Legislature(2021 - 2022)BUTROVICH 205

02/19/2021 09:00 AM Senate EDUCATION

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Audio Topic
09:01:45 AM Start
09:02:27 AM Presentation: "national Landscape and Policy Trends in Early Literacy" by Education Commission of the States
10:02:26 AM SB8
10:30:35 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: TELECONFERENCED
"National Landscape and Policy Trends in Early
Literacy" by Tom Keily, Senior Policy Analyst
with Education Commission of the States and Ben
Erwin, Policy Researcher.
+= SB 8 PRE-K/ELEM ED PROGRAMS/FUNDING; READING TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+= SB 42 VIRTUAL AND EARLY EDUCATION, READING TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
         SB   8-PRE-K/ELEM ED PROGRAMS/FUNDING; READING                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:02:26 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR HOLLAND  announced the consideration  of SENATE BILL  NO. 8                                                               
"An Act relating  to early education programs  provided by school                                                               
districts;  relating  to  school  age  eligibility;  relating  to                                                               
funding   for  early   education  programs;   establishing  early                                                               
education programs  and a voluntary  parent program;  relating to                                                               
the duties of the Department  of Education and Early Development;                                                               
relating  to certification  of teachers;  establishing a  reading                                                               
intervention  program  for  public school  students  enrolled  in                                                               
grades  kindergarten   through  three;  establishing   a  reading                                                               
program  in the  Department of  Education and  Early Development;                                                               
establishing  a teacher  retention working  group; and  providing                                                               
for an effective date."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He called Senator Begich to the table.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
10:02:56 AM                                                                                                                   
At ease                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:03:11 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR HOLLAND reconvened the meeting.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:03:17 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR TOM  BEGICH, speaking as sponsor  of SB 8, said  he would                                                               
highlight the complex components of  the bill, the need for which                                                               
was  reinforced by  the earlier  presentation. He  said today  he                                                               
would talk about how the continuum  works and why it makes sense.                                                               
In 2019 he  started working with Governor  Dunleavy and Education                                                               
Commissioner  Johnson to  draft legislation  that would  build on                                                               
his earlier  pre-K bill and  also tie  that into reading.  He was                                                               
convinced  that  the  connection  between pre-K  and  reading  is                                                               
critical and that  support from the department  is also critical.                                                               
He  wanted a  bill to  turn the  curve on  reading in  Alaska and                                                               
ensure that every  child can read at grade level  by third grade,                                                               
a goal  shared by  all on  the committee. The  bill is  rooted in                                                               
evidence and research  and based on the successes  seen in states                                                               
like Oklahoma, Mississippi, Florida, Tennessee, and Colorado.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH  said that  to  turn  the curve,  investments  in                                                               
education  are necessary  today. The  results of  the investments                                                               
won't be seen overnight, but they  will be seen over time. It all                                                               
starts with  prekindergarten. Universal, voluntary pre-K  has the                                                               
ability  to  change  lives.  Research  shows  that  the  greatest                                                               
improvements  for  pre-K  students  are  amongst  those  who  are                                                               
economically disadvantaged  and dual language learners.  Over 100                                                               
languages are spoken in his  Anchorage district alone. Throughout                                                               
rural Alaska  and in the  state, many students are  dual language                                                               
learners.   This    disproportionately   impacts    the   poorest                                                               
populations in both rural and urban areas.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:06:17 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH said that  establishing universal, voluntary pre-K                                                               
across  Alaska  will  have significant  and  lasting  impact  for                                                               
children.  The   research  is  clear.  Pre-K   without  continued                                                               
investments in evidence-based reading  instruction does not work,                                                               
and the state will not  see gains from high-quality pre-K without                                                               
substantial reading instruction. Both  are required and must work                                                               
side-by-side.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH noted that he  provided the research the committee                                                               
has asked  for. This includes the  Alaska pre-elementary research                                                               
compilation  and  the  multigenerational Perry  Preschool  study.                                                               
This  shows four  key outcomes:  fewer  teen pregnancies,  higher                                                               
likelihood  of  high  school  graduation,  higher  likelihood  of                                                               
holding  a  job with  higher  earnings,  and less  likelihood  of                                                               
needing state  support programs.  He highlighted a  document that                                                               
