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Public Act 094-0979 |
SB2235 Enrolled |
LRB094 18103 RAS 53408 b |
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AN ACT concerning education.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Grow
Our Own Teacher Education Act is |
amended by changing Sections 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, and 35 |
as follows: |
(110 ILCS 48/1)
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Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Grow
Your
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Our Own Teacher Education Act.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/5)
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Sec. 5. Purpose. The Grow Your
Our Own Teacher preparation
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programs established under this Act shall comprise a major new
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statewide initiative, known as the Grow Your
Our Own Teacher
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Education Initiative, to prepare highly skilled, committed
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teachers who will teach in hard-to-staff schools and
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hard-to-staff teaching positions and who will remain in these
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schools for substantial periods of time. |
The Grow Your
Our Own Teacher Education Initiative shall
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effectively recruit and prepare parent and community leaders
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and paraeducators to become effective teachers and
teacher |
leaders statewide in hard-to-staff schools and
hard-to-staff |
teaching positions in schools
serving a substantial percentage |
of low-income students.
Further, the Initiative shall increase |
the diversity of
teachers, including diversity based on race, |
ethnicity, and
disability.
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The Grow Your
Our Own Teacher Education Initiative shall |
ensure
educational rigor by effectively preparing candidates
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students in
accredited bachelor's degree programs in teaching, |
through
which graduates shall meet the requirements to secure |
an
Illinois initial
standard teaching certificate.
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The goal of the Grow Your
Our Own Teacher Education |
Initiative is to add 1,000 teachers to low-income and other |
hard-to-staff Illinois schools by 2016 with an average |
retention period of 7 years, as opposed to the current rate of |
2.5 years for new teachers in such areas.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/10)
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Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Accredited teacher preparation program" means a State or
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regionally accredited higher education program authorized to
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prepare individuals to fulfill all of the requirements to
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receive an Illinois initial
standard teaching certificate. |
"Developmental classes" means classes in basic skill |
areas, such as mathematics and language arts that are |
prerequisite to, but not counted towards, degree requirements |
of a teacher preparation program.
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"Hard-to-staff school" means an elementary or secondary
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school that, based on data compiled by the State Board of |
Education,
ranks in the upper third of schools in this State on
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a combined index measuring the percentage of the school's
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teachers who are not fully certified and the percentage of the
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school's teachers who leave their positions annually. |
"Hard-to-staff teaching position" means a teaching
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category (such as special education, mathematics, or science)
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in which statewide data compiled by the State Board of |
Education
indicates a multi-year pattern of substantial
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teacher shortage or that has been identified as a critical need |
by the local school board.
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"Initiative" means the Grow Your
Our Own Teacher Education
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Initiative created under this Act.
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"Paraeducators" means individuals with a history of
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demonstrated accomplishments in school staff positions (such
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as teacher assistants, school-community liaisons, school
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clerks, and security aides) in schools serving a substantial
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percentage of low-income students.
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"Parent and community leaders" means individuals with a
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significant history of working to improve
involvement in |
improving schools serving a
substantial percentage of |
low-income students, including membership in a community |
organization. |
"Community organization" means a nonprofit organization |
that has a demonstrated capacity to train, develop, and |
organize parents and community leaders into a constituency that |
will hold the school and the school district accountable for |
achieving high academic standards; in addition to |
organizations with a geographic focus, "community |
organization" includes general parent organizations, |
organizations of special education or bilingual education |
parents, and school employee unions.
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"Program" means a Grow Your
Our Own Teacher preparation |
program
established by a consortium under this Act.
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"Schools serving a substantial percentage of low-income
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students" means schools that maintain any of grades |
pre-kindergarten through 8, in which at least 35% of the |
students are eligible to receive
whose percentage of students |
receiving free or reduced-price lunches and schools that |
maintain any of grades 9 through 12, in which at least 25% of |
the students are eligible to receive free or reduced price |
lunches
is at or above the district-average percentage . |
"State Board" means the State Board of Education.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/15)
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Sec. 15. Creation of Initiative. The Grow Your
Our Own |
Teacher Education Initiative is created. The State Board shall |
administer the Initiative as a grant competition to fund |
consortia that will carry out Grow Your
Our Own Teacher |
preparation programs.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/20)
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Sec. 20. Selection of grantees. The State Board shall award |
grants to up to 10 qualified consortia that reflect the |
distribution and diversity of target hard-to-staff schools and |
hard-to-staff positions across this State. In awarding grants, |
the State Board shall select programs that successfully address |
Initiative criteria and that reflect a diversity of strategies |
in terms of serving urban areas, serving rural areas, the |
nature of the participating institutions of higher education, |
whether participants will be trained at the baccalaureate or |
master's level, and the nature of hard-to-staff schools and
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hard-to-staff teaching positions on which a program is focused.
