; and 3) the governing
body of a private school participating in a parental choice program may not promote
a third grade pupil who is attending the private school under the parental choice
program to the fourth grade unless the pupil scores proficient or higher on the test.
The bill also provides an exception to the third grade promotion prerequisite
created in the bill. Under the exception, the school board, operator, or governing body
may promote a pupil if the pupil meets any of the good cause reasons specified in the
bill and all of the following conditions are met:
1. The pupil's teacher submits documentation of the pupil's good cause reason
to the principal or administrator of the pupil's school.
2. The principal or administrator of the pupil's school discusses the
documentation with the teacher and the pupil's parent, determines that promoting
the pupil is appropriate, and submits that recommendation to the school board,
operator, or governing body.
3. The pupil's parent agrees with the recommendation.
4. The school board, operator, or governing body reviews the recommendation
and agrees that promoting the pupil is appropriate.
Assessments of reading readiness
Under current law, school boards and operators of independent charter schools
must annually assess pupils enrolled in four-year-old kindergarten to second grade
for reading readiness using an assessment of literacy fundamentals selected by the
school board or operator. Under current law, if a reading readiness assessment
indicates that a pupil is at risk of reading difficulty, the school board or operator must
provide interventions or remedial reading services to the pupil.
The bill provides that, beginning in the 2023-24 school year, a school board or
operator must, in addition to the assessment required under current law, annually
assess, using a diagnostic assessment, a pupil enrolled in four-year-old
kindergarten to second grade to whom any of the following applies: 1) the pupil's
parent requests the diagnostic assessment; 2) an assessment administered under
current law indicates that the pupil is at risk of reading difficulty; or 3) the pupil has
been identified as having characteristics of dyslexia. The bill defines “
diagnostic
assessment” as a tool that includes 1) an assessment that evaluates a pupil's skill in
the areas of phonemic awareness, decoding skills, rapid naming, alphabet
knowledge, letter sound knowledge, oral vocabulary, phonological awareness, word
recognition, spelling, vocabulary, listening comprehension, and, when
developmentally appropriate for the pupil, oral reading fluency and reading
comprehension; and 2) an opportunity for a pupil's parent to complete a family
history survey to provide additional information about learning difficulties in the
pupil's family.
Under current law, school boards and operators must report the results of
reading readiness assessments to pupils' parents. The bill provides that, beginning
in the 2023-24 school year, the pupil's teacher or the principal or administrator of
the pupil's school must provide the parental notification. In addition, if a pupil's
assessment indicates that the pupil is at risk of reading difficulty, the teacher,
principal, or administrator also must provide all of the following to the pupil's parent:
1. A list of the interventions or remedial reading services that will be provided
to the pupil.
2. A form on which the parent may acknowledge receipt of the information and
may indicate that the parent understands the information.
3. A request that the parent sign the form and return the signed form to the
sender.
The bill requires a school board or operator annually to report to the
Department of Public Instruction the results of pupil assessments and the
interventions and remedial reading services the school board or operator provided
to pupils in the previous school year. The bill also requires DPI annually to compile
and submit that information to the appropriate standing committees of the
legislature.
Grants to increase licensure of reading teachers
The bill allows DPI to award grants in the 2023-24 school year, in amounts
determined by DPI, to school boards to provide support and financial assistance to
their licensed teachers for the purpose of obtaining additional licensure as reading
teachers. In awarding grants under the bill, DPI must give priority to school districts
with high numbers of pupils whose scores on the most recent standardized third
grade reading test were lower than proficient, as determined by DPI. A school board
that receives a grant under the bill must use the grant moneys to pay costs associated
with its teachers obtaining licensure as reading teachers and must pay to a teacher
who successfully obtains a reading teacher license a bonus payment of $1,000.
The bill provides for the grants to be paid from moneys that become available
as a result of the sunsetting of the Achievement Gap Reduction program (described
below).
