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Public Act 095-0793 |
SB2482 Enrolled |
LRB095 17874 NHT 43954 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 School Code is amended by changing Sections |
1A-4, 1A-10, 1C-2, 2-3.11, 2-3.30, 2-3.73, 2-3.117, 10-20.40, |
13B-65.10, 14-8.03, 14-15.01, 14C-2, 17-2.11, 18-3, 21-2, |
21-14, 27-23, 27-24.4, and 34-18.34 as follows:
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(105 ILCS 5/1A-4) (from Ch. 122, par. 1A-4)
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(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 95-626 )
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Sec. 1A-4. Powers and duties of the Board.
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A. (Blank).
|
B. The Board shall determine the qualifications of and |
appoint a
chief education officer, to be known as the State |
Superintendent of
Education, who may be proposed by the |
Governor and who shall serve at the pleasure of the Board and |
pursuant to a
performance-based contract linked to statewide |
student performance and academic
improvement within Illinois |
schools. Upon expiration or buyout of the contract of the State |
Superintendent of Education in office on the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, a State |
Superintendent of Education shall be appointed by a State Board |
of Education that includes the 7 new Board members who were |
appointed to fill seats of members whose terms were terminated |
|
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly. Thereafter, a State Superintendent of |
Education must, at a minimum, be appointed at the beginning of |
each term of a Governor after that Governor has made |
appointments to the Board. A performance-based
contract issued |
for the employment of a State Superintendent of
Education |
entered into on or after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 93rd General Assembly must expire no later than |
February 1, 2007, and subsequent contracts must expire no later |
than February 1 each 4 years thereafter. No contract
shall be
|
extended or renewed beyond February 1, 2007 and February 1 each |
4 years thereafter, but a State Superintendent of Education |
shall serve until his or her successor is appointed. Each |
contract entered into on or before January 8, 2007 with a State |
Superintendent of Education must provide that the State Board |
of Education may terminate the contract for cause, and the |
State Board of Education shall not thereafter be liable for |
further payments under the contract. With regard to this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, it is the intent |
of the General Assembly that, beginning with the Governor who |
takes office on the second Monday of January, 2007, a State |
Superintendent of Education be appointed at the beginning of |
each term of a Governor after that Governor has made |
appointments to the Board. The State
Superintendent of |
Education shall not serve as a member of the State
Board of |
Education. The Board shall set the compensation of the State
|
|
Superintendent of Education who shall serve as the Board's |
chief
executive officer. The Board shall also establish the |
duties, powers and
responsibilities of the State |
Superintendent, which shall be included in the
State |
Superintendent's performance-based contract along with the |
goals and
indicators of student performance and academic |
improvement used to measure the
performance and effectiveness |
of the State Superintendent.
The State Board of Education may |
delegate
to the State Superintendent of Education the authority |
to act on the Board's
behalf, provided such delegation is made |
pursuant to adopted board policy
or the powers delegated are |
ministerial in nature. The State Board may
not delegate |
authority under this Section to the State Superintendent to
(1) |
nonrecognize school districts, (2) withhold State payments as a |
penalty,
or (3) make final decisions under the contested case |
provisions of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act unless |
otherwise provided by law.
|
C. The powers and duties of the State Board of Education |
shall encompass all
duties delegated to the Office of |
Superintendent of Public Instruction on
January 12, 1975, |
except as the law providing for such powers and duties is
|
thereafter amended, and such other powers and duties as the |
General Assembly
shall designate. The Board shall be |
responsible for the educational policies
and guidelines for |
public schools, pre-school through grade
12 and Vocational |
Education in the State of Illinois. The Board shall
analyze the |
|
present and future aims, needs, and requirements of
education |
in the State of Illinois and recommend to the General Assembly
|
the powers which should be exercised by the Board. The Board |
shall
recommend the passage and the legislation necessary to |
determine the
appropriate relationship between the Board and |
local boards of education
and the various State agencies and |
shall recommend desirable
modifications in the laws which |
affect schools.
|
D. Two members of the Board shall be appointed by the |
chairperson
to serve on a standing joint Education Committee, 2 |
others shall be
appointed from the Board of Higher Education, 2
|
others shall be appointed by the chairperson of the
Illinois |
Community College Board, and 2 others shall be appointed by the
|
chairperson of the Human Resource Investment Council. The
|
Committee shall be
responsible for making recommendations |
concerning the submission of any
workforce development plan or |
workforce training program required by federal
law or under any |
block grant authority. The Committee will be
responsible for |
developing policy on matters of mutual concern to
elementary, |
secondary and higher education such as Occupational and
Career |
Education, Teacher Preparation and Certification, Educational
|
Finance, Articulation between Elementary, Secondary and Higher |
Education
and Research and Planning. The joint Education |
Committee shall meet at
least quarterly and submit an annual |
report of its findings,
conclusions, and recommendations to the |
State Board of Education, the Board of
Higher Education, the |
|
Illinois Community College Board,
the Human Resource |
Investment Council, the Governor, and the
General
Assembly. All |
meetings of this Committee shall be official meetings for
|
reimbursement under this Act.
|
E. Five members of the Board shall constitute a quorum. A
|
majority
vote of the members appointed, confirmed and serving |
on the Board is
required to approve any action, except that the |
7 new Board members who were appointed to fill seats of members |
whose terms were terminated on the effective date of this |
amendatory act of the 93rd General Assembly may vote to approve |
actions when appointed and serving.
|
Using the most recently available data, the The Board shall |
prepare and submit to the General Assembly and the
Governor on |
or before January 14, 1976 and annually thereafter a report
or |
reports of its findings and recommendations. Such annual report |
shall
contain a separate section which provides a critique and |
analysis of the
status of education in Illinois and which |
identifies its specific problems
and recommends express |
solutions therefor.
Such annual report also shall contain the |
following information for the
preceding year ending on June 30: |
each act or omission of a school district
of which the State |
Board of Education has knowledge as a consequence of
scheduled, |
approved visits and which constituted a
failure by the district |
to comply with applicable State or federal laws or
regulations |
relating to public education, the name of such district, the |
date
or dates on which the State Board of Education notified |
|
the school district of
such act or omission, and what action, |
if any, the school district took with
respect thereto after |
being notified thereof by the State Board of Education.
The |
report shall also include the statewide high school dropout |
rate by
grade level, sex and race and the annual student |
dropout rate of and the
number of students who graduate from, |
transfer from or otherwise leave
bilingual programs. The |
Auditor General shall annually perform a
compliance audit of |
the State Board of Education's performance of the
reporting |
duty imposed by this amendatory Act of 1986. A regular system |
of
communication with other directly related State agencies |
shall be
implemented.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Council, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General
Assembly Organization |
Act, and
filing such additional
copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library
Act.
|
F. Upon appointment of the 7 new Board members who were |
appointed to fill seats of members whose terms were terminated |
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly, the Board shall review all of its current |
|
rules in an effort to streamline procedures, improve |
efficiency, and eliminate unnecessary forms and paperwork.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1036, eff. 9-14-04.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 95-626 )
|
Sec. 1A-4. Powers and duties of the Board.
|
A. (Blank).
|
B. The Board shall determine the qualifications of and |
appoint a
chief education officer, to be known as the State |
Superintendent of
Education, who may be proposed by the |
Governor and who shall serve at the pleasure of the Board and |
pursuant to a
performance-based contract linked to statewide |
student performance and academic
improvement within Illinois |
schools. Upon expiration or buyout of the contract of the State |
Superintendent of Education in office on the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, a State |
Superintendent of Education shall be appointed by a State Board |
of Education that includes the 7 new Board members who were |
appointed to fill seats of members whose terms were terminated |
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly. Thereafter, a State Superintendent of |
Education must, at a minimum, be appointed at the beginning of |
each term of a Governor after that Governor has made |
appointments to the Board. A performance-based
contract issued |
for the employment of a State Superintendent of
Education |
entered into on or after the effective date of this amendatory |
|
Act of the 93rd General Assembly must expire no later than |
February 1, 2007, and subsequent contracts must expire no later |
than February 1 each 4 years thereafter. No contract
shall be
|
extended or renewed beyond February 1, 2007 and February 1 each |
4 years thereafter, but a State Superintendent of Education |
shall serve until his or her successor is appointed. Each |
contract entered into on or before January 8, 2007 with a State |
Superintendent of Education must provide that the State Board |
of Education may terminate the contract for cause, and the |
State Board of Education shall not thereafter be liable for |
further payments under the contract. With regard to this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, it is the intent |
of the General Assembly that, beginning with the Governor who |
takes office on the second Monday of January, 2007, a State |
Superintendent of Education be appointed at the beginning of |
each term of a Governor after that Governor has made |
appointments to the Board. The State
Superintendent of |
Education shall not serve as a member of the State
Board of |
Education. The Board shall set the compensation of the State
|
Superintendent of Education who shall serve as the Board's |
chief
executive officer. The Board shall also establish the |
duties, powers and
responsibilities of the State |
Superintendent, which shall be included in the
State |
Superintendent's performance-based contract along with the |
goals and
indicators of student performance and academic |
improvement used to measure the
performance and effectiveness |
|
of the State Superintendent.
The State Board of Education may |
delegate
to the State Superintendent of Education the authority |
to act on the Board's
behalf, provided such delegation is made |
pursuant to adopted board policy
or the powers delegated are |
ministerial in nature. The State Board may
not delegate |
authority under this Section to the State Superintendent to
(1) |
nonrecognize school districts, (2) withhold State payments as a |
penalty,
or (3) make final decisions under the contested case |
provisions of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act unless |
otherwise provided by law.
|
C. The powers and duties of the State Board of Education |
shall encompass all
duties delegated to the Office of |
Superintendent of Public Instruction on
January 12, 1975, |
except as the law providing for such powers and duties is
|
thereafter amended, and such other powers and duties as the |
General Assembly
shall designate. The Board shall be |
responsible for the educational policies
and guidelines for |
public schools, pre-school through grade
12 and Vocational |
Education in the State of Illinois. The Board shall
analyze the |
present and future aims, needs, and requirements of
education |
in the State of Illinois and recommend to the General Assembly
|
the powers which should be exercised by the Board. The Board |
shall
recommend the passage and the legislation necessary to |
determine the
appropriate relationship between the Board and |
local boards of education
and the various State agencies and |
shall recommend desirable
modifications in the laws which |
|
affect schools.
|
D. Two members of the Board shall be appointed by the |
chairperson
to serve on a standing joint Education Committee, 2 |
others shall be
appointed from the Board of Higher Education, 2
|
others shall be appointed by the chairperson of the
Illinois |
Community College Board, and 2 others shall be appointed by the
|
chairperson of the Human Resource Investment Council. The
|
Committee shall be
responsible for making recommendations |
concerning the submission of any
workforce development plan or |
workforce training program required by federal
law or under any |
block grant authority. The Committee will be
responsible for |
developing policy on matters of mutual concern to
elementary, |
secondary and higher education such as Occupational and
Career |
Education, Teacher Preparation and Certification, Educational
|
Finance, Articulation between Elementary, Secondary and Higher |
Education
and Research and Planning. The joint Education |
Committee shall meet at
least quarterly and submit an annual |
report of its findings,
conclusions, and recommendations to the |
State Board of Education, the Board of
Higher Education, the |
Illinois Community College Board,
the Human Resource |
Investment Council, the Governor, and the
General
Assembly. All |
meetings of this Committee shall be official meetings for
|
reimbursement under this Act. On the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Joint |
Education Committee is abolished.
|
E. Five members of the Board shall constitute a quorum. A
|
|
majority
vote of the members appointed, confirmed and serving |
on the Board is
required to approve any action, except that the |
7 new Board members who were appointed to fill seats of members |
whose terms were terminated on the effective date of this |
amendatory act of the 93rd General Assembly may vote to approve |
actions when appointed and serving.
|
Using the most recently available data, the The Board shall |
prepare and submit to the General Assembly and the
Governor on |
or before January 14, 1976 and annually thereafter a report
or |
reports of its findings and recommendations. Such annual report |
shall
contain a separate section which provides a critique and |
analysis of the
status of education in Illinois and which |
identifies its specific problems
and recommends express |
solutions therefor.
Such annual report also shall contain the |
following information for the
preceding year ending on June 30: |
each act or omission of a school district
of which the State |
Board of Education has knowledge as a consequence of
scheduled, |
approved visits and which constituted a
failure by the district |
to comply with applicable State or federal laws or
regulations |
relating to public education, the name of such district, the |
date
or dates on which the State Board of Education notified |
the school district of
such act or omission, and what action, |
if any, the school district took with
respect thereto after |
being notified thereof by the State Board of Education.
The |
report shall also include the statewide high school dropout |
rate by
grade level, sex and race and the annual student |
|
dropout rate of and the
number of students who graduate from, |
transfer from or otherwise leave
bilingual programs. The |
Auditor General shall annually perform a
compliance audit of |
the State Board of Education's performance of the
reporting |
duty imposed by this amendatory Act of 1986. A regular system |
of
communication with other directly related State agencies |
shall be
implemented.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Council, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General
Assembly Organization |
Act, and
filing such additional
copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library
Act.
|
F. Upon appointment of the 7 new Board members who were |
appointed to fill seats of members whose terms were terminated |
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly, the Board shall review all of its current |
rules in an effort to streamline procedures, improve |
efficiency, and eliminate unnecessary forms and paperwork.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-626, eff. 6-1-08.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/1A-10)
|
|
Sec. 1A-10. Divisions of Board. The State Board of |
Education shall, before April 1, 2005, create divisions within |
the Board, including without limitation the following: |
(1) Teaching and Learning Services for All Children. |
(2) School Support Services for All Schools.
|
(3) Fiscal Support Services. |
(4) (Blank). Special Education Services. |
(5) Internal Auditor. |
(6) Human Resources.
|
The State Board of Education may, after consultation with the |
General Assembly, add any divisions or functions to the Board |
that it deems appropriate and consistent with Illinois law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1036, eff. 9-14-04.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/1C-2)
|
Sec. 1C-2. Block grants.
|
(a) For fiscal year 1999, and each fiscal year thereafter, |
the State Board
of Education shall award to school districts |
block grants as described in subsection
subsections (b) and |
(c). The State Board of Education may adopt
rules and |
regulations necessary to implement this Section. In accordance |
with
Section 2-3.32, all state block grants are subject to an |
audit. Therefore,
block grant receipts and block grant |
expenditures shall be recorded to the
appropriate fund code.
|
(b) (Blank). A Professional Development Block Grant shall |
be created by combining the
existing School Improvement Block |
|
Grant and the REI Initiative.
These funds shall be distributed |
to school districts based on the number of
full-time certified |
instructional staff employed in the district.
|
(c) An Early Childhood Education Block Grant shall be |
created by combining
the following programs: Preschool |
Education, Parental Training and Prevention
Initiative. These |
funds shall be distributed to school districts and other
|
entities on a competitive basis. Eleven percent of this grant
|
shall be used to
fund programs for children ages 0-3.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-396, eff. 7-29-03.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.11) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.11)
|
Sec. 2-3.11. Report to Governor and General Assembly. Using |
the most recently available data, to To report to the
Governor |
and General Assembly annually on or before January 14 the
|
condition of the schools
of the State for the preceding year, |
ending on June 30.
|
Such annual report shall contain reports of the State |
Teacher
Certification Board; the schools of the State |
charitable
institutions; reports on driver education, special |
education,
and transportation; and for such year the annual |
statistical
reports of the State Board of Education, including |
the number
and kinds of school districts; number of school |
attendance
centers; number of men and women teachers; |
enrollment by
grades; total enrollment; total days attendance; |
total days
absence; average daily attendance; number of |
|
elementary and
secondary school graduates;
assessed valuation; |
tax levies
and tax rates for various purposes; amount of |
teachers' orders,
anticipation warrants, and bonds |
outstanding; and number of men
and women teachers and total |
enrollment of private schools.
The report shall give for all |
school districts receipts from
all sources and expenditures for |
all purposes for each fund;
the total operating expense,
the |
per capita cost, and instructional expenditures; federal
and |
state aids and reimbursements; new school buildings, and
|
recognized schools; together with such other information and
|
suggestions as the State Board of Education may deem important
|
in relation to the schools and school laws and the means of
|
promoting education throughout the state.
|
In this Section, "instructional expenditures" means the |
annual expenditures of school districts properly attributable |
to expenditure functions defined in rules of the State Board of |
Education as:
1100 (Regular Education); 1200-1220 (Special |
Education); 1250 (Ed. Deprived/Remedial); 1400 (Vocational |
Programs); 1600 (Summer School); 1650 (Gifted); 1800 |
(Bilingual Programs); 1900 (Truant Alternative); 2110 |
(Attendance and Social Work Services); 2120 (Guidance |
Services); 2130 (Health Services); 2140 (Psychological |
Services); 2150 (Speech Pathology and Audiology Services); |
2190 (Other Support Services Pupils); 2210 (Improvement of |
Instruction); 2220 (Educational Media Services); 2230 |
(Assessment and Testing); 2540 (Operation and Maintenance of |
|
Plant Services); 2550 (Pupil Transportation Service); 2560 |
(Food Service); 4110 (Payments for Regular Programs); 4120 |
(Payments for Special Education Programs); 4130 (Payments for |
Adult Education Programs); 4140 (Payments for Vocational |
Education Programs); 4170 (Payments for Community College |
Programs); 4190 (Other payments to in-state government units); |
and 4200 (Other payments to out of state government units).
|
(Source: P.A. 93-679, eff. 6-30-04.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.30) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.30)
|
Sec. 2-3.30. Census for special education. To require on or |
before
December 22 of each year reports as to the census of all |
children 3 years of age birth
through 21 years of
age inclusive |
of the types described in definitions under the rules |
authorized
in Section 14-1.02 who were receiving special |
education and related services on
December 1 of the current |
school year.
|
To require an annual report, on or before December 22 of |
each year , from
the Department of Children and Family Services, |
Department of Corrections , and
Department of Human Services |
containing a census of all
children 3 years of age birth |
through 21 years of age inclusive , of the types
described in |
Section 14-1.02 who were receiving special education services |
on
December 1 of the current school year within State |
facilities. Such report
shall be submitted pursuant to rules |
and regulations issued by the State Board
of Education.
|
|
The State Board of Education shall ascertain and report |
annually, on or
before January 15, the number of children of |
non-English background, birth
through 21 years of age, |
inclusive of (a) types described in definitions
under rules |
authorized in Section 14-1.02 who were receiving special
|
education and related services on December of the previous year |
and (b)
inclusive of those served within State facilities |
administered by the
Department of Children and Family Services
|
and the Department of Human Services. The report
shall classify |
such children according to their language background, age,
|
category of exceptionality and level of severity, least |
restrictive
placement and achievement level.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-764, eff. 6-9-00.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.73) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.73)
|
Sec. 2-3.73. Missing child program. The State Board of |
Education shall
administer and implement a missing child |
program in accordance with the
provisions of this Section. Upon |
receipt of each periodic information
bulletin from the |
Department of State Police pursuant
to Section 6 of
the |
Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984, the State |
Board
of Education shall promptly disseminate the information |
to make copies of the same and mail one copy to
the school |
board of each school district in this State and to the |
principal
or chief administrative officer of every each |
nonpublic elementary and
secondary school in this State |
|
registered with the State Board of Education . Upon receipt of |
such information, each school board shall
compare the names on |
the bulletin to the names of all students presently
enrolled in |
the schools of the district. If a school board or its designee
|
determines that a missing child is
attending one of the schools |
within the
school district, or if the principal or chief |
administrative officer of a
nonpublic school is notified by |
school personnel that a missing child is
attending that school, |
the school board or the principal or chief
administrative |
officer of the nonpublic school shall immediately give
notice |
of this fact to the State Board of Education, the Department of |
State
Police, and the law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction in the area
where the missing child resides or |
attends school.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.117)
|
Sec. 2-3.117. School Technology Program.
|
(a) The State Board of Education is authorized to provide |
technology-based
learning resources , including matching |
grants, to school districts to improve
educational |
opportunities and student achievement throughout the State. |
School
districts may use grants for technology-related |
investments, including
computer hardware, software, optical |
media networks, and related wiring, to
educate staff to use |
that equipment in a learning context, and for other items
|
|
defined under rules adopted by the State Board of Education.
|
(b) The State Board of Education is authorized, to the |
extent funds are
available, to establish a statewide support |
system for information,
professional development, technical |
assistance, network design consultation,
leadership, |
technology planning consultation, and information exchange; to
|
expand school district connectivity; and to increase the |
quantity and quality
of student and educator access to on-line |
resources, experts, and
communications avenues from moneys |
appropriated for the purposes of this
Section.
|
(b-5) The State Board of Education may enter into |
intergovernmental
contracts or agreements with other State |
agencies, public community colleges,
public libraries, public |
and private colleges and universities, museums on
public land, |
and other public
agencies in the areas of technology, |
telecommunications, and information
access, under such terms |
as the parties may agree, provided that those
contracts and |
agreements are in compliance with the Department of Central
|
Management Services' mandate to provide telecommunications |
services to all
State agencies.
|
(c) (Blank). The State Board of Education shall adopt all |
rules necessary for the
administration of the School Technology |
Program, including but not limited to
rules defining the |
technology-related investments that qualify for funding, the
|
content of grant applications and reports, and the requirements |
for the local
match.
|
|
(d) (Blank). The State Board of Education may establish by |
rule provisions
to waive the local matching requirement for |
school districts determined unable
to finance the local match.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95; 90-388, eff. 8-15-97; 90-566, |
eff. 1-2-98.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.40) |
Sec. 10-20.40. Student biometric information. |
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "biometric |
information" means any information that is collected through an |
identification process for individuals based on their unique |
behavioral or physiological characteristics, including |
fingerprint, hand geometry, voice, or facial recognition or |
iris or retinal scans. |
(b) School districts that collect biometric information |
from students shall adopt policies that require, at a minimum, |
all of the following: |
(1) Written permission from the individual who has |
legal custody of the student, as defined in Section |
10-20.12b of this Code, or from the student if he or she |
has reached the age of 18. |
(2) The discontinuation of use of a student's biometric |
information under either of the following conditions: |
(A) upon the student's graduation or withdrawal |
from the school district; or |
(B) upon receipt in writing of a request for |
|
discontinuation by the individual having legal custody |
of the student or by the student if he or she has |
reached the age of 18. |
(3) The destruction of all of a student's biometric |
information within 30 days after the use of the biometric |
information is discontinued in accordance with item (2) of |
this subsection (b). |
(4) The use of biometric information solely for |
identification or fraud prevention. |
(5) A prohibition on the sale, lease, or other |
disclosure of biometric information to another person or |
entity, unless: |
(A) the individual who has legal custody of the |
student or the student, if he or she has reached the |
age of 18, consents to the disclosure; or |
(B) the disclosure is required by court order. |
(6) The storage, transmittal, and protection of all |
biometric information from disclosure. |
(c) Failure to provide written consent under item (1) of |
subsection (b) of this Section by the individual who has legal |
custody of the student or by the student, if he or she has |
reached the age of 18, must not be the basis for refusal of any |
services otherwise available to the student.
|
(d) Student biometric information may be destroyed without |
notification to or the approval of a local records commission |
under the Local Records Act if destroyed within 30 days after |
|
the use of the biometric information is discontinued in |
accordance with item (2) of subsection (b) of this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 95-232, eff. 8-16-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-65.10)
|
Sec. 13B-65.10. Continuing professional development for |
teachers. Teachers may receive
continuing education units or |
continuing professional development units,
subject to the |
provisions of Section 13B-65.5 of
this Code, for professional |
development related to alternative learning.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-8.03) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-8.03)
|
Sec. 14-8.03. Transition goals, supports, and services.
|
(a) A school district shall consider, and develop when |
needed, the
transition goals and supports for eligible students |
with
disabilities not later than the school
year in which the |
student reaches age 14 1/2 at the individualized education
plan |
meeting and provide services as identified on the
student's |
individualized
education plan. Transition goals shall
be based |
on appropriate
evaluation procedures and information, take |
into consideration the
preferences of the student and his or |
her parents or guardian, be
outcome-oriented, and include |
employment,
post-secondary
education, and community living |
alternatives. Consideration of these goals
shall result in the |
clarification of a school district's responsibility to
deliver |
|
specific educational services such as vocational training and |
community
living skills instruction.
|
(b) To appropriately assess and plan for the student's |
transition needs,
additional individualized education plan |
team members may be
necessary
and may be asked by the school |
district to assist in the planning process.
Additional |
individualized education plan team members
may include a
|
representative from the Department of Human Services,
a case |
coordinator, or persons representing other community agencies |
or
services. The individualized education plan shall specify
|
each person
responsible for coordinating and
delivering |
transition services. The public school's responsibility for
|
delivering educational services does not extend beyond the time |
the student
leaves school or when the student reaches age 21 |
inclusive, which for purposes of this Article means the day |
before the student's 22nd birthday .
|
(c) A school district shall submit annually a summary of |
each eligible
student's transition goals and needed supports |
resulting from the
individualized education plan
team
meeting |
to the appropriate local Transition Planning Committee. If
|
students with disabilities who are ineligible for special |
education services
request transition services, local public |
school districts shall assist those
students by identifying |
post-secondary school goals, delivering appropriate
education |
services, and coordinating with other agencies and services for
|
assistance.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 92-452, eff. 8-21-01.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-15.01) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-15.01)
|
Sec. 14-15.01. Community and Residential Services |
Authority.
|
(a) (1) The Community and Residential Services Authority is
|
hereby created and shall consist of the following members:
|
A representative of the State Board of Education;
|
Four representatives of the Department of Human Services |
appointed by the Secretary of Human Services ,
with one member |
from the Division of Community Health and
Prevention, one |
member from the Division the Office of Developmental |
Disabilities of
the Division of Disability and Behavioral |
Health Services , one member
from the Division the Office of |
Mental Health of the Division of Disability and
Behavioral |
Health Services , and one member from the Division of the Office |
of
Rehabilitation Services of the Division of Disability and |
Behavioral Health
Services ;
|
A representative of the Department of Children and Family |
Services;
|
A representative of the Department of Juvenile Justice |
Corrections ;
|
A representative of the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services;
|
A representative of the Attorney General's Disability |
Rights Advocacy
Division;
|
|
The Chairperson and Minority Spokesperson of the House and |
Senate
Committees on Elementary and Secondary Education or |
their designees; and
|
Six persons appointed by the Governor. Five of such
|
appointees shall be experienced or knowledgeable relative to
|
provision of services for individuals with a behavior
disorder
|
or a severe emotional disturbance
and shall include |
representatives of
both the private and public sectors, except |
that no more than 2 of those 5
appointees may be from the |
public sector and at least 2 must be or have been
directly |
involved in provision of services to such individuals. The |
remaining
member appointed by the Governor shall be or shall |
have been a parent of an
individual with a
behavior disorder or |
a severe emotional disturbance, and
that appointee may be from |
either the private or the public sector.
|
(2) Members appointed by the Governor shall be appointed |
for terms
of 4 years and shall continue to serve until their |
respective successors are
appointed; provided that the terms of |
the original
appointees shall expire on August 1, 1990 , and the |
term of the additional
member appointed under this amendatory |
Act of 1992 shall commence upon the
appointment and expire |
August 1, 1994 . Any vacancy in the office of a
member appointed |
by the Governor shall be filled by appointment of the
Governor |
for the remainder of the term.
|
A vacancy in the office of a member appointed by the |
Governor exists when
one or more of the following events occur:
|
|
(i) An appointee dies;
|
(ii) An appointee files a written resignation with the |
Governor;
|
(iii) An appointee ceases to be a legal resident of the |
State of Illinois;
or
|
(iv) An appointee fails to attend a majority of |
regularly scheduled
Authority meetings in a fiscal year.
|
Members who are representatives of an agency shall serve at |
the will
of the agency head. Membership on the Authority shall |
cease immediately
upon cessation of their affiliation with the |
agency. If such a vacancy
occurs, the appropriate agency head |
shall appoint another person to represent
the agency.
|
If a legislative member of the Authority ceases to be |
Chairperson or
Minority Spokesperson of the designated |
Committees, they shall
automatically be replaced on the |
Authority by the person who assumes the
position of Chairperson |
or Minority Spokesperson.
|
(b) The Community and Residential Services Authority shall |
have the
following powers and duties:
|
(1) To conduct surveys to determine the extent of need, |
the degree to
which documented need is currently being met |
and feasible alternatives for
matching need with |
resources.
|
(2) To develop policy statements for interagency |
cooperation to cover
all aspects of service delivery, |
including laws, regulations and
procedures, and clear |
|
guidelines for determining responsibility at all times.
|
(3) To recommend policy statements
and provide |
information regarding effective programs for delivery of
|
services to all individuals under 22 years of age with a |
behavior disorder
or a severe emotional disturbance in |
public or private situations.
|
(4) To review the criteria for service eligibility, |
provision and
availability established by the governmental |
agencies represented on this
Authority, and to recommend |
changes, additions or deletions to such criteria.
|
(5) To develop and submit to the Governor, the General |
Assembly, the
Directors of the agencies represented on the |
Authority, and the
State Board of Education a master plan |
for individuals under 22 years of
age with a
behavior |
disorder or a severe emotional disturbance,
including
|
detailed plans of service ranging from the least to the |
most
restrictive options; and to assist local communities, |
upon request, in
developing
or strengthening collaborative |
interagency networks.
|
(6) To develop a process for making determinations in |
situations where
there is a dispute relative to a plan of |
service for
individuals or funding for a plan of service.
|
(7) To provide technical assistance to parents, |
service consumers,
providers, and member agency personnel |
regarding statutory responsibilities
of human service and |
educational agencies, and to provide such assistance
as |
|
deemed necessary to appropriately access needed services.
|
(c) (1) The members of the Authority shall receive no |
compensation for
their services but shall be entitled to |
reimbursement of reasonable
expenses incurred while performing |
their duties.
|
(2) The Authority may appoint special study groups to |
operate under
the direction of the Authority and persons |
appointed to such groups shall
receive only reimbursement of |
reasonable expenses incurred in the
performance of their |
duties.
|
(3) The Authority shall elect from its membership a |
chairperson,
vice-chairperson and secretary.
|
(4) The Authority may employ and fix the compensation of
|
such employees and technical assistants as it deems necessary |
to carry out
its powers and duties under this Act. Staff |
assistance for the Authority
shall be provided by the State |
Board of Education.
|
(5) Funds for the ordinary and contingent expenses of the |
Authority
shall be appropriated to the State Board of Education |
in a separate line item.
|
(d) (1) The Authority shall have power to promulgate rules |
and
regulations to carry out its powers and duties under this |
Act.
|
(2) The Authority may accept monetary gifts or grants from |
the federal
government or any agency thereof, from any |
charitable foundation or
professional association or from any |
|
other reputable source for
implementation of any program |
necessary or desirable to the carrying out of
the general |
purposes of the Authority. Such gifts and grants may be
held in |
trust by the Authority and expended in the exercise of its |
powers
and performance of its duties as prescribed by law.
|
(3) The Authority shall submit an annual report of its |
activities and
expenditures to the Governor, the General |
Assembly, the
directors of agencies represented on the |
Authority, and the State
Superintendent of Education.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14C-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-2)
|
Sec. 14C-2. Definitions. Unless the context indicates |
otherwise, the terms used in this
Article have the following |
meanings:
|
(a) "State Board" means the State Board of Education.
|
(b) "Certification Board" means the State Teacher |
Certification
Board.
|
(c) "School District" means any school district |
established under
this Code.
|
(d) "Children of limited English-speaking ability" means |
(1)
all children in grades pre-K through 12 who were not born |
in the United States , whose native tongue is a
language other |
than English , and who are incapable of performing ordinary
|
classwork in English; and (2) all children in grades pre-K |
through 12 who were born in the United
States of parents |
|
possessing no or limited English-speaking ability and
who are |
incapable of performing ordinary classwork in English.
|
(e) "Teacher of transitional bilingual education" means a |
teacher
with a speaking and reading ability in a language other |
than English in
which transitional bilingual education is |
offered and with communicative
skills in English.
|
(f) "Program in transitional bilingual education" means a |
full-time
program of instruction (1) in all those courses or |
subjects which a
child is required by law to receive and which |
are required by the
child's school district which shall be |
given in the native language of
the children of limited |
English-speaking ability who are enrolled in the
program and |
also in English, (2) in the reading and writing of the
native |
language of the children of limited English-speaking ability |
who
are enrolled in the program and in the oral comprehension, |
speaking,
reading and writing of English, and (3) in the |
history and culture of
the country, territory or geographic |
area which is the native land of
the parents of children of |
limited English-speaking ability who are
enrolled in the |
program and in the history and culture of the United
States; or |
a part-time program of instruction based on the educational
|
needs of those children of limited English-speaking ability who |
do not
need a full-time program of instruction.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1028.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-2.11) (from Ch. 122, par. 17-2.11)
|
|
Sec. 17-2.11. School board power to levy a tax or to borrow |
money and
issue bonds for fire prevention, safety, energy |
conservation, disabled
accessibility, school security, and |
specified repair purposes. |
(a) Whenever, as a
result of any lawful order of any |
agency,
other than a school board, having authority to enforce |
any school building code
applicable to any facility that houses |
students, or any law or regulation for
the protection and |
safety of the environment, pursuant to the Environmental
|
Protection Act, any school district having a population of less |
than 500,000
inhabitants is required to alter or reconstruct |
any school building or
permanent, fixed equipment; the district |
may, by proper resolution, levy a tax for the purpose of making |
such alteration or reconstruction, based on a survey report by |
an architect or engineer licensed in this State, upon all of |
the taxable property of the district at the value as assessed |
by the Department of Revenue and at a rate not to exceed 0.05% |
per year for a period sufficient to finance such alteration or |
reconstruction, upon the following conditions: |
(1) When there are not sufficient funds available in |
the operations and maintenance fund of the school district, |
the school facility occupation tax fund of the district, or |
the fire prevention and safety fund of the district, as |
determined by the district on the basis of rules adopted by |
the State Board of Education, to make such alteration or |
reconstruction or to purchase and install such permanent, |
|
fixed equipment so ordered or determined as necessary. |
Appropriate school district records must be made available |
to the State Superintendent of Education, upon request, to |
confirm this insufficiency. |
(2) When a certified estimate of an architect or |
engineer licensed in this State stating the estimated |
amount necessary to make the alteration or reconstruction |
or to purchase and install the equipment so ordered has |
been secured by the school district, and the estimate has |
been approved by the regional superintendent of schools |
having jurisdiction over the district and the State |
Superintendent of Education. Approval must not be granted |
for any work that has already started without the prior |
express authorization of the State Superintendent of |
Education. If the estimate is not approved or is denied |
approval by the regional superintendent of schools within 3 |
months after the date on which it is submitted to him or |
her, the school board of the district may submit the |
estimate directly to the State Superintendent of Education |
for approval or denial. |
(b) Whenever or whenever any such district determines that
|
it is necessary for energy conservation purposes that any |
school building
or permanent, fixed equipment should be altered |
or reconstructed and
that such alterations or reconstruction |
will be made with funds not necessary
for the completion of |
approved and recommended projects contained in any safety
|
|
survey report or amendments thereto authorized by Section |
2-3.12 of this Act; the district may levy a tax or issue bonds |
as provided in subsection (a) of this Section. |
(c) Whenever
or whenever any such district determines that |
it is necessary for disabled accessibility purposes and to |
comply with the school building
code that any
school building |
or equipment should be altered or reconstructed and that such
|
alterations or reconstruction will be made with
funds not |
necessary for the completion of approved and recommended |
projects
contained in any safety survey report or amendments |
thereto authorized under
Section 2-3.12 of this Act , the |
district may levy a tax or issue bonds as provided in |
subsection (a) of this Section. ; or whenever |
(d) Whenever any such district determines that it is
|
necessary for school
security purposes and the related |
protection and safety of pupils and school
personnel that any |
school building or property should be altered or
reconstructed |
or that security systems and equipment (including but not |
limited
to intercom, early detection and warning, access |
control and television
monitoring systems) should be purchased |
and installed, and that such
alterations, reconstruction or |
purchase and installation of equipment will be
made with funds |
not necessary for the completion of approved and recommended
|
projects contained in any safety survey report or amendment |
thereto authorized
by Section 2-3.12 of this Act and will deter |
and prevent unauthorized entry or
activities upon school |
|
property by unknown or dangerous persons, assure early
|
detection and advance warning of any such actual or attempted |
unauthorized
entry or activities and help assure the continued |
safety of pupils and school
staff if any such unauthorized |
entry or activity is attempted or occurs;
the district may levy |
a tax or issue bonds as provided in subsection (a) of this |
Section. |
(e) If or if a school district does not need funds for |
other fire prevention and
safety projects, including the |
completion of approved and recommended projects
contained in |
any safety survey report or amendments thereto authorized by
|
Section 2-3.12 of this Act, and it is determined after a public |
hearing (which
is preceded by at least one published notice (i) |
occurring at least 7 days
prior to the hearing in a newspaper |
of general circulation within the school
district and (ii) |
setting forth the time, date, place, and general subject
matter |
of the hearing) that there is a
substantial, immediate, and |
otherwise unavoidable threat to the health, safety,
or welfare |
of pupils due to disrepair of school sidewalks, playgrounds, |
parking
lots, or school bus turnarounds and repairs must be |
made ; then the district may levy a tax or issue bonds as |
provided in subsection (a) of this Section. : then
in any such |
event, such district may, by proper resolution, levy a tax for |
the
purpose of making such alteration or reconstruction, based |
on a survey report
by an architect or engineer licensed in the |
State of Illinois, upon all the
taxable property of the |
|
district at the value as assessed by the Department of
Revenue |
at a rate not to exceed .05% per year for a period sufficient |
to
finance such alterations, repairs, or reconstruction, upon |
the following
conditions:
|
(a) When there are not sufficient funds available in |
the operations
and maintenance fund of the district, the |
school facility occupation tax fund of the district, or the |
fire prevention and safety fund of
the district as |
determined by the district on the basis of regulations |
adopted
by the State Board of Education to make such |
alterations, repairs, or
reconstruction, or to purchase |
and install such permanent fixed equipment so
ordered or |
determined as necessary. Appropriate school district |
records shall
be made available to the State Superintendent |
of Education upon request to
confirm such insufficiency.
|
(b) When a certified estimate of an architect or |
engineer licensed in the
State of Illinois stating the |
estimated amount necessary to make the
alterations or |
repairs, or to purchase and install such equipment so |
ordered
has been secured by the district, and the estimate |
has been approved by the
regional superintendent of |
schools, having jurisdiction of the district, and
the State |
Superintendent of Education. Approval shall not be granted |
for any
work that has already started without the prior |
express authorization of the
State Superintendent of |
Education. If such estimate is not approved or denied
|
|
approval by the regional superintendent of schools within 3 |
months after the
date on which it is submitted to him or |
her, the school board of the district
may submit such |
estimate directly to the State Superintendent of Education |
for
approval or denial.
|
(f) For purposes of this Section a school district may |
replace a school
building or build additions to replace |
portions of a building when it is
determined that the |
effectuation of the recommendations for the existing
building |
will cost more than the replacement costs. Such determination |
shall
be based on a comparison of estimated costs made by an |
architect or engineer
licensed in the State of Illinois. The |
new building or addition shall be
equivalent in area (square |
feet) and comparable in purpose and grades served
and may be on |
the same site or another site. Such replacement may only be |
done
upon order of the regional superintendent of schools and |
the approval of the
State Superintendent of Education.
|
(g) The filing of a certified copy of the resolution |
levying the tax when
accompanied by the certificates of the |
regional superintendent of schools and
State Superintendent of |
Education shall be the authority of the county clerk to
extend |
such tax.
|
(h) The county clerk of the county in which any school |
district levying a
tax under the authority of this Section is |
located, in reducing raised
levies, shall not consider any such |
tax as a part of the general levy
for school purposes and shall |
|
not include the same in the limitation of
any other tax rate |
which may be extended.
|
Such tax shall be levied and collected in like manner as |
all other
taxes of school districts, subject to the provisions |
contained in this Section.
|
(i) The tax rate limit specified in this Section may be |
increased to .10%
upon the approval of a proposition to effect |
such increase by a majority
of the electors voting on that |
proposition at a regular scheduled election.
Such proposition |
may be initiated by resolution of the school board and
shall be |
certified by the secretary to the proper election authorities |
for
submission in accordance with the general election law.
|
(j) When taxes are levied by any school district for fire |
prevention,
safety, energy conservation, and school security |
purposes as specified in this
Section, and the purposes for |
which the taxes have been
levied are accomplished and paid in |
full, and there remain funds on hand in
the Fire Prevention and |
Safety Fund from the proceeds of the taxes levied,
including |
interest earnings thereon, the school board by resolution shall |
use
such excess and other board restricted funds , excluding |
bond proceeds and
earnings from such proceeds , as follows: |
(1) for other authorized fire prevention,
safety, |
energy conservation, and school security purposes ;
or |
(2) for transfer to the Operations and Maintenance Fund
|
for the purpose of abating an equal amount of operations |
and maintenance
purposes taxes. |
|
(k) If any transfer is made to the Operation and |
Maintenance
Fund, the secretary of the school board shall |
within 30 days notify
the county clerk of the amount of that |
transfer and direct the clerk to
abate the taxes to be extended |
for the purposes of operations and
maintenance authorized under |
Section 17-2 of this Act by an amount equal
to such transfer.
|
(l) If the proceeds from the tax levy authorized by this
|
Section are insufficient to complete the work approved under |
this
Section, the school board is authorized to sell bonds |
without referendum
under the provisions of this Section in an |
amount that, when added to the
proceeds of the tax levy |
authorized by this Section, will allow completion
of the |
approved work.
|
(m) Any Such bonds issued pursuant to this Section shall |
bear interest at a rate not to exceed the maximum rate
|
authorized by law at the time of the making of the contract, |
shall mature
within 20 years from date, and shall be signed by |
the president of the school
board and the treasurer of the |
school district.
|
(n) In order to authorize and issue such bonds, the school |
board shall adopt
a resolution fixing the amount of bonds, the |
date thereof, the maturities
thereof, rates of interest |
thereof, place of payment and denomination,
which shall be in |
denominations of not less than $100 and not more than
$5,000, |
and provide for the levy and collection of a direct annual tax |
upon
all the taxable property in the school district sufficient |
|
to pay the
principal and interest on such bonds to maturity. |
Upon the filing in the
office of the county clerk of the county |
in which the school district is
located of a certified copy of |
the resolution, it is the duty of the
county clerk to extend |
the tax therefor in addition to and in excess of all
other |
taxes heretofore or hereafter authorized to be
levied by such |
school district.
|
(o) After the time such bonds are issued as provided for by |
this Section, if
additional alterations or reconstructions are |
required to be made because
of surveys conducted by an |
architect or engineer licensed in the State of
Illinois, the |
district may levy a tax at a rate not to exceed .05% per year
|
upon all the taxable property of the district or issue |
additional bonds,
whichever action shall be the most feasible.
|
(p) This Section is cumulative and constitutes complete |
authority for the
issuance of bonds as provided in this Section |
notwithstanding any other
statute or law to the contrary.
|
(q) With respect to instruments for the payment of money |
issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the |
effective date of Public Act 86-004
(June 6, 1989), it is, and |
always has been, the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that |
the Omnibus Bond Acts are, and always have been,
supplementary |
grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
|
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that |
may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those |
Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a |
|
limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the |
Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this |
Section within the supplementary authority granted by the
|
Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of |
this Act that
may appear to be or to have been more restrictive |
than those Acts.
|
(r) When the purposes for which the bonds are issued have |
been accomplished
and paid for in full and there remain funds |
on hand from the proceeds of
the bond sale and interest |
earnings therefrom, the board shall, by
resolution, use such |
excess funds in accordance with the provisions of
Section |
10-22.14 of this Act.
|
(s) Whenever any tax is levied or bonds issued for fire |
prevention, safety,
energy conservation, and school security |
purposes, such proceeds shall be
deposited and accounted for |
separately within the Fire Prevention and Safety
Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-675, eff. 10-11-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-3) (from Ch. 122, par. 18-3)
|
Sec. 18-3. Tuition of children from orphanages and |
children's homes.
|
When the children from any home for orphans, dependent, |
abandoned or
maladjusted children maintained by any |
organization or association
admitting to such home children |
from the State in general or when children
residing in a school |
district wherein the State of Illinois maintains and
operates |
|
any welfare or penal institution on property owned by
the State |
of Illinois, which contains houses, housing units or housing
|
accommodations within a school district, attend grades |
kindergarten through
12 of the public schools maintained by |
that school district, the
State Superintendent of Education |
shall direct the State Comptroller to
pay a specified amount |
sufficient to pay the annual tuition cost of such
children who |
attended such public schools during the regular school year
|
ending on June 30 . The or the summer term for that school year, |
and the
Comptroller shall pay the amount after receipt of a |
voucher
submitted by the State Superintendent of Education.
|
The amount of the tuition for such children attending the |
public schools
of the district shall be determined by the State |
Superintendent of
Education by multiplying the number of such |
children in average daily
attendance in such schools by 1.2 |
times the total annual per capita cost of
administering the |
schools of the district. Such total annual per capita
cost |
shall be determined by totaling all expenses of the school |
district in
the educational, operations and maintenance, bond |
and interest,
transportation, Illinois municipal retirement, |
and rent funds for the
school year preceding the filing of such |
tuition claims less expenditures
not applicable to the regular |
K-12 program, less offsetting revenues from
State sources |
except those from the common school fund, less offsetting
|
revenues from federal sources except those from federal |
impaction aid, less
student and community service revenues, |
|
plus a depreciation allowance; and
dividing such total by the |
average daily attendance for the year.
|
Annually on or before July 15 June 30 the superintendent of |
the district shall certify to upon forms
prepared by the State |
Superintendent of Education shall certify to the regional
|
superintendent the following:
|
1. The name of the home and of the organization or |
association
maintaining it; or the legal description of the |
real estate upon which the
house, housing units, or housing |
accommodations are located and that no
taxes or service |
charges or other payments authorized by law to be made in
|
lieu of taxes were collected therefrom or on account |
thereof during either
of the calendar years included in the |
school year for which claim is being
made;
|
2. The number of children from the home or living in |
such houses,
housing units or housing accommodations and |
attending the schools of the
district;
|
3. The total number of children attending the schools |
of the district;
|
4. The per capita tuition charge of the district; and
|
5. The computed amount of the tuition payment claimed |
as due.
|
Whenever the persons in charge of such home for orphans, |
dependent, abandoned
or maladjusted children have received |
from the parent or guardian of any such
child or by virtue of |
an order of court a specific allowance for educating
such |
|
child, such persons shall pay to the school board in the |
district
where the child attends school such amount of the |
allowance as is necessary
to pay the tuition required by such |
district for the education of the
child. If the allowance is |
insufficient to pay the tuition in full the
State |
Superintendent of Education shall direct the Comptroller to pay |
to
the district the difference between the total tuition |
charged and the
amount of the allowance.
|
Whenever the facilities of a school district in which such |
house,
housing units or housing accommodations are located, are |
limited, pupils
may be assigned by that district to the schools |
of any adjacent district to
the limit of the facilities of the |
adjacent district to properly educate
such pupils as shall be |
determined by the school board of the adjacent
district, and |
the State Superintendent of Education shall direct the
|
Comptroller to pay a specified amount sufficient to pay the |
annual tuition
of the children so assigned to and attending |
public schools in the adjacent
districts and the Comptroller |
shall draw his warrant upon the State
Treasurer for the payment |
of such amount for the benefit of the adjacent
school districts |
in the same manner as for districts in which the houses,
|
housing units or housing accommodations are located.
|
The school district shall certify to the State |
Superintendent of Education
the report of claims due for such |
tuition payments on or before
July 15 31 . Failure on the part |
of the school board to certify its claim on
July 31 shall |
|
constitute a forfeiture by the district of its right to the
|
payment of any such tuition claim for the school year. The
|
State Superintendent of Education shall direct the Comptroller |
to pay to the
district, on or before August 15, the amount due |
the district for the school
year in accordance with the |
calculation of the claim as set forth in this
Section.
|
Summer session costs shall be reimbursed based on the |
actual expenditures for providing these services. On or before |
November 1 of each year, the superintendent of each eligible |
school district shall certify to the State Superintendent of |
Education the claim of the district for the summer session |
following the regular school year just ended. The State |
Superintendent of Education shall transmit to the Comptroller |
no later than December 15th of each year vouchers for payment |
of amounts due to school districts for summer session. |
Claims for tuition for children from any home for orphans |
or dependent,
abandoned, or maladjusted children beginning |
with the 1993-1994 school year
shall be paid on a current year |
basis. On September 30, December 31, and
March 31, the State |
Board of Education shall voucher payments for districts
with |
those students based on an estimated cost calculated from the |
prior
year's claim. Final claims for those students for the |
regular school term
and summer term must be received at the |
State Board of Education by July 15 31
following the end of the |
regular school year. Final claims for those students
shall be |
vouchered by August 15. During fiscal year 1994 both the |
|
1992-1993
school year and the 1993-1994 school year shall be |
paid in order to change the
cycle of payment from a |
reimbursement basis to a current year funding basis of
payment. |
However, notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section |
or the
School Code, beginning with fiscal year 1994 and each |
fiscal year thereafter, if the amount appropriated for any |
fiscal year is
less than the amount required for purposes of |
this Section, the amount required
to eliminate any insufficient |
reimbursement for each district claim under this
Section shall |
be reimbursed on August 30 of the next fiscal year. Payments |
required to eliminate any insufficiency for prior fiscal
year |
claims shall be made before any claims are paid for the current |
fiscal
year.
|
If a school district makes a claim for reimbursement under |
Section 18-4
or 14-7.03 it shall not include in any claim filed |
under this Section
children residing on the property of State |
institutions included in its
claim under Section 18-4 or |
14-7.03.
|
Any child who is not a resident of Illinois who is placed |
in a child
welfare institution, private facility, State |
operated program, orphanage
or children's home shall have the |
payment for his educational tuition and
any related services |
assured by the placing agent.
|
In order to provide services appropriate to allow a student |
under the legal
guardianship or custodianship of the State to |
participate in local school
district educational programs, |
|
costs may be incurred in appropriate cases by
the
district that |
are in excess of 1.2 times the district per capita tuition |
charge
allowed under the provisions of this Section. In the |
event such excess costs
are incurred, they must be documented |
in accordance with cost rules established
under the authority |
of this Section and may then be claimed for reimbursement
under |
this Section.
|
Planned services for students eligible for this funding |
must be a
collaborative effort between the appropriate State |
agency or the student's
group home or institution and the local |
school district.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-94, eff. 1-1-02; 92-597, eff. 7-1-02; 93-609, |
eff. 11-20-03.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2)
|
Sec. 21-2. Grades of certificates.
|
(a) All certificates issued under this Article shall be |
State certificates
valid, except as limited in Section 21-1, in |
every school district coming
under the provisions of this Act |
and shall be limited in time and designated
as follows: |
Provisional vocational certificate, temporary provisional
|
vocational certificate, early childhood certificate, |
elementary school
certificate, special certificate, secondary |
certificate, school service
personnel certificate, |
administrative certificate, provisional
certificate, and |
substitute certificate. The requirement of student teaching
|
|
under close and competent supervision for obtaining a teaching |
certificate
may be waived by the State Teacher Certification |
Board upon presentation to
the Board by the teacher of evidence |
of 5 years successful teaching
experience on a valid |
certificate and graduation from
a recognized institution of |
higher learning with a bachelor's degree.
|
(b) Initial Teaching Certificate.
Persons who (1) have |
completed an approved teacher preparation program,
(2) are |
recommended by an
approved teacher preparation program, (3) |
have successfully completed the
Initial Teaching Certification |
examinations required by the State Board of
Education, and (4) |
have met all other criteria established by the State Board
of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board, shall
be issued an Initial Teaching Certificate valid |
for 4 years of teaching, as
defined in Section 21-14 of this |
Code. Initial Teaching Certificates shall be
issued for |
categories corresponding to Early Childhood, Elementary, |
Secondary,
and Special K-12, with special certification |
designations for Special
Education, Bilingual Education, |
fundamental learning areas (including Language
Arts, Reading, |
Mathematics, Science, Social Science, Physical Development and
|
Health, Fine Arts, and Foreign Language), and other areas
|
designated by the State Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State
Teacher Certification Board. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Article, an Initial Teaching |
Certificate shall be automatically extended for one year for |
|
all persons who (i) have been issued an Initial Teaching |
Certificate that expires on June 30, 2004 and (ii) have not |
met, prior to July 1, 2004, the Standard Certificate |
requirements under paragraph (c) of this Section. An |
application and fee shall not be required for this extension.
|
(b-5) A person who holds an out-of-state certificate and |
who is otherwise eligible for a comparable Illinois certificate |
may be issued an Initial Certificate if that person has not |
completed 4 years of teaching. Upon completion of 4 years of |
teaching, the person is eligible for a Standard Certificate. |
Beginning July 1, 2004, an out-of-state candidate who has |
already earned a second-tier certificate in another state is |
not subject to any Standard Certificate eligibility |
requirements stated in paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this |
Section other than completion of the 4 years of teaching. An |
out-of-state candidate who has completed less than 4 years of |
teaching and does not hold a second-tier certificate from |
another state must meet the requirements stated in paragraph |
(2) of subsection (c) of this Section, proportionately reduced |
by the amount of time remaining to complete the 4 years of |
teaching.
|
(c) Standard Certificate.
|
(1) Persons who (i)
have completed 4 years of teaching, as |
defined in Section 21-14 of this Code,
with an Initial |
Certificate or an Initial Alternative Teaching Certificate and
|
have met all other criteria established by the State Board of |
|
Education in
consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board, (ii) have
completed 4
years of teaching on a valid |
equivalent certificate in another State or
territory of the |
United States, or have completed 4 years of teaching in a
|
nonpublic Illinois elementary or secondary school with an |
Initial Certificate
or an Initial Alternative Teaching |
Certificate, and have met all other criteria
established by the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board, or (iii) were issued teaching
|
certificates prior to
February 15, 2000 and are renewing those |
certificates after February 15, 2000,
shall be issued a |
Standard Certificate valid for 5 years, which may be renewed
|
thereafter every 5 years by the State Teacher Certification |
Board based on
proof of continuing education or professional |
development.
Beginning July 1,
2003, persons who have completed |
4 years of teaching, as described in clauses
(i) and (ii) of |
this paragraph (1), have successfully completed the
|
requirements of paragraphs (2) through (4) of this subsection |
(c),
and have met all other criteria
established by the State |
Board of Education, in consultation with the State
Teacher |
Certification Board, shall be issued Standard Certificates. |
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, |
beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold valid out-of-state |
certificates and have completed 4 years of teaching on a valid |
equivalent certificate in another State or territory of the |
United States shall be issued comparable Standard |
|
Certificates. Beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold valid |
out-of-state certificates as described in subsection (b-5) of |
this Section are subject to the requirements of paragraphs (2) |
through (4) of this subsection (c), as required in subsection |
(b-5) of this Section, in order to receive a Standard |
Certificate. Standard
Certificates shall be issued for |
categories corresponding to Early Childhood,
Elementary, |
Secondary, and Special K-12, with special certification
|
designations for Special Education, Bilingual Education,
|
fundamental learning areas (including Language Arts, Reading, |
Mathematics,
Science, Social Science, Physical Development and |
Health, Fine Arts, and
Foreign Language), and other areas |
designated by the State Board of
Education, in consultation |
with the State
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(2) This paragraph (2) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1)
of this subsection (c). In order |
to receive a Standard Teaching Certificate,
a person must |
satisfy one of the following requirements:
|
(A) Completion of a program of induction and mentoring |
for new teachers
that is
based upon a specific plan |
approved by the State Board of Education, in
consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board. Nothing in this |
Section, however, prohibits an induction or mentoring |
program from operating prior to approval. Holders of |
Initial Certificates issued before September 1, 2007 must |
|
complete, at a minimum, an approved one-year induction and |
mentoring program. Holders of Initial Certificates issued |
on or after September 1, 2007 must complete an approved |
2-year induction and mentoring program. The plan must
|
describe the role of mentor teachers, the criteria and |
process for their
selection, and how all the following |
components are to be provided:
|
(i) Assignment of a formally trained mentor |
teacher to each new
teacher
for a specified period of |
time, which shall be established by the employing
|
school or school district,
provided that a mentor |
teacher may not directly or indirectly participate in
|
the evaluation of a new teacher pursuant to Article 24A |
of this Code or the
evaluation procedure of the school.
|
(ii) Formal mentoring for each new teacher.
|
(iii) Support for each new teacher in relation to |
the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards, the |
content-area standards applicable to
the new teacher's |
area of certification, and any applicable local school
|
improvement and professional development plans.
|
(iv) Professional development specifically |
designed to foster the
growth of each new teacher's |
knowledge and skills.
|
(v) Formative assessment that is based on the |
Illinois Professional
Teaching Standards and designed |
to provide feedback to the new teacher and
|
|
opportunities for reflection on his or her |
performance, which must not
be used directly or |
indirectly in any evaluation of a new teacher
pursuant |
to Article 24A of this Code or the evaluation procedure |
of the
school and which must include the activities |
specified
in clauses (B)(i), (B)(ii), and (B)(iii) of |
this paragraph (2).
|
(vi) Assignment of responsibility for coordination |
of the induction
and mentoring program within each |
school district participating in the program.
|
(B) Successful completion of 4 semester hours of |
graduate-level
coursework on the assessment of one's own |
performance in relation to the
Illinois Professional |
Teaching Standards. The coursework must be approved
by the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board; must be offered either by an |
institution of higher
education, by such an institution in |
partnership with a teachers' association
or union or with a |
regional office of education, or by another entity
|
authorized to issue college credit; and must include |
demonstration of
performance through all of the following |
activities for each of the Illinois
Professional Teaching |
Standards:
|
(i) Observation, by the course instructor or |
another experienced
teacher, of the new teacher's |
classroom practice (the observation may be
recorded |
|
for later viewing) for the purpose of identifying and |
describing how
the new teacher made content meaningful |
for students; how the teacher motivated
individuals |
and the group and created an environment conducive to |
positive
social interactions, active learning, and |
self-motivation; what instructional
strategies the |
teacher used to encourage students' development of |
critical
thinking, problem solving, and performance; |
how the teacher communicated using
written, verbal, |
nonverbal, and visual communication techniques; and |
how the
teacher maintained standards of professional |
conduct and provided leadership to
improve students' |
learning.
|
(ii) Review and analysis, by the course instructor |
or another
experienced
teacher, of written |
documentation (i.e., lesson plans, assignments, |
assessment
instruments, and samples of students' work) |
prepared by the new teacher for
at least 2 lessons. The |
documentation must provide evidence of classroom
|
performance related to Illinois Professional Teaching |
Standards 1 through 9,
with an emphasis on how the |
teacher used his or her understanding of students,
|
assessment data, and subject matter to decide on |
learning goals; how the
teacher designed or selected |
activities and instructional materials and
aligned |
instruction to the relevant Illinois Learning |
|
Standards; how the
teacher adapted or modified |
curriculum to meet individual students' needs;
and how |
the teacher sequenced instruction and designed or |
selected student
assessment strategies.
|
(iii) Demonstration of professional expertise on |
the part of the new
teacher in reflecting on his or her |
practice, which was observed under clause
(B)(i) of |
this paragraph (2) and documented under clause (B)(ii) |
of this
paragraph (2), in terms of teaching strengths, |
weaknesses, and implications
for improvement according |
to the Illinois Professional Teaching Standards.
|
(C) Successful completion of a minimum of 4 semester |
hours of
graduate-level coursework addressing preparation |
to meet the requirements
for certification by the National |
Board for Professional Teaching Standards
(NBPTS). The |
coursework must be approved by the State Board of |
Education, in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board, and must be offered
either by an |
institution of higher education, by such an institution in
|
partnership with a teachers' association or union or with a |
regional office
of education, or by another entity |
authorized to issue college credit. The
course must address |
the 5 NBPTS Core Propositions and relevant standards
|
through such means as the following:
|
(i) Observation, by the course instructor or |
another experienced
teacher, of the new teacher's |
|
classroom practice (the observation may be
recorded |
for later viewing) for the purpose of identifying and |
describing how
the new teacher made content meaningful |
for students; how the teacher motivated
individuals |
and the group and created an environment conducive to |
positive
social interactions, active learning, and |
self-motivation; what instructional
strategies the |
teacher used to encourage students' development of |
critical
thinking, problem solving, and
performance; |
how the teacher communicated using written, verbal, |
nonverbal, and
visual communication techniques; and |
how the teacher maintained standards of
professional |
conduct and provided leadership to improve students' |
learning.
|
(ii) Review and analysis, by the course instructor |
or another
experienced
teacher, of written |
documentation (i.e., lesson plans, assignments, |
assessment
instruments, and samples of students' work) |
prepared by the new teacher for
at least 2 lessons. The |
documentation must provide evidence of classroom
|
performance, including how the teacher used his or her |
understanding of
students, assessment data, and |
subject matter to decide on learning goals;
how the |
teacher designed or selected activities and |
instructional materials
and aligned instruction to the |
relevant Illinois Learning Standards; how
the teacher |
|
adapted or modified curriculum to meet individual |
students' needs;
and how the teacher sequenced |
instruction and designed or selected student
|
assessment strategies.
|
(iii) Demonstration of professional expertise on |
the part of the new
teacher in reflecting on his or her |
practice, which was observed under clause
(C)(i) of |
this paragraph (2) and documented under clause (C)(ii) |
of this
paragraph (2), in terms of teaching strengths, |
weaknesses, and implications
for improvement.
|
(C-5) Satisfactory completion of a minimum of 12 |
semester hours of graduate credit towards an advanced |
degree in an education-related field from an accredited |
institution of higher education.
|
(D)
Receipt of an advanced degree from an accredited |
institution of
higher education in an education-related |
field that is earned by a person either while he or she |
holds an Initial Teaching Certificate or prior to his or |
her receipt of that certificate.
|
(E) Accumulation of 60 continuing professional |
development units
(CPDUs), earned by completing selected |
activities that comply with paragraphs
(3) and (4) of this |
subsection (c). However, for an individual who holds an
|
Initial Teaching Certificate on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the number of |
CPDUs shall be reduced to reflect the
teaching time |
|
remaining on the Initial Teaching Certificate.
|
(F) Completion of a nationally normed, |
performance-based assessment, if
made available by the |
State Board of Education in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board, provided that the cost to the |
person shall not
exceed the cost of the coursework |
described in clause (B) of this paragraph
(2).
|
(G) Completion of requirements for meeting the |
Illinois criteria for becoming "highly qualified" (for |
purposes of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Public |
Law 107-110) in an additional teaching area. |
(H) Receipt of a minimum 12-hour, post-baccalaureate, |
education-related professional development certificate |
issued by an Illinois institution of higher education and |
developed in accordance with rules adopted by the State |
Board of Education in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board. |
(I) Completion of the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards (NBPTS) process.
|
(J) Receipt of a subsequent Illinois certificate or |
endorsement pursuant to Article 21 of this Code.
|
(3) This paragraph (3) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1)
of this subsection (c). Persons |
who seek to satisfy the requirements of clause (E) of paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (c) through accumulation of CPDUs may |
|
earn credit through
completion of coursework, workshops, |
seminars, conferences, and other similar
training events that |
are pre-approved by the State Board of Education, in
|
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board, for |
the purpose of
reflection on teaching practices in order to |
address all of the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards |
necessary to obtain a Standard Teaching
Certificate. These |
activities must meet all of the following requirements:
|
(A) Each activity must be designed to advance a |
person's knowledge and
skills in relation to one or more of |
the Illinois Professional Teaching
Standards or in |
relation to the content-area standards applicable to the
|
teacher's field of certification.
|
(B) Taken together, the activities completed must |
address each of the
Illinois Professional Teaching |
Standards as provided in clauses (B)(i),
(B)(ii), and |
(B)(iii) of paragraph (2) of this subsection (c).
|
(C) Each activity must be provided by an entity |
approved by the State
Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board,
for this |
purpose.
|
(D) Each activity, integral to its successful |
completion, must require
participants to demonstrate the |
degree to which they have acquired new
knowledge or skills, |
such as through performance, through preparation of a
|
written product, through assembling samples of students' |
|
or teachers' work, or
by some other means that is |
appropriate to the subject matter of the activity.
|
(E) One CPDU shall be available for each hour of direct |
participation
by a holder of an Initial Teaching |
Certificate in a qualifying activity.
An activity may be |
attributed to more than one of the Illinois Professional
|
Teaching Standards, but credit for any activity shall be |
counted only once.
|
(4) This paragraph (4) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1) of
this subsection (c). Persons |
who seek to satisfy the requirements of clause (E) of paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (c) through accumulation of CPDUs may |
earn credit from the following, provided that each activity is |
designed to advance a person's
knowledge and skills in relation |
to one or more of the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards |
or in relation to the content-area
standards applicable to the |
person's field or fields of certification:
|
(A) Collaboration and partnership activities related |
to improving a
person's knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including all of the following:
|
(i) Peer review and coaching.
|
(ii) Mentoring in a formal mentoring program, |
including service as a
consulting teacher |
participating in a remediation process formulated |
under
Section 24A-5 of this Code.
|
|
(iii) Facilitating parent education programs |
directly related to
student achievement for a school, |
school district, or regional office of
education.
|
(iv) Participating in business, school, or |
community partnerships
directly related to student |
achievement.
|
(B) Teaching college or university courses in areas |
relevant to a
teacher's field of certification, provided |
that the teaching may only be
counted once during the |
course of 4 years.
|
(C) Conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, and |
symposiums related
to improving a person's knowledge and |
skills as a teacher, including all of the
following:
|
(i) Completing non-university credit directly |
related to student
achievement, the Illinois |
Professional Teaching Standards, or content-area
|
standards.
|
(ii) Participating in or presenting at workshops, |
seminars,
conferences, institutes, and symposiums.
|
(iii) (Blank).
|
(iv) Training as reviewers of university teacher |
preparation programs.
|
An activity listed in this clause (C) is creditable
|
only if its provider is approved for this purpose by the |
State Board of
Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
|
|
(D) Other educational experiences related to improving |
a person's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, including all |
of the following:
|
(i) Participating in action research and inquiry |
projects.
|
(ii) Observing programs or teaching in schools, |
related businesses, or
industry that is systematic, |
purposeful, and relevant to a teacher's field of
|
certification.
|
(iii)
Participating in study groups related to |
student achievement,
the Illinois Professional |
Teaching Standards, or content-area standards.
|
(iv) Participating in work/learn programs or |
internships.
|
(v) Developing a portfolio of students' and |
teacher's work.
|
(E) Professional leadership experiences related to |
improving a person's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including all of the following:
|
(i) Participating in curriculum development or |
assessment activities
at the school, school district, |
regional office of education, State, or
national level.
|
(ii) Participating in team or department |
leadership in a school or
school district.
|
(iii) (Blank).
|
(iv) Publishing educational articles, columns, or |
|
books relevant to
a teacher's field of certification.
|
(v) Participating in non-strike related activities |
of a professional
association or labor organization |
that are related to professional development.
|
(5) A person must complete the requirements of this |
subsection (c) before the expiration of his or her Initial
|
Teaching Certificate and must submit assurance of having done |
so to the regional superintendent of schools or a local
|
professional development committee authorized by the regional |
superintendent to submit recommendations to him or her for this |
purpose.
|
Within 30 days after receipt, the regional superintendent |
of schools shall review the assurance
of
completion submitted |
by a person and, based upon compliance with all of the
|
requirements for receipt of a Standard Teaching Certificate, |
shall forward to
the State Board of Education a recommendation |
for issuance of the Standard Certificate or non-issuance.
The |
regional superintendent of schools shall notify the affected |
person
if the recommendation is for non-issuance of the |
Standard Certificate. A person who is considered not to be |
eligible for a Standard Certificate and who has received the |
notice of non-issuance may appeal this determination to the |
Regional Professional Development Review Committee (RPDRC). |
The recommendation of the regional superintendent and the |
RPDRC, along with all supporting materials, must then be |
forwarded to the State Board of Education for a final |
|
determination.
|
Upon review of a regional superintendent of school's |
recommendations, the
State Board of Education shall issue |
Standard Teaching Certificates to those
who qualify and shall |
notify a person, in writing, of a decision denying a
Standard |
Teaching Certificate. Any decision denying issuance of a |
Standard
Teaching Certificate to a person may be appealed to |
the State Teacher
Certification Board.
|
(6) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Teacher
Certification Board, may adopt rules to implement |
this subsection (c) and may
periodically evaluate any of the |
methods of qualifying for a Standard Teaching
Certificate |
described in this subsection (c).
|
(7) The changes made to paragraphs (1) through (5) of this |
subsection (c) by this amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly shall apply to those persons who hold or are eligible |
to hold an Initial Certificate on or after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly and shall |
be given effect upon their application for a Standard |
Certificate.
|
(8) Beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold a Standard |
Certificate and have acquired one master's degree in an |
education-related field are eligible for certificate renewal |
upon completion of two-thirds of the continuing education units |
specified in subdivision (C) of paragraph (3) of subsection (e) |
of Section 21-14 of this Code or of the continuing professional |
|
development units specified in subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) |
of subsection (e) of Section 21-14 of this Code. Persons who |
hold a Standard Certificate and have acquired a second master's |
degree, an education specialist, or a doctorate in an |
education-related field or hold a Master Certificate are |
eligible for certificate renewal upon completion of one-third |
of the continuing education units specified in subdivision (C) |
of paragraph (3) of subsection (e) of Section 21-14 of this |
Code or of the continuing professional development units |
specified in subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) of subsection (e) |
of Section 21-14 of this Code.
|
(d) Master Certificate. Persons who have
successfully |
achieved National Board certification through the National |
Board
for Professional Teaching Standards shall be issued a |
Master Certificate, valid
for 10 years and renewable thereafter |
every 10 years through compliance with
requirements set forth |
by the State Board of Education, in consultation with
the State |
Teacher Certification Board. However, each teacher who holds a
|
Master Certificate shall be eligible for a teaching position in |
this State in
the areas for which he or she holds a Master |
Certificate without satisfying any
other requirements of this |
Code, except for those requirements pertaining to
criminal |
background checks. A holder of a Master Certificate in an area |
of science or social science is eligible to teach in any of the |
subject areas within those fields, including those taught at |
the advanced level, as defined by the State Board of Education |
|
in consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board. A |
teacher who holds a Master Certificate shall be
deemed to meet |
State certification renewal requirements in the area or areas
|
for which he or she holds a Master Certificate for the 10-year |
term of the
teacher's Master Certificate.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-796, eff. 8-10-02; |
93-679, eff. 6-30-04.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-14)
|
Sec. 21-14. Registration and renewal of certificates.
|
(a) A limited
four-year certificate or a certificate issued |
after July 1, 1955, shall
be renewable at its expiration or |
within 60 days thereafter by the
county superintendent of |
schools having supervision and control over the
school where |
the teacher is teaching upon certified evidence of meeting
the |
requirements for renewal as required by this Act and prescribed |
by
the State Board of Education in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board. An elementary supervisory |
certificate
shall not be renewed at the end of the first |
four-year period covered by
the certificate unless the holder |
thereof has filed certified evidence
with the State Teacher |
Certification Board that he has a master's degree
or that he |
has earned 8 semester hours of credit in the field of
|
educational administration and supervision in a recognized |
institution
of higher learning. The holder shall continue to |
earn 8 semester hours
of credit each four-year period until |
|
such time as he has earned a
master's degree.
|
All certificates not renewed or registered as herein |
provided shall
lapse after a period of 5 years from the |
expiration of the last year
of
registration. Such certificates |
may be reinstated for a one year period
upon payment of all |
accumulated registration fees. Such reinstated
certificates |
shall only be renewed: (1) by earning 5 semester hours of
|
credit in a recognized institution of higher learning in the |
field of
professional education or in courses related to the |
holder's contractual
teaching duties; or (2) by presenting |
evidence of holding a valid
regular certificate of some other |
type. Any certificate may be
voluntarily surrendered by the |
certificate holder. A voluntarily
surrendered certificate |
shall be treated as a revoked certificate.
|
(b) When those teaching certificates issued before |
February 15, 2000 are
renewed for the first time after February |
15, 2000, all
such
teaching
certificates
shall be exchanged for |
Standard Teaching Certificates as provided in subsection
(c) of |
Section 21-2. All Initial and Standard Teaching Certificates, |
including
those issued to persons who previously held teaching |
certificates issued before
February 15, 2000, shall be |
renewable under the conditions
set forth
in this
subsection |
(b).
|
Initial Teaching Certificates are valid for 4 years of |
teaching, as provided in subsection (b) of Section 21-2 of this |
Code, and are renewable every 4 years until the person |
|
completes 4 years of teaching. If the holder of an Initial |
Certificate has completed 4 years of teaching but has not |
completed the requirements set forth in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code, then the Initial |
Certificate may be reinstated for one year, during which the |
requirements must be met. A holder of an Initial Certificate |
who has not completed 4 years of teaching may continuously |
register the certificate for additional 4-year periods without |
penalty. Initial Certificates that are not registered shall |
lapse consistent with subsection (a) of this Section and may be |
reinstated only in accordance with subsection (a).
Standard |
Teaching Certificates are renewable every 5 years as provided
|
in
subsection (c) of Section 21-2
and subsection (c) of this |
Section.
For purposes of this Section, "teaching" is defined as |
employment and
performance of
services in an Illinois public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary
school, or
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or board |
of control, in a
certificated teaching position, or a charter |
school operating in compliance
with the
Charter Schools Law.
|
(c) In compliance with subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of |
this Code, which
provides that a
Standard
Teaching Certificate |
may be renewed by the State Teacher Certification Board
based
|
upon proof of continuing professional development, the State |
Board of Education
and
the State Teacher Certification Board |
shall jointly:
|
(1) establish a procedure for renewing Standard |
|
Teaching Certificates,
which shall include but not be |
limited to annual timelines for the renewal
process and the |
components set forth in subsections (d) through (k) of this
|
Section;
|
(2) establish the standards for certificate renewal;
|
(3) approve or disapprove the providers of continuing |
professional development
activities;
|
(4) determine the maximum credit for each category of |
continuing
professional development activities, based upon |
recommendations submitted by
a continuing professional
|
development
activity task force, which shall consist of 6 |
staff members from the State
Board of
Education, appointed |
by the State Superintendent of Education, and 6 teacher
|
representatives, 3 of whom are selected by the Illinois |
Education Association
and 3 of
whom are selected by the |
Illinois Federation of Teachers;
|
(5) designate the type and amount of documentation |
required to show that
continuing professional development |
activities have been completed; and
|
(6) provide, on a timely basis to all Illinois |
teachers, certificate
holders, regional superintendents of |
schools,
school districts, and others with an interest in |
continuing professional
development, information about the |
standards and requirements established
pursuant to this |
subsection (c).
|
(d) Any Standard Teaching Certificate held by an individual |
|
employed and
performing services in an
Illinois public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary school, or
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or board |
of control in a
certificated teaching
position or a
charter |
school in compliance with the Charter Schools Law must be |
maintained
Valid
and
Active through certificate renewal |
activities specified in the certificate
renewal procedure
|
established pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section, |
provided that
a holder of a Valid
and Active
certificate who is |
only employed on either a part-time basis or day-to-day
basis |
as a
substitute
teacher shall pay only the required |
registration fee to renew his or her
certificate
and maintain |
it as Valid and Active. All other Standard Teaching |
Certificates
held may be
maintained as
Valid and Exempt through |
the registration process provided for in the
certificate |
renewal
procedure established pursuant to subsection (c) of |
this Section. A Valid and
Exempt
certificate must
be |
immediately activated, through procedures developed jointly by |
the State
Board of
Education and the State Teacher |
Certification Board, upon the certificate
holder
becoming |
employed and performing services in an Illinois public or
|
State-operated elementary school,
secondary school, or |
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
board |
of control in a
certificated
teaching position or a charter |
school operating in compliance with the Charter
Schools
Law. A |
holder of a Valid and Exempt certificate may activate his or |
|
her
certificate
through procedures provided for in the |
certificate renewal procedure
established pursuant to
|
subsection (c) of this Section.
|
(e)(1) A Standard Teaching Certificate that has been |
maintained as Valid
and
Active for the 5 years of the |
certificate's validity shall be renewed as Valid
and Active
|
upon the certificate holder: (i)
completing an advanced degree |
from an approved institution in an
education-related field; |
(ii)
completing at least
8 semester hours of
coursework as |
described in
subdivision (B) of paragraph (3) of this |
subsection (e);
(iii)
(blank); earning at least
24 continuing |
education units as described in subdivision (C) of
paragraph |
(3)
of this subsection (e); (iv) completing the National Board |
for
Professional
Teaching Standards process as described in |
subdivision (D) of
paragraph (3) of
this subsection (e); or (v) |
earning 120 continuing professional
development
units ("CPDU") |
as described in subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) of
this
|
subsection (e). The maximum continuing professional |
development units for each
continuing professional development |
activity identified in subdivisions
(F)
through (J) of |
paragraph (3) of this subsection (e) shall be
jointly |
determined
by the State Board of Education and the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
If, however, the certificate |
holder has maintained the certificate
as Valid and
Exempt for a |
portion of the 5-year period of validity, the number of
|
continuing
professional development units needed to renew the |
|
certificate as Valid and
Active shall
be proportionately |
reduced by the amount of time the certificate was Valid and
|
Exempt.
Furthermore, if a certificate holder is employed and |
performs teaching services
on a
part-time basis for all or a |
portion of the certificate's 5-year period of
validity, the |
number
of continuing professional development units needed to |
renew the certificate as
Valid
and Active shall be reduced by |
50% for the amount of time the certificate
holder has
been |
employed and performed teaching services on a part-time basis. |
Part-time
shall
be defined as less than 50% of the school day |
or school term.
|
Notwithstanding any other requirements to the contrary, if |
a Standard
Teaching
Certificate has been maintained as Valid |
and Active for the 5 years of the
certificate's validity and |
the certificate holder has completed his or her
certificate |
renewal plan before July 1, 2002, the certificate shall
be |
renewed as Valid and Active.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 2004, in order to satisfy the |
requirements for continuing professional development provided |
for in subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code, each
Valid |
and Active Standard Teaching Certificate holder shall
complete |
professional development activities that address the |
certificate or those certificates that are required of his or |
her
certificated
teaching position, if the certificate holder |
is employed and performing
services in an Illinois public
or |
State-operated elementary school,
secondary school, or |
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
board |
of control, or that certificate or those certificates most |
closely
related to his or
her teaching position, if the |
certificate holder is employed in a charter
school. Except as |
otherwise provided in this subsection (e), the certificate |
holder's activities must address purposes (A), (B),
(C), or (D) |
and must reflect purpose (E) of the following continuing |
professional
development purposes:
|
(A) Advance both the certificate holder's knowledge |
and skills as a
teacher consistent with the Illinois |
Professional Teaching Standards and the
Illinois Content |
Area Standards in the certificate holder's areas of
|
certification,
endorsement, or teaching assignment in |
order to keep the certificate holder
current
in those |
areas.
|
(B) Develop the certificate holder's knowledge and |
skills in areas
determined
to be critical for all Illinois |
teachers, as defined by the State Board of
Education, known |
as "State priorities".
|
(C) Address the knowledge, skills, and goals of the |
certificate holder's
local
school improvement plan, if the |
teacher is employed in an Illinois public
or State-operated |
elementary school, secondary school, or cooperative or |
joint
agreement with a governing body or board of control.
|
(D) Expand the certificate holder's knowledge and |
skills in an
additional teaching field or toward
the
|
|
acquisition of another teaching certificate, endorsement, |
or relevant
education degree.
|
(E) Address the needs of serving students with |
disabilities, including adapting and modifying the general |
curriculum related to the Illinois Learning Standards to |
meet the needs of students with disabilities and serving |
such students in the least restrictive environment. |
Teachers who hold certificates endorsed for special |
education must devote at least 50% of their continuing |
professional development activities to this purpose. |
Teachers holding other certificates must devote at least |
20% of their activities to this purpose.
|
A speech-language pathologist or audiologist who is
|
licensed under the Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and
|
Audiology Practice Act and who has met the continuing
education |
requirements of that Act and the rules promulgated
under that |
Act shall be deemed to have satisfied the continuing
|
professional development requirements established by the State
|
Board of Education and the Teacher Certification Board to renew
|
a Standard Certificate.
|
(3) Continuing professional development activities may |
include, but are not limited to, the following activities:
|
(A) completion of an advanced degree from an approved |
institution
in an education-related field;
|
(B) at
least 8 semester hours of coursework
in an |
approved education-related program, of which at least 2 |
|
semester
hours relate
to the continuing professional |
development purpose set forth in purpose (A) of
paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (e), completion of which means no
|
other continuing professional development activities are |
required;
|
(C) (blank); continuing education units that satisfy |
the continuing
professional
development purposes set forth |
in paragraph (2) of this subsection (e), with
each |
continuing education unit equal to 5
clock
hours, provided |
that a plan that includes at least 24 continuing
education |
units (or 120 clock/contact hours) need not
include any |
other continuing professional development activities;
|
(D) completion of the National Board for
Professional |
Teaching
Standards
("NBPTS") process for certification or |
recertification, completion of which means no other |
continuing professional development activities are |
required;
|
(E) completion of 120 continuing professional |
development
units that
satisfy the continuing professional |
development purposes set forth in
paragraph (2) of this |
subsection (e) and may include without limitation
the |
activities identified in subdivisions (F) through
(J) of |
this paragraph
(3);
|
(F) collaboration and partnership activities related |
to
improving the
teacher's knowledge and skills as a |
teacher, including the following:
|
|
(i) participating on collaborative planning and |
professional
improvement
teams and committees;
|
(ii) peer review and coaching;
|
(iii) mentoring in a formal mentoring program, |
including service as a
consulting teacher |
participating in a remediation
process formulated |
under Section 24A-5 of this Code;
|
(iv) participating in site-based management or |
decision making teams,
relevant committees, boards, or |
task forces directly related to school
improvement |
plans;
|
(v) coordinating community resources in schools, |
if the project is a
specific goal of the school |
improvement plan;
|
(vi) facilitating parent education programs for a |
school, school
district, or
regional office of |
education directly related to student achievement or
|
school improvement plans;
|
(vii) participating in business, school, or |
community partnerships
directly
related to student |
achievement or school improvement plans; or
|
(viii) supervising a student teacher or teacher |
education candidate in
clinical supervision, provided |
that the supervision may only be counted
once during |
the course of 5 years;
|
(G) college or university coursework related to |
|
improving the
teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher |
as follows:
|
(i) completing undergraduate or graduate credit |
earned from a
regionally
accredited institution in |
coursework relevant to the certificate area being
|
renewed,
including coursework that incorporates |
induction activities and
development of a portfolio of |
both student and teacher work that
provides experience |
in reflective practices,
provided the coursework meets |
Illinois Professional Teaching Standards
or Illinois |
Content Area Standards and
supports the essential |
characteristics of quality professional development; |
or
|
(ii) teaching college or university courses in |
areas relevant to the
certificate area being renewed, |
provided that the teaching may only be
counted once |
during the course of 5 years;
|
(H) conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, and
|
symposiums related
to improving the teacher's knowledge |
and skills as a teacher, subject to disapproval of the |
activity or event by the State Teacher Certification Board |
acting jointly with the State Board of Education,
including
|
the following:
|
(i) completing non-university credit directly |
related to student
achievement, school improvement |
plans, or State priorities;
|
|
(ii) participating in or presenting at workshops, |
seminars,
conferences,
institutes, and symposiums;
|
(iii) training as external reviewers for Quality |
Assurance; or
|
(iv) training as reviewers of university teacher |
preparation programs.
|
A teacher, however, may not receive credit for conferences, |
workshops, institutes, seminars, or symposiums that are |
designed for entertainment, promotional, or commercial |
purposes or that are solely inspirational or motivational. |
The State Superintendent of Education and regional |
superintendents of schools are authorized to review the |
activities and events provided or to be provided under this |
subdivision (H) and to investigate complaints regarding |
those activities and events, and either the State |
Superintendent of Education or a regional superintendent |
of schools may recommend that the State Teacher |
Certification Board and the State Board of Education |
jointly disapprove those activities and events considered |
to be inconsistent with this subdivision (H);
|
(I) other educational experiences related to improving |
the
teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, including |
the following:
|
(i) participating in action research and inquiry |
projects;
|
(ii) observing programs or teaching in schools, |
|
related businesses, or
industry that is systematic, |
purposeful, and relevant to certificate renewal;
|
(iii) traveling related to one's teaching |
assignment, directly related to
student achievement or |
school improvement plans and approved by the regional |
superintendent of schools or his or her designee at |
least
30 days prior to the travel experience,
provided |
that the traveling shall not include time spent |
commuting to
destinations where the learning |
experience will occur;
|
(iv) participating in study groups related to |
student achievement or
school
improvement plans;
|
(v) serving on a statewide education-related |
committee, including but
not
limited to the State |
Teacher Certification Board, State Board of Education
|
strategic agenda teams, or the State Advisory Council |
on Education of
Children with Disabilities;
|
(vi) participating in work/learn programs or |
internships; or
|
(vii) developing a portfolio of student and |
teacher work;
|
(J) professional leadership experiences related to |
improving
the teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including the following:
|
(i) participating in curriculum development or |
assessment activities
at the
school, school district, |
|
regional office of education, State, or national
|
level;
|
(ii) participating in team or department |
leadership in a school or
school
district;
|
(iii) participating on external or internal school |
or school district
review
teams;
|
(iv) publishing educational articles, columns, or |
books relevant to
the
certificate area being renewed; |
or
|
(v) participating in non-strike related |
professional association or
labor organization
service |
or
activities related to professional development;
|
(K) receipt of a subsequent Illinois certificate or |
endorsement pursuant to this Article;
|
(L) completion of requirements for meeting the |
Illinois criteria for becoming "highly qualified" (for |
purposes of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Public |
Law 107-110) in an additional teaching area;
|
(M) successful completion of 4 semester hours of |
graduate-level coursework on the assessment of one's own |
performance in relation to the Illinois Teaching |
Standards, as described in clause (B) of paragraph (2) of |
subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code; or |
(N) successful completion of a minimum of 4 semester |
hours of graduate-level coursework addressing preparation |
to meet the requirements for certification by the National |
|
Board for Professional Teaching Standards, as described in |
clause (C) of paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of Section |
21-2 of this Code.
|
(4) A person must complete the requirements of this |
subsection (e) before the expiration of his or her Standard |
Teaching Certificate and must submit assurance to the regional |
superintendent of schools or, if applicable, a local |
professional development committee authorized by the regional |
superintendent to submit recommendations to him or her for this |
purpose. The statement of assurance shall contain a list of the |
activities completed, the provider offering each activity, the |
number of credits earned for each activity, and the purposes to |
which each activity is attributed. The certificate holder shall |
maintain the evidence of completion of each activity for at |
least one certificate renewal cycle. The certificate holder |
shall affirm under penalty of perjury that he or she has |
completed the activities listed and will maintain the required |
evidence of completion. The State Board of Education or the |
regional superintendent of schools for each region shall |
conduct random audits of assurance statements and supporting |
documentation.
|
(5) (Blank).
|
(6) (Blank).
|
(f) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Code, a |
school district is authorized to enter into an agreement with |
the exclusive bargaining representative, if any, to form a |
|
local professional development committee (LPDC). The |
membership and terms of members of the LPDC may be determined |
by the agreement. Provisions regarding LPDCs contained in a |
collective bargaining agreement in existence on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly |
between a school district and the exclusive bargaining |
representative shall remain in full force and effect for the |
term of the agreement, unless terminated by mutual agreement. |
The LPDC shall make recommendations to the regional |
superintendent of schools on renewal of teaching certificates. |
The regional superintendent of schools for each region shall
|
perform
the following functions:
|
(1)
review recommendations for certificate renewal, if |
any, received from LPDCs;
|
(2) (blank);
|
(3) (blank);
|
(4) (blank);
|
(5) determine whether certificate holders have met the
|
requirements for certificate renewal and notify |
certificate holders
if the decision is not to renew the |
certificate;
|
(6) provide a certificate holder with the opportunity |
to appeal a recommendation made by a LPDC, if any, not to |
renew the certificate to the regional professional |
development review committee;
|
(7) issue and forward recommendations for renewal or |
|
nonrenewal
of certificate holders' Standard Teaching |
Certificates to the State Teacher Certification Board; and
|
(8) (blank).
|
(g)(1) Each regional superintendent of schools shall |
review and concur or
nonconcur
with each recommendation for |
renewal or nonrenewal of a Standard Teaching
Certificate he or |
she receives from a local professional development committee, |
if any,
or, if
a certificate
holder appeals the recommendation |
to the regional professional development
review committee, the
|
recommendation for renewal or nonrenewal he or she receives |
from a regional
professional
development review committee and, |
within 14 days of receipt of the
recommendation,
shall
provide |
the State Teacher Certification Board with verification of the
|
following, if applicable:
|
(A) the certificate holder has satisfactorily |
completed professional development and continuing |
education activities set forth in paragraph (3) of |
subsection (e) of this Section;
|
(B) the certificate holder has submitted the statement |
of assurance required under paragraph (4) of subsection (e) |
of this Section, and this statement has been attached to |
the application for renewal;
|
(C) the local professional development committee, if |
any, has recommended the
renewal of the certificate |
holder's Standard Teaching Certificate and
forwarded the |
recommendation to the regional superintendent of schools;
|
|
(D) the certificate holder has appealed his or her |
local professional
development committee's recommendation |
of nonrenewal, if any, to the regional
professional |
development review committee and the result of that appeal;
|
(E) the regional superintendent of schools has |
concurred or nonconcurred
with
the
local professional |
development committee's or regional professional
|
development review committee's recommendation, if any, to |
renew or nonrenew the
certificate holder's Standard |
Teaching Certificate and made a
recommendation to that |
effect; and
|
(F) the established registration fee for the Standard |
Teaching
Certificate has
been paid.
