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Public Act 096-0861 |
SB0315 Enrolled |
LRB096 06030 NHT 16112 b |
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AN ACT concerning education.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. This amendatory Act may be referred to as the |
Performance Evaluation Reform Act of 2010. |
Section 5. Findings; declarations. The General Assembly |
finds and declares all of the following: |
(1) Effective teachers and school leaders are a |
critical factor contributing to student achievement. |
(2) Many existing district performance evaluation |
systems fail to adequately distinguish between effective |
and ineffective teachers and principals. A recent study of |
evaluation systems in 3 of the largest Illinois districts |
found that out of 41,174 teacher evaluations performed over |
a 5-year period, 92.6% of teachers were rated "superior" or |
"excellent", 7% were rated "satisfactory", and only 0.4% |
were rated "unsatisfactory". |
(3) Performance evaluation systems must assess |
professional competencies as well as student growth. |
(4) School districts and the State must ensure that |
performance evaluation systems are valid and reliable and |
contribute to the development of staff and improved student |
achievement outcomes. |
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Section 10. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
2-3.25g, 24A-3, 24A-4, 24A-5, 24A-7, 24A-8, 24A-15, 34-8, and |
34-85c and by adding Sections 24A-2.5, 24A-7.1, and 24A-20 as |
follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.25g) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25g) |
Sec. 2-3.25g. Waiver or modification of mandates within the |
School
Code and administrative rules and regulations. |
(a) In this Section: |
"Board" means a school board or the governing board or |
administrative district, as the case may be, for a joint |
agreement. |
"Eligible applicant" means a school district, joint |
agreement made up of school districts, or regional |
superintendent of schools on behalf of schools and programs |
operated by the regional office of education.
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"Implementation date" has the meaning set forth in |
Section 24A-2.5 of this Code. |
"State Board" means the State Board of Education.
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(b) Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this School |
Code or any other law of this State to the
contrary, eligible |
applicants may petition the State Board of Education for the
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waiver or modification of the mandates of this School Code or |
of the
administrative rules and regulations promulgated by the |
State Board of
Education. Waivers or modifications of |
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administrative rules and regulations
and modifications of |
mandates of this School Code may be requested when an eligible |
applicant demonstrates that it can address the intent of the |
rule or
mandate in a more effective, efficient, or economical |
manner or when necessary
to stimulate innovation or improve |
student performance. Waivers of
mandates of
the School Code may |
be requested when the waivers are necessary to stimulate
|
innovation or improve student performance. Waivers may not be |
requested
from laws, rules, and regulations pertaining to |
special education, teacher
certification, teacher tenure and |
seniority, or Section 5-2.1 of this Code or from compliance |
with the No
Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (Public Law 107-110). |
On and after the applicable implementation date, eligible |
applicants may not seek a waiver or seek a modification of a |
mandate regarding the requirements for (i) student performance |
data to be a significant factor in teacher or principal |
evaluations or (ii) for teachers and principals to be rated |
using the 4 categories of "excellent", "proficient", "needs |
improvement", or "unsatisfactory". On the applicable |
implementation date, any previously authorized waiver or |
modification from such requirements shall terminate. |
(c) Eligible applicants, as a matter of inherent managerial |
policy, and any
Independent Authority established under |
Section 2-3.25f may submit an
application for a waiver or |
modification authorized under this Section. Each
application |
must include a written request by the eligible applicant or
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Independent Authority and must demonstrate that the intent of |
the mandate can
be addressed in a more effective, efficient, or |
economical manner
or be based
upon a specific plan for improved |
student performance and school improvement.
Any eligible |
applicant requesting a waiver or modification for the reason |
that intent
of the mandate can be addressed in a more |
economical manner shall include in
the application a fiscal |
analysis showing current expenditures on the mandate
and |
projected savings resulting from the waiver
or modification. |
Applications
and plans developed by eligible applicants must be |
approved by the board or regional superintendent of schools |
applying on behalf of schools or programs operated by the |
regional office of education following a public hearing on the |
application and plan and the
opportunity for the board or |
regional superintendent to hear testimony from staff
directly |
involved in
its implementation, parents, and students. The time |
period for such testimony shall be separate from the time |
period established by the eligible applicant for public comment |
on other matters. If the applicant is a school district or |
joint agreement requesting a waiver or modification of Section |
27-6 of this Code, the public hearing shall be held on a day |
other than the day on which a regular meeting of the board is |
held. If the applicant is a school district, the
public hearing |
must be preceded
by at least one published notice occurring at |
least 7 days prior to the hearing
in a newspaper of general |
circulation within the school district that sets
forth the |
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time, date, place, and general subject matter of the hearing. |
If the applicant is a joint agreement or regional |
superintendent, the public hearing must be preceded by at least |
one published notice (setting forth the time, date, place, and |
general subject matter of the hearing) occurring at least 7 |
days prior to the hearing in a newspaper of general circulation |
in each school district that is a member of the joint agreement |
or that is served by the educational service region, provided |
that a notice appearing in a newspaper generally circulated in |
more than one school district shall be deemed to fulfill this |
requirement with respect to all of the affected districts. The
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eligible applicant must notify in writing the affected |
exclusive collective
bargaining agent and those State |
legislators representing the eligible applicant's territory of
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its
intent to seek approval of a
waiver or
modification and of |
the hearing to be held to take testimony from staff.
