By: Toth, Meyer, Dutton, Anderson, Burrows, H.B. No. 3928
      et al.
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the screening of students for dyslexia and related
  disorders and a student's eligibility for special education
  services provided by a school district, including services for
  dyslexia and related disorders.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  This Act may be cited as the Beckley Wilson Act.
         SECTION 2.  Section 12.104(b), Education Code, as amended by
  Chapters 542 (S.B. 168), 887 (S.B. 1697), 915 (H.B. 3607), 974 (S.B.
  2081), and 1046 (S.B. 1365), Acts of the 87th Legislature, Regular
  Session, 2021, is reenacted and amended to read as follows:
         (b)  An open-enrollment charter school is subject to:
               (1)  a provision of this title establishing a criminal
  offense;
               (2)  the provisions in Chapter 554, Government Code;
  and
               (3)  a prohibition, restriction, or requirement, as
  applicable, imposed by this title or a rule adopted under this
  title, relating to:
                     (A)  the Public Education Information Management
  System (PEIMS) to the extent necessary to monitor compliance with
  this subchapter as determined by the commissioner;
                     (B)  criminal history records under Subchapter C,
  Chapter 22;
                     (C)  reading instruments and accelerated reading
  instruction programs under Section 28.006;
                     (D)  accelerated instruction under Section
  28.0211;
                     (E)  high school graduation requirements under
  Section 28.025;
                     (F)  special education programs under Subchapter
  A, Chapter 29;
                     (G)  bilingual education under Subchapter B,
  Chapter 29;
                     (H)  prekindergarten programs under Subchapter E
  or E-1, Chapter 29, except class size limits for prekindergarten
  classes imposed under Section 25.112, which do not apply;
                     (I)  extracurricular activities under Section
  33.081;
                     (J)  discipline management practices or behavior
  management techniques under Section 37.0021;
                     (K)  health and safety under Chapter 38;
                     (L)  the provisions of Subchapter A, Chapter 39;
                     (M)  public school accountability and special
  investigations under Subchapters A, B, C, D, F, G, and J, Chapter
  39, and Chapter 39A;
                     (N)  the requirement under Section 21.006 to
  report an educator's misconduct;
                     (O)  intensive programs of instruction under
  Section 28.0213;
                     (P)  the right of a school employee to report a
  crime, as provided by Section 37.148;
                     (Q)  bullying prevention policies and procedures
  under Section 37.0832;
                     (R)  the right of a school under Section 37.0052
  to place a student who has engaged in certain bullying behavior in a
  disciplinary alternative education program or to expel the student;
                     (S)  the right under Section 37.0151 to report to
  local law enforcement certain conduct constituting assault or
  harassment;
                     (T)  a parent's right to information regarding the
  provision of assistance for learning difficulties to the parent's
  child as provided by Sections 26.004(b)(11) and 26.0081(c) and (d);
                     (U)  establishment of residency under Section
  25.001;
                     (V)  school safety requirements under Sections
  37.108, 37.1081, 37.1082, 37.109, 37.113, 37.114, 37.1141, 37.115,
  37.207, and 37.2071;
                     (W)  the early childhood literacy and mathematics
  proficiency plans under Section 11.185;
                     (X)  the college, career, and military readiness
  plans under Section 11.186; [and]
                     (Y) [(X)]  parental options to retain a student
  under Section 28.02124; and
                     (Z)  the grievance policy and procedure regarding
  dyslexia intervention under Section 26.0111.
         SECTION 3.  Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by adding
  Section 26.0111 to read as follows:
         Sec. 26.0111.  POLICY ON COMPLAINTS REGARDING DYSLEXIA
  INTERVENTION. (a)  The board of trustees of each school district
  shall adopt a grievance procedure under which the board shall
  address each complaint that the board receives concerning:
               (1)  a violation of a right related to the screening and
  intervention services for dyslexia or a related disorder under
  Sections 29.0031 and 29.0053; or
               (2)  the implementation by the school district of the
  Texas Dyslexia Handbook, as published by the agency, and its
  subsequent amendments.
         (b)  The board of trustees of a school district that receives
  a complaint described by Subsection (a) shall submit the complaint
  to the agency, in the manner prescribed by the agency, for
  investigation by the agency in a manner that would satisfy the
  requirements of 20 U.S.C. Section 1415(b)(6).
         (c)  The policy adopted under Subsection (a) may not
  interfere with a parent's due process rights under the Individuals
  with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.).
         SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 29, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 29.0031, 29.0032, and 29.0053 to read as
  follows:
         Sec. 29.0031.  DYSLEXIA AND RELATED DISORDERS. (a)  In
  addition to the screening and testing for dyslexia and related
  disorders required under Section 38.003, a school district shall
  request consent from the parent of a student enrolled in
  kindergarten through grade 12 for a full individual and initial
  evaluation under Section 29.004 to evaluate the student for
  dyslexia or a related disorder if the district:
               (1)  suspects that the student has dyslexia or a
  related disorder;
               (2)  identifies the student as at risk for reading
  difficulties, including dyslexia and related disorders, using
  quantitative and qualitative data indicating that the student
  exhibits characteristics of a student with dyslexia or a related
  disorder or other specific learning disability; or
               (3)  removes the student from the student's assigned
  campus and the student is exhibiting academic difficulties in
  reading, spelling, or written expression or complex conditions or
  behaviors that may result from an undiagnosed learning disability.
         (b)  A full individual and initial evaluation under
  Subsection (a) must:
               (1)  assess a student for dyslexia and related
  disorders using:
                     (A)  best practices for identifying dyslexia and
  related disorders that are aligned with the knowledge and practice
  standards of the International Dyslexia Association; and
                     (B)  the process outlined in the Texas Dyslexia
  Handbook, as published by the agency, and its subsequent
  amendments; and
               (2)  consider associated academic difficulties and
  other conditions that regularly affect students with dyslexia and
  related disorders.
         (c)  During an evaluation of a student under this section, a
  school district shall ensure that the student:
               (1)  continues to receive grade-level appropriate,
  evidence-based core reading instruction; and
               (2)  is provided appropriate tiered interventions.
         (d)  A school district may not delay the evaluation of a
  student under this section based on the implementation of another
  intervention process for the student.
         (e)  On determining that a student is at risk for dyslexia or
  a related disorder, the student may be evaluated by a
  multidisciplinary team that includes at least one member with
  specific knowledge regarding the reading process, dyslexia and
  related disorders, and dyslexia instruction. The member must:
               (1)  hold a licensed dyslexia therapist license under
  Chapter 403, Occupations Code;
               (2)  hold the most advanced dyslexia-related
  certification issued by an association accredited by the
  International Multisensory Structured Language Education Council,
  including an academic language therapist with a master's degree and
  certified by the Academic Language Therapy Association; or
               (3)  if a person qualified under Subdivision (1) or (2)
  is not available in the school district at which the student is
  enrolled, hold documentation evidencing completion of dyslexia
  training regarding instructional strategies that are aligned with
  strategies for dyslexia instruction as established by commissioner
  rule, including the use of:
                     (A)  individualized, intensive, multisensory,
  phonetic methods; and
                     (B)  a variety of writing and spelling components.
         (f)  If a student is evaluated for dyslexia and related
  disorders by a licensed specialist in school psychology or a
  diagnostician for dyslexia or a related disorder, a determination
  that a student has dyslexia or a related disorder must be made in
  collaboration with a qualified person under Subsection (e). The
  qualified person shall sign the evaluation to affirm the person's
  participation in the evaluation.
         (g)  If a student's parent declines to consent to a full
  individual and initial evaluation of the student under Subsection
  (a), the school district must submit a statement to the agency
  documenting that the district has explained to the parent:
               (1)  the rights the parent is waiving under the
  Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400
  et seq.); and
               (2)  that the accommodations and dyslexia
  interventions offered under a plan created under Section 504,
  Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794) are available
  under an individualized education program under Section 29.005.
         (h)  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary to
  implement this section. The rules must include:
               (1)  a process by which a school district submits a
  statement to the agency each time a student's parent declines to
  consent to a full individual and initial evaluation of the student
  under Subsection (g); and
               (2)  requirements for annual training and signed
  affidavits to ensure hearing officers and school district board of
  trustees are aware and understand changes to the law, commissioner
  rules, and any updated guidelines from the State Board of Education
  related to dyslexia or a related disorder.
         Sec. 29.0032.  DYSLEXIA SPECIALISTS. (a)  A school district
  shall employ dyslexia therapists, practitioners, specialists, or
  interventionists to provide dyslexia intervention services to
  students with dyslexia and related disorders. A person employed
  under this subsection:
               (1)  must be fully trained in the district's adopted
  instructional materials for students with dyslexia; and
               (2)  is not required to hold a certificate or permit in
  special education issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21.