|
If
the notice required by this subsection
(g) includes a |
recommendation of certificate nonrenewal, then, at the same |
time the regional superintendent of schools provides the State |
Teacher Certification Board with the notice, he or she
shall
|
also notify the
certificate holder in writing, by certified |
mail, return receipt requested, that
this notice has been |
provided to the
State
Teacher
Certification Board.
|
(2) Each certificate holder shall have the right to appeal
|
his or her
local
professional development committee's |
recommendation of nonrenewal, if any, to the
regional
|
professional development review committee, within 14 days of |
receipt of notice
that the
recommendation has
been sent to the |
regional superintendent of schools. Each regional
|
|
superintendent of schools shall
establish a regional |
professional development review committee or committees
for |
the
purpose of
advising the regional superintendent of schools, |
upon request, and handling
certificate
holder appeals. This |
committee shall
consist of at least 4 classroom teachers, one |
non-administrative
certificated
educational
employee, 2 |
administrators, and one at-large member who shall be either (i) |
a
parent, (ii)
a member of the business community, (iii) a |
community member, or (iv) an
administrator, with preference |
given to an individual chosen from among those
persons
listed |
in items (i), (ii), and (iii) in order to secure representation |
of an
interest not already
represented on the committee. The |
teacher and non-administrative certificated
educational |
employee members of the review committee shall be selected by |
their
exclusive representative, if any, and the administrators |
and at-large member
shall be
selected by the regional |
superintendent of schools. A regional superintendent
of |
schools
may add additional members to the committee, provided |
that the same proportion
of
teachers to administrators and |
at-large members on the committee is maintained. Any
additional |
teacher and non-administrative certificated educational |
employee members
shall be selected by their exclusive |
representative, if any. Vacancies in positions on a
regional |
professional development review committee shall be filled in |
the same manner
as the original selections. Committee members |
shall serve staggered 3-year terms. All
individuals selected to |
|
serve on regional professional development review committees
|
must be known to demonstrate the best practices in teaching or |
their respective
field of
practice.
|
(h)(1) The State Teacher Certification Board shall review |
the regional
superintendent of schools' recommendations to |
renew or nonrenew Standard
Teaching Certificates
and notify |
certificate holders in writing whether their certificates have
|
been renewed or
nonrenewed within 90 days of receipt of the |
recommendations,
unless a certificate holder has appealed a |
regional
superintendent of schools'
recommendation of |
nonrenewal, as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection
|
(h). The State Teacher Certification Board shall verify that |
the
certificate holder
has met the renewal criteria set forth |
in paragraph (1) of subsection (g) of
this Section.
|
(2) Each certificate holder shall have the right to appeal |
a regional
superintendent of school's recommendation to |
nonrenew his or her Standard
Teaching Certificate
to
the State |
Teacher Certification Board, within 14 days of receipt of |
notice that
the
decision has been sent to the State Teacher |
Certification Board, which shall
hold an
appeal hearing within |
60 days of receipt of the appeal. When such an appeal is
taken,
|
the certificate holder's Standard Teaching Certificate shall |
continue to be
valid until the
appeal is finally determined. |
The State Teacher Certification Board shall
review the
regional |
superintendent of school's recommendation, the regional |
professional
development review committee's recommendation, if |
|
any, and the local
professional
development committee's |
recommendation, if any, and all relevant documentation to |
verify
whether the certificate holder has met the renewal |
criteria set forth in
paragraph (1) of
subsection (g) of this |
Section. The State Teacher Certification Board may
request that
|
the certificate holder appear before it. All actions taken by |
the State
Teacher
Certification Board shall require a quorum |
and be by a simple majority of those
present and voting.
A |
record of
all votes
shall be maintained. The State Teacher |
Certification Board shall notify the
certificate
holder in |
writing, within 7 days of completing the review, whether his or |
her
Standard
Teaching Certificate has been renewed or |
nonrenewed, provided that if the State
Teacher
Certification |
Board determines to nonrenew a certificate, the written notice
|
provided to
the certificate holder shall be by certified mail, |
return receipt requested.
All certificate
renewal or |
nonrenewal decisions of the State Teacher Certification Board |
are
final and
subject to administrative review, as set forth in |
Section 21-24 of this Code.
|
(i) Holders of Master Teaching Certificates shall meet the |
same
requirements
and follow the same procedures as holders of |
Standard Teaching Certificates,
except
that their renewal |
cycle shall be as set forth in subsection (d) of Section
21-2 |
of this
Code and their renewal requirements shall be subject to |
paragraph (8) of subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code.
|
A holder of a
teaching certificate endorsed as a |
|
speech-language pathologist who
has been granted the |
Certificate of Clinical Competence by the
American |
Speech-Language Hearing Association may renew his or her
|
Standard Teaching Certificate pursuant to the 10-year renewal |
cycle set
forth in subsection (d) of Section 21-2 of this Code.
|
(j) Holders of Valid and Exempt Standard and Master |
Teaching Certificates
who are not employed and performing |
services in an Illinois public or
State-operated
elementary |
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement |
with a
governing body or board of control, in a certificated |
teaching position,
may
voluntarily activate their certificates |
through the regional superintendent of schools of the regional |
office of
education for the geographic area where their |
teaching is done. These certificate holders shall follow the |
same renewal
criteria
and procedures as all other Standard and |
Master Teaching Certificate holders,
except
that their |
continuing professional development activities need not
|
reflect or
address the knowledge, skills, and goals of a local |
school improvement plan.
|
(k) (Blank).
|
(l) (Blank).
|
(m) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
of the 93rd General Assembly that affect renewal of Standard |
and Master Certificates shall apply to those persons who hold |
Standard or Master Certificates on or after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly and shall |
|
be given effect upon renewal of those certificates.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-23) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-23)
|
Sec. 27-23. Motor Vehicle Code. The curriculum in all |
public schools
shall include a course dealing with the content |
of Chapters 11, 12, 13, 15,
and 16 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, the rules and regulations adopted pursuant
to those |
Chapters insofar as they pertain to the operation of motor |
vehicles,
and the portions of the Litter Control Act relating |
to the operation of motor
vehicles. Instruction shall be given |
in safety education in each grade, 1
through 8, equivalent to 1 |
class period each week, and in at least 1 of the
years in |
grades 10 through 12. The course of instruction required of |
each
eligible student at the high school level shall consist of |
a minimum of 30
clock hours of classroom instruction taught by |
a certified high school teacher
who has acquired special |
qualifications as required for participation under the
terms of |
Section 27-24.2 of this Act. Each school district maintaining
|
grades 9 through 12: (i) shall provide the classroom course for |
each public
and non-public high school student resident of the |
school district who either
has received a passing grade in at |
least 8 courses during the previous 2
semesters or has received |
a waiver of that requirement from the local
superintendent of |
schools (with respect to a public high school student) or
chief |
school administrator (with respect to a non-public high school |
|
student),
as provided in Section 27-24.2, and for each |
out-of-school resident of the
district between the age of 15 |
and 21 years who requests the classroom course,
and (ii) may |
provide such classroom course for any resident of the district
|
over age 55 who requests the classroom course, but only if |
space therein
remains available after all eligible public and |
non-public high school student
residents and out-of-school |
residents between the age of 15 and 21 who request
such course |
have registered therefor, and only if such resident of the |
district
over age 55 has not previously been licensed as a |
driver under the laws of this
or any other state or country. |
Each school district (i) shall provide an
approved course in |
practice driving consisting of a minimum of 6 clock hours of
|
individual behind-the-wheel instruction or its equivalent in a |
car, as
determined by the State Board of Education, for each |
eligible resident of the
district between the age of 15 and 21 |
years who has started an approved high
school classroom driver |
education course on request, and (ii) may provide such
approved |
course in practice driving for any resident of the district |
over age
55 on request and without regard to whether or not |
such resident has started
any high school classroom driver |
education course, but only if space therein
remains available |
after all eligible residents of the district between the ages
|
of 15 and 21 years who have started an approved classroom |
driver education
course and who request such course in practice |
driving have registered
therefor, and only if such resident of |
|
the district over age 55 has not
previously been licensed as a |
driver under the laws of this or any other state
or country. |
Subject to rules and regulations of the State Board of |
Education,
the district may charge a reasonable fee, not to |
exceed
$50, to students who
participate in the course, unless a |
student is unable to pay for such a course,
in which event the |
fee for such a student shall be waived. The total amount from |
driver education fees and reimbursement from the State for |
driver education must not exceed the total cost of the driver |
education program in any year and must be deposited into the |
school district's driver education fund as a separate line item |
budget entry. All moneys deposited into the school district's |
driver education fund must be used solely for the funding of a |
high school driver education program approved by the State |
Board of Education that uses instructors certified by the State |
Board of Education. If a
district provides the classroom or |
practice driving course or both of such
courses to any |
residents of the district over age 55, the district may charge
|
such residents a fee in any amount up to but not exceeding the |
actual cost of
the course or courses in which such residents |
participate. The course of
instruction given in grades 10 |
through 12 shall include an emphasis on the
development of |
knowledge, attitudes, habits and skills necessary for the safe
|
operation of motor vehicles including motorcycles insofar as |
they can be taught
in the classroom, and in addition the course |
shall include instruction on
special hazards existing at, and |
|
required extra safety and driving precautions
that must be |
observed at, emergency situations, highway construction and
|
maintenance zones, and
railroad crossings and the approaches |
thereto.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-426, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-24.4) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-24.4)
|
Sec. 27-24.4. Reimbursement amount. Each school district |
shall be entitled
to reimbursement, for each pupil, excluding |
each resident of the district
over age 55, who finishes either |
the classroom instruction
part or the practice driving part of |
a
driver education course that meets the minimum requirements |
of this Act.
However, if a school district has adopted a policy |
to permit proficiency examinations for the practice driving |
part of the driver education course as provided under Section |
27-24.3, then the school district is entitled to only one-half |
of the reimbursement amount for the practice driving part for |
each pupil who has passed the proficiency examination, and the |
State Board of Education shall adjust the reimbursement formula |
accordingly. Reimbursement under this Act is payable from
the |
Drivers Education Fund in the State treasury.
|
Each year all funds appropriated from the Drivers
Education |
Fund to the
State Board of Education, with the exception of |
those funds necessary for
administrative purposes of the State |
Board of Education, shall be distributed
in the manner provided |
in this paragraph to school districts by the State Board of |
|
Education for reimbursement of
claims from the previous school |
year. As soon as may be after each quarter of the year, if |
moneys are available in the Drivers
Education Fund in the State |
treasury for payments under this Section, the State Comptroller |
shall draw his or her warrants upon the State Treasurer as |
directed by the State Board of Education. The warrant for each |
quarter shall be in an amount equal to one-fourth of the total |
amount to be distributed to school districts for the year. |
Payments shall be made to school districts as soon as may be |
after receipt of the warrants.
|
The base reimbursement amount shall be calculated by the |
State Board by
dividing the total amount appropriated for |
distribution by the total of:
(a) the number of students, |
excluding residents of the district over age
55, who have |
completed the classroom instruction
part for whom valid claims |
have been made times 0.2; plus (b) the number
of students, |
excluding residents of the district over age 55, who have
|
completed the practice driving instruction part for whom valid |
claims have
been made times 0.8.
|
The amount of reimbursement to be distributed on each claim |
shall be 0.2
times the base reimbursement amount for each |
validly claimed student,
excluding residents of the district |
over age 55, who
has completed the classroom instruction part, |
plus 0.8 times the base reimbursement
amount for each validly |
claimed student, excluding residents of the
district over age |
55, who has completed the practice driving
instruction part. |
|
The school district which is the residence of
a pupil who |
attends a nonpublic school in another district that has |
furnished the driver
education course shall reimburse the |
district offering the course, the
difference between the actual |
per capita cost of giving the course the
previous school year |
and the amount reimbursed by the State.
|
By April 1 the
nonpublic school shall notify the district |
offering the course of the
names and district numbers of the |
nonresident students desiring to take
such course the next |
school year. The district offering such course shall
notify the |
district of residence of those students affected by April 15.
|
The school district furnishing the course may claim the |
nonresident pupil
for the purpose of making a claim for State |
reimbursement under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-440, eff. 8-4-05; 94-525, eff. 1-1-06; 95-331, |
eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-18.34)
|
Sec. 34-18.34. Student biometric information.
|
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "biometric |
information" means any information that is collected through an |
identification process for individuals based on their unique |
behavioral or physiological characteristics, including |
fingerprint, hand geometry, voice, or facial recognition or |
iris or retinal scans. |
(b) If the school district collects biometric information |
|
from students, the district shall adopt a policy that requires, |
at a minimum, all of the following: |
(1) Written permission from the individual who has |
legal custody of the student, as defined in Section |
10-20.12b of this Code, or from the student if he or she |
has reached the age of 18. |
(2) The discontinuation of use of a student's biometric |
information under either of the following conditions: |
(A) upon the student's graduation or withdrawal |
from the school district; or |
(B) upon receipt in writing of a request for |
discontinuation by the individual having legal custody |
of the student or by the student if he or she has |
reached the age of 18. |
(3) The destruction of all of a student's biometric |
information within 30 days after the use of the biometric |
information is discontinued in accordance with item (2) of |
this subsection (b). |
(4) The use of biometric information solely for |
identification or fraud prevention. |
(5) A prohibition on the sale, lease, or other |
disclosure of biometric information to another person or |
entity, unless: |
(A) the individual who has legal custody of the |
student or the student, if he or she has reached the |
age of 18, consents to the disclosure; or |
|
(B) the disclosure is required by court order. |
(6) The storage, transmittal, and protection of all |
biometric information from disclosure. |
(c) Failure to provide written consent under item (1) of |
subsection (b) of this Section by the individual who has legal |
custody of the student or by the student, if he or she has |
reached the age of 18, must not be the basis for refusal of any |
services otherwise available to the student.
