Nevada Code § 388.417

Definitions
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As
used in NRS 388.417 to 388.515 , inclusive:
1. Communication mode means any system
or method of communication used by a person with a disability, including,
without limitation, a person who is deaf or whose hearing is impaired, to
facilitate communication which may include, without limitation:
(a) American Sign Language;
(b) English-based manual or sign systems;
(c) Oral and aural communication;
(d) Spoken and written English, including speech
reading or lip reading; and
(e) Communication with assistive technology
devices.
2. Dyslexia means a neurological
learning disability characterized by difficulties with accurate and fluent word
recognition and poor spelling and decoding abilities that typically result from
a deficit in the phonological component of language.
3. Dyslexia intervention means
systematic, multisensory intervention offered in an appropriate setting that is
derived from evidence-based research.
4. Individualized education program has
the meaning ascribed to it in 20 U.S.C. 1414(d)(1)(A).
5. Individualized education program team
has the meaning ascribed to it in 20 U.S.C. 1414(d)(1)(B).
6. Provider of special education means a
school within a school district or charter school that provides education or
services to pupils with disabilities or any other entity that is responsible
for providing education or services to a pupil with a disability for a school
district or charter school.
7. Pupil who receives early intervening
services means a person enrolled in kindergarten or grades 1 to 12, inclusive,
who is not a pupil with a disability but who needs additional academic and
behavioral support to succeed in a regular school program.
8. Pupil with a disability means a
child with a disability, as that term is defined in 20 U.S.C. 1401(3)(A),
who is under 22 years of age.
9. Response to scientific, research-based
intervention means a collaborative process which assesses a pupils response
to scientific, research-based intervention that is matched to the needs of a
pupil and that systematically monitors the level of performance and rate of
learning of the pupil over time for the purpose of making data-based decisions
concerning the need of the pupil for increasingly intensified services.
10. Specific learning disability means a
disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in
understanding or using spoken or written language which is not primarily the
result of a visual, hearing or motor impairment, intellectual disability,
serious emotional disturbance, or an environmental, cultural or economic
disadvantage. Such a disorder may manifest itself in an imperfect ability to
listen, think, speak, read, write, spell or perform mathematical calculations.
The term includes, without limitation, perceptual disabilities, brain injury,
minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia and developmental aphasia.

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