Wisconsin Code § 118.016

Reading readiness assessments; characteristics of dyslexia
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(1) DEFINITIONS. In this section:
(a) “At-risk” means a pupil scored below the 25th percentile
on a universal screening assessment or diagnostic assessment, as
indicated by the publisher of the assessment.
(b) “Diagnostic assessment” means a tool that includes all of
the following:
1. An assessment that evaluates a pupil’s skill in the areas
listed in par. (L) 1. to 5., rapid naming, phonological awareness,
word recognition, spelling, vocabulary, listening comprehension,

and, when developmentally appropriate for the pupil, oral reading
fluency and reading comprehension.
2. An opportunity for a pupil’s parent to complete a family
history survey to provide additional information about learning
difficulties in the pupil’s family.
(c) “Dyslexia” means a specific learning disability that is all
of the following:
1. Neurobiological in origin.
2. 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. Consequences of these difficulties may include problems in reading comprehension and reduced reading experience
that may impede vocabulary growth and background knowledge.
3. Often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities.
(d) “Family history survey” means a questionnaire that includes questions about previous recommendations for summer
reading support or outside tutoring, general interest in reading
and books, family history of characteristics of dyslexia, and any
known family struggles in reading or spelling.
(e) “Fidelity” means to perform in the manner that the author
or publisher of a program or assessment intends.
(f) “Fundamental skills screening assessment” means an assessment that evaluates whether a pupil possesses phonemic
awareness and letter sound knowledge.
(g) “Inadequate rate of progress” means a pupil’s rate of improvement that is minimal and that with continued intervention
the pupil is unlikely to demonstrate grade-level skills by the end
of the school year.
(h) “Independent charter school” means a charter school established under s. 118.40 (2r) or (2x).
(i) “Intervention” means an intervention that is all of the
following:
1. Explicit, direct instruction that is systematic, sequential,
and cumulative and follows a logical plan of presenting the area
of deficit that targets the specific needs of the pupil without presuming prior skills or knowledge of the pupil.
2. Individualized instruction to meet the specific needs of a
pupil in a setting that uses intensive, highly concentrated instruction methods and materials that maximize pupil engagement.
3. Instruction that incorporates the simultaneous use of 2 or
more sensory pathways during teacher presentations and pupil
practice.
(j) “Parent” has the meaning given in s. 115.76 (12) (a).
(k) “Reading readiness assessment” means a fundamental
skills screening assessment, universal screening assessment, or
diagnostic assessment.
(L) “Universal screening assessment” means an assessment
that evaluates a pupil’s skill in all of the following areas:
1. Phonemic awareness.
2. Decoding skills.
3. Alphabet knowledge.
4. Letter sound knowledge.
5. Oral vocabulary.
(2) FOUR-YEAR-OLD KINDERGARTEN; SCREENING REQUIREMENT. Each school board and the operator of each independent
charter school shall annually assess the early literacy skills of
each pupil enrolled in 4-year-old kindergarten in the school district or in the independent charter school at least 2 times during
the school year using a fundamental skills screening assessment
selected by the department. The school board or operator of the
independent charter school shall ensure that the first screening
assessment is administered before the 45th day after the first day
of the school term and that the 2nd screening assessment is administered by the date that is 45 days before the last day of the
school term. The school board or operator of the independent
charter school shall ensure that assessments required under this
subsection are administered with fidelity.
(3) EARLY LITERACY ASSESSMENTS; 5- YEAR-OLD KINDERGARTEN TO 3RD GRADE. Each school board and the operator of
each independent charter school shall annually assess the early
literacy skills of each pupil enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten to
3rd grade in the school district or in the independent charter
school as follows:
(a) Universal screenings. Screen the pupil at least 3 times
during the school year using a universal screening assessment selected by the department. The school board or operator of the independent charter school shall ensure that the universal screening
assessments are administered at the following times during the
school year:
1. The first universal screening assessment is administered
before the 45th day after the first day of the school term.
2. The 2nd universal screening assessment is administered in
the middle of the school term, as determined by the school board
or operator of the independent charter school.
3. The 3rd universal screening assessment is administered by
the date that is 45 days before the last day of the school term.
(b) Diagnostic assessment. Assess a pupil using a diagnostic
assessment as follows:
1. No later than the 2nd Friday of November if a universal
screening assessment administered under par. (a) 1. indicates that
the pupil is at-risk.
2. Within 10 days after a universal screening assessment is
administered under par. (a) 2. if the universal screening assessment indicates that the pupil is at-risk.
3. Within 20 days after a teacher or parent who suspects that
the pupil has characteristics of dyslexia submits a request for a diagnostic assessment.
(c) Administering assessments with fidelity. Ensure that each
assessment required under this subsection is administered with
fidelity.
(4) PARENTAL NOTIFICATION. (a) Assessment results. A
school board or operator of an independent charter school shall
provide the results of a reading readiness assessment, in writing,
to a pupil’s parent no later than 15 days after the reading readiness assessment is scored. For purposes of providing results of a
reading readiness assessment under this paragraph, a school
board or operator of an independent charter school shall provide
at least all of the following to a pupil’s parent in the native language of the pupil’s parent:
1. The pupil’s score on the reading readiness assessment.
2. The pupil’s score in each early literacy skill category assessed by the reading readiness assessment.
3. The pupil’s percentile rank score on the reading readiness
assessment, if available.
4. The definition of “at-risk” and the score on the reading
readiness assessment that would indicate that a pupil is at-risk.
5. A plain language description of the literacy skills the reading readiness assessment is designed to measure.
(b) Special education information. If a diagnostic assessment
indicates that a pupil is at-risk, a school board or operator of an
independent charter school shall include information about how
to make a special education referral under s. 115.777 with the diagnostic assessment results provided to the parent under par. (a).
(c) Dyslexia information; certain pupils. If a school board or
operator of an independent charter school is required to assess a
pupil’s early literacy skills using a diagnostic assessment, a

