HB2928 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022
HB2928

 

Introduced 2/19/2021, by Rep. Deanne M. Mazzochi

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Relieve College Costs Pilot Program Act. Provides that a pilot program is created for a 4-year degree pathway based on texts that served as the core foundational basis for western civilization and the Enlightenment. Provides that under the program, one public high school, one public community college, and one public university in this State shall be chosen to develop a competency-based baccalaureate degree program for a Fundamental Issues and Texts Humanities Degree. Provides that the goals of the program must include (1) preparing students who complete the program with the requisite skills relating to critical thinking, problem solving, rational inquiry, and oral and written communication needed for employment or further graduate study; (2) using open educational resources if available; (3) using online course options if available to reduce costs; (4) identifying pathway courses that can be used to promote dual credit course enrollment in the participating high school; and (5) having a $20,000 maximum tuition rate for the entirety of the degree pathway. Contains provisions concerning a program director, the curriculum, open educational resources adoption incentives, reporting, and rulemaking. Effective immediately.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2928LRB102 14505 CMG 19858 b

1    AN ACT concerning education.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Relieve College Costs Pilot Program Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly makes all of the
7following findings:
8        (1) A college degree involving a substantive and
9    rigorous curriculum that is designed to challenge the
10    mind, enhance knowledge and skills, provide a core,
11    canonical knowledge base, expose students to great
12    literature and writing, and prepare a student for success
13    as a future citizen can be a valuable asset to residents of
14    this State.
15        (2) Public community colleges and universities offer
16    multiple existing courses of study pertaining to
17    fundamental topics that have historically served as the
18    foundation for degrees in the humanities, including art,
19    philosophy, logic and rhetoric, history, literature, world
20    religions, world languages, and studies of civilizations
21    from antiquity, that, in turn, have served as the basis
22    for intellectual thought and development for generations.
23    These may be classified as high impact courses.

 

 

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1        (3) In view of COVID-19, many institutions of higher
2    learning have cultivated courses that can be delivered
3    through online instruction.
4        (4) Many State residents will experience disruptions
5    or economic hardships when seeking a college degree.
6        (5) It is in the interests of State residents to
7    identify affordable pathways to secure a college degree.
8        (6) It is in the interests of State residents to have
9    an accredited 4-year college degree pathway based on
10    high-impact courses that costs less than $20,000 for the
11    entirety of the degree pathway.
12        (7) It is also in the interests of State residents to
13    employ, if possible, a degree pathway based on educational
14    resources that reside in the public domain or which have
15    been released under an intellectual property license that
16    allows for free use, reuse, modification, and sharing with
17    others, including full courses, course materials, modules,
18    textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any
19    other tools, materials, or techniques used to support
20    access to knowledge. Many foundational materials and
21    original sources used in high impact courses are
22    particularly likely to fall into these categories.
 
23    Section 10. Creation of a 4-year degree pathway. A pilot
24program is created for a 4-year degree pathway, which shall
25comply with the standards of the Higher Learning Commission,

 

 

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1based on texts that served as the core foundational basis for
2western civilization and the Enlightenment. The degree pathway
3may not exceed $20,000 for the full degree program. This
4pathway may be referred to as the Fundamental Issues and Texts
5Humanities Degree.
 
6    Section 15. Relieve College Costs Pilot Program.
7    (a) Subject to appropriation, beginning with the 2021-2022
8academic year or, if funds are not appropriated for the
9program that academic year, beginning with the academic year
10in which funds are appropriated for the program, the State
11Board of Education, Illinois Community College Board, and
12Board of Higher Education shall coordinate with each other to
13assign a qualified individual to serve as a program director
14to develop the curriculum for the 4-year degree pathway
15created in Section 10.
16    If a source of outside funding for the program director is
17secured to support the development of the program, the State
18Board of Education, Illinois Community College Board, and
19Board of Higher Education shall facilitate the approval of the
20Fundamental Issues and Texts Humanities Degree curriculum
21pathway for the public institutions agreeing to participate in
22the pilot program.
23    (b) Under the program, one public high school, one public
24community college, and one public university in this State
25shall be chosen to develop a competency-based baccalaureate

 

 

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1degree program for the Fundamental Issues and Texts Humanities
2Degree. The goals of the program must include all of the
3following:
4        (1) To prepare students who complete the program with
5    the requisite skills relating to critical thinking,
6    problem solving, rational inquiry, and oral and written
7    communication needed for employment or further graduate
8    study.
9        (2) To use open educational resources if available.
10        (3) To use online course options if available to
11    reduce costs.
12        (4) To identify pathway courses that can be used to
13    promote dual credit course enrollment in the participating
14    high school.
15        (5) To have a $20,000 maximum tuition rate for the
16    entirety of the degree pathway.
17    (c) The curriculum of the pilot program must include
18course instruction on the canonical texts that served as the
19foundations for western civilization and the Enlightenment in
20areas that shall include, but are not limited to, philosophy,
21literature, history, religion, government and politics, art,
22and architecture. The program must allow for 2 courses of
23instruction on global areas outside of western civilization in
24areas that include, but are not limited to, philosophy,
25literature, history, religion, government and politics, art,
26and architecture.

