Elementary Home
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Required documents for New Students:
Completed enrollment packet
Immunization records
Social Secuirty Card
Utility bill for proof of enrollment
Native American Card (if applicable)
Custody documentation if restrictions are in place as a court order (if applicable)
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Dear 4th and 5th Grade Parents,
The State of Oklahoma requires each public school to test our students. This year, the 3rd, 4th and 5th grade assessment will be on-line (computer-based testing). The state assessment department has provided a simple test to help students familiarize themselves with the format. If you have internet access, you can help your student by logging on to help them practice.
To access the practice questions, click the following link and use the information below to login:
Grade 4-8 Practice Questions Login:
Username: practice
Password: testing
Also, in the constructive response (writing) questions, students are required to type their responses. In computer class, the HES students are working on keyboarding skills. Here is a website to help strengthen their typing skills at home.
Ms. Kathy Bailey, DTC (District Test Coordinator)
(918) 652-6587, Ext. 2260
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Every student enrolled in kindergarten, first, second, and third grades shall be assessed at the beginning and end of each school year using a screening instrument approved by the State Board of Education for the acquisition of reading skills including, but not limited to, phonological awareness, decoding, reading fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension, for the grade level in which enrolled. Any student who is assessed and found not to be meeting grade level shall be provided a program of reading instruction designed to enable the student to acquire the appropriate grade level of reading skills.
The program of reading instruction shall be based on scientific reading research and shall align with the State subject matter standards adopted by the State Board of Education, shall be based on a three tiered Response to Intervention (“RtI”) model. The plan may include, but is not limited to:
- Sufficient additional in-school instructional time sufficient for the acquisition of phonological awareness, decoding, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension,
- If necessary, and funding is available, tutorial instruction after regular school hours, on Saturdays, and during the Summer, however, such instruction may not be counted toward the 180 day or 1080 hour school year required by law;
- Assessments identified for diagnostic purposes and periodic monitoring to measure the acquisition of reading skills as identified in the student’s program of reading instruction.
- High-quality instructional materials grounded in scientifically based reading research and
- A means of providing every family of a student in prekindergarten, kindergarten, first, second, and third grade access to free online evidence-based literacy instruction resources to support the student’s literacy development at home.
A student enrolled in kindergarten, first, second, or third grades who exhibits a deficiency in reading at any time based upon the screening instrument shall receive an individual reading intervention plan no later than thirty (30) days after the identification of the deficiency in reading. The reading intervention plan shall be provided in addition to core reading instruction that is provided to all students. The reading intervention plan shall:
- Describe the research-based reading intervention services the student will receive to remedy the deficiency in reading,
- Provide explicit and systematic instruction in phonological awareness, decoding, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension as applicable,
- Monitor the reading progress of each student’s reading skills throughout the school year and adjust instruction according to the student’s needs; and
- Continue until the student is determined to be meeting grade-level targets in reading based on screening instruments or assessments.
The district strong readers plan shall be adopted and annually updated, with input from school administrators, teachers, and parents and legal guardians, and if possible a reading specialist, and which shall be submitted to and approved by the State Board of Education. This plan shall include a plan for each site that includes an analysis of data provided by the Oklahoma School Testing Program and other reading assessments utilized which outlines how each school site shall comply with the provision of the Strong Readers Act.
Beginning with the 2022-2023 school year, any student enrolled in kindergarten, first, second, or third grade who is assessed through the Strong Readers Act is not meeting grade level targets in reading after the beginning of the year assessment shall be screened for dyslexia. Screening may also be requested for a student by his or her parent or guardian, teacher counselor,
speech-language pathologist or school psychologist.
REFERENCE: 70 O.S. §1210.508A, et seq.