Sunset of Achievement Gap Reduction program
The bill sunsets the Achievement Gap Reduction program by prohibiting DPI
from entering into any new contracts, or renewing any existing contracts, with school
boards on or after the effective date of the bill. Under current law, the program is
a categorical aid program that provides funding to a participating school for
low-income pupils enrolled in certain grades if the school complies with a five-year
contract entered into between DPI and the school board of the school district in which
the school is located. Currently, a contract may be renewed for one or more terms of
five school years.
Under current law, DPI annually must pay to a school board under contract
with DPI a per pupil amount determined by 1) subtracting $125,000 from the total
amount appropriated for the program for the school year; 2) adding the total number
of low-income pupils enrolled in grades kindergarten to three in all schools
participating in the program; and 3) dividing the difference calculated under item
1 by the sum calculated under item 2. That calculation results in the entire amount
appropriated for the program being paid in each school year.
The bill changes the per pupil payment amount by fixing that amount at the per
pupil amount calculated for the 2022-23 school year. In other words, beginning in
the 2023-24 school year, DPI pays a school board under contract with DPI a per pupil
amount that is equal to the per pupil amount DPI paid in the 2022-23 school year.
The bill provides that, if the amount appropriated to DPI is insufficient to pay the
full per pupil amount, DPI must prorate the payments among the school boards
eligible for payment.
The bill provides that any grants DPI awards in the 2023-24 school year to
increase licensure of reading teachers (described above) will be paid from the
Achievement Gap Reduction program appropriation account.
Programs to identify and address pupils with dyslexia
The bill requires a school board, the operator of an independent charter school,
or the governing body of a private school participating in a parental choice program
to develop or adopt a program to identify and address pupils with dyslexia.
Parental opt-out of pupils from statewide examinations
The bill prohibits a school board, the operator of an independent charter school,
or the governing body of a private school participating in a parental choice program
from allowing the parent of a pupil in any grade from kindergarten to three to excuse
the pupil from taking a standardized test.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB971,1
1Section
1. 20.255 (2) (cu) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB971,5,52
20.255
(2) (cu)
Achievement gap reduction contracts and grants to increase
3licensure of reading teachers. The amounts in the schedule for aid to school districts
4and the program evaluation under ss. 118.43 and 118.44
and for grants under 2021
5Wisconsin Act .... (this act), section 33
.
AB971,2
6Section
2
. 20.255 (2) (cu) of the statutes, as affected by 2021 Wisconsin Act ....
7(this act), is amended to read:
AB971,5,118
20.255
(2) (cu)
Achievement gap reduction contracts and grants to increase
9licensure of reading teachers. The amounts in the schedule for aid to school districts
10and the program evaluation under ss. 118.43 and 118.44
and for grants under 2021
11Wisconsin Act .... (this act), section 33
.
AB971,3
12Section
3. 118.015 (4) (e) of the statutes is created to read:
AB971,5,1513
118.015
(4) (e) No later than one year after the effective date of this paragraph
14.... [LRB inserts date], develop or adopt a program to identify and address pupils with
15dyslexia, as defined in s. 118.016 (1b) (b).
AB971,4
16Section
4. 118.016 (1) (a) of the statutes is repealed.
AB971,5
17Section
5. 118.016 (1) (b) of the statutes is renumbered 118.016 (1e) (b).
AB971,6
18Section
6. 118.016 (1) (c) of the statutes is renumbered 118.016 (5) and
19amended to read:
AB971,6,720
118.016
(5) State aid. The department shall pay to
the a school board
or and
21the operator
of a charter school under s. 118.40 (2r) or (2x), from the appropriation
1under s. 20.255 (1) (f), the per pupil cost of the
selected assessment
the school board
2or operator selects under sub. (1e) (b) and the per pupil cost of a diagnostic
3assessment administered under sub. (1e) (d). If the appropriation under s. 20.255
4(1) (f) in any fiscal year is insufficient to pay the full amount of aid under this
5paragraph subsection, the
state superintendent department shall prorate state aid
6payments among the school boards and operators
of charter schools entitled to the
7aid.
AB971,7
8Section
7. 118.016 (1b) of the statutes is created to read: