093_HB2352enr

 
HB2352 Enrolled                      LRB093 03343 NHT 03361 b

 1        AN  ACT to implement the federal No Child Left Behind Act
 2    of 2001.

 3        WHEREAS, The General Assembly supports enhancement of the
 4    current State  assessment  system  in  order  to  develop  an
 5    appropriate,  high-quality, statewide K-12 assessment system,
 6    based on the Illinois Learning Standards; and

 7        WHEREAS, This enhanced statewide assessment  system  must
 8    have  a  high level of credibility, reliability, and validity
 9    and must provide continuity with  the  assessment  system  in
10    place prior to the changes made by this amendatory Act of the
11    93rd General Assembly; and

12        WHEREAS,  A  credible,  reliable,  and  valid  assessment
13    system   should   allow  school  districts  to  reduce  local
14    assessments;  once  the  State  assessment  system  is  fully
15    implemented in the 2005-2006 school  year,  school  districts
16    are  encouraged  and expected to reduce the local assessments
17    of students in the grades and subjects assessed by the State;
18    and

19        WHEREAS, The changes in the  assessment  system  made  by
20    this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly are a direct
21    result  of  the  federal  No  Child  Left  Behind Act of 2001
22    (Public Law 107-110),  which  requires  the  testing  of  all
23    students  as  well  as enhancements to the system in order to
24    provide timely results that are meaningful and  educationally
25    useful  for  educators,  parents,  and the broader community;
26    therefore

27        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
28    represented in the General Assembly:

29        Section  5.   The  School  Code  is  amended  by changing
30    Section 2-3.64 as follows:
 
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 1        (105 ILCS 5/2-3.64) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.64)
 2        Sec. 2-3.64.  State goals and assessment.
 3        (a)  Beginning in the 1998-1999 school  year,  the  State
 4    Board    of   Education   shall   establish   standards   and
 5    periodically, in collaboration with local  school  districts,
 6    conduct  studies of student performance in the learning areas
 7    of fine arts and physical development/health.
 8        Beginning  with  the  1998-1999  school  year  until  the
 9    2005-2006 school year at  the  latest,  the  State  Board  of
10    Education shall annually test: (i) all pupils enrolled in the
11    3rd,  5th,  and 8th grades in English language arts (reading,
12    writing, and English grammar) and mathematics; and  (ii)  all
13    pupils  enrolled  in the 4th and 7th grades in the biological
14    and physical  sciences  and  the  social  sciences  (history,
15    geography,  civics,  economics,  and government). The maximum
16    time allowed for  all  actual  testing  required  under  this
17    paragraph  shall  not exceed 25 hours, as allocated among the
18    required tests by the State Board of  Education,  across  all
19    grades tested.
20        Beginning  no  later  than the 2005-2006 school year, the
21    State Board of Education shall annually test: (i) all  pupils
22    enrolled  in  the  3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th grades in
23    reading and mathematics; (ii) all  pupils  enrolled  in  3rd,
24    4th,  6th,  and  8th  grades  in  writing;  (iii)  all pupils
25    enrolled in the 4th and 7th  grades  in  the  biological  and
26    physical  sciences;  and  (iv) all pupils enrolled in 5th and
27    8th  grades  in  the  social  sciences  (history,  geography,
28    economics,  civics,  and  government).  The  State  Board  of
29    Education shall sample student performance  in  the  learning
30    area  of  physical  development  and health in grades 4 and 7
31    through the science tests and in the learning  area  of  fine
32    arts  in  grades  5  and 8 through the social sciences tests.
33    After the addition of subjects and grades  as  delineated  in
34    this paragraph and including whatever other tests that may be
 
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 1    approved from time to time no later than the 2005-2006 school
 2    year,  the  maximum  time  allowed  for  all State testing in
 3    grades 3 through 8 shall not exceed  38  hours  across  those
 4    grades.
 5        The State Board of Education shall establish the academic
 6    standards that are to be applicable to pupils who are subject
 7    to   State  tests  under  this  Section  beginning  with  the
 8    1998-1999 school year.  However, the State Board of Education
 9    shall not establish any such standards in final form  without
10    first  providing  opportunities  for public participation and
11    local  input  in  the  development  of  the  final   academic
12    standards.     Those    opportunities    shall    include   a
13    well-publicized period of  public  comment,  public  hearings
14    throughout  the  State,  and  opportunities  to  file written
15    comments.   Beginning  with  the  1998-99  school  year   and
16    thereafter,  the  State tests will identify pupils in the 3rd
17    grade or 5th grade who do not meet the State standards.
18        If,  by  performance  on  the  State   tests   or   local
19    assessments  or  by teacher judgment, a student's performance
20    is determined to be 2 or more grades below current placement,
21    the student shall be provided a remediation program developed
22    by the district in consultation with a  parent  or  guardian.
23    Such  remediation  programs  may  include,  but  shall not