The |
affected exclusive collective bargaining agents shall be |
notified of such
public hearing at least 7 days prior to the |
date of the hearing and shall be
allowed to attend
such public |
hearing. The eligible applicant shall attest to compliance with |
all of
the notification and procedural requirements set forth |
in this Section. |
(d) A request for a waiver or modification of |
administrative rules and
regulations or for a modification of |
mandates contained in this School Code
shall be submitted to |
the State Board of Education within 15 days after
approval by |
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the board or regional superintendent of schools. The |
application as submitted to the
State Board of Education shall |
include a description of the public hearing.
Following receipt |
of the request, the
State Board shall have 45 days to review |
the application and request. If the
State Board fails to |
disapprove the application within that 45 day period, the
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waiver or modification shall be deemed granted. The State Board
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may disapprove
any request if it is not based upon sound |
educational practices, endangers the
health or safety of |
students or staff, compromises equal opportunities for
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learning, or fails to demonstrate that the intent of the rule |
or mandate can be
addressed in a more effective, efficient, or |
economical manner or have improved
student performance as a |
primary goal. Any request disapproved by the State
Board may be |
appealed to the General Assembly by the eligible applicant
as |
outlined in this Section. |
A request for a waiver from mandates contained in this |
School Code shall be
submitted to the State Board within 15 |
days after approval by the board or regional superintendent of |
schools.
The application as submitted to the State Board of |
Education
shall include a description of the public hearing. |
The description shall
include, but need not be limited to, the |
means of notice, the number of people
in attendance, the number |
of people who spoke as proponents or opponents of the
waiver, a |
brief description of their comments, and whether there were any
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written statements submitted.
The State Board shall review the |
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applications and requests for
completeness and shall compile |
the requests in reports to be filed with the
General Assembly.
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The State Board shall file
reports outlining the waivers
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requested by eligible applicants
and appeals by eligible |
applicants of requests
disapproved by the State Board with the |
Senate and the House of
Representatives before each March 1 and
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October
1. The General Assembly may disapprove the report of |
the State Board in whole
or in part within 60 calendar days |
after each house of the General Assembly
next
convenes after |
the report is filed by adoption of a resolution by a record |
vote
of the majority of members elected in each house. If the |
General Assembly
fails to disapprove any waiver request or |
appealed request within such 60
day period, the waiver or |
modification shall be deemed granted. Any resolution
adopted by |
the General Assembly disapproving a report of the State Board |
in
whole or in part shall be binding on the State Board. |
(e) An approved waiver or modification (except a waiver |
from or modification to a physical education mandate) may |
remain in effect for a period not to
exceed 5 school years and |
may be renewed upon application by the
eligible applicant. |
However, such waiver or modification may be changed within that
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5-year period by a board or regional superintendent of schools |
applying on behalf of schools or programs operated by the |
regional office of education following the procedure as set
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forth in this Section for the initial waiver or modification |
request. If
neither the State Board of Education nor the |
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General Assembly disapproves, the
change is deemed granted. |
An approved waiver from or modification to a physical |
education mandate may remain in effect for a period not to |
exceed 2 school years and may be renewed no more than 2 times |
upon application by the eligible applicant. An approved waiver |
from or modification to a physical education mandate may be |
changed within the 2-year period by the board or regional |
superintendent of schools, whichever is applicable, following |
the procedure set forth in this Section for the initial waiver |
or modification request. If neither the State Board of |
Education nor the General Assembly disapproves, the change is |
deemed granted.
