Mirror Indy: Cellphones, reading, state testing: See what’s new as Indiana students head back to school

A desk sits empty at the end of the school day Feb. 27 at East Washington Academy in Muncie, Indiana. This classroom belongs to a first-grade class in the Muncie Community Schools. Mya Cataline, DN
A desk sits empty at the end of the school day Feb. 27 at East Washington Academy in Muncie, Indiana. This classroom belongs to a first-grade class in the Muncie Community Schools. Mya Cataline, DN

Across the state, students are heading back to school.

With a new school year comes new rules about cellphones in classrooms, a new pilot program for shorter but more frequent state testing, and a new policy on holding back students who can’t read based on third grade reading exams.

Read more about these changes and others you’ll notice this school year.

Check for school bans on cellphones

A new Indiana law requires school districts to ban cell phones and “any portable wireless device” from class time.

The ban covers phones, tablets, laptops, and gaming systems, as well as any other devices that can provide communication between two parties. But it’s up to each school district to decide on the exact policy.

There are some exceptions for educational purposes (including Individualized Education Programs), emergencies, and health care.

Some students will take more, shorter state tests

The Indiana Department of Education is piloting a checkpoint-based ILEARN this school year as an alternative to one high-stakes exam at the end of the year. More than 70% of schools opted into the pilot program, the department said.

The aim is to make the data more actionable throughout the school year for students, families and teachers instead of having to wait for results at the end of the year.

[Here’s how townships help families buy back-to-school clothes]

The pilot program will have three checkpoints throughout the year and a shortened summative assessment at the end of the year, per the department. The change is expected to be made for all students in the 2025-26 school year.

Schools and parents must meet about chronic absenteeism

Under a new law on truancy prevention, parents of chronically absent students in kindergarten through sixth grade will be required to meet with schools to create a plan and receive wraparound services to improve attendance. 

The law also requires school officials to report truant students to the prosecutor’s office and requires prosecutors to tell parents that they could be held legally accountable for their children missing school.

More students could be held back

More students could have to repeat the third grade because of a new law that tightens the state’s policy for remediation. The policy doesn’t start until the 2025-2026 school year but will be based on test results from the coming school year.

Retention has long been part of Indiana policy. It’s become less common in recent years, with thousands of students “socially promoted” over the years. But now, students have to pass the IREAD-3 to move to fourth grade.

There are some exemptions including for some students with an IEP and some English learners as well as students who pass the math portion of the statewide exam.

Additionally, parents have an opportunity to appeal a remediation recommendation if they believe their student meets one of the exemptions.

COVID relief funding ends for schools

Schools have until September to commit the third and final round of federal COVID funding — known as Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief, or ESSER. This means districts may already be looking for new ways to fund programs and positions supported by these dollars.

The state spending tracker shows the state has reimbursed schools for about 87% of available federal relief funds as of July 19. However, the tracker doesn’t capture schools’ expenditures in real time.

Chalkbeat Indiana Reporter Aleksandra Appleton contributed to this article.

This article was written by MJ Slaby, who oversees Chalkbeat Indiana’s coverage as bureau chief and covers access to higher education and Warren Township Schools. Chalkbeat Indiana Reporter Aleksandra Appleton contributed.

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