On March 20, 2024

After pushback from education orgs, Senate edits literacy screening bill

 

By Holly Sullivan, Community News Service 

Editor’s note: The Community News Service is a program in which University of Vermont students work with professional editors to provide content for local news outlets at no cost.

The Senate Committee on Education is revising a bill that aims to improve Vermont’s literacy rate — a number that’s been steadily declining for years.

The changes address problems prompted by education officials who said the bill’s language is too limiting and would present problems for schools required to implement them.

“I think the reasoning was just that, [with] this bill, we’re hoping to capture all students that have any kind of learning deficiency or just struggling readers,” Sen. Martine Gulick, D-Chittenden Central said. 

Jay Nichols, executive director of the Vermont Principals’ Association said to committee members Jan. 10 that he agrees with S.204’s goals, but he takes issue with some of its phrasing. 

Committee members walked through some potential changes during a Feb. 9. meeting, including getting rid of specific language about follow-ups to literacy screenings, removing language that would require the Agency of Education to approve literacy screeners and altering the state’s definition of an inadequate literacy test. 

Children advocacy groups, The Vermont Early Childhood Advocacy Alliance VT,  Let’s Grow Kids’ and Voices for VT Kids, declined requests for comment from Community News Service.  

If screenings revealed a potential reading deficiency in a student, S.204 would require all public and approved independent schools to provide literacy screenings and interventions approved by the Agency of Education. The bill is an attempt to support struggling readers early in their education, Gulick said.

“It really focuses on Kindergarten to Grade 3,” she said. “And why Kindergarten to Grade 3 is important is because that’s when you’re learning to read, and after grade three, you’re actually using reading to learn. And so if by that point you haven’t learned how to read, it’s really going to start setting you back.”

Nichols said the language in the bill is too restrictive, specifically when it refers to “reading specialists,” who would teach the students, in that some literacy teachers could be deemed unqualified under that language.

Nichols also noted S.204’s language regarding literacy screeners themselves could result in ineffective and/or corrupt programs under the bill’s guidelines. 

“Let’s be very careful about prescribing anything that would be considered curriculum or requiring a certain program to be used,” he told committee members, adding after, “There are a ton of commercial for-profit groups out there that sell screening programs, curriculum packages, make billions of dollars, who  claim to be able to produce better reading results and often develop their own paid-for research that supports their product.”

Other education specialists representing the Vermont Superintendent Association, Vermont Agency of Education and The Union Of Vermont Educators made suggested changes to the bill’s language, arguing they’re too strict. 

Most of the concern boils down to how the new guidelines could harm schools that are currently using their own screenings and intervention methods, because it would force them to rework their systems if they don’t align with the bill’s language, Gwen Carmoli, chair of the Vermont Curriculum Leaders Association, said to committee members on Jan. 5. 

Cynthia Gardner-Morse, a private literacy tutor in Vermont, expressed her support for the bill at the meeting Jan. 5. Citing a study from the National Assessment of Educational Progress that measured Vermont students reading levels on a numbered scale, Gardner-Morse told lawmakers just 9% of students in Vermont classified as advanced and 66% were below proficient. 

The study’s numerical scale ranges from 0–500 and, based on the student’s score, categorizes them into three groups: below proficient, basic and advanced. Each level comes with an outline of what the student’s reading capabilities should be to meet the mark. 

“This reading crisis is not the fault of teachers,” Gardner-Morse told committee members. “It’s the fault of the entire system.” 

Dorinne Dorfman, principal at Champlain Elementary School, wants the state to take action — and she thinks S.204 is a solid first step. 

Dorfman told committee members at the same meeting that reading struggles are more prevalent than ever. Literacy tests are accurate, and implementing them will make positive change, she said.

“I urge you to go into any school and experience what most of our teachers are enduring every day. Come in and watch children try to write a complete sentence, try to spell a multisyllabic word,” Dorfman told committee members, adding later, “You will feel the urgency for change that I’m talking about.”

Most students with reading deficiencies have struggled since preschool or Kindergarten, and some don’t receive appropriate literacy screenings until they are seniors in high school, Dorfman said. She applauded the bill’s efforts to help students of all ages improve their reading skills. 

“We can’t ignore [older] kids,” she said. “We should never say, ‘Sorry, you’re too old to get help.’ Instead, S.204 says, ‘We see your struggle. We’re going to teach you to read and write at grade level and invest in the future you deserve’.”

S.204 continues to be discussed and amended in committee. If passed, the bill would take effect  July 1, 2024. Gulick made the level of urgency clear when she introduced the bill to Senate education committee members Jan. 5.

“There was a time when we were second in the nation for literacy, and now we are in the middle of the pack,” Gulick said.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

With cost of education driving voters, lawmakers feel pressure to respond

November 20, 2024
Dem lawmakers and governor defer to each other to take up proposals By Ethan Weinstein/VTDigger Vermonters cited affordability as a top priority in the 2024 election, and last week, they voted to send more Republicans to Montpelier than in recent decades.  Driving affordability concerns is the cost of education, which fueled this year’s average education property tax increase of 13.8%.…

VTrans announces new plow names and winner of long-wing contest

November 13, 2024
The Vermont Agency of Transportation (AOT) received 118 new names for its big orange plow trucks through this year’s Name a Plow program for Vermont schools. The agency also received 77 entries in the contest for schools to name the new plow truck that has a second plow spanning 21 feet and will be used…

Vermont’s regular deer season starts Nov. 16

November 6, 2024
Hunters are gearing up for the start of Vermont’s traditionally popular 16-day regular deer season that begins Saturday, Nov. 16 and ends Sunday, Dec. 1.  A hunter may take one legal buck during this season if they did not already take one during the archery deer season. “The greatest numbers of deer continue to be…

Hospitals report runs into furor over ‘major restructuring’ recommendations 

November 6, 2024
Analysis plunged state’s healthcare system into anxiety, uncertainty By Peter D’Auria/VTDigger Last month, a consultant released a sweeping report recommending significant changes for Vermont’s healthcare system, including “major restructuring” at four community hospitals. The 144-page state-commissioned document details a series of steps that Vermont’s hospitals should take to stay afloat, including repurposing inpatient units and downgrading emergency departments…