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The State Board shall select consortia that meet the |
following requirements:
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(1) A consortium shall be composed of at least one |
4-year institution of higher education with an accredited |
teacher preparation program, at least one school district |
or group of schools, and one or more community |
organizations. The consortium may also include a 2-year |
institution of higher education or a school employee union |
or both.
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(2) The 4-year institution of higher education |
participating in the consortium shall have past, |
demonstrated success in preparing teachers for elementary |
or secondary schools serving a substantial percentage of |
low-income students. |
(3) The consortium shall focus on a clearly defined set |
of target schools serving a substantial percentage of |
low-income students that will be the primary focus of the |
program. The consortium shall articulate the steps that it |
will carry out in preparing teachers for its target |
hard-to-staff schools and in preparing teachers for one or |
more hard-to-staff teaching positions in its target |
schools. |
(4) Candidate
Student participants in a program under |
the Initiative must hold a high school diploma or its |
equivalent and must meet either the definition of "parent |
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and community leaders" or the definition of |
"paraeducators" contained in Section 10 of this Act. |
(5) The consortium shall employ effective procedures |
for teaching the skills and knowledge needed to prepare |
highly competent teachers. Professional preparation
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Instruction shall include on-going direct experience in |
target schools and evaluation
analysis of this experience. |
(6) The consortium shall offer the program to cohorts |
of candidates
students who begin by moving through the |
program together. The program shall be offered on a |
schedule that enables candidates
students to work full time |
while participating in the program and allows |
paraeducators to continue in their current positions. The |
consortium shall guarantee that support will be available |
to an admitted cohort through the cohort's full period of |
training. At the beginning of the Initiative, programs that |
are already operating and existing cohorts of candidates
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students under this model shall be eligible for funding. |
(7) The institutions of higher education participating |
in the consortium shall document and agree to expend the |
same amount of funds in implementing the program that these |
institutions spend per student on similar educational |
programs. Grants received by the consortium shall |
supplement and not supplant these amounts. |
(8) The State Board shall establish additional |
criteria for review of proposals, including criteria that |
address the following issues: |
(A) Previous experience of the institutions of |
higher education in preparing candidates
students for |
hard-to-staff schools and positions and in working |
with students with non-traditional backgrounds. |
(B) The quality of the implementation plan, |
including strategies for overcoming institutional |
barriers to the progress of non-traditional candidates
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students . |
(C) If a community college is a participant, the |
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nature and extent of existing articulation agreements |
and guarantees between the community college and the |
4-year institution of higher education. |
(D) The number of candidates
participants to be |
trained in the planned
current cohort or cohorts and |
the capacity of the consortium for adding cohorts in |
future cycles. |
(E) Experience of the community organization or |
organizations in organizing parents and community |
leaders to achieve school improvement and a strong |
relational school culture. |
(F) The qualifications of the person or persons |
designated by the 4-year institution of higher |
education to be responsible for cohort support and the |
development of a shared learning and social |
environment among candidates
participants . |
(G) The consortium's plan for collective |
consortium decision-making, including mechanisms for |
community and candidate
participant input. |
(H) The consortium's plan for direct impact of the |
program on the quality of education in the target |
schools. |
(I) The relevance of the curriculum to the needs of |
targeted schools and positions, and the use in |
curriculum and instructional planning of principles |
for effective education for adults
adult education . |
(J) The availability of classes under the program |
in places and times accessible to the candidates
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participants . |
(K) Provision of a level of performance to be |
maintained by candidates
participants as a condition |
of continuing in the program. |
(L) The plan of the 4-year institution of higher |
education to ensure that candidates
students take |
advantage of existing financial aid resources before |
using the loan funds described in Section 25 of this |
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Act. |
(M) The availability of supportive services, |
including counseling, tutoring, and child care. |
(N) A plan for continued participation of |
graduates of the program in a program of support for at |
least 2 years, including mentoring and group meetings. |
(O) A plan for testing and qualitative evaluation |
of candidates'
participants' teaching skills that |
ensures that graduates of the program are as prepared |
for teaching as other individuals completing the |
institution of higher education's preparation program |
for the certificate sought
those from the conventional |
teacher training program of the 4-year institution of |
higher education . |
(P) A plan for internal evaluation that provides |
reports at least yearly on the progress of candidates
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participants towards graduation and the impact of the |
program on the target schools and their communities. |
(Q) Contributions from schools, school districts, |
and other consortia members to the program, including |
stipends for candidates
participants during their |
student teaching. |
(R) Consortium commitment for sustaining the |
program over time, as evidenced by plans for reduced |
requirements for external funding in subsequent |
cycles.
