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Bill narrowing statewide testing window draws bipartisan stakeholder support, presenters say
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Summary
House Bill 20‑32 would change the statewide assessment testing window, reporting deadlines, and clarify third‑grade intervention requirements; the Senate amendment lengthened the maximum testing window and adjusted timing, and the presenter said stakeholders that opposed the bill have shifted to support.
Michael Lynn presented House Bill 20‑32, which alters the statewide assessment testing window and the deadlines by which local education agencies must receive statewide assessment scores and data. The presenter said the bill removes the Department of Education's ability to modify the testing window with State Board of Education approval in certain circumstances and clarifies intervention requirements for third‑grade students who do not demonstrate sufficient reading skills but are not retained.
The Senate amendment prohibits the testing window from being longer than six consecutive school weeks (rather than four) and restricts administration of grades 3–8 statewide assessments before April. The presenter said the sponsor concurs and that organizations previously signed in opposed have shifted to support the bill.
Why it matters: the changes affect district assessment schedules, data‑reporting timelines, and the process for reading interventions for third‑grade students. Stakeholder movement toward support suggests negotiated changes addressed prior objections.
