Dyslexia intervention bills move to house floor

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Bills that would help school districts identify and assist young students
with dyslexic traits and provide a mechanism to fund district support for those
students have passed the House Education Committee.

House Bill 187, sponsored by Rep. Addia Wuchner, R-Florence, would require the state
to provide districts with a “dyslexia toolkit” to guide instruction of students with
dyslexic traits. The toolkit would be ready next January, with districts required to
have policies in place by next June that would help identify and assist students
with dyslexic traits in kindergarten through third grade.

Three specific school districts would be selected to serve as “laboratories of
learning” by the Kentucky Commissioner of Education, with districts chosen from
urban, suburban and rural areas.

“We are going to work closely with these three districts to find good research
methodologies to really identify and be able to take to scale the lessons we learn,”
state Education Commissioner Stephen Pruitt told the committee.

Wuchner said HB 187 would not require screening of every student but would instead
provide tools to help districts assist students with “characteristics” of dyslexia,
she said.

Additionally, she said the bill would ensure that teachers are educated about
dyslexia at the university level as of 2020.

Funding for district support of students with dyslexic traits could come from HB
367, also sponsored by Wuchner. The bill would create a dyslexia trust fund
administered by the state to finance district grants. Money for the fund could come
from donations, gifts, public appropriations and proceeds from a “Dyslexia Ready to
Read” specialty license plate that the bill would establish.

Dyslexia, as it would be defined by HB 187, is a “specific learning disability”
marked by “difficulties with accurate or fluent work recognition and by poor
spelling and decoding abilities.”

Wuchner said dyslexia is believed to affect nearly 60,000 Kentucky students.

“That would be the size of one of our largest or second largest school districts
that may be affected by dyslexia,” she told the committee.

Testifying in favor of the bill was Miss Kentucky 2015 Clark Davis, who described
herself as having “very, very severe dyslexia.” Although Davis has excelled
academically and will graduate from the University of Kentucky this spring at age
20, she tearfully told lawmakers how dyslexia still affects her life.

“I had an exam in school last week and, for all of my accomplishments and for all
the gifts that the Lord has given me, I looked at that paper and I couldn’t read the
first two words,” she said. “And the worst thing about dyslexia is that you can’t
describe it-you can’t describe it to people who don’t have it.”

HBs 187 and 367 now return to the full House.