|
(d) Student biometric information may be destroyed without |
notification to or the approval of a local records commission |
under the Local Records Act if destroyed within 30 days after |
the use of the biometric information is discontinued in |
accordance with item (2) of subsection (b) of this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 95-232, eff. 8-16-07.) |
Section 6. The Illinois School Student Records Act is |
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 10/6) (from Ch. 122, par. 50-6)
|
Sec. 6. (a) No school student records or information
|
contained therein may be released, transferred, disclosed or |
otherwise
disseminated, except as follows:
|
(1) To a parent or student or person specifically
|
designated as a representative by a parent, as provided in |
paragraph (a)
of Section 5;
|
(2) To an employee or official of the school or
school |
|
district or State Board with current demonstrable |
educational
or administrative interest in the student, in |
furtherance of such interest;
|
(3) To the official records custodian of another school |
within
Illinois or an official with similar |
responsibilities of a school
outside Illinois, in which the |
student has enrolled, or intends to enroll,
upon the |
request of such official or student;
|
(4) To any person for the purpose of research,
|
statistical reporting or planning, provided that no |
student or parent can be
identified from the information |
released and the person to whom the
information is released |
signs an affidavit agreeing to comply with all
applicable |
statutes and rules pertaining to school student records;
|
(5) Pursuant to a court order, provided that the
parent |
shall be given prompt written notice upon receipt
of such |
order of the terms of the order, the nature and
substance |
of the information proposed to be released
in compliance |
with such order and an opportunity to
inspect and copy the |
school student records and to
challenge their contents |
pursuant to Section 7;
|
(6) To any person as specifically required by State
or |
federal law;
|
(6.5) To juvenile authorities
when necessary for the |
discharge of their official duties
who request information |
prior to
adjudication of the student and who certify in |
|
writing that the information
will not be disclosed to any |
other party except as provided under law or order
of court. |
For purposes of this Section "juvenile authorities" means:
|
(i) a judge of
the circuit court and members of the staff |
of the court designated by the
judge; (ii) parties to the |
proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and
their |
attorneys; (iii) probation
officers and court appointed |
advocates for the juvenile authorized by the judge
hearing |
the case; (iv) any individual, public or private agency |
having custody
of the child pursuant to court order; (v) |
any individual, public or private
agency providing |
education, medical or mental health service to the child |
when
the requested information is needed to determine the |
appropriate service or
treatment for the minor; (vi) any |
potential placement provider when such
release
is |
authorized by the court for the limited purpose of |
determining the
appropriateness of the potential |
placement; (vii) law enforcement officers and
prosecutors;
|
(viii) adult and juvenile prisoner review boards; (ix) |
authorized military
personnel; (x)
individuals authorized |
by court;
|
(7) Subject to regulations of the State Board,
in |
connection with an emergency, to appropriate persons
if the |
knowledge of such information is necessary to protect
the |
health or safety of the student or other
persons;
|
(8) To any person, with the prior specific dated
|
|
written consent of the parent designating the person
to |
whom the records may be released, provided that at
the time |
any such consent is requested or obtained,
the parent shall |
be advised in writing that he has the right
to inspect and |
copy such records in accordance with Section 5, to
|
challenge their contents in accordance with Section 7 and |
to limit any such
consent to
designated records or |
designated portions of the information contained
therein;
|
(9) To a governmental agency, or social service agency |
contracted by a
governmental agency, in furtherance of an |
investigation of a student's school
attendance pursuant to |
the compulsory student attendance laws of this State,
|
provided that the records are released to the employee or |
agent designated by
the agency;
|
(10) To those SHOCAP committee members who fall within |
the meaning of
"state and local officials and authorities", |
as those terms are used within the
meaning of the federal |
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, for
the
purposes |
of identifying serious habitual juvenile offenders and |
matching those
offenders with community resources pursuant |
to Section 5-145 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987, but |
only to the extent that the release, transfer,
disclosure, |
or dissemination is consistent with the Family Educational |
Rights
and Privacy Act; or
|
(11) To the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services in furtherance of the
requirements of Section |
|
2-3.131, 3-14.29, 10-28, or 34-18.26 of
the School Code or |
Section 10 of the School Breakfast and Lunch
Program Act.
|
(12) To the State Board or another State government |
agency or between or among State government agencies in |
order to evaluate or audit federal and State programs or |
perform research and planning, but only to the extent that |
the release, transfer, disclosure, or dissemination is |
consistent with the federal Family Educational Rights and |
Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. 1221 et seq.). |
(b) No information may be released pursuant to |
subparagraphs (3) or
(6) of paragraph (a) of this Section 6 |
unless the parent receives
prior written notice of the nature |
and substance of the information
proposed to be released, and |
an opportunity to inspect
and copy such records in accordance |
with Section 5 and to
challenge their contents in accordance |
with Section 7. Provided, however,
that such notice shall be |
sufficient if published in a local newspaper of
general |
circulation or other publication directed generally to the |
parents
involved where the proposed release of information is |
pursuant to
subparagraph 6 of paragraph (a) in this Section 6 |
and relates to more
than 25 students.
|
(c) A record of any release of information pursuant
to this |
Section must be made and kept as a part of the
school student |
record and subject to the access granted by Section 5.
Such |
record of release shall be maintained for the life of the
|
school student records and shall be available only to the |
|
parent
and the official records custodian.
Each record of |
release shall also include:
|
(1) The nature and substance of the information |
released;
|
(2) The name and signature of the official records
|
custodian releasing such information;
|
(3) The name of the person requesting such information,
|
the capacity in which such a request has been made, and the |
purpose of such
request;
|
(4) The date of the release; and
|
(5) A copy of any consent to such release.
|
(d) Except for the student and his parents, no person
to |
whom information is released pursuant to this Section
and no |
person specifically designated as a representative by a parent
|
may permit any other person to have access to such information |
without a prior
consent of the parent obtained in accordance |
with the requirements
of subparagraph (8) of paragraph (a) of |
this Section.
|
(e) Nothing contained in this Act shall prohibit the
|
publication of student directories which list student names, |
addresses
and other identifying information and similar |
publications which
comply with regulations issued by the State |
Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
Section 7. The Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy Law |
|
is amended by changing Sections 2 and 3 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 305/2) (from Ch. 122, par. 1503-2)
|
Sec. 2. Establishment, Funding and Location. There is |
hereby created the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy ,
|
which shall be a residential institution located in the Fox |
River Valley in
close proximity to the national science |
laboratories based in Illinois. The Academy may develop |
additional campuses throughout the State, however, any |
additional campus does not need to serve as a residential |
institution.
The Academy shall be a State agency, funded by |
State appropriations,
private contributions
and endowments. |
Minimal fees for residential students may be charged. The
|
Academy may admit those students who have completed the |
academic
equivalent of the 9th grade and may offer a program of |
secondary and
postsecondary course work.
Admission shall be |
determined by competitive examination.
|
In order to be eligible for State appropriations, the |
Academy shall
submit to the Board of Higher Education not later |
than the 1st day of
October of each year its budget proposal |
for the operation and capital
needs of the Academy for its next |
fiscal year.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-109.)
|
(105 ILCS 305/3) (from Ch. 122, par. 1503-3)
|
Sec. 3. Board of Trustees. The Illinois Mathematics and |
|
Science Academy shall be governed by a
Board of Trustees which |
shall consist of the following members:
|
1. Ex Four ex officio nonvoting members who shall be: the |
State
Superintendent of Education; the Executive Director
of |
the Illinois Community College Board; the Executive Director of |
the
State Board of Higher Education; and the superintendent of |
schools of Superintendent of Schools in the
school district |
where each campus of in which the Academy is located.
|
2. Three Representatives of Secondary Education, one of |
whom must be a
math or science teacher, appointed by the State |
Superintendent of Education.
|
3. Two Representatives of Higher Education, one of whom |
must be a Dean
of Education, appointed by the Executive |
Director of the Illinois Board of
Higher Education.
|
4. Three representatives of the scientific community in |
Illinois
appointed by the Governor.
|
5. Three representatives of the Illinois private |
industrial sector
appointed by the Governor.
|
6. Two members representative of the general public at |
large appointed
by the Governor.
|
With the exception of the initial appointments, the members |
terms of
office shall be for 6 years. At the first meeting |
members shall draw
lots for appointments of 2, 4 or 6 year |
initial terms. Vacancies shall be
filled for the unexpired |
portion of the terms by appointment of the officer
who |
appointed the person causing such vacancy. The initial terms |
|
shall
commence upon appointment and upon expiration of a term, |
the member shall
continue serving until a successor is |
appointed. The Board shall select a
chair from among its |
members who shall serve a 2 year term as chair.
Members shall |
receive no
salary but shall be reimbursed for all ordinary and |
necessary expenses
incurred in performing their duties as |
members of the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-126.)
|
Section 8. The Illinois Summer School for the Arts Act is |
amended by adding Section 4.5 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 310/4.5 new)
|
Sec. 4.5. Transfer to State Board of Education. |
(a) On the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
95th General Assembly, the board of trustees of the Illinois |
Summer School for the Arts is abolished and the terms of all |
members end. On that date, all of the powers, duties, assets, |
liabilities, employees, contracts, property, records, pending |
business, and unexpended appropriations of the board of |
trustees of the Illinois Summer School for the Arts are |
transferred to the State Board of Education. |
(b) For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and Section 9b |
of the State Finance Act, the State Board of Education is |
declared to be the successor agency of the board of trustees of |
the Illinois Summer School for the Arts. |
|
(c) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 95th General Assembly, references in statutes, rules, |
forms, and other documents to the board of trustees of the |
Illinois Summer School for the Arts shall, in appropriate |
contexts, be deemed to refer to the State Board of Education. |
(d) Rules, standards, and procedures of the board of |
trustees of the Illinois Summer School for the Arts in effect |
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th |
General Assembly shall be deemed rules, standards, and |
procedures of the State Board of Education and shall remain in |
effect until amended or repealed by the State Board of |
Education. |
Section 9. The Vocational Education Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 435/2) (from Ch. 122, par. 697)
|
Sec. 2. Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1975 and
thereafter, any reference in this Act or any other |
Illinois statute to
the Board of Vocational Education and |
Rehabilitation, as such reference
pertains to vocational and |
technical education, means and refers to the
State Board of |
Education. Notwithstanding the provisions of any Act or
statute |
to the contrary, upon the effective date of this amendatory Act
|
of 1975, the State Board of Education shall assume all powers |
and duties
pertaining to vocational and technical education. |
|
The State Board of
Education shall be responsible for policy |
and guidelines pertaining to
vocational and technical |
education and shall exercise the following
powers and duties:
|
(a) To co-operate with the federal government in the |
administration
of the provisions of the Federal Vocational |
Education Law, to the extent
and in the manner therein |
provided;
|
(b) To promote and aid in the establishment of schools and |
classes
of the types and standards provided for in the plans of |
the Board, as
approved by the federal government, and to |
co-operate with State
agencies maintaining such schools or |
classes and with State and local
school authorities in the |
maintenance of such schools and classes;
|
(c) To conduct and prepare investigations and studies in |
relation to
vocational education and to publish the results of |
such investigations
and studies;
|
(d) To promulgate reasonable rules and regulations |
relating to
vocational and technical education;
|
(e) To report, in writing, to the Governor annually on or |
before the
fourteenth day of January. The annual report shall |
contain (1) a statement
to the extent to which vocational |
education has been established and
maintained in the State; (2) |
a statement of the existing condition of
vocational education |
in the State; (3) a statement of suggestions and
|
recommendations with reference to the development of |
vocational
education in the State; (4) (blank); a statement of |
|
recommendations on programs
and policies to overcome sex bias |
and sex stereotyping in vocational
education programming and an |
assessment of the State's progress in
achieving such goals |
prepared by the state vocational education sex equity
|
coordinator pursuant to the Federal Vocational Education Law; |
and (5)
an itemized statement of the amounts of money received |
from
Federal and State sources, and of the objects and purposes |
to which the
respective items of these several amounts have |
been devoted; and
|
(f) To make such reports to the federal government as may |
be
required by the provisions of the Federal Vocational |
Education Law, and
by the rules and regulations of the federal |
agency administering the
Federal Vocational Education Law.
|
(g) To make grants subject to appropriation and to |
administer and
promulgate rules and regulations to implement a |
vocational
equipment program. The use of such grant funds shall |
be
limited to obtaining equipment for vocational education |
programs, school
shops and laboratories. The State Board of |
Education shall adopt
appropriate regulations to administer |
this paragraph.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-560.)
|
Section 10. The Missing Children Records Act is amended by |
changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(325 ILCS 50/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 2285)
|
|
Sec. 5. Duties of school or other entity. |
(a) Upon notification by the Department of a
person's |
disappearance, a school, preschool educational program, child |
care facility, or day care home or group day care home in which |
the person is currently or was
previously enrolled shall flag |
the record of that person in such a manner
that whenever a copy |
of or information regarding the record is requested,
the school |
or other entity shall be alerted to the fact that the record is |
that of a
missing person. The school or other entity shall |
immediately report to the
Department any request concerning |
flagged records or knowledge
as to the whereabouts of any |
missing person. Upon notification by the
Department that the |
missing person has been recovered, the school or other entity
|
shall
remove the flag from the person's record.
|
(b) (1) For every child enrolled Upon enrollment of a child |
for the first time in a particular
elementary or secondary |
school, public or private preschool educational program, |
public or private child care facility licensed under the Child |
Care Act of 1969, or day care home or group day care home |
licensed under the Child Care Act of 1969, that school or other |
entity shall notify in writing the
person enrolling the child |
that within 30 days he must provide either (i)
a certified copy |
of the child's birth certificate or (ii) other reliable
proof, |
as determined by the Department, of the child's identity and |
age
and an affidavit explaining the inability to produce a copy |
of the birth
certificate. Other reliable proof of the child's |
|
identity and age shall
include a passport, visa or other |
governmental documentation of the child's
identity. When the |
person enrolling the child provides the school or other entity |
with a certified copy of the child's birth certificate, the |
school or other entity shall promptly make a copy of the |
certified copy for its records and return the original |
certified copy to the person enrolling the child. Once a school |
or other entity has been provided with a certified copy of a |
child's birth certificate as required under item (i) of this |
subdivision (b)(1), the school or other entity need not request |
another such certified copy with respect to that child for any |
other year in which the child is enrolled in that school or |
other entity.
|
(2) Upon the failure of a person enrolling a child
to
|
comply with subsection (b) (1), the school or other entity
|
shall immediately notify the
Department or local law |
enforcement agency of such failure, and shall
notify the person |
enrolling the child in writing that he has 10
additional days |
to comply.
|
(3) The school or other entity shall immediately report to |
the Department any affidavit
received pursuant to this |
subsection which appears inaccurate or suspicious
in form or |
content.
|
(c) Within 14 days after enrolling a transfer student, the |
elementary or
secondary school shall request directly from the |
student's previous school
a certified copy of his record. The |
|
requesting school shall exercise due
diligence in obtaining the |
copy of the record requested. Any elementary
or secondary |
school requested to forward a copy of a transferring student's
|
record to the new school shall comply within 10 days of receipt |
of the
request unless the record has been flagged pursuant to |
subsection (a), in
which case the copy shall not be forwarded |
and the requested school shall
notify the Department or local |
law enforcement authority of the request.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-439, eff. 1-1-08.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.21 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.61 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.65 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.92 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.93 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.94 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.95 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.99 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.102 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.124 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.22a rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.5 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.10 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.15 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.20 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.25 rep.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/13B-40.30 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-8.4 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-18 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-26 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-23.2 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/prec. Sec. 27-25 heading rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-25 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-25.1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-25.2 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-25.3 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-25.4 rep.)
|
Section 11. The School Code is amended by repealing |
Sections 2-3.21, 2-3.61, 2-3.65, 2-3.92, 2-3.93, 2-3.94, |
2-3.95, 2-3.99, 2-3.102, 2-3.124, 10-22.22a, 13B-40.5, |
13B-40.10, 13B-40.15, 13B-40.20, 13B-40.25, 13B-40.30, 18-8.4, |
21-18, 21-26, 27-23.2, 27-25, 27-25.1, 27-25.2, 27-25.3, and |
27-25.4 and the heading preceding Section 27-25.
|
(105 ILCS 310/4 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 310/5 rep.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Summer School for the Arts Act is |
amended by repealing Sections 4 and 5.
|
(105 ILCS 420/Act rep.)
|
Section 20. The Council on Vocational Education Act is |
repealed.
|
|
(105 ILCS 423/Act rep.)
|
Section 25. The Occupational Skill Standards Act is |
repealed. |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act. |
Section 99. Effective date. This Section and Section 10 |
take effect upon becoming law. |