West Virginia Code § 18-20-10

Dyslexia and dyscalculia defined
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(a) The Legislature finds as follows:
(1) Reading difficulties are the most common cause of academic failure and
underachievement;
(2) There are many students who demonstrate significant weaknesses with reading, writing
and mathematics that are influenced by specific learning disabilities, including dyslexia,
dyscalculia, and related learning difficulties. Of those who are referred to special education
services in public schools, the majority are referred because of puroblems with language,
reading, writing, or a combination of each;
(3) Teaching reading effectively, especially to students experiencing difficulty, requires
considerable knowledge and skill. Informed and effectaive classroom instruction, especially in
the early grades, can prevent and relieve the severity of language difficulties, and
significantly improve literacy development; l
(4) For those students with specific learning disabilities, including dyslexia and dyscalculia,
who need specialized instruction, competeint intervention can lessen the impact of the
disorder and help the student overcome the most debilitating symptoms;
(5) While programs for specific learning disabilities, including dyslexia and dyscalculia, that
certify or support teachers, clinicians or specialists differ in their preparation
methodologies, teaching approaches and organizational purposes, they should ascribe to a
common set of professional standards for the benefit of the students they serve. Compliance
with such standards can assure the public that individuals who serve students with specific
learning disabilities i n public schools are prepared to implement scientifically based and
clinically provVen practices;
(6) The International Dyslexia Association (IDA) offers widely-adopted and consistent
standards to guide the preparation, certification, and professional development for teachers
of reading and related literacy skills in classroom, remedial and clinical settings; and
(7) The basis of ascribing to common standards to benefit students with specific learning
disabilities, including dyslexia and dyscalculia, requires recognizing common characteristics
of the disabilities. The Legislature finds that the definitions of dyslexia and dyscalculia
prescribed by the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-5-TR) are the appropriate measures for
recognizing characteristics of dyslexia and dyscalculia in students.
(b) The Legislature recognizes the following regarding dyslexia and dyscalculia:
(1) Dyslexia and dyscalculia are conditions that may be considered under the specific
learning disability category, and their definitions are consistent with IDEA and state board
policy. State board policy provides that "specific learning disability" means a disorder in one
or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language,
spoken or written, that may manifest itself in the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak,
read, write, spell, or to do mathematical calculations, including conditions such as
perceptual disabilities, brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia and developmental
aphasia;
(2) Dyslexia is an alternative term used to refer to a pattern of learning diffieculties
characterized by problems with accurate or fluent word recognition, poor decoding, and
poor spelling abilities. If dyslexia is used to specify this particular patterrn of difficulties, it is
important also to specify any additional difficulties that are present, such as difficulties with
reading comprehension or math reasoning; and
(3) Dyscalculia is an alternative term used to refer to a pattetrn of learning difficulties
characterized by problems processing numerical information, learning arithmetic facts, and
performing accurate or fluent calculations. If dyscalculia is used to specify this particular
pattern of mathematic difficulties, it is important also to specify any additional difficulties
that are present, such as difficulties with math reasoning or word reasoning accuracy.
(c) The state board shall:
(1) Develop a list of appropriate scregeners, early assessments, and professional development
that address and ensure that all students receive the necessary and appropriate screenings,
evaluations, and early assessments for specific learning disabilities, including dyslexia and
dyscalculia which contain information related to the following:
(A) Appropriate literacy and numeracy screening tools for identifying students who are at
risk for academic difficulty in reading and/or math, including dyslexia and dyscalculia, and
who require tiered intervention;
(B) Appropriate diagnostic assessment components that can be used to help identify and
diagnose;
(C) Appropriate evidence-based instruction and intervention strategies for students who are
at risk for academic difficulty in reading and/or mathematics, including students who exhibit
possible indicators of risk for dyslexia and/or dyscalculia;
(D) Appropriate accommodations for students who exhibit possible indicators of risk for, or
who have been diagnosed with, dyslexia, dyscalculia, and/or other specific learning
disabilities;
(E) Connecting a multi-tiered system of support framework to specific learning disability
identification; and
(F) The use of the terms "dyslexia" and "dyscalculia" in Individualized Education Programs,
and in evaluation reports by professionals qualified to render these diagnoses; and
(2) Explore options to assist any local educational agency (LEA) with acquiring approved
literacy and/or numeracy screening tools: Provided, That the local educational agency is
unable to acquire its own literacy and/or numeracy screening tools that are consistent with
state educational agency recommendations;
(3) Adopt and make publicly available guidelines for including dyslexia diagnostic evaluation
components in comprehensive assessments for special education and relateed services. These
guidelines shall:
(A) Recommend at least one person on each multidisciplinary evaluation team be
knowledgeable about dyslexia and be able to recognize when a duyslexia diagnostic
component should be requested in the evaluation process;
(B) Recommend that a diagnosis of dyslexia be given when the data from the comprehensive
evaluation components indicate such a diagnosis is apparopriate;
(C) Include recommendations for how to documentl a dyslexia diagnosis in an IEP; and
(D) Include that a Section 504 Plan be considered if a student has a dyslexia diagnosis but
does not qualify for special education serviices;
(4) Adopt and make publicly available a list of approved diagnostic assessment components
that can be used to help identify and diagnose dyslexia during comprehensive
multidisciplinary evaluations;
(5) Adopt and make publicly available guidelines and a list of resources for dyslexia
intervention practices that are evidence-based, including practices consistent with the
Science of Reading a nd Structured Literacy, that are explicit, direct, sequential, systematic,
and multisensVory;
(6) Adopt and make publicly available a list of recommended accommodations and
instructional practices to be used with students who exhibit signs of dyslexia or have been
diagnosed with dyslexia. These shall reflect contemporary research and guidelines of the
Science of Reading related to dyslexia. These recommendations shall include, but are not
limited to, structured literacy approaches that are explicit, direct, sequential, systematic,
and multisensory;
(7) Adopt and make publicly available a list of available professional development resources
that support evidence-based intervention for struggling readers, including the Science of
Reading and Structured Literacy. This list shall be made publicly available and include
resources endorsed or espoused by technical assistance centers, research organizations, and
professional associations that support the Science of Reading and Structured Literacy
regarding dyslexia, including the International Dyslexia Association; and
(8) Develop and make publicly available informational materials related to dyslexia for
parents and guardians that include information about the multidisciplinary evaluation
process, updated regularly.