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(f) On or before February 1, 1998, and each year |
thereafter, the State Board of
Education shall submit a |
cumulative report summarizing all types of waivers of
mandates |
and modifications of mandates granted by the State Board or the
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General Assembly. The report shall identify the topic of the |
waiver along with
the number and percentage of eligible |
applicants for which the waiver has been
granted. The report |
shall also include any recommendations from the State
Board |
regarding the repeal or modification of waived mandates. |
(Source: P.A. 94-198, eff. 1-1-06; 94-432, eff. 8-2-05; 94-875, |
eff. 7-1-06; 95-223, eff. 1-1-08.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-2.5 new) |
Sec. 24A-2.5. Definitions. In this Article: |
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"Evaluator" means: |
(1) an administrator qualified under Section 24A-3; or |
(2) other individuals qualified under Section 24A-3, |
provided that, if such other individuals are in the |
bargaining unit of a district's teachers, the district and |
the exclusive bargaining representative of that unit must |
agree to those individuals evaluating other bargaining |
unit members. |
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in item (2) of |
this definition, a school district operating under Article 34 |
of this Code may require department chairs qualified under |
Section 24A-3 to evaluate teachers in their department or |
departments, provided that the school district shall bargain |
with the bargaining representative of its teachers over the |
impact and effects on department chairs of such a requirement. |
"Implementation date" means, unless otherwise specified |
and provided that the requirements set forth in subsection (d) |
of Section 24A-20 have been met: |
(1) For school districts having 500,000 or more |
inhabitants, in at least 300 schools by September 1, 2012 |
and in the remaining schools by September 1, 2013. |
(2) For school districts having less than 500,000 |
inhabitants and receiving a Race to the Top Grant or School |
Improvement Grant after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the date |
specified in those grants for implementing an evaluation |
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system for teachers and principals incorporating student |
growth as a significant factor. |
(3) For the lowest performing 20% percent of remaining |
school districts having less than 500,000 inhabitants |
(with the measure of and school year or years used for |
school district performance to be determined by the State |
Superintendent of Education at a time determined by the |
State Superintendent), September 1, 2015. |
(4) For all other school districts having less than |
500,000 inhabitants, September 1, 2016. |
"Race to the Top Grant" means a grant made by the Secretary |
of the U.S. Department of Education pursuant to paragraph (2) |
of Section 14006(a) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment |
Act of 2009. |
"School Improvement Grant" means a grant made by the |
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education pursuant to |
Section 1003(g) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-3) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-3) |
Sec. 24A-3. Evaluation training and pre-qualification . |
(a) School Beginning January 1, 1986, school
boards shall |
require evaluators those administrators, or -- in school |
districts
having a population exceeding 500,000 -- assistant |
principals, who
evaluate other certified personnel to |
participate at least once every 2
years in an inservice |
training workshop on either school improvement or the
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evaluation of certified personnel
provided or approved by the |
State Board of Education prior to undertaking any evaluation |
and at least once during each certificate renewal cycle. |
Training provided or approved by the State Board of Education |
shall include the evaluator training program developed |
pursuant to Section 24A-20 of this Code . |
(b) Any evaluator undertaking an evaluation after |
September 1, 2012 must first successfully complete a |
pre-qualification program provided or approved by the State |
Board of Education. The program must involve rigorous training |
and an independent observer's determination that the |
evaluator's ratings properly align to the requirements |
established by the State Board pursuant to this Article. |
(Source: P.A. 86-1477; 87-1076.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-4) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-4) |
Sec. 24A-4. Development and submission of evaluation plan. |
(a) As used in
this and the succeeding Sections, "teacher" |
means any and all school
district employees regularly required |
to be certified under laws relating
to the certification of |
teachers. Each school district shall develop, in
cooperation |
with its teachers or, where applicable, the exclusive
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bargaining representatives of its teachers, an evaluation plan |
for all
teachers . |
(b) By no later than the applicable implementation date, |
each school district shall, in good faith cooperation with its |
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teachers or, where applicable, the exclusive bargaining |
representatives of its teachers, incorporate the use of data |
and indicators on student growth as a significant factor in |
rating teaching performance, into its evaluation plan for all |
teachers, both those teachers in contractual continued service |
and those teachers not in contractual continued service. The |
plan shall at least meet the standards and requirements for |
student growth and teacher evaluation established under |
Section 24A-7, and specifically describe how student growth |
data and indicators will be used as part of the evaluation |
process, how this information will relate to evaluation |
standards, the assessments or other indicators of student |
performance that will be used in measuring student growth and |
the weight that each will have, the methodology that will be |
used to measure student growth, and the criteria other than |
student growth that will be used in evaluating the teacher and |
the weight that each will have. |
To incorporate the use of data and indicators of student |
growth as a significant factor in rating teacher performance |
into the evaluation plan, the district shall use a joint |
committee composed of equal representation selected by the |
district and its teachers or, where applicable, the exclusive |
bargaining representative of its teachers. If, within 180 |
calendar days of the committee's first meeting, the committee |
does not reach agreement on the plan, then the district shall |
implement the model evaluation plan established under Section |
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24A-7 with respect to the use of data and indicators on student |
growth as a significant factor in rating teacher performance. |
Nothing in this subsection (a) shall make decisions on the |
use of data and indicators on student growth as a significant |
factor in rating teaching performance mandatory subjects of |
bargaining under the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act |
that are not currently mandatory subjects of bargaining under |
the Act. |
(c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in subsection |
(b) of this Section, if the joint committee referred to in that |
subsection does not reach agreement on the plan within 90 |
calendar days after the committee's first meeting, a school |
district having 500,000 or more inhabitants shall not be |
required to implement any aspect of the model evaluation plan |
and may implement its last best proposal. in contractual |
continued service. The district shall, no later
than October 1, |
1986, submit a copy of its evaluation plan to the State
Board |
of Education, which shall review the plan and make public its
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comments thereon, and the district shall at the same time |
provide a copy to
the exclusive bargaining representatives. |
Whenever any substantive change
is made in a district's |
evaluation plan, the new plan shall be submitted to
the State |
Board of Education for review and comment, and the district |
shall
at the same time provide a copy of any such new plan to |
the exclusive
bargaining representatives. The board of a school |
district operating under Article 34 of this Code and the |
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exclusive representative of the district's teachers shall |
submit a certified copy of an agreement entered into under |
Section 34-85c of this Code to the State Board of Education, |
and that agreement shall constitute the teacher evaluation plan |
for teachers assigned to schools identified in that agreement. |
Whenever any substantive change is made in an agreement entered |
into under Section 34-85c of this Code by the board of a school |
district operating under Article 34 of this Code and the |
exclusive representative of the district's teachers, the new |
agreement shall be submitted to the State Board of Education.