includes the  Perry Preschool and  also the  Carolina Abecedarian                                                               
Project. The committee packet contains  many other reports on the                                                               
effect of  universal pre-K. He  noted that some of  these studies                                                               
were referenced in the earlier presentation.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:08:42 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH said  that from his perspective  the pre-K element                                                               
was key, but  the learning process in working  with the governor,                                                               
commissioner, and  superintendents has helped him  understand the                                                               
full  relationship  between  the  reading  component,  the  pre-K                                                               
component, and the support for  teachers, which was emphasized in                                                               
the prior presentation,  to ensure that they can do  the job they                                                               
are being asked  to do. Practically, this means  the fiscal notes                                                               
will  look different.  The  pre-K early  education  program is  a                                                               
high-quality program  to prepare students for  reading readiness,                                                               
allowing students to enter kindergarten  armed with the knowledge                                                               
and tools for future academic success.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH  said studies  the state has  done show  that when                                                               
this  pre-K was  provided,  whether  in Nome  or  Mat-Su, it  has                                                               
always  led  to greater  achievement  by  third grade  and  those                                                               
achievements  hold  by eighth  grade.  That  pre-K experience  is                                                               
limited in Alaska. Thirty-five school  districts offer some level                                                               
of pre-K through  state and federal grants. SB 8  takes away that                                                               
uncertainty and  gives every school district  opportunity to join                                                               
or not join  a pre-K program. It is voluntary  and only for four-                                                               
and five-year-olds.  It does not  compete with the 17  Head Start                                                               
programs  in Alaska.  It holds  them harmless  and ensures  local                                                               
control  of  pre-K  programs. It  sets  universal  standards  but                                                               
control remains at the local level.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH  said  a  crucial  element of  the  bill  is  the                                                               
investment to  prepare teachers.  The Perry Preschool  study says                                                               
that high-quality preschool  can save up to $7  [for every dollar                                                               
spent] in  long-term government expense  by reducing the  need of                                                               
remedial education,  involvement in the criminal  justice system,                                                               
and  public assistance  programs. He  asked, "If  we don't  offer                                                               
opportunity to our  kids, what are we doing  with our educational                                                               
system?"                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:11:35 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH said  SB 8 offers school districts  the ability to                                                               
develop  high   quality,  early   education  programs   that  are                                                               
culturally  appropriate and  tailored to  the students  through a                                                               
three-year grants  process based on Alaska's  current, successful                                                               
pre-K  efforts. In  year  one  the lowest  10  percent of  school                                                               
districts, the first  cohort, would be eligible to  apply for the                                                               
three-year grants.  The second  cohort would  begin in  year two,                                                               
and the  third cohort in year  three, etc. The program  is spread                                                               
over six years  to reduce the impact and focus  on where the need                                                               
is greatest.  It is an eased-in  process that is also  a terminal                                                               
process. After  every district has  been offered  the opportunity                                                               
[to develop a pre-K], the grant program terminates.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH said  that during  the three  years of  the grant                                                               
program,  the districts  will work  on  developing programs  with                                                               
high  quality elements.  Those are  detailed in  the bill.  Early                                                               
education  capacity will  systemically be  built in  those lowest                                                               
performing  school  districts with  limited  or  no pre-K.  Pre-K                                                               
potentially could reach virtually every  student in the state. He                                                               
stressed that  pre-K will be  voluntary and high quality.  No one                                                               
is forced in this bill to put a child in pre-K.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH  said that  the fiscal note  is higher  because it                                                               
reflects  every  district  taking   advantage  of  this  program,                                                               
although not  every district will  take part in the  program. The                                                               
districts  that have  a pre-K  program that  the department  will                                                               
sign off  on will  count pre-K  students as one  half of  an ADM,                                                               
Average Daily Membership.  They will count as half  of a student.                                                               