         (b)  The completion of a literacy achievement academy under
  Section 21.4552 by an educator who participates in the evaluation
  or instruction of students with dyslexia and related disorders does
  not satisfy the requirements of Subsection (a)(1).
         (c)  A dyslexia therapist licensed under Chapter 403,
  Occupations Code, is not required to hold a certificate or permit
  issued under Subchapter B, Chapter 21, to provide dyslexia
  intervention services or serve as a member of a multidisciplinary
  evaluation team for a school district under Section 29.0031.
         Sec. 29.0053.  DYSLEXIA INTERVENTION. (a)  If a student is
  determined, as a result of dyslexia or a related disorder, to need
  additional instruction that is not provided to students without
  dyslexia or a related disorder or additional instruction to meet
  the student's academic goals related to the required curriculum,
  the committee established under Section 29.005 shall:
               (1)  develop an individualized education program for
  the student under Section 29.005; and
               (2)  ensure that the individualized education program
  aligns with the processes established in the Texas Dyslexia
  Handbook, as published by the agency, and its subsequent amendments
  while meeting the individual needs of the student.
         (b)  If a student's parent declines to consent to the
  development of an individualized education program for the student
  under this section, the school district must submit a statement to
  the agency documenting that the district has explained to the
  parent:
               (1)  the rights the parent is waiving under the
  Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400
  et seq.); and
               (2)  that the accommodations and dyslexia
  interventions offered under a plan created under Section 504,
  Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794) are available
  under an individualized education program under Section 29.005.
         (c)  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary to
  implement this section. The rules must include a process by which a
  school district submits a statement to the agency each time a
  student's parent declines to consent to the development of an
  individualized education program for the student under Subsection
  (b).
         SECTION 5.  Section 28.006(g-2), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (g-2)  In accordance with a notification program developed
  by the commissioner by rule, a school district shall notify the
  parent or guardian of each student determined, on the basis of a
  screening under Section 29.0031 or 38.003 or another [other] basis,
  to be at risk for or have dyslexia or a related disorder, or
  determined, on the basis of reading instrument results, to be at
  risk for dyslexia or other reading difficulties, of the program
  maintained by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission
  providing students with reading disabilities the ability to borrow
  audiobooks free of charge.
         SECTION 6.  Section 29.003(b), Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b)  A student is eligible to participate in a school
  district's special education program if the student:
               (1)  is not more than 21 years of age and has a visual or
  auditory impairment that prevents the student from being adequately
  or safely educated in public school without the provision of
  special services; or
               (2)  is at least three but not more than 21 years of age
  and has one or more of the following disabilities that prevents the
  student from being adequately or safely educated in public school
  without the provision of special services:
                     (A)  physical disability;
                     (B)  intellectual or developmental disability;
                     (C)  emotional disturbance;
                     (D)  learning disability;
                     (E)  autism;
                     (F)  speech disability; [or]
                     (G)  traumatic brain injury; or
                     (H)  dyslexia or a related disorder.
         SECTION 7.  As soon as practicable after the effective date
  of this Act:
               (1)  the commissioner of education shall adopt rules
  necessary to implement this Act using a negotiated rulemaking
  process under Chapter 2008, Government Code;
               (2)  each school district shall notify the parent or
  person standing in parental relation to a student who has been
  identified as having dyslexia or a related disorder and who
  received dyslexia and instructional support under Section 504,
  Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29. U.S.C. Section 794), during the
  2022-2023 school year of the parent's or person's right to request a
  full individual and initial evaluation under Section 29.004,
  Education Code; and
               (3)  the commissioner of education shall develop and
  make available a model notice that a school district may use to
  provide the notice required by Subdivision (2) of this section.
         SECTION 8.  To the extent of any conflict, this Act prevails
  over another Act of the 88th Legislature, Regular Session, 2023,
  relating to nonsubstantive additions to and corrections in enacted
  codes.
         SECTION 9.  Not later than September 1, 2023, the Texas
  Education Agency shall provide additional training materials to
  school districts regarding the evaluation and identification of
  students with dyslexia or a related disorder in accordance with
  this Act.
         SECTION 10.  This Act applies beginning with the 2023-2024
  school year.
         SECTION 11.  This Act takes effect immediately if it
  receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
  house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.
  If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
  effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2023.