Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 6A-6.0533 - Determining a Substantial Deficiency in Early Mathematics Skills and Substantial Deficiency in Mathematics
(1) Purpose. The
purpose of this rule is to set forth the requirements for determining and
addressing a substantial deficiency in early mathematics skills for students in
a Voluntary Prekindergarten (VPK) educational program and a substantial
deficiency in mathematics for students in grades kindergarten through
4.
(2) Definitions.
(a) "District" means a Florida school
district or district school board, the Florida Virtual School (s.
1002.37, F.S.), the Florida
School for the Deaf and the Blind (s.
1002.36, F.S.), Developmental
Research (Laboratory) Schools (s.
1002.32, F.S.), and a university
or Florida College System institution (s.
1002.33(5),
F.S.) that sponsors one or more charter schools.
(b) "Voluntary Prekindergarten" (VPK) means a
state-funded program that covers the cost of a set number of hours of
prekindergarten instruction to children who turn four (4) years of age on or
before September 1 of the school year for which they are eligible to attend as
provided in Part V of Chapter 1002, F.S.
(c) "Trained tutor" means:
1. A high school student who meets the
following criteria:
a. Be a rising junior or
senior;
b. Have a cumulative grade
point average of 3.0 of higher;
c.
Have no history of out-of-school suspensions or expulsions;
d. Be on track to complete all core course
requirements to graduate;
e. Have
earned at least three (3) credits in mathematics; and
f. Have received two (2) written
recommendations to serve as a trained tutor from present or former high school
teachers of record or extracurricular activity sponsors; and
g. Have completed the Division of Early
Learning developed math professional learning course for tutors of students in
VPK or a district-identified training for tutors of students in grades K-4;
or
2. An adult who meets
the following criteria:
a. Complete the
Division of Early Learning developed math professional learning course, if
tutoring students in VPK; and
b.
Complete forty (40) hours of professional learning on instructional strategies
in grades K-4 math, if tutoring students in grades K-4.
(3) Planning for
Learning and Teaching of Mathematics. Mathematics instruction must align with
Florida's Mathematics Formula for Success. This formula, 5+5+T1+T2+T3,
describes five (5) characteristics of high-quality mathematics instruction,
five (5) types of assessments and three (3) tiers (T1, T2 and T3) of
mathematics instruction and intervention that promote student success.
(a) The five (5) characteristics of
high-quality mathematics instruction include: horizontal and vertical
alignment, balanced instructional approaches, student-centered, instruction
informed by assessment(s), and implementing tiered instruction.
(b) . The five (5) types of assessments are:
screening, progress monitoring (PM), diagnostic, formative and
summative.
(c) Tiered instruction
(T1, T2 and T3) includes Tier 1 provided to all students, supplemental or Tier
2 intervention for students needing additional support, and intensive or Tier 3
intervention for students whom data indicate a need for more intensive,
individualized instruction/intervention. Tiered instruction is
standards-aligned; includes accommodations for students with a disability,
students with an Individual Educational Plan (IEP) and students who are English
language learners (ELLs); and incorporates the principles of Universal Design
for Learning (UDL) as defined in Title 34 Code of Federal Regulations Section
200.2(b)(2)(ii). When data indicate that a student needs more intensive support
of Tier 2 or Tier 3, those interventions must be provided in addition to, not
in place of, Tier 1. Tier 2 and 3 interventions must be aligned with Tier 1 and
include additional instructional time focused on critical skills and content.
1. Tier 1 (core) instruction is instruction
that is accessible to all students. A Tier 1 intervention is a change or
adjustment made to core instruction for all students based on data. Tier 1
interventions are implemented when data indicate that the majority or a high
percentage of students in a large group (e.g., class, grade level, school) are
performing below expectation.
2.
Tier 2, or supplemental instruction and intervention, is provided to students
not meeting expectations. Tier 2 is often delivered to small groups of students
who will likely benefit from instruction focused on the same target skill(s).
Tier 2 occurs in addition to Tier 1 (core) instruction.
3. Tier 3, or intensive instruction and
intervention, is intended for students experiencing significant barriers to
learning. Tier 3 can be provided one-on-one or in very small groups. Tier 3
occurs in addition to Tier 1 (core) instruction and Tier 2.
(4) Substantial
Deficiency in Early Mathematics Skills. A VPK student is identified as having a
substantial deficiency in early mathematics skills as described below.
(a) If the student scores below the tenth
(10th) percentile at the middle (PM2) or the end of the year (PM3) test
administrations of the coordinated screening and progress monitoring system
pursuant to s. 1008.25(9),
F.S., or is unable to complete the practice items at the middle (PM2) or the
end of the year (PM3) test administrations of the coordinated screening and
progress monitoring system pursuant to s.
1008.25(9),
F.S.; and
(b) Through observation
and informal assessment has demonstrated achievement of twenty-five (25)
percent or less of the mathematical thinking standards adopted for use in VPK
programs per s. 1002.67, F.S.
(5) Substantial Deficiency in
Mathematics. A student in kindergarten through grade 4 is identified as having
a substantial deficiency in mathematics based upon a minimum of five (5) data
points as described below
(a) For
kindergarten, if the student scores below the tenth (10th) percentile on
various assessments including screening, diagnostic, formative, summative,
progress monitoring, or the coordinated screening and progress monitoring
system pursuant to s.
1008.25(6),
F.S.; and if the student has demonstrated minimum skill levels for mathematics
competencies in one or more of the areas of emphasis for that grade level. In
Kindergarten, areas of emphasis include:
1.
Developing an understanding of counting to represent the total number of
objects in a set and to order the objects within a set;
2. Developing an understanding of addition
and subtraction and the relationship of these operations to counting;
and
3. Measuring, comparing, and
categorizing objects according to various attributes, including their two- and
three-dimensional shapes.
(b) For grade 1, if the student scores below
the tenth (10th) percentile on various assessments including screening,
diagnostic, formative, summative, progress monitoring, or the coordinated
screening and progress monitoring system pursuant to s.
1008.25(6),
F.S.; and if the student has demonstrated minimum skill levels for mathematics
competencies in one or more of the areas of emphasis for that grade level. In
grade 1, areas of emphasis include:
1.
Understanding the place value of tens and ones within two-digit whole
numbers;
2. Extending understanding
of addition and subtraction and the relationship between them;
3. Developing an understanding of measurement
of physical objects, money and time and
4. Categorizing, composing and decomposing
geometric figures.
(c)
For grade 2, if the student scores below the tenth (10th) percentile on various
assessments including screening, diagnostic, formative, summative, progress
monitoring, or the coordinated screening and progress monitoring system
pursuant to s. 1008.25(6),
F.S.; and if the student has demonstrated minimum skill levels for mathematics
competencies in one or more of the areas of emphasis for that grade level. In
grade 2, areas of emphasis include:
1.
Extending understanding of place value in three-digit numbers;
2. Building fluency and algebraic reasoning
with addition and subtraction;
3.
Extending understanding of measurement of objects, time and the perimeter of
geometric figures; and
4.
Developing spatial reasoning with number representations and two-dimensional
figures.
(d) For grade 3,
if the student scores below the tenth (10th) percentile on various assessments
including screening, diagnostic, formative, summative, progress monitoring, or
the coordinated screening and progress monitoring system pursuant to s.
1008.25(6),
F.S.; and if the student has demonstrated minimum skill levels for mathematics
competencies in one or more of the areas of emphasis for that grade level. In
grade 3, areas of emphasis include:
1. Adding
and subtracting multi-digit whole numbers, including using a standard
algorithm;
2. Building an
understanding of multiplication and division, the relationship between them and
the connection to area of rectangles;
3. Developing an understanding of fractions;
and
4. Extending geometric
reasoning to lines and attributes of quadrilaterals.
(e) For grade 4, if the student scores below
the tenth (10th) percentile on various assessments including screening,
diagnostic, formative, summative, progress monitoring, or the coordinated
screening and progress monitoring system pursuant to s.
1008.25(6),
F.S.; and if the student has demonstrated minimum skill levels for mathematics
competencies in one or more of the areas of emphasis for that grade level. In
grade 4, areas of emphasis include:
1.