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(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-5) |
Sec. 24A-5. Content of evaluation plans. This Section does |
not apply to teachers assigned to schools identified in an |
agreement entered into between the board of a school district |
operating under Article 34 of this Code and the exclusive |
representative of the district's teachers in accordance with |
Section 34-85c of this Code.
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Each school district to
which this Article applies shall |
establish a teacher evaluation plan
which ensures that each |
teacher in contractual continued service
is evaluated at least |
once in the course of every 2 school years , beginning
with the |
1986-87 school year . |
By no later than September 1, 2012, each school district |
shall establish a teacher evaluation plan that ensures that: |
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(1) each teacher not in contractual continued service |
is evaluated at least once every school year; and |
(2) each teacher in contractual continued service is |
evaluated at least once in the course of every 2 school |
years. However, any teacher in contractual continued |
service whose performance is rated as either "needs |
improvement" or "unsatisfactory" must be evaluated at |
least once in the school year following the receipt of such |
rating. |
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section or |
any other Section of the School Code, a principal shall not be |
prohibited from evaluating any teachers within a school during |
his or her first year as principal of such school. |
The evaluation plan shall comply with the requirements of |
this Section and
of any rules adopted by the State Board of |
Education pursuant to this Section. |
The plan shall include a description of each teacher's |
duties
and responsibilities and of the standards to which that |
teacher
is expected to conform . The plan may provide for |
evaluation of personnel whose positions
require administrative |
certification by independent evaluators not employed
by or |
affiliated with the school district. The results of the school
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district administrators' evaluations shall be reported to the |
employing
school board, together with such recommendations for |
remediation as the
evaluator or evaluators may deem |
appropriate. Evaluation of teachers whose positions do not |
|
require administrative
certification shall be conducted by an |
administrator qualified under Section
24A-3, or -- in school |
districts having a population exceeding 500,000 --
by either an |
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 or an assistant
|
principal under the supervision of an administrator qualified |
under Section
24A-3 , and shall include at least the following |
components: |
(a) personal observation of the teacher in the |
classroom by the evaluator (on at least
2 different school |
days in school districts having a population
exceeding
|
500,000) by a district administrator qualified under |
Section 24A-3, or --
in school districts having a |
population exceeding 500,000 -- by either an
administrator |
qualified under Section 24A-3 or an assistant principal |
under
the supervision of an administrator qualified under |
Section 24A-3 , unless
the teacher has no classroom duties. |
(b) consideration of the teacher's attendance, |
planning, and
instructional methods, classroom management, |
where relevant, and
competency in the subject matter |
taught , where relevant . |
(c) by no later than the applicable implementation |
date, consideration of student growth as a significant |
factor in the rating of the teacher's performance. |
(d) prior to September 1, 2012, (c) rating of the |
teacher's performance of teachers in contractual continued |
service as either: |
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(i) "excellent",
"satisfactory" or |
"unsatisfactory" ; or . |
(ii) "excellent", "proficient", "needs |
improvement" or "unsatisfactory". |
(e) on and after September 1, 2012, rating of the |
performance of teachers in contractual continued service |
as "excellent", "proficient", "needs improvement" or |
"unsatisfactory". |
(f) (d) specification as to the teacher's strengths and |
weaknesses, with
supporting reasons for the comments made. |
(g) (e) inclusion of a copy of the evaluation in the |
teacher's personnel
file and provision of a copy to the |
teacher. |
(h) within 30 school days after the completion of an |
evaluation rating a teacher in contractual continued |
service as "needs improvement", development by the |
evaluator, in consultation with the teacher, and taking |
into account the teacher's on-going professional |
responsibilities including his or her regular teaching |
assignments, of a professional development plan directed |
to the areas that need improvement and any supports that |
the district will provide to address the areas identified |
as needing improvement. |
(i) (f) within 30 days after completion of an |
evaluation rating a teacher
in contractual continued |
service as "unsatisfactory", development and commencement |
|
by the district , or by an administrator qualified under |
Section
24A-3 or an assistant principal under the |
supervision of an administrator
qualified under Section |
24A-3 in school districts having a population
exceeding |
500,000, of a remediation plan designed to correct |
deficiencies
cited, provided the deficiencies are deemed |
remediable.
In all school districts the
remediation plan |
for unsatisfactory, tenured teachers shall
provide for 90 |
school days of remediation within the
classroom , unless an |
applicable collective bargaining agreement provides for a |
shorter duration . In all school districts evaluations |
issued pursuant
to
this Section shall be
issued within 10 |
days after the conclusion of the respective remediation |
plan.