school board or operator of an independent charter school shall
provide all of the following, in writing, to the pupil’s parent:
1. A description of the common indicators and characteristics of dyslexia.
2. Information about appropriate interventions and accommodations for pupils with characteristics of dyslexia.
(d) Early literacy remediation plan; availability. A school
board or operator of an independent charter school shall post its
early literacy remediation plan, as established under sub. (6), on
the school district’s or independent charter school’s website.
(5) INTERVENTIONS; AT-RISK PUPILS. (a) Personal reading
plans. If a pupil enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten to 3rd grade
is identified as at-risk based on a universal screening assessment
or diagnostic assessment, the school board of the school district
or operator of the independent charter school in which the pupil
is enrolled shall do all of the following:
1. Create a personal reading plan for the pupil that includes at
least all of the following:
a. The pupil’s specific early literacy skill deficiencies, as
identified by the applicable assessment.
b. Goals and benchmarks for the pupil’s progress toward
grade-level literacy skills.
c. How the pupil’s progress will be monitored.
d. A description of the interventions and any additional instructional services that will be provided to the pupil to address
the pupil’s early literacy skill deficiencies.
e. The programming using science-based early reading instruction, as defined in s. 118.015 (1c) (b), that the pupil’s teacher
will use to provide reading instruction to the pupil, addressing the
areas of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and
comprehension.
f. Strategies the pupil’s parent is encouraged to use to help
the pupil achieve grade-level literacy skills.
g. Any additional services available and appropriate to accelerate the pupil’s early literacy skill development.
2. Provide the interventions described in the pupil’s personal
reading plan to the pupil, as soon as practicable.
3. Monitor the pupil’s progress at least weekly using the
method described in the pupil’s personal reading plan to determine whether the pupil demonstrates an inadequate rate of
progress.
4. Provide a copy of the pupil’s personal reading plan to the
pupil’s parent and obtain a copy of the pupil’s personal reading
plan signed by the pupil’s parent.
5. After providing the interventions described in the pupil’s
personal reading plan to the pupil for 10 weeks, notify the pupil’s
parent of the pupil’s progress, as determined under the pupil’s
personal reading plan.
(b) Deadlines for plan creation. If a school board or operator
of an independent charter school is required to create a personal
reading plan for a pupil under par. (a) 1., the school board or operator shall prepare the personal reading plan as follows:
1. If the pupil is identified as at-risk based on a universal
screening assessment administered under sub. (3) (a) 1. or based
on a diagnostic assessment administered under sub. (3) (b) 1., no
later than the 3rd Friday of November.
2. If the pupil is identified as at-risk based on a universal
screening assessment administered under sub. (3) (a) 2. or 3. or
based on a diagnostic assessment administered under sub. (3) (b)
2. or 3., within 10 days after the applicable screening assessment
is administered.
(c) Inadequate rate of progress. For purposes of determining
whether a pupil demonstrates an inadequate rate of progress under par. (a) 3., a school board or operator of an independent charter school shall determine whether the pupil is likely to demonstrate grade-level skills by the end of the school year by assessing
one of the following:
1. For a pupil enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten, nonword
or nonsense word fluency and phoneme segmentation fluency.
2. For a pupil enrolled in 1st, 2nd, or 3rd grade, oral reading
fluency.
(d) Plan completion; 3rd grade. A 3rd grade pupil who has a
personal reading plan under par. (a) 1. is considered to have completed the personal reading plan if the pupil’s parent and the
pupil’s school agree that the pupil has met the goals outlined in
the personal reading plan and the pupil scores at grade-level in
reading on a summative assessment, as defined by the department
by rule.
(6) EARLY LITERACY REMEDIATION PLAN; SCHOOL DISTRICT
OR INDEPENDENT CHARTER SCHOOL. A school board or operator
of an independent charter school shall establish an early literacy
remediation plan for grades 5-year-old kindergarten to 3 that includes all of the following:
(a) The assessments the school board or operator of the independent charter school uses to satisfy the requirements under sub.
(3).
(b) A description of the interventions the school board or operator of the independent charter school uses to address characteristics of dyslexia.
(c) A description of how the school board or operator of the
independent charter school monitors pupil progress during interventions, including the frequency of monitoring pupil progress
during interventions and any assessment tools used to monitor
pupil progress during interventions.
(d) How the school board or operator of the independent charter school uses results of assessments required under sub. (3) to
evaluate early literacy instruction being provided in the school
district or at the independent charter school.
(e) A parent notification policy that complies with subs. (4)
and (5) (a) 4. and 5.
(7) REPORTING ASSESSMENT DATA. By no later than July 15,
2025, and each July 15 thereafter, a school board shall report for
each school and for the school district, and the operator of an independent charter school shall report for the independent charter
school, all of the following to the department:
(a) The number of pupils who were identified as at-risk as the
result of a fundamental skills screening assessment administered
in the previous school year.
(b) The number of pupils who were identified as at-risk as the
result of a universal screening assessment administered in the
previous school year.
(c) The number of pupils who were identified as at-risk as the
result of a diagnostic assessment administered in the previous
school year.
(d) The names of the diagnostic assessments used to assess
pupils in the previous school year.
(e) The number of pupils enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten
to 3rd grade who began receiving interventions during the previous school year, by grade.
(f) The total number of pupils enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten to 3rd grade who received interventions under a personal
reading plan during the previous school year.
(g) The number of pupils enrolled in 5-year-old kindergarten
to 3rd grade who exited interventions during the previous school
year, by grade.
(h) The number of pupils for whom a referral under s. 115.777
was made during the previous school year based on diagnostic assessment results provided to a parent under sub. (4) (a).