Extending understanding of multi-digit multiplication and division;
2. Developing the relationship between
fractions and decimals and beginning operations with both;
3. Classifying and measuring angles; and
4. Developing an understanding for
interpreting data to include mode, median and range.
(6) Notification to Parents.
(a) Parents of students with a substantial
deficiency in mathematics must be notified by the school district in writing of
the information listed in s. 1008.25(6)(c)1.-4., F.S., and consulted in the
development of a plan to address the deficiency as described in subsection (7)
of this rule.
(b) Timing of
Notification. The initial parental notification must occur immediately after a
school district determines that a student has a substantial deficiency and
identifies the student's specific area or type of deficiency with sufficient
specificity to tailor interventions.
(7) Required Plan and Interventions.
(a) Interventions. Student with a substantial
deficiency in early mathematics skills in a VPK educational program provided by
a public school or a substantial deficiency in mathematics in grades K-4 or who
exhibit the characteristics of dyscalculia must be provided with daily small
group intervention during the school day or supplemental interventions provided
before or after school or both, as described in s. 1008.25(6)(a)1. and 2., F.S.
1. Timing of Interventions. Interventions
must begin immediately after a school district determines that a student has a
substantial deficiency or exhibits the characteristics of dyscalculia and
identifies the student's specific area or type of deficiency with sufficient
specificity to tailor interventions.
2. Interventions Based upon Diagnosis. In
addition to identification of a student by a school district for interventions
based upon the criteria set forth in subsections (4) or (5) of this rule, the
requirement to provide interventions is triggered based upon receipt of written
documentation from a professional licensed under chapter 490, F.S., which
diagnoses a student with dyscalculia.
3. For grades K-4, supplemental interventions
provided before or after school must be delivered by an educator with a
bachelor's degree or higher who holds an active valid Florida Educator
Certificate as defined in s.
1012.56, F.S., or a trained
tutor as defined in paragraph (2)(c) of this rule. If the tutor is a student,
tutoring must occur on school district property in the presence and under the
supervision of instructional personnel who are school district employees and
only where a parent has provided written permission.
4. VPK supplemental interventions provided
before or after school must be delivered by an instructor who meets the school
year or summer prekindergarten instructor qualifications, in accordance with
sections 1002.55(3)(c)2.,
1002.61(4), and
1002.63(4),
F.S., or by an educator with a bachelor's degree or higher who holds an active
valid Florida Educator Certificate as defined in s.
1012.56, F.S., or a trained
tutor as defined in paragraph (2)(c) of this rule. If the tutor is a student,
tutoring must occur on school district property in the presence and under the
supervision of instructional personnel who are school district employees and
only where a parent has provided written permission.
(b) Progress Monitoring Plan. Except as
provided in paragraph (7)(c) of this rule, students identified with a
substantial deficiency in mathematics for grades Kindergarten through 4 must
have an individualized progress monitoring plan that is in writing, provided to
parents and designed to address the student's specific mathematics deficiency.
A progress monitoring plan must meet the following requirements:
1. The plan must include the information set
forth in s. 1008.25(4)(c),
F.S.;
2. The plan must include an
explanation of the timing of progress reports, which must be provided to
parents at least monthly, the process for a parent to request more
interventions and the process for a parent to request more frequent
notification of the student's progress;
3. The plan must include an explanation of
how the district will determine grade level proficiency for the purpose of
discontinuing interventions; and
4.
The plan must be developed as soon as the identification occurs as described in
subsections (4) or (5) of this rule and no later than forty-five (45) school
days after the results of the coordinated screening and progress monitoring
system become available.
(c) Exemption from Requirement for a Progress
Monitoring Plan. Students with qualifying disabilities addressed by an
Individual Educational Plan (IEP) under the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act or a 504 Plan under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
are exempt from the requirement to have an individualized progress monitoring
plan, if the IEP or 504 Plan addresses the student's mathematics deficiency.
Nothing in this rule should be construed to require or prohibit the development
or review of an IEP or 504 Plan or prescribe the contents of these
plans.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 1001.02(1),(2)(n) FS. Law Implemented 1008.25(6)(a) FS.
New 9-26-23.
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