Question 33 in The Dyslexia Handbook asks, “What factors must the ARD or Section 504 committee consider before providing a student dyslexia services?”
The IDEA evaluation requirements for eligibility in 34 C.F.R. §300.309(a)(1) specifically designate the following areas for a learning disability in reading: basic reading skills (dyslexia), reading fluency skills, and/or reading comprehension.
If the student with dyslexia is found eligible for special education, the student’s individualized education program (IEP) must include appropriate reading instruction. Appropriate reading instruction includes the components and delivery of dyslexia instruction listed in Chapter IV: Critical, Evidence-based Components of Dyslexia Instruction.
Based on the data, if the Section 504 committee determines that weaknesses are indicated in reading and spelling, the committee, based on the student’s pattern of performance over time, test profile, and response to instruction, will determine the intervention plan. Refinement of that plan will occur as the student’s response to instruction is observed. If the student with dyslexia is found eligible for Section 504, the student’s Section 504 Plan must include appropriate reading instruction. Appropriate reading instruction includes the components and delivery of dyslexia instruction listed in Chapter IV: Critical, Evidence-based Components of Dyslexia Instruction.
- The observations of the teacher, district or charter school staff, and/or parents/guardians
- Data gathered from the classroom, including student work and the results of classroom measures, and information found in the student’s cumulative folder (including the developmental and academic history of the student)
- Data-based documentation of student progress during instruction/intervention
- The results of administered assessments
- Language Proficiency Assessment Committee (LPAC) documentation, when applicable
- All other accumulated data regarding the development of the student’s learning
“Districts or charter schools must establish written procedures for assessing students for dyslexia. The first step in the evaluation process, data gathering, should be an integral part of the district’s or charter school’s process for any student exhibiting learning difficulties” (The Dyslexia Handbook, 2018, 25).
The whole picture of the student is important. The collection of data from multiple sources will assist with determining reading and spelling abilities and difficulties.
Environmental and Socioeconomic Factors
Language and literacy experiences may be affected by socioeconomic, environmental, and cultural factors. Just as it is important to determine that a student’s reading difficulties are not due to a lack of appropriate instruction, it is also important to determine that reading difficulties are not due to the student’s environmental and/or socioeconomic background. For example, the Dyslexia Handbook (26) explores the Hart and Risley (1995) study that found that three-year-old children from different socioeconomic backgrounds had varied cumulative vocabulary development.
Children from professional families had 1,100 words compared to children from lower socioeconomic levels who had as few as 500 words indicating home vocabulary experiences have an effect on young children’s language acquisition. Collecting data about environmental and socioeconomic factors helps determine whether a student’s reading struggles are due to dyslexia or a lack of opportunity.
(Hart and Risley, 1995)