Las Vegas Review-Journal

Low scores setting up fight over 2015 law

- COMMENTARY

I FRead by Three had been in effect last year, more than 10,000 of this year’s fourth-graders might still be in third grade. Last month, Nevada’s Department of Education revealed that just 46 percent of the Clark County School District’s third- to eighth-graders are proficient in reading. While grade-level data haven’t been released yet, that is the same overall number as last year. At the end of the 2015-16 school year, just 46 percent of CCSD third-graders were proficient in reading.

Third-grade scores are especially important because third-grade students primarily learn to read. After third grade, student read to learn. An Annie E. Casey Foundation study found that students who aren’t proficient in reading by the end of third grade are four times more likely to drop out of high school.

That’s why the Nevada Legislatur­e passed Read by Three legislatio­n in 2015. It requires that schools hold back third-graders who aren’t proficient in reading based on a proficienc­y test. Good-cause exemptions will allow students to advance if they demonstrat­e proficienc­y in other ways. And the law doesn’t require schools to hold students back until the end of the 2019-20 school year.

While I was with the Nevada Policy Research Institute, I worked with Assemblyma­n Ira Hansen, R-sparks, on an amendment to start retention sooner. The Legislatur­e’s Republican leadership rejected the idea. Gov. Brian Sandoval wanted students that schools could retain to benefit from the bill’s additional reading programs.

That argument never made sense. If Read by Three helps — and evidence from Florida suggests it does — it would also be helpful right now for the new fourth-graders struggling to read at a third-grade level.

It also set up a major political problem. Parents are going to be upset the first year schools hold students back. If this had happened while Sandoval was in office, it wouldn’t have threatened the program. He would have defended the policy and wielded the veto pen. With Sandoval not being up for re-election, opponents would’ve had no political leverage. Parents and schools, realizing that this requiremen­t is real, would adjust. Reading would increase, and failure rates

JOECKS

would drop.

In Florida, after the legislatur­e put a similar requiremen­t in place, retention rates dropped from 13.5 percent to 5.6 percent in six years.

But Sandoval — and his veto pen — won’t be in the governor’s office in 2020 when the first retentions happen.

This is dangerous because the move to repeal Read by Three retention is already underway.

As chairman of the Assembly Education Committee last session, Tyrone Thompson, D-north Las Vegas, introduced a bill to do just that. It died after passing out of committee. The far-left Educate Nevada Now has called on lawmakers to “re-ex-

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