However, the school board or other governing |
authority of the district
shall not lose
jurisdiction to |
discharge a teacher in the event the evaluation is not |
issued
within 10 days after the conclusion of the |
respective remediation plan. |
(j) (g) participation in the remediation plan by the |
teacher in contractual continued service rated
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"unsatisfactory", an evaluator and a district |
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3
(or -- in a |
school district having a population exceeding 500,000 -- an
|
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 or an |
assistant principal under
the supervision of an |
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3),
and a |
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consulting teacher , selected by the evaluator by the |
participating administrator or by
the principal, or -- in |
school districts having a population exceeding
500,000 -- |
by an administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 or by an
|
assistant principal under the supervision of an |
administrator qualified
under Section 24A-3, of the |
teacher who was rated "unsatisfactory", which
consulting |
teacher is an educational employee as defined in the |
Educational
Labor Relations Act, has at least 5 years' |
teaching experience , and a
reasonable familiarity with the |
assignment of the teacher being evaluated,
and who received |
an "excellent" rating on his or her most
recent evaluation. |
Where no teachers who meet these criteria are available
|
within the district, the district shall request and the |
State Board of
Education shall supply, to participate in |
the remediation process, an
individual who meets these |
criteria. |
In a district having a population of less than 500,000 |
with an
exclusive bargaining agent, the bargaining agent
|
may, if it so chooses, supply a roster of qualified |
teachers from whom the
consulting teacher is to be |
selected. That roster shall, however, contain
the names of |
at least 5 teachers, each of whom meets the criteria for
|
consulting teacher with regard to the teacher being |
evaluated, or the names
of all teachers so qualified if |
that number is less than 5. In the event of
a dispute as to |
|
qualification, the State Board shall determine |
qualification. |
(k) a mid-point and final evaluation by an evaluator |
during and at the end of the remediation period, |
immediately following receipt of a remediation plan |
provided for under subsections (i) and (j) of this Section. |
Each evaluation shall assess the teacher's performance |
during the time period since the prior evaluation; provided |
that the last evaluation shall also include an overall |
evaluation of the teacher's performance during the |
remediation period. A written copy of the evaluations and |
ratings, in which any deficiencies in performance and |
recommendations for correction are identified, shall be |
provided to and discussed with the teacher within 10 school |
days after the date of the evaluation, unless an applicable |
collective bargaining agreement provides to the contrary. |
(h) evaluations and ratings once every 30 school days
for |
the 90 school day
remediation period immediately
following |
receipt of a remediation plan provided for under |
subsections (f) and (g) of this
Section;
provided that in |
school districts having a population
exceeding
500,000
|
there shall be monthly evaluations and ratings for the |
first 6 months and
quarterly evaluations and ratings for |
the next 6 months immediately
following completion of the |
remediation program of a teacher for whom a
remediation |
plan has been developed. These subsequent evaluations
|
|
shall be conducted by an evaluator the participating |
administrator, or -- in school
districts having a |
population exceeding 500,000 -- by either the principal
or |
by an assistant principal under the supervision of an
|
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 . The |
consulting
teacher shall provide advice to the teacher |
rated "unsatisfactory" on how
to improve teaching skills |
and to successfully complete the remediation
plan. The |
consulting teacher shall participate in developing the
|
remediation plan, but the final decision as to the |
evaluation shall be done
solely by the evaluator |
administrator, or -- in school districts having a |
population
exceeding 500,000 -- by either the principal or |
by an assistant principal
under the supervision of an |
administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 ,
unless an |
applicable collective bargaining agreement provides to the |
contrary.
Teachers in the remediation process in a school |
district having a
population
exceeding 500,000 are not |
subject to the annual evaluations
described in paragraphs |
(a) through (e) of this Section. Evaluations at the
|
conclusion of the remediation process shall be separate and |
distinct from the
required annual evaluations of teachers |
and shall not be subject to the
guidelines and procedures |
relating to those annual evaluations. The evaluator
may but |
is not required to use the forms provided for the annual |
evaluation of
teachers in the district's evaluation plan. |
|
(l) (i) in school districts having a population of less |
than
500,000,
reinstatement to the evaluation schedule set |
forth in the district's evaluation plan a schedule of |
biennial evaluation for any teacher in contractual |
continued service
who achieves a rating equal to or better |
than "satisfactory" or "proficient" in the school year |
following a rating of "needs improvement" or |
"unsatisfactory". completes the 90 school day remediation |
plan with a
"satisfactory" or better
rating, unless the |
district's plan regularly requires more frequent
|
evaluations; and in school districts having a population |
exceeding
500,000, reinstatement to a schedule of biennial |
evaluation for any teacher
who completes the 90 school day |
remediation plan with a "satisfactory" or
better rating and |
the one
year intensive review schedule as provided in |
paragraph (h) of this Section
with a "satisfactory" or |
better rating, unless such district's plan regularly
|
requires more frequent evaluations. |
(m) (j) dismissal in accordance with Section 24-12 or |
34-85 of the School
Code of any teacher who fails to |
complete any applicable remediation plan
with a rating |
equal to or better than a "satisfactory" or "proficient" |
better rating. Districts and teachers subject to
dismissal |
hearings are precluded from compelling the testimony of
|
consulting teachers at such hearings under Section 24-12 or |
34-85, either
as to the rating process or for opinions of |
|
performances by teachers under
