STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
5480--A
2023-2024 Regular Sessions
IN SENATE
March 6, 2023
___________
Introduced by Sens. HOYLMAN-SIGAL, GALLIVAN -- read twice and ordered
printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Educa-
tion -- recommitted to the Committee on Education in accordance with
Senate Rule 6, sec. 8 -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered
reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
AN ACT to amend the education law, in relation to early literacy educa-
tion
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "right to
2 read act".
3 § 2. The education law is amended by adding a new section 818 to read
4 as follows:
5 § 818. Early literacy education. 1. For purposes of this section, the
6 following terms shall have the following meanings:
7 (a) "Evidence-based" means the instruction or item described is based
8 on rigorous, reliable, trustworthy and valid scientific evidence and has
9 demonstrated a record of success in addressing students' reading compe-
10 tency in the areas of phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary develop-
11 ment, reading fluency and comprehension, including background knowledge
12 oral language and writing.
13 (b) "Phonemic awareness" means the ability to notice, think about and
14 manipulate individual sounds in spoken syllables and words.
15 (c) "Vocabulary development" means the process of acquiring new words.
16 "Vocabulary development" includes improving all areas of communication,
17 including listening, speaking, reading and writing which is directly
18 related to school achievement and is a strong predictor for reading
19 success.
20 (d) "Reading fluency" means the ability to read words, phrases and
21 sentences accurately, at an appropriate speed, and with expression.
22 (e) "Reading comprehension" means a function of word recognition
23 skills and language comprehension skills and shall include having suffi-
24 cient background information and vocabulary in order for the reader to
25 understand the words in front of them. "Reading comprehension" also
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[ ] is old law to be omitted.
LBD01977-06-3
S. 5480--A 2
1 includes the active process that requires intentional thinking during
2 which meaning is constructed through interactions between the text and
3 reader. Comprehension skills are taught explicitly by demonstrating,
4 explaining, modeling and implementing specific cognitive strategies to
5 help beginning readers derive meaning through intentional, problem-solv-
6 ing thinking processes.
7 (f) "Three-cueing", or "meaning structure visual" (MSV) means a method
8 that teaches students to use meaning, structure and syntax, and visual
9 cues when attempting to read an unknown word.
10 (g) "Cultural responsiveness" means alignment with the New York state
11 culturally-responsive sustaining education (CRSE) framework.
12 (h) "Culturally-responsive sustaining education (CRSE) framework"
13 means a framework that helps educators create student-centered learning
14 environments that: affirm racial, linguistic and cultural identities;
15 prepare students for rigor and independent learning, develop students'
16 abilities to connect across lines of difference; elevate historically
17 marginalized voices; and empower students as agents of social change.
18 2. Each school district shall provide all students in pre-kindergarten
19 through fifth grade programming and services necessary to ensure to the
20 greatest extent possible that students, as they progress through pre-
21 kindergarten, first, second, third, fourth and fifth grades develop the
22 necessary foundational reading skills to enable them to master the
23 academic standards and expectations applicable to the sixth grade
24 curriculum and beyond. The instructional programming and services for
25 teaching students to read must be evidence-based and scientifically-
26 based, must focus on reading competency in the areas of phonemic aware-
27 ness, phonics, vocabulary development, reading fluency, comprehension,
28 including background knowledge, oral language and writing, oral skill
29 development, and must align with CRSE framework. Districts shall ensure
30 that all early literacy programming and services are part of an aligned
31 and coherent plan designed to improve student reading outcomes in grades
32 pre-kindergarten through five.
33 3. Every school district shall ensure that all teachers employed to
34 teach pre-kindergarten, kindergarten, first, second, third, fourth and
35 fifth grades, including teachers with multiple subject and education
36 specialist teaching credentials, possess adequate capabilities to teach
37 literacy using evidence-based instruction. Teachers employed by a
38 district before or on the effective date of this section may meet this
39 requirement by presenting evidence of their proficiency in reading
40 instruction through completion of professional learning courses includ-
41 ing, but not limited to, evidence-based means of teaching foundational
42 reading skills in print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics and
43 word recognition, comprehension and supporting reading fluency for all
44 pupils, including establishing tiered supports for students with reading
45 difficulties including those with characteristics of dyslexia and
46 dysgraphia, English learners and students with exceptional needs. Teach-
47 ers employed by a district after the effective date of this section
48 shall meet this requirement by successfully completing at least thirty-
49 five hours of evidence-based training in reading instruction in accord-
50 ance with subdivision seven of this section. Alternatively, current and
51 future educators can provide evidence that their teacher preparation
52 program adequately covered all of these topics during their enrollment.
53 To the extent possible, school leaders of elementary schools should also
54 meet the requirements of this section.
55 4. The department shall provide grants to BOCES and/or school
56 districts to hire onsite literacy coaches trained in the science of
S. 5480--A 3
1 reading, focusing on high need districts with at least seventy-five
2 percent of third graders reading below proficiency based on the two
3 thousand twenty-two--two thousand twenty-three New York state English
4 language arts assessment.
