(1) As used in this section:
- (a) "Competency" means a demonstrable acquisition of a specified knowledge, skill, or ability that has been organized into a hierarchical arrangement leading to higher levels of knowledge, skill, or ability.
(b)
- (i) "Diagnosis" means a formal determination that an individual has dyslexia based on a comprehensive evaluation conducted by a qualified professional acting within the scope of the professional's license or credentials.
(ii) "Diagnosis" does not mean:
- (A) screening;
- (B) a recommendation from an educational professional to screen a student for dyslexia; or
- (C) results from a diagnostic assessment.
- (c) "Diagnostic assessment" means an assessment that measures key literacy skills, including phonemic awareness, sound-symbol recognition, alphabet knowledge, decoding and encoding skills, and comprehension, to determine a student's specific strengths and weaknesses in a skill area.
(d) "Dyslexia" means a learning disorder that:
(i) is neurological in origin and is characterized by difficulties with:
- (A) accurate or fluent word recognition; and
- (B) poor spelling and decoding abilities; and
- (ii) typically results from a deficit in the phonological component of language that is often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the provision of effective classroom instruction.
- (e) "Dyslexia assessment" means a diagnostic assessment for the identification of dyslexia or a psychoeducational evaluation for the diagnosis of dyslexia.
- (f) "Evidence-based" means the same as that term is defined in Section 53G-11-303.
- (g) "Evidence-informed" means the same as that term is defined in Section 53G-11-303.
- (h) "Qualified professional" means an individual who has specialized formal training in identifying and evaluating reading disorders, including dyslexia.
(i) "Qualifying dyslexia assessment" means a dyslexia assessment administered by an individual who is:
- (i) licensed under Title 58, Occupations and Professions;
- (ii) practicing within the scope of practice for the individual's license; and
- (iii) competent by training, education, and experience to administer the dyslexia assessment.
(j) "Screening" means the use of evidence-based measures to identify whether a student may:
- (i) be at risk for characteristics of dyslexia; and
- (ii) need additional assessment, progress monitoring, and intervention related to dyslexia.
- (2) The state board shall approve a benchmark assessment for use statewide by school districts and charter schools to assess the reading competency of students in grades 1 through 6 as provided by this section.
(3)
(a) A school district or charter school shall:
- (i) administer benchmark assessments to students in grades 1, 2, and 3 at the beginning, middle, and end of the school year using the benchmark assessment approved by the state board; and
- (ii) after administering a benchmark assessment, report the results to a student's parent.
- (b) A student's parent may provide the results of a qualifying dyslexia assessment to a school district or charter school.
(4)
(a) If a benchmark assessment, supplemental reading assessment, or qualifying dyslexia assessment indicates a student lacks competency in a reading skill, is demonstrating characteristics of dyslexia, or is lagging behind other students in the student's grade in acquiring a reading skill, the school district or charter school shall:
- (i) administer diagnostic assessments to the student;
- (ii) using data from the diagnostic assessment, provide specific, focused, and individualized intervention or tutoring to develop the reading skill;
- (iii) administer formative assessments and progress monitoring at recommended levels for the benchmark assessment to measure the success of the focused intervention;
- (iv) inform the student's parent of activities that the parent may engage in with the student to assist the student in improving reading proficiency;
- (v) provide information to the parent regarding appropriate interventions available to the student outside of the regular school day that may include tutoring, before and after school programs, or summer school; and
- (vi) provide instructional materials that are evidence-informed for core instruction and evidence-based for intervention and supplemental instruction.
- (b) Nothing in this section or in Section 53F-4-203 or 53G-11-303 requires a reading software product to demonstrate the statistically significant effect size described in Subsection 53G-11-303(1)(a) in order to be used as an instructional material described in Subsection (4)(a)(vi).
(5)
- (a) In accordance with Section 53F-4-201 and except as provided in Subsection (5)(b), the state board shall contract with one or more educational technology providers for a benchmark assessment system for reading for students in kindergarten through grade 6.
- (b) If revenue is insufficient for the benchmark assessment system for the grades described in Subsection (5)(a), the state board shall first prioritize funding a benchmark assessment for students in kindergarten through grade 3.
- (6) A student with dyslexia is only eligible for special education services if the student meets federal eligibility criteria.
(7)
(a) A school district or charter school may not discipline, retaliate against, or subject to adverse employment action an educational professional solely for recommending or referring a student for dyslexia screening, consistent with:
- (i) the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et seq.; or
- (ii) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 701 et seq.
- (b) An educational professional's recommendation that a student receive a dyslexia screening does not constitute a diagnosis of dyslexia.
Amended by Chapter 222, 2026 General Session