DEED  must  certify that  the  pre-K  program meets  the  highest                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:14:26 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  BEGICH  said  the  second  part of  the  bill  is  about                                                               
parental and  local control  in the  process of  helping children                                                               
learn to  read. He and Senator  Hughes both share this  desire to                                                               
make reading work for kids. They  have been working on this issue                                                               
and came to the same  conclusion from different angles. They want                                                               
to  improve the  lives of  children.  The two  components of  the                                                               
reading  program are  the intervention  services and  the reading                                                               
program. The earlier presentation  showed that assessments early-                                                               
on  make a  difference in  reading. Those  assessments must  come                                                               
with an  individual reading program  for each student  to respond                                                               
to  reading  deficiencies.  Parents and  classroom  teachers  are                                                               
engaged in  that process. The  state lays out the  best practices                                                               
based on science. The teachers and  parents figure out how to use                                                               
those so  a child can read  by third grade. These  two components                                                               
are  key   to  successful  outcomes   by  eighth  grade   and  by                                                               
graduation.  It will  take years  to see  the outcomes,  but some                                                               
will be seen fairly soon. Pre-K data from the state shows that.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:16:23 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH said  teachers must be prepared to  do their jobs.                                                               
This  is  the  component  that   the  governor  and  commissioner                                                               
stressed with  him. It is a  piece that he had  missed. The state                                                               
should provide support for reading  programs for districts, which                                                               
it  is required  to do  by  the constitution  and law.  Up to  10                                                               
struggling schools  in this bill  can apply for  an on-the-ground                                                               
reading  interventionist  who  will  come from  the  state.  That                                                               
specialist will be  present in the school district for  a year to                                                               
train up  the workforce.  The research-based  reading instruction                                                               
is  focused   on  the  five   components  of   reading:  phonemic                                                               
awareness,  phonics,   vocabulary,  comprehension,   and  reading                                                               
fluency.  Reading  specialists  train teachers,  model  evidence-                                                               
based  reading  instruction,  convene community  gatherings,  and                                                               
provide  reading  interventions  for  struggling  students.  DEED                                                               
reading intervention specialists funded  with a five-year federal                                                               
grant will also  support existing school staff,  engage and build                                                               
community understanding  of the evidence-based  reading programs,                                                               
and  work  with  local  teachers and  support  staff  to  improve                                                               
reading scores.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:17:50 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH  said it is a  continuum. No one component  can do                                                               
it alone.  Both pre-K and  a good reading program  are necessary.                                                               
The evidence  in North Carolina  and Tennessee  underscores that.                                                               
Those studies are  in the documentation he  provided. Pre-K alone                                                               
would fail  just as  reading without  supports to  train teachers                                                               
how to teach reading or  without ensuring that kids come prepared                                                               
to understand the reading instruction would also fail.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH  said that  is  why  he,  the governor,  and  the                                                               
commissioner wrote their principles on  a board almost a year and                                                               
a half  ago to combine these  things. It costs money  to do this.                                                               
That  resource  is something  the  legislature  has been  talking                                                               
about this year, but this senate  will support a lot of different                                                               
ideas  but  very  few  will   potentially  transform  the  entire                                                               
population of the state. Legislators  have talked about education                                                               
being   transformative.   The   leadership  on   this   committee                                                               
represents  a  vision of  education  in  this body.  That  vision                                                               
should be  comprehensive. SB 8  and SB 42 underscore  that. These                                                               
are  comprehensive  approaches  that are  designed  to  transform                                                               
education.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  suggested presenting the sectional  at a different                                                               
time to allow for testimony.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH expressed his preference  to hear from the invited                                                               
guests.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND called on Commissioner Johnson to comment on SB 8.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:20:51 AM                                                                                                                   
MICHAEL  JOHNSON, Ph.D.,  Commissioner,  Department of  Education                                                               
