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Colorado bipartisan effort works to ease reading test burden for young English language learners

House Bill 1160 cleared its first legislative hurdle Monday with unanimous support from the House Education Committee

Justin Machado, 9, reads on his iPad during his 3rd grade class  at Ashley Elementary school in Denver on March 3, 2015.
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post
Justin Machado, 9, reads on his iPad during his 3rd grade class at Ashley Elementary school in Denver on March 3, 2015.
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Colorado lawmakers from both political parties are seeking to undo a controversial State Board of Education decision that called for schools to test thousands of Colorado’s youngest students in English — a language they are still learning.

House Bill 1160 cleared its first legislative hurdle Monday with unanimous support from the House Education Committee.

The bill would allow school districts to decide whether to use tests in English or Spanish to gauge whether students in kindergarten through third grade enrolled in dual-language or bilingual programs have reading deficiencies.

The bill is sponsored in the House of Representatives by Reps. Millie Hamner, a Frisco Democrat, and Jim Wilson, a Salida Republican.

If the bill becomes law, it would overrule a decision by the State Board of Education last year that required testing such students at least once in English. That meant some schools would need to test students twice if they wanted to gauge reading skills in a studentap native language.

The bill is the latest political twist in a years-long effort to apply the READ Act in Colorado schools that serve a growing number of native Spanish-speakers.

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Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organization covering education issues. For more, visit .

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