(d) The local education agency shall:
(1) Develop a system for parents and guardians to annually receive digital and print
informational materials related to dyslexia;
(2) Ensure at least one educator at each school is trained to administer, score, and interpret
the data from the literacy screening instrument or instruments, and to recognize signs of
dyslexia;
(3) Notify parents of the results of these literacy screeners while emphasizing that not all
students who perform poorly on these screening instruments have dyslexia. Also, not all
students with dyslexia will perform poorly on the screeners;
(4) Provide evidence-based reading intervention to students who exhibit academic risk in
future reading performance, including indicators olf dyslexia;
(5) Conduct comprehensive assessments to determine eligibility for special education
services when a student does not respond or only minimally responds to intervention
strategies and/or when there is a suspected disability of dyslexia. If a determination is made
through the evaluation process that a student needs to be assessed for dyslexia, provide
assessment and diagnosis as necessary per West Virginia Department of Education
guidelines;
(6) Employ appropriate accommodations and instructional practices recommended by the
West Virginia Department of Education based upon the students' needs. When those needs
are related to dyslex ia, these accommodations and instructional techniques or strategies
shall also meeVt the West Virginia Department of Education-approved guidelines for dyslexia
accommodations and instructional practices;
(7) Require all elementary educators, special educators, reading interventionists or
specialists, and other personnel determined appropriate by the local education agency to
receive professional development on the possible signs of dyslexia and the related classroom
accommodations and instructional practices approved by the West Virginia Department of
Education;
(8) Administer a literacy screening instrument or instruments to students in grades 3-5 who
transfer from a local education agency where literacy screening instruments were not
administered. If the literacy screening instrument indicates a deficit in reading, the school
will provide intervention according to current policy. If a student does not respond or only
minimally responds to intervention, a referral for multidisciplinary evaluation shall be made;
and
(9) Require all appropriate personnel, as determined by the local education agency, to
annually receive professional development relating to the possible indicators for dyslexia
and dyscalculia, accommodations and modifications in the classroom environment, proper
instructional practices for educating students who exhibit possible indicators of risk for, or
who have been, diagnosed with dyslexia, dyscalculia, and/or other specific learning
disabilities. Local education agencies may create more than one module to satisfy the
requirements of this subdivision.
(e) The state board shall promulgate a rule pursuant to §29A-3B-1 et seq. ofe this code to
implement this section. In addition to other provisions to implement this section, the rule
shall at least include the following: r
(1) If a student is reading substantially below grade level accorduing to formal and/or
informal assessments, including benchmark assessments, and has never been evaluated for
special education, a request may be made by a school, parentt, or teacher for the
administration of an age- or grade-appropriate West Virginia Department of Education-
approved literacy screening instrument or instruments. These points of data may be used to
either start intervention and progress monitoring per West Virginia Department of
Education guidance, or make a referral for a special education evaluation;
(2) Acknowledgement that each local education agency may have one certified Literacy and
Numeracy Specialist in each local educational agency, or another appropriate professional
designated by relevant local educatigonal agency leadership, to be appropriately trained, or
be seeking appropriate training, in intervention, accommodations, and instructional
strategies for students with dyeslexia or a related disorder. The trained individual(s) shall
serve as an advisor and trainer for dyslexia and related disorders for the local educational
agency. The reading speLcialist(s) or other designated professional(s) shall have an
understanding of the definition of dyslexia and a working knowledge of:
(A) Techniques to help a student on the continuum of skills with dyslexia;
(B) Dyslexia characteristics that may manifest at different ages and levels;
(C) The basic foundation of the keys to reading, including multisensory, explicit, systematic,
and structured literacy instruction; and
(D) Appropriate interventions, accommodations, and assistive technology supports for
students with dyslexia.
(f) Legislative Oversight Commission on Education Accountability (LOCEA):
(1) The final draft of the state board's literacy and numeracy rule shall be submitted to the
Legislative Oversight Commission on Education Accountability (LOCEA) by August 1, 2023.
(2) The following shall be submitted to the Legislative Oversight Commission on Education
Accountability (LOCEA) annually:
(A) Disaggregated data concerning literacy and numeracy patterns statewide;
(B) Statewide interventions implemented; and
(C) The statewide professional development plan.
(3) Progress monitoring regarding K-2 screening and 3-8 formative assessments shall be
presented to the Legislative Oversight Commission on Education Accountability (LOCEA)
after data is collected for the beginning, middle, and end of the school year.

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