and Early Development, Juneau, Alaska,  thanked the committee for                                                               
working together  on reading legislation. They  have been working                                                               
on this  for a  number of  years. They  do not  need a  bill that                                                               
makes a statement. They need a  bill that makes a change. If they                                                               
believe  reading is  that important,  then there  is no  state in                                                               
this country  that needs  to be more  aggressive in  facing their                                                               
problems  because  the outcomes  are  so  low. Every  moment  the                                                               
committee spends  on this issue  is important. Several  years ago                                                               
the State  Board of  Education endorsed  that kind  of aggressive                                                               
approach  by making  it the  number  one priority  in the  Alaska                                                               
Education Challenge. SB  8 and SB 42 both have  three parts. Some                                                               
students don't arrive at kindergarten  ready to learn how to read                                                               
and  need prekindergarten  supports. Some  need in-school  pre-K,                                                               
some need  supports such  as from Parents  as Teachers.  Some may                                                               
not need any  of those and have access  to literacy opportunities                                                               
at home. That is why it is  voluntary. If the state invests a lot                                                               
in pre-K,  the state  has to  invest in  programs of  quality and                                                               
must   follow   it   up    with   evidence-based   practice   and                                                               
accountability. Some schools need  intensive supports in order to                                                               
provide quality  learning programs. Yesterday the  country landed                                                               
another rover  on Mars. As he  watched the team celebrate  on TV,                                                               
he  thought that  all of  the many  team members  had learned  to                                                               
read, and  probably by  third grade.  He hopes  that all  of them                                                               
could work  together on a  bill that  makes change so  that every                                                               
student in the  state can know what it is  like to celebrate that                                                               
kind of achievement. It begins with learning to read.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:25:12 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR STEVENS commented that the  commissioner is right; change                                                               
is required because  the state has such problems.  He asked where                                                               
the state is succeeding in pre-K.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON  responded  that   some  great  things  are                                                               
happening  across  the  state. Many  districts  have  implemented                                                               
quality pre-K programs. The state  board adopted new Alaska Early                                                               
Learning Guidelines  to support quality pre-K.  The department is                                                               
trying to move  forward as the legislature works on  a bill. Some                                                               
districts have district-supported programs.  There are Head Start                                                               
programs  and some  private early  learning  programs. There  are                                                               
programs such as Best Beginnings.  Through some of the settlement                                                               
agreements, studies  have been done  on impacts of pre-K  on some                                                               
of  the rural  districts,  namely Lower  Kuskokwim.  That can  be                                                               
provided  to  the  committee. Targeted  pre-K  programs  do  help                                                               
students  arrive at  kindergarten ready  to  learn to  be on  the                                                               
trajectory  of reading  proficiency by  the end  of third  grade.                                                               
Even  in the  last few  months, elevating  this conversation  has                                                               
resulted in  some districts focusing  resources and  attention on                                                               
developing strong K-3 reading programs.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND reported that 35  of 54 districts offer some pre-K.                                                               
He asked the commissioner how many schools offer pre-K.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON  replied  he   would  follow  up  with  the                                                               
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH estimated that about  10 percent of kids who would                                                               
be eligible are currently in some form of a pre-K program.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON  responded that it  depends on what  type of                                                               
pre-K is included in that statistic.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH said  he stresses  the quality  of pre-K  because                                                               
there can  be haphazard  pre-K programs.  The governor  asked him                                                               
from day one what he meant  by pre-K and he replied quality pre-K                                                               
with evidence that it  is doing what it says. That  is why he and                                                               
the governor were able to come to common ground.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:29:15 AM                                                                                                                   
At ease                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:29:58 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR HOLLAND asked the remaining  invited testifiers to speak at                                                               
another meeting. He held SB 8 in committee.                                                                                     

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
ECS - Alaska Senate Ed Policy Resources.pdf SEDC 2/19/2021 9:00:00 AM
K-3 Literacy_AK_Senate_Feb_2021_Final.pdf SEDC 2/19/2021 9:00:00 AM