5 5. The department shall develop a list of approved, evidence-based
6 curricula that meets the definition set forth in paragraph (a) of subdi-
7 vision one of this section. Such list shall be posted on the depart-
8 ment's website and shall at a minimum be updated annually. Such list
9 shall not include instructional programming or materials that employ
10 three-cueing or meaning structure visual (MSV). Approved curricula shall
11 at a minimum:
12 (a) have been proven to accelerate student progress in attaining read-
13 ing competency;
14 (b) provide explicit and systematic skill development in the areas of
15 phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary development, comprehension and
16 reading fluency, including oral skill development;
17 (c) be evidence-based and be aligned with the preschool through
18 elementary and secondary education standards for reading adopted by the
19 department;
20 (d) include evidence-based valid and reliable assessments that provide
21 initial and ongoing analysis of a student's progress in attaining read-
22 ing competency at least three times per year, beginning in kindergarten;
23 and
24 (e) include texts on core academic content to assist students in main-
25 taining or meeting grade-appropriate proficiency levels in academic
26 subjects in addition to reading, while ensuring alignment with the
27 state's CRSE framework.
28 6. The department shall develop a competitive grant program that
29 allows districts to replace non-evidence-based curricula with curricula
30 from the approved department list of evidence-based curricula. Funds
31 from this grant may be used to provide professional learning for educa-
32 tors to effectively implement the new evidence-based curricula.
33 7. (a) The department shall develop a list of approved professional
34 development programs that are evidence-based and provide opportunities
35 for practical application of evidence-based literacy instruction in the
36 classroom. Programs should address significant reading deficiencies and
37 apply intervention strategies for struggling students including students
38 with characteristics of dyslexia and dysgraphia, in addition to teaching
39 general, evidence-based literacy instructional approaches for all
40 students. The department shall include on such list the approved profes-
41 sional development programs that are available online. Such list shall
42 be posted on the department's website and shall at a minimum be updated
43 annually. The department shall ensure that each professional development
44 program included on such list:
45 (i) is focused on or aligns with the science of reading, and is
46 comprehensive and research-based, including the following:
47 (1) the study of organized, systematic, explicit skills including
48 phonemic awareness, direct, systematic, explicit phonics, and decoding
49 strategies;
50 (2) a strong literature, language and comprehension component encom-
51 passing both oral and written language;
52 (3) ongoing screening techniques to inform teaching;
53 (4) early intervention measures; and
54 (5) guided practice in a clinical setting;
S. 5480--A 4
1 (ii) includes rigorous evaluations of learning both throughout and at
2 the conclusion of the course, which a participant must pass to success-
3 fully complete the course; and
4 (iii) aligns with the approved instructional programming published in
5 accordance with subdivision five of this section.
6 (b) For purposes of this subdivision, "direct, systematic, explicit
7 phonics" means phonemic awareness, spelling patterns, the direct
8 instruction of sound/symbol codes and practice in connected text, and
9 the relationship of direct, systematic, explicit phonics.
10 8. (a) Every school district, at least three times per year, shall
11 give the parent or guardian of each student in pre-kindergarten through
12 grade five a progress report about such student's literacy progress. For
13 pre-kindergarten students, such report shall include an assessment of
14 cognitive abilities, including executive function, and social-emotional
15 learning. For kindergarten through grade five, such progress report
16 shall include information about the following:
17 (i) the student's reading proficiency as measured by district reading
18 assessments and screeners;
19 (ii) information about the literacy programming and services being
20 provided to the student, including curriculum; and
21 (iii) list of evidence-based home and community resources that fami-
22 lies and caregivers can use to support their child's reading and
23 language development.
24 (b) The department shall develop a progress report template for
25 districts to meet the requirements set forth pursuant to this subdivi-
26 sion.
27 9. (a) Twelve months after the effective date of this section and on
28 an annual basis thereafter, the commissioner shall submit a report to
29 the legislative committees with jurisdiction over pre-kindergarten
30 through grade twelve education summarizing, at minimum, the state's
31 performance on each of the following metrics:
32 (i) students' literacy and reading progression using state growth
33 measures. The commissioner shall analyze the state's progress in regard
34 to students' reading and literacy using the state's educational assess-
35 ment system. The system shall measure individual students' educational
36 growth in the area of reading based on indicators of current achievement
37 growth, and each individual student's growth must be shown relative to
38 the student's prior achievement. Indicators of achievement and prior
39 achievement shall be based on highly reliable statewide assessments. The
40 commissioner shall include aggregated data and disaggregated data show-
41 ing educational growth by school site, grade and race/ethnicity;
42 (ii) by school site and grade, the percentage of teachers required to
43 possess capabilities in research-based literacy instruction as specified
44 under subdivision three of this section that have successfully completed
45 training or otherwise demonstrated knowledge in evidence-based literacy
46 instruction;
47 (iii) by school site and grade, the names of the approved professional
48 development programs in accordance with subdivision seven of this
49 section used by teachers; and
50 (iv) by school site and grade, the names of the approved instructional
51 programming and supporting materials as specified under subdivision five
52 of this section that were used at the beginning and end of the school
53 year.
54 (b) The department shall publish this information on its website in a
55 clear and accessible format.
56 § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.