Public Act 100-1043 Public Act 1043 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-1043 | HB4442 Enrolled | LRB100 17751 AXK 32926 b |
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| AN ACT concerning education.
| WHEREAS, Research-based prevention and wellness promotion | efforts that strengthen positive parenting practices and | enhance a child's resilience in the face of adversity have been | shown to have a significant impact on a child's mental health, | physical health, and educational outcomes; and | WHEREAS, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | define positive parenting skills as good communication, | appropriate discipline, and responding to a child's physical | and emotional needs; and | WHEREAS, Studies in the last decade have shown that | well-designed programs created to promote healthy cognitive, | emotional, and social development can improve the prospects and | quality of life of many children; and | WHEREAS, Parenting programs have been shown to provide | critical information on child development and safety, promote | positive parenting behaviors, teach effective discipline | strategies, alter adverse family patterns, and reduce levels of | child abuse and neglect; and | WHEREAS, Positive parenting practices are directly linked | to adaptive behaviors in children and can buffer adverse | outcomes, even amongst at-risk families; and |
| WHEREAS, While positive parenting strategies can promote | adjustment and achievement, child abuse and neglect can | interrupt healthy development in children and can lead to | maladaptive functioning; and | WHEREAS, In the first major study of child abuse and | neglect in 20 years, researchers with the National Academy of | Sciences reported that the damaging consequences of abuse can | reshape a child's brain (resulting in consequences that last | throughout his or her life), influence the child's amygdala | (the part of the brain that regulates emotions, particularly | fear and anxiety), and change how the functioning prefrontal | cortex works (the part of the brain responsible for thinking, | planning, reasoning, and decision-making), which can lead to | behavioral and academic problems; and | WHEREAS, Research shows an association between child | maltreatment and a broad range of social problems, including | substance abuse, violence, criminal behavior, teenage | pregnancy, anxiety, sexually transmitted diseases, smoking, | obesity, and diabetes; and | WHEREAS, Child abuse and neglect is a serious health | problem that costs the United States $103 billion annually, | which includes $33 billion in direct costs for foster care |
| services, hospitalization, mental health treatment, and law | enforcement and $70 billion in indirect costs, including | productivity, chronic health problems, and special education; | and | WHEREAS, Nobel prize-winning economist James J. Heckman | and others have shown that for every dollar devoted to the | nurturing of young children, the need for greater government | spending on remedial education, teenage pregnancy, and prison | incarceration may be eliminated; and | WHEREAS, Researchers have found that, left untreated, the | effects of child abuse and neglect can profoundly influence a | victim's physical and mental health, emotions and impulses, | achievements in school, and relationships formed as a child and | as an adult; and | WHEREAS, The American Academy of Pediatrics' Psychological | Maltreatment Clinical Report posits that emotional abuse is | linked with mental illness, delinquency, aggression, school | troubles, and lifelong relationship problems in children; | these effects of ill-treatment on a child's brain and | behavioral development are not static and can be reversed with | quick intervention and positive changes in a child's | environment; the negative changes present in a child's brain | can be countered by positive brain changes that take place when |
| the abuse ends and when the child is given the support he or | she requires; parenting education is an effective way to | prevent abuse and mental illness before it starts; therefore | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section | 27-23.1 as follows:
| (105 ILCS 5/27-23.1) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-23.1)
| Sec. 27-23.1. Parenting education. | (a) The State Board of Education must assist each school | district that offers an evidence-based parenting education | model. School districts may provide
instruction in parenting | education for grades 6 through 12 and include such
instruction | in the courses of study regularly taught therein.
School | districts may give regular school credit for satisfactory | completion
by the student of such courses.
| As used in this subsection (a) section , "parenting | education" means and includes
instruction in the following:
| (1) Child growth and development, including prenatal | development.
| (2) Childbirth and child care.
| (3) Family structure, function and management.
| (4) Prenatal and postnatal care for mothers and |
| infants.
| (5) Prevention of child abuse.
| (6) The physical, mental, emotional, social, economic | and psychological
aspects of interpersonal and family | relationships.
| (7) Parenting skill development.
| The State Board of Education shall assist those districts | offering
parenting education instruction, upon request, in | developing instructional
materials, training teachers, and | establishing appropriate time allotments
for each of the areas | included in such instruction.
| School districts may offer parenting education courses | during that period
of the day which is not part of the regular | school day. Residents of
the school district may enroll in such | courses. The school board may
establish fees and collect such | charges as may be necessary for attendance
at such courses in | an amount not to exceed the per capita cost of the
operation | thereof, except that the board may waive all or part of such
| charges if it determines that the individual is indigent or | that the
educational needs of the individual requires his or | her attendance at such courses.
| (b) Beginning with the 2019-2020 school year, from | appropriations made for the purposes of this Section, the State | Board of Education shall implement and administer a 3-year | pilot program supporting the health and wellness | student-learning requirement by utilizing a unit of |
| instruction on parenting education in participating school | districts that maintain grades 9 through 12, to be determined | by the participating school districts. The program is | encouraged to include, but is not be limited to, instruction on | (i) family structure, function, and management, (ii) the | prevention of child abuse, (iii) the physical, mental, | emotional, social, economic, and psychological aspects of | interpersonal and family relationships, and (iv) parenting | education competency development that is aligned to the social | and emotional learning standards of the student's grade level. | Instruction under this subsection (b) may be included in the | Comprehensive Health Education Program set forth under Section | 3 of the Critical Health Problems and Comprehensive Health | Education Act. The State Board of Education is authorized to | make grants to school districts that apply to participate in | the pilot program under this subsection (b). The State Board of | Education shall by rule provide for the form of the application | and criteria to be used and applied in selecting participating | urban, suburban, and rural school districts. The provisions of | this subsection (b), other than this sentence, are inoperative | at the conclusion of the pilot program. | (Source: P.A. 84-534.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 8/23/2018
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