remediation. |
In a district subject to a collective bargaining agreement
|
as of the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997, any |
changes made by this amendatory Act to the provisions of this
|
Section that are contrary to the express terms and provisions |
of that
agreement shall go into effect in that district only |
upon
expiration of that agreement. Thereafter, collectively |
bargained evaluation
plans shall at a minimum meet the |
standards of this Article. If such a
district has an evaluation |
plan, however, whether pursuant to the
collective bargaining |
agreement or otherwise, a copy of that plan shall be
submitted |
to the State Board of Education for review and comment, in
|
accordance with Section 24A-4. |
Nothing in this Section or Section 24A-4 shall be construed |
as preventing immediate
dismissal of a teacher for deficiencies |
which are
deemed irremediable or for actions which are |
injurious to or endanger the
health or person of students in |
the classroom or school , or preventing the dismissal or |
non-renewal of teachers not in contractual continued service |
for any reason not prohibited by applicable employment, labor, |
and civil rights laws . Failure to
strictly comply with the time |
requirements contained in Section 24A-5 shall
not invalidate |
the results of the remediation plan. |
(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-7) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-7) |
|
Sec. 24A-7. Rules. The State Board of Education is |
authorized to adopt such rules as
are deemed necessary to |
implement and accomplish the purposes and
provisions of this |
Article, including, but not limited to, rules (i) relating to |
the methods for measuring student growth (including, but not |
limited to, limitations on the age of useable data; the amount |
of data needed to reliably and validly measure growth for the |
purpose of teacher and principal evaluations; and whether and |
at what time annual State assessments may be used as one of |
multiple measures of student growth), (ii) defining the term |
"significant factor" for purposes of including consideration |
of student growth in performance ratings, (iii) controlling for |
such factors as student characteristics (including, but not |
limited to, students receiving special education and English |
Language Learner services), student attendance, and student |
mobility so as to best measure the impact that a teacher, |
principal, school and school district has on students' academic |
achievement, (iv) establishing minimum requirements for |
district teacher and principal evaluation instruments and |
procedures, and (v) establishing a model evaluation plan for |
use by school districts in which student growth shall comprise |
50% of the performance rating. Notwithstanding any provision in |
this Section, rules shall not preclude a school district having |
500,000 or more inhabitants from using an annual State |
assessment as the sole measure of student growth for purposes |
of teacher or principal evaluations. |
|
The rules shall be developed through a process involving |
collaboration with a Performance Evaluation Advisory Council, |
which shall be convened and staffed by the State Board of |
Education. Members of the Council shall be selected by the |
State Superintendent and include, without limitation, |
representatives of teacher unions and school district |
management, persons with expertise in performance evaluation |
processes and systems, as well as other stakeholders. The |
Performance Evaluation Advisory Council shall meet at least |
quarterly following the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly until June 30, 2017. |
Prior to the applicable implementation date, except that |
these rules shall not apply to teachers assigned to schools |
identified in an agreement entered into between the board of a |
school district operating under Article 34 of this Code and the |
exclusive representative of the district's teachers in |
accordance with Section 34-85c of this Code. |
(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-7.1 new) |
Sec. 24A-7.1. Teacher, principal, and superintendent |
performance evaluations. Except as otherwise provided under |
this Act, disclosure of public school teacher, principal, and |
superintendent performance evaluations is prohibited. |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-8) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-8) |
|
Sec. 24A-8. Evaluation of teachers not in contractual |
continued service. Each Beginning with the 1987-88 school year |
each teacher not in contractual
continued service shall be |
evaluated at least once each school year. |
(Source: P.A. 84-1419.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-15) |
Sec. 24A-15. Development and submission of evaluation plan |
for principals. |
(a) Each Beginning with the 2006-2007 school year and each |
school year thereafter, each school district, except for a |
school district organized under Article 34 of this Code, shall |
establish a principal evaluation plan in accordance with this |
Section. The plan must ensure that each principal is evaluated |
as follows: |
(1) For a principal on a single-year contract, the |
evaluation must take place by March February 1 of each |
year. |
(2) For a principal on a multi-year contract under |
Section 10-23.8a of this Code, the evaluation must take |
place by March 1 February 1 of the final year of the |
contract. |
On and after September 1, 2012, the plan must: |
(i) rate the principal's performance as "excellent", |
"proficient", "needs improvement" or "unsatisfactory"; and |
(ii) ensure that each principal is evaluated at least |
|
once every school year. |
Nothing in this Section prohibits a school district from |
conducting additional evaluations of principals.
|
(b) The evaluation shall include a description of the |
principal's duties and responsibilities and the standards to |
which the principal is expected to conform. |
(c) The evaluation must be performed by the district |
superintendent, the superintendent's designee, or, in the |
absence of the superintendent or his or her designee, an |
individual appointed by the school board who holds a registered |
Type 75 State administrative certificate. |
Prior to September 1, 2012, the The evaluation must be in |
writing and must at least do all of the following: |
(1) Consider the principal's specific duties, |
responsibilities, management, and competence as a |
principal. |
(2) Specify the principal's strengths and weaknesses, |
with supporting reasons. |
(3) Align with the Illinois Professional Standards for |
School Leaders or research-based standards established by |
administrative rule district standards .
