AUTHORITY: Implementing Sections 3, 10, 11 and 13 and authorized by Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act [20 ILCS 2405/3, 10, 11 and 13].
SOURCE: Adopted at 6 Ill. Reg. 1235, effective January 18, 1982; codified at 6 Ill. Reg. 14859; amended at 12 Ill. Reg. 12103, effective July 8, 1988; amended at 13 Ill. Reg. 5154, effective March 30, 1989; amended at 15 Ill. Reg. 6261, effective April 15, 1991; recodified from the Department of Rehabilitation Services to the Department of Human Services at 21 Ill. Reg. 9325; amended at 23 Ill. Reg. 10297, effective August 10, 1999; amended at 27 Ill. Reg. 5020, effective March 7, 2003; amended at 37 Ill. Reg. 11340, effective July 2, 2013.
SUBPART A: ADMINISTRATION OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
Section 765.10 Special Education Instructional Programs
Each State School shall establish and maintain special education instructional programs and related services that meet the educational needs of children with the following disabilities:
a) The Illinois School for the Deaf (ISD) will maintain programs for students whose primary disability is an auditory impairment of a severe to profound nature.
b) The Illinois School for the Visually Impaired (ISVI) will maintain programs for students whose primary disability is a visual impairment of a severe to profound nature or who are deaf-blind.
c) The Illinois Center for Rehabilitation and Education-Roosevelt (ICRE-R) will maintain transition-based programs for students whose primary disability is a physical impairment of a severe to profound nature.
d) Each School will maintain programs for students with additional disabilities listed in this subsection provided that the disability is not so severe that the needs of the student cannot be met appropriately by the School.
1) Health impairment.
2) Speech or language impairment.
3) Specific learning disabilities.
4) Deficits in cognitive development.
5) Emotional or social disability.
6) Adaptive behavior that restricts effective functioning.
e) Each School shall annually prepare a school calendar for the school term, specifying the opening and closing dates and providing a minimum of at least 185 days to ensure 176 days of actual student attendance. Any of the four days allowed for teachers' institute, but not used for such, shall increase the minimum term by the number of school days not so used. A School may specify a closing date earlier than that set on the actual calendar when the School has provided the minimum number of computable days under this subsection; i.e., 176 days of actual student attendance plus four days of teachers' institute.
f) The length of the school day at each School shall not be less than five clock hours of school or work per day under the direct supervision of special education personnel. The school day may be less than five clock hours on the opening and closing of the school term, and on the first day of student attendance, if preceded by a day or days utilized as an institute or teachers' workshop.
(Source: Amended at 37 Ill. Reg. 11340, effective July 2, 2013)
Section 765.20 Range of Services
Special education instructional programs and related services shall range along a continuum based on the nature and degree of the intervention. This continuum of program options shall include, but not be limited to:
a) Basic Special Education Program of the School − The special education program provided to the majority of the students enrolled in the School.
b) Basic Special Education Program of the School with Modification − The student receives most of his or her educational experiences through the basic program of the School. However, these experiences are modified through:
1) Additional or specialized education from the teacher.
2) Consultation to and with the teacher.
3) Provision of special equipment and materials.
4) Modification in the instructional program (e.g., multi-age placement, expectations, grading, etc.).
c) Alternate Basic Special Education Program of the School − The student receives most of his or her educational experiences in a basic program whose curricular content and educational methodology have been substantially changed. These changes shall occur when the special education needs of a proportionately large, identifiable segment of the school population are not otherwise being met.
d) Basic or Alternate Basic Educational Program of the School with Related Services − The student receives most of his or her educational experiences through the basic, or alternate basic, program. However, these experiences are augmented by one or more related services.
e) Special Program − The student receives most of his or her basic educational experiences through an instructional program in a special class that is largely self-contained in the School.
1) Inclusion in those parts of the basic special education program that are appropriate.
2) Provision of related services as needed.
f) Cooperative Program − The student receives most of his or her educational experiences through either the basic or the special program of the School. However, this is supplemented through work-experience programs or shared agency involvement. Cooperative programs may include integration of students into academic and nonacademic programs and services provided by a public school district, provided the programs and services are available in the public school district and the student has expressed an interest in such programs or services.
(Source: Amended at 37 Ill. Reg. 11340, effective July 2, 2013)