 

 

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1    (d) The program director shall prioritize for the pilot
2program community colleges and public universities that have
3existing articulation agreements. The program director shall
4attempt to craft a degree pathway that can be satisfied by
5existing core courses that are commonly offered at multiple
6institutions of higher education in this State.
 
7    Section 20. Open educational resources adoption
8incentives.
9    (a) The State Board of Education, Illinois Community
10College Board, and Board of Higher Education shall create a
11panel comprised of all of the following members, who shall
12serve without compensation:
13        (1) Eight persons from institutions of higher
14    education located in this State appointed by the Executive
15    Director of the Board of Higher Education, including at
16    least 2 representatives from a university, one
17    representative from a community college in Cook County,
18    one representative from a community college with a
19    district boundary that includes some portion of DuPage,
20    Kane, Lake, McHenry, or Will County, one representative
21    from a community college in downstate Illinois, and one
22    representative from a nonpublic university that has
23    participated in articulation agreements with a community
24    college.
25        (2) Two persons each from a high school located in

 

 

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1    this State that offers dual credit programs, preferably
2    from geographically diverse regions, appointed by the
3    State Superintendent Education.
4        (3) A person from the State Board of Education
5    appointed by the State Board of Education, a person from
6    the Illinois Community College Board appointed by the
7    Illinois Community College Board, and a person from the
8    Board of Higher Education appointed by the Board of Higher
9    Education.
10        (4) Two members appointed by the Governor.
11        (5) One member of the House of Representative
12    appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
13    one member of the House of Representatives appointed by
14    the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, one
15    member of the Senate appointed by the President of the
16    Senate, and one member of the Senate appointed by the
17    Minority Leader of the Senate.
18    Appointments under paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
19subsection (a) shall include at least 4 faculty members, a
20library professional, an instructional design expert, and 2
21academic administrators.
22    The Board of Higher Education shall provide administrative
23and other support to the panel.
24    The Executive Director of the Board of Higher Education
25shall convene the first meeting of the panel no later than
26September 1, 2021.

 

 

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1    The panel shall seek to identify initiatives to support
2the use of open educational resource materials and make
3recommendations to the General Assembly no later than December
431, 2022.
5    (b) Each campus of a public university or public community
6college district shall, upon request of its board of trustees,
7do both of the following:
8        (1) Clearly highlight, by means that may include a
9    symbol or logo in a conspicuous place on the online campus
10    course schedule, the courses that exclusively use digital
11    course materials that are free of charge to students or
12    that may have a low-cost option for print versions.
13        (2) Ensure that the materials comply with the federal
14    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and the federal
15    Copyright Act of 1976.
16    (c) Subject to appropriation or third-party funding, the
17Illinois Community College Board shall establish and
18administer a grant program to encourage faculty at
19institutions of higher education to adopt, modify, redesign,
20or develop courses that use only open educational resources in
21support of the degree program set forth in Section 10.
22    Any individual who receives a grant under this subsection
23(c) shall ensure that any open educational resources used in a
24course is provided to a student enrolled in the course at no
25cost other than the cost of printing.
26    A faculty member who receives a grant under this

 

 

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1subsection (c) must submit to the Illinois Community College
2Board for each of the 4 semesters immediately following the
3implementation of the course a report that includes:
4        (1) the number of students who have completed the
5    course;
6        (2) an estimate of the amount of money saved by a
7    student due to the use of open educational resources in
8    the course;
9        (3) the number of faculty members, if any, who adopted
10    the course curriculum; and
11        (4) any other information required as a condition of
12    the grant.
 
13    Section 25. Reporting.
14    (a) After the first cohort of students complete the pilot
15program under Section 10, the State Board of Education,
16Illinois Community College Board, and Board of Higher
17Education must submit a report to the Governor and General
18Assembly detailing the impact of the pilot program on all of
19the following:
20        (1) Reducing the costs of attending an institution of
21    higher learning and overall student loan debt.
22        (2) Elevating the importance of coursework in the
23    classical liberal arts.
24        (3) Creating a model curriculum that can be replicated
25    through partnerships between other institutions of higher

 

 

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1    learning and school districts across this State.
2    (b) This Act is inoperative on and after the State Board of
3Education, Illinois Community College Board, and Board of
4Higher Education submit the report required under subsection
5(a).
 
6    Section 90. Rules. The Illinois Community College Board,
7in consultation with the State Board of Education and the
8Board of Higher Education, must adopt rules to implement this
9Act.
 
10    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
11becoming law.