|
On and after September 1, 2012, the evaluation must, in |
addition to the requirements in items (1), (2), and (3) of this |
subsection (c), provide for the use of data and indicators on |
student growth as a significant factor in rating performance. |
(d) One copy of the evaluation must be included in the |
|
principal's personnel file and one copy of the evaluation must |
be provided to the principal. |
(e) Failure by a district to evaluate a principal and to |
provide the principal with a copy of the evaluation at least |
once during the term of the principal's contract, in accordance |
with this Section, is evidence that the principal is performing |
duties and responsibilities in at least a satisfactory manner |
and shall serve to automatically extend the principal's |
contract for a period of one year after the contract would |
otherwise expire, under the same terms and conditions as the |
prior year's contract. The requirements in this Section are in |
addition to the right of a school board to reclassify a |
principal pursuant to Section 10-23.8b of this Code. |
(f) Nothing in this Section prohibits a school board from |
ordering lateral transfers of principals to positions of |
similar rank and salary.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1039, eff. 7-20-06.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-20 new) |
Sec. 24A-20. State Board of Education data collection and |
evaluation assessment and support systems. |
(a) On or before the date established in subsection (b) of |
this Section, the State Board of Education shall, through a |
process involving collaboration with the Performance |
Evaluation Advisory Council, develop or contract for the |
development of and implement all of the following data |
|
collection and evaluation assessment and support systems: |
(1) A system to annually collect and publish data by |
district and school on teacher and administrator |
performance evaluation outcomes. The system must ensure |
that no teacher or administrator can be personally |
identified by publicly reported data. |
(2) Both a teacher and principal model evaluation |
template. The model templates must incorporate the |
requirements of this Article and any other requirements |
established by the State Board by administrative rule, but |
allow customization by districts in a manner that does not |
conflict with such requirements. |
(3) An evaluator pre-qualification program based on |
the model teacher evaluation template. |
(4) An evaluator training program based on the model |
teacher evaluation template. The training program shall |
provide multiple training options that account for the |
prior training and experience of the evaluator. |
(5) A superintendent training program based on the |
model principal evaluation template. |
(6) One or more instruments to provide feedback to |
principals on the instructional environment within a |
school. |
(7) A State Board-provided or approved technical |
assistance system that supports districts with the |
development and implementation of teacher and principal |
|
evaluation systems. |
(8) Web-based systems and tools supporting |
implementation of the model templates and the evaluator |
pre-qualification and training programs. |
(9) A process for measuring and reporting correlations |
between local principal and teacher evaluations and (A) |
student growth in tested grades and subjects and (B) |
retention rates of teachers. |
(10) A process for assessing whether school district |
evaluation systems developed pursuant to this Act and that |
consider student growth as a significant factor in the |
rating of a teacher's and principal's performance are valid |
and reliable, contribute to the development of staff, and |
improve student achievement outcomes. By no later than |
September 1, 2014, a research-based study shall be issued |
assessing such systems for validity and reliability, |
contribution to the development of staff, and improvement |
of student performance and recommending, based on the |
results of this study, changes, if any, that need to be |
incorporated into teacher and principal evaluation systems |
that consider student growth as a significant factor in the |
rating performance for remaining school districts to be |
required to implement such systems. |
(b) If the State of Illinois receives a Race to the Top |
Grant, the data collection and support systems described in |
subsection (a) must be developed on or before September 30, |
|
2011. If the State of Illinois does not receive a Race to the |
Top Grant, the data collection and support systems described in |
subsection (a) must be developed on or before September 30, |
2012; provided, however, that the data collection and support |
systems set forth in items (3) and (4) of subsection (a) of |
this Section must be developed by September 30, 2011 regardless |
of whether the State of Illinois receives a Race to the Top |
Grant. By no later than September 1, 2011, if the State of |
Illinois receives a Race to the Top Grant, or September 1, |
2012, if the State of Illinois does not receive a Race to the |
Top Grant, the State Board of Education must execute or |
contract for the execution of the assessment referenced in item |
(10) of subsection (a) of this Section to determine whether the |
school district evaluation systems developed pursuant to this |
Act have been valid and reliable, contributed to the |
development of staff, and improved student performance. |
(c) Districts shall submit data and information to the |
State Board on teacher and principal performance evaluations |
and evaluation plans in accordance with procedures and |
requirements for submissions established by the State Board. |
Such data shall include, without limitation, (i) data on the |
performance rating given to all teachers in contractual |
continued service, (ii) data on district recommendations to |
renew or not renew teachers not in contractual continued |
service, and (iii) data on the performance rating given to all |
principals. |
|
(d) If the State Board of Education does not timely fulfill |
any of the requirements set forth in Sections 24A-7 and 24A-20, |
and adequate and sustainable federal, State, or other funds are |
not provided to the State Board of Education and school |
districts to meet their responsibilities under this Article, |
the applicable implementation date shall be postponed by the |
number of calendar days equal to those needed by the State |
Board of Education to fulfill such requirements and for the |
adequate and sustainable funds to be provided to the State |
Board of Education and school districts. The determination as |