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(S) The inclusion in the planned program of |
strategies derived from community organizing that will |
help candidates develop tools for working with parents |
and other community members.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/25)
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Sec. 25. Expenditures under the Initiative. |
(a) Every program under the Initiative shall implement and |
manage a program of forgivable loans to cover any portion of |
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tuition and direct expenses of candidates
students under the |
program in excess of grants-in-aid and other forgivable loans |
received. All students admitted to a cohort shall be eligible |
for such loans. Loans shall be fully forgiven if a graduate |
completes 5 years of service in a hard-to-staff schools
school
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or hard-to-staff teaching positions, with partial forgiveness |
for shorter periods of service. The State Board shall establish |
standards for the approval of requests from programs to waive |
this obligation for individual candidates and for deferral of |
repayment for work interruptions after certification. The |
State Board shall also define standards for the fiscal |
management of these loan funds
position . |
(b) Grants under the Initiative shall be awarded in such a |
way as to provide the required support for a cohort of |
candidates
students for the cohort's entire training period. |
Program budgets must show expenditures for the entire period |
that candidates
participants are expected to be enrolled. |
(c) No funds under the Initiative may be used to supplant |
the average per-capita expenditures by the institution of |
higher education for candidates
students in regular education |
degree programs . |
(d) Where necessary, program budgets shall include the |
costs of child care to permit candidates
parents to maintain a |
full class schedule. Child care may be provided by the |
community organization or organizations or be independently |
contracted for. |
(e) The institution of higher education may expend grant |
funds to cover the salary of a site-based cohort coordinator |
and the additional costs of offering classes in community |
settings and for tutoring services. |
(f) The community organization or organizations may |
receive a portion of the grant money for the expenses of |
recruitment, community orientation, and counseling of |
potential candidates
participants , for providing space in the |
community, and for working with school personnel to facilitate |
individual work experiences and support of candidates
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participants . |
(g) The school district or school employee union or both |
may receive a portion of the grant money for expenses of |
supporting the work experiences of candidates
participants and |
providing mentors for graduates.
Notwithstanding the |
provisions of Section 10-20.15 of the School Code, school |
districts may also use these or other applicable public funds |
to pay participants in programs under the Initiative for |
student teaching required by an accredited teacher preparation |
program. |
(h) One member of the consortium may expend funds to cover |
the salary of a site-based cohort coordinator. |
(i) Grant funds may also be expended to pay directly for |
required developmental classes for candidates beginning a |
program.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/30)
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Sec. 30. Implementation of Initiative. The State Board |
shall develop guidelines and application procedures for the |
Initiative in fiscal year 2005. The State Board may, if it |
chooses, award a small number of planning grants during any
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fiscal year 2005 to potential consortia using existing |
resources . Other than existing cohorts, the
The first programs |
under the Initiative shall be awarded grants in such a way as |
to allow candidates
participants to begin their work at the |
beginning of the 2006-2007
2005-2006 school year.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(110 ILCS 48/35)
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Sec. 35. Independent program evaluation. The State Board |
shall contract for an independent evaluation of program |
implementation by each of its participating consortia and of |
the impact of each program, including the extent of candidate
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student persistence in program enrollment, acceptance as an |
education major in a 4-year institution of higher education, |
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completion of a bachelor's degree in teaching, obtaining a |
teaching position in a target school or similar school, |
subsequent effectiveness as a teacher, and persistence in |
teaching in a target school or similar school. The evaluation |
shall assess the Initiative's overall effectiveness and shall |
identify particular program strategies that are especially |
effective.
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(Source: P.A. 93-802, eff. 1-1-05.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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