By Ms. Jehlen, a petition (accompanied by bill, Senate,
No. 326) of Patricia D. Jehlen and John W. Scibak for
legislation to establish a deaf children's bill of rights.
Education. |
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. Chapter 6 of the General Laws is hereby amended by
inserting after section 198 the following section:—
Section 198A. The commission shall certify the sign language or oral/aural
communication proficiency of professionals and para-professionals
who are providing direct or related services pursuant to an individualized
education plan to deaf and hard of hearing pupils in the school. For the
purposes of this section, such direct and indirect service providers shall
include teachers of the deaf, speech therapists, counselors, interpreters, teaching
associates and others as appropriate.
The department of education shall acknowledge the commission certification
awards or acceptance by the commission of other certifying entities as meeting
communication proficiency standards within its certification process for said
educational personnel.
No person shall be employed by a school district in any of the positions
enumerated herein who has not been certified, but the department may issue a
temporary certification effective for up to three years-to an applicant seeking
certification under the provisions of this section, provided that the applicant
is pursuing an educational program to attain competence in communication.
SECTION 2. Section 1B of chapter 69 of the General
Laws, as appearing in the 2004 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting
after the 22nd paragraph the following paragraph:—
The board shall provide information to schools, through referral by the
commission for the deaf and hard of hearing children’s services specialists or
other appropriate persons concerning educational, medical, cultural and
linguistic issues of deafness and hearing loss to meet the individual
educational needs of deaf and hard of hearing children.
SECTION 3. Section 38G of chapter 71 of the General
Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended by inserting after the 20th paragraph
the following two paragraphs:—
Competence in sign language or oral/aural communication shall be a requirement
for initial certification as a teacher of students who are deaf or hard of
hearing. Such competence shall be verified through a communication proficiency
assessment certification process determined by the commission for the deaf and
hard of hearing.
Competence in interpreting shall be a requirement for initial certification by
the department for educational interpreters. Such competence shall be
determined by the commission for the deaf and hard of hearing.
SECTION 4. Chapter 71B of the General Laws is
hereby amended by inserting after section 3A the following section:—
Section 3B. As used in this section, the following terms shall have the
following meanings:
“American sign language”, the visual/gestural language used by deaf people in the United States and Canada, with semantic,
syntactic, morphological, and phonological rules which are distinct from
English;
“Deaf student”, an individual who has a severe or complete absence of auditory
sensitivity which adversely affects educational performance and which is so
severe that the student is impaired in processing linguistic information through
hearing, with or without amplification;
“English sign systems”, sign systems developed for educational purposes, which
use manual signs in English word order; sometimes with added affixes which are
not present in American sign language;
“Hard of hearing student”, an individual who has some absence of auditory
sensitivity with residual hearing, whether permanent or fluctuating, which
adversely affects a child’s educational performance but which is not included
under the definition of “deaf student” in this section;
“Individualized education plan (IEP)”, a written educational plan developed for
a student eligible for special education services pursuant to the Code of
Massachusetts regulations and the federal Individual with Disabilities
Education Act, 20 U.S.C.§ 1400 et seq;
“Primary communication mode, style, and language”, the communication mode,
style, and language which is preferred by and most effective for a particular
student, as determined by appropriate language assessment undertaken by
individuals proficient in the communication mode, style, or languages being
assessed. Communication mode may include one or more of the following systems
or methods of communication applicable to deaf or hard of hearing children:
(a) American Sign Language;
(b) English-based manual or sign systems; or
(c) Oral, aural, or speech-based training.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to appropriate screening
and assessment of hearing and vision capabilities and language and
communication needs at the earliest possible age and to the continuation of
intermittent screening services throughout their educational experience.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to early intervention to
provide for acquisition of a solid language base(s) developed at the earliest
possible age.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to have an education in
which their parents’/guardians’ full informed participation in determining the
extent, content, and purpose of all their educational planning and programs.