to whether the State Board of Education has fulfilled any or |
all requirements set forth in Sections 24A-7 and 24A-20 and |
whether adequate and sustainable funds have been provided to |
the State Board of Education and school districts shall be made |
by the State Board of Education in consultation with the P-20 |
Council. |
(105 ILCS 5/34-8) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-8) |
Sec. 34-8. Powers and duties of general superintendent. The |
general superintendent of schools shall prescribe and control,
|
subject to the approval of the board and to other provisions of |
this
Article, the courses of study mandated by State law, |
textbooks,
educational apparatus and equipment, discipline in |
and conduct of the
schools, and shall perform such other duties |
as the board may by rule
prescribe. The superintendent shall |
also notify the State Board of
Education, the board and the |
|
chief administrative official, other than the
alleged |
perpetrator himself, in the school where the alleged |
perpetrator
serves, that any person who is employed in a school |
or otherwise comes into
frequent contact with children in the |
school has been named as a
perpetrator in an indicated report |
filed pursuant to the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, |
approved June 26, 1975, as amended. |
The general superintendent may be granted the authority by |
the board
to hire a specific number of employees to assist in |
meeting immediate
responsibilities. Conditions of employment |
for such personnel shall not be
subject to the provisions of |
Section 34-85. |
The general superintendent may, pursuant to a delegation of |
authority by
the board and Section 34-18, approve contracts and |
expenditures. |
Pursuant to other provisions of this Article, sites shall |
be selected,
schoolhouses located thereon and plans therefor |
approved, and textbooks
and educational apparatus and |
equipment shall be adopted and purchased
by the board only upon |
the recommendation of the general superintendent
of schools or |
by a majority vote of the full membership of the board
and, in |
the case of textbooks, subject to Article 28 of this Act. The
|
board may furnish free textbooks to pupils and may publish its |
own
textbooks and manufacture its own apparatus, equipment and |
supplies. |
In addition, in January of each year,
the general
|
|
superintendent of schools shall report to the State Board of |
Education the number of high school students
in the district |
who are enrolled in accredited courses (for which high
school |
credit will be awarded upon successful completion of the |
courses) at
any community college, together with the name and |
number of the course or
courses which each such student is |
taking. |
The general superintendent shall also have the authority to |
monitor the
performance of attendance centers, to identify and |
place an attendance
center on remediation and probation, and to |
recommend to the board that the
attendance center be placed on |
intervention and be reconstituted, subject to
the provisions of |
Sections 34-8.3 and 8.4. |
The general superintendent, or his or her designee, shall
|
conduct an annual evaluation of each principal in the district
|
pursuant to guidelines promulgated by the Board and the Board |
approved
principal evaluation form. The evaluation
shall be |
based on factors, including the following:
(i) student academic |
improvement, as defined by the
school improvement plan; (ii) |
student absenteeism rates at the school;
(iii) instructional |
leadership;
(iv) effective implementation of programs, |
policies, or strategies to
improve student academic |
achievement; (v) school management;
and (vi) other factors, |
including, without limitation, the principal's
communication |
skills and ability to create and maintain a
student-centered |
learning environment, to develop
opportunities for |
|
professional development, and to encourage parental
|
involvement and community partnerships to achieve school |
improvement. |
Effective no later than September 1, 2012, the general |
superintendent or his or her designee shall develop a written |
principal evaluation plan. The evaluation plan must be in |
writing and shall supersede the evaluation requirements set |
forth in this Section. The evaluation plan must do at least all |
of the following: |
(1) Provide for annual evaluation of all principals |
employed under a performance contract by the general |
superintendent or his or her designee, no later than July |
1st of each year. |
(2) Consider the principal's specific duties, |
responsibilities, management, and competence as a |
principal. |
(3) Specify the principal's strengths and weaknesses, |
with supporting reasons. |
(4) Align with research-based standards. |
(5) Use data and indicators on student growth as a |
significant factor in rating principal performance. |
(Source: P.A. 95-496, eff. 8-28-07.) |
(105 ILCS 5/34-85c) |
Sec. 34-85c. Alternative procedures for teacher |
evaluation, remediation, and removal for cause after |
|
remediation. |
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the board and |
the exclusive representative of the district's teachers are |
hereby authorized to enter into an agreement to establish |
alternative procedures for teacher evaluation, remediation, |
and removal for cause after remediation, including an |
alternative system for peer evaluation and recommendations ; |
provided, however, that no later than September 1, 2012: (i) |
any alternative procedures must include provisions whereby |
student performance data is a significant factor in teacher |
evaluation and (ii) teachers are rated as "excellent", |
"proficient", "needs improvement" or "unsatisfactory" . |
Pursuant exclusively to that agreement, teachers assigned to |
schools identified in that agreement shall be subject to an |
alternative performance evaluation plan and remediation |
procedures in lieu of the plan and procedures set forth in |
Article 24A of this Code and alternative removal for cause |
standards and procedures in lieu of the removal standards and |
procedures set forth in Sections 34-85 and 34-85b of this Code. |
To the extent that the agreement provides a teacher with an |
opportunity for a hearing on removal for cause before an |
independent hearing officer in accordance with Sections 34-85 |
and 34-85b or otherwise, the hearing officer shall be governed |
by the alternative performance evaluation plan, remediation |
procedures, and removal standards and procedures set forth in |
the agreement in making findings of fact and a recommendation. |