(8) DEPARTMENT; DUTIES. (a) Selected and approved reading readiness assessments. 1. By no later than July 15, 2024, and
subject to subd. 2., the department shall select a fundamental
skills screening assessment and a universal screening assessment,
and establish and maintain a list of diagnostic assessments that
are approved by the department for use under this section.
2. The department may select or approve an assessment under subd. 1. only if the assessment meets all of the following
criteria:
a. The assessment has a sensitivity rate of at least 70 percent.
b. The assessment has a specificity rate of at least 80 percent.
c. The assessment includes a growth measure.
3. The department shall publish a list of the assessments selected or approved under subd. 1. on its website and submit the
lists of approved assessments to the appropriate standing committees of the legislature under s. 13.172 (3). If the department modifies a list under subd. 1., the department shall submit the modified list to the appropriate standing committees of the legislature
under s. 13.172 (3).
(b) Reports to the legislature. By November 30, 2025, and by
each November 30 thereafter, the department shall compile the
information it receives under sub. (7) and submit a report to the
appropriate standing committees of the legislature under s.
13.172 (3) that includes the number of pupils identified as at-risk
in the previous school year, by school and by school district.
(9) STATE SUPPORT. (a) Payments and assessments. From
the appropriation under s. 20.255 (1) (f) and subject to par. (b),
the department shall pay a school board or operator of an independent charter school the per pupil cost of each reading readiness assessment required to be administered under sub. (3) (b).
Beginning in the 2025-26 school year, the department may pay a
school board or operator of an independent charter school under
this paragraph only if the school board or operator of the independent charter school does all of the following:
1. Submits the report required under sub. (7) for the previous
school year.
2. In the report required under sub. (7) for the previous
school year, indicates that the school board or operator of the independent charter school used only reading readiness assessments selected or approved under sub. (8) (a) for that school year.
(b) Proration. If the appropriation under s. 20.255 (1) (f) in
any fiscal year is insufficient to pay the full amount of aid under
par. (a), the department shall prorate state aid payments among
the school boards and operators of independent charter schools
entitled to the aid.
(c) Assessments. The department shall provide to each school
board and operator of an independent charter school the reading
readiness assessments required for the school board or operator to
comply with subs. (2) and (3) (a), at no cost to the school board or
independent charter school.
(10) ENFORCEMENT. (a) If a parent or guardian of a pupil enrolled in 4-year-old kindergarten to 3rd grade in a school district
or independent charter school believes that the school board or
operator of the independent charter school is not in compliance
with this section, the parent or guardian may file a complaint with
the department that describes the specific manner in which the
school board or operator is not in compliance with this section.
The department shall review a complaint received under this
paragraph and issue a determination on whether the school board
or operator is in compliance with this section. If the department
determines that a school board or operator of an independent
charter school is not in compliance with this section, the department shall notify the school board or operator of its determination and shall include in the notice the specific actions required
for the school board or operator to be in compliance with this
section.
(b) If the department determines under par. (a) that a school
board or operator of an independent charter school is not in compliance with this section and the school board or operator continues to fail to comply with this section, the complainant under par.
(a) may bring an action for injunctive relief or a writ of mandamus in circuit court to compel the school board to comply with
this section.
(11) RULES. The department may promulgate rules under
this section only on the following:
(a) A process to select or approve assessments under sub. (8)
(a).
(b) A process to request that a specific diagnostic assessment
be approved by the department.

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