CCS HCS SB 319 -- ASSESSMENT OF STUDENTS This bill prohibits counting the performance of students for whom English is a second language on statewide assessment tests until the student has been educated in an English-speaking state for 3 full school years. Provisions that require students scoring at the lowest level of proficiency on statewide assessment tests to retake the test the next year are repealed. The bill also completely revises a section that currently prohibits promoting any student if the student's reading ability is more than a grade level lower than the student's grade. Each school district will give its chosen reading assessment to any third-grade student or any student who transfers into a district in grades 4, 5, or 6 who has not been determined to be reading at grade level during the current school year. The bill exempts students who have individualized education plans for special education, students with limited English proficiency, certain students receiving services under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and students whose cognitive ability does not permit them to achieve the bill's reading standards. Beginning with the 2002-2003 school year, each student whose third-grade assessment shows the student reading below second-- grade level will be provided with a reading improvement plan to contain a minimum of 30 hours of additional reading instruction during the fourth-grade year. The students will be assessed again near the end of fourth grade and, if reading below third grade levels, will be retained for one year. Students may be retained only once for not meeting the reading level required by the bill, but districts may retain any student in accordance with district policy for whom they believe retention is in the student's best interest. The assessment-remediation cycle required by the bill stops at the end of sixth grade. School districts are required to offer summer school reading instruction to students with reading improvement plans, may adopt policies that permit retention of students who do not attend required summer school remediation, and may fulfill the obligation to offer summer school through cooperative arrangements with neighboring districts. Districts may be reimbursed for certain costs of running the reading improvement programs that exceed the additional funds they receive from the additional average daily attendance generated by the reading program. The bill defines key terms, prohibits the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education from using information about the number of students receiving reading improvement instruction in accreditation matters, and requires districts to make an effort to inform parents about their methods and materials for teaching reading. Districts are required to make available statistical information about numbers and percentages of students undergoing reading improvement instruction pursuant to the bill. The bill also creates a grant program to provide after-school programs that focus on reading and assessment, beginning in the 2002-2003 school year, subject to appropriation. The bill contains an emergency clause.Copyright (c) Missouri House of Representatives