Children who are deaf and hard of hearing are entitled to have an education in
which teachers of the deaf and hard of hearing, counselors, psychologists,
speech therapists, diagnostic personnel, administrators, and other special
education personnel understand the unique nature of deafness and are
specifically trained to work with deaf and hard of hearing students.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to qualified teachers,
teacher aides, interpreters of the deaf and hard of hearing who have a
background in deafness, have demonstrated proficiency in the preferred language
mode of those children and are qualified based on standards as set forth by the
Massachusetts commission for the
deaf and hard of hearing.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to contact with and to be
exposed to adult role models who are deaf or hard of hearing in their
educational programs.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to receive an education
with a sufficient number of language mode peers with whom they can communicate
directly and who are of the same, or approximately the same, age and ability
level.
Deaf and hard of hearing children are entitled to have programs in which they
have direct and appropriate access to all components of programs services of
the educational process, including, but not limited to, extracurricular social
and athletic activities.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to placement best suited
to their individual needs, including, but not limited to age, hearing loss,
academic level, mode(s) of communications, style of learning, motivational
levels and family support.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to benefit from the
development and implementation of state and regional programs for children with
low incidence disabilities.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to up-to-date
technological devices and equipment, acoustic enhancements such as carpeting in
the classroom, assistive listening devices used alone or in conjunction with a
hearing aid such as audio loop and FM systems, visual technological support to
the classroom and school building.
Children who are deaf or hard of hearing are entitled to have the public fully
informed concerning medical, cultural, and linguistic issues of deafness and
hearing loss.
Each deaf or hard of hearing student shall have a determination of the least
restrictive environment that takes into consideration these legislative
findings and declarations.
SECTION 5. A person who is certified as a teacher of students who are deaf or hard of hearing shall demonstrate continued competency in sign language or oral/aural communication for instruction as a condition of renewal of certification in accordance with the provisions of section 38G of chapter 71 of the General Laws.
SECTION 6. The assessment for communication
proficiency in sign language and oral/aural communication accepted by the
department of education for certification of teachers of deaf or hard of
hearing students shall be determined or developed by the commission for the
deaf and hard of hearing.
The assessment for interpreting proficiency in sign language or oral/aural
communication accepted by the department of education for certification of
educational interpreters of deaf or hard of hearing students shall be
determined or developed by the commission for the deaf and hard of hearing.
SECTION 7. There is hereby established an advisory
council on the education of children who are deaf or hard of hearing consisting
of 14 members to be appointed by the board of education in consultation with
the commission for the deaf and hard of hearing, one of whom shall have
professional experience in using assistive technology; two of whom shall be
educators of deaf or hard of hearing students, one of whom shall be a regular
and effective user of American Sign language and one of whom shall be a regular
and effective user of oral/aural or speech based English; two parents of deaf
or hard of hearing students, one of whom is a regular and effective user of
American sign language and one of whom is a regular and effective user of
oral/aural or speech based English; two representatives of the deaf and hard of
hearing community, one of whom is a user of American sign language and one of
whom is a user of oral/aural or speech based English; two administrators of
college or university teacher training programs, one of whom shall use American
Sign language and one of whom shall use oral/aural or speech based English; an
administrator of a college or university program in interpreter training; two
administrators of programs or schools for deaf or hard of hearing students, one
of whom shall be an administrator of a program which uses American Sign
language, and one of whom shall be the administrator of a program which uses
oral/aural or speech based English; one shall be a representative of the
Massachusetts Registry of Interpreters for the deaf; and one shall be a
representative of the commission for the deaf and hard of hearing.
The council shall file a report with the clerk of the house of representatives
who shall forward the same to the joint committee on education on the first
Wednesday in July, of each year commencing with July 5, 2007. Said report shall include, but not be
limited to the following: the number of teachers certified pursuant to section
38G of chapter 71 of the General Laws, the number of deaf and hard of hearing
students accepting such instructions; the percentage and type of assistive
technology and other educational materials available, and such recommendations
as it may make to improve the amount and variety of such materials; and
findings and recommendations concerning the employment conditions of teachers
of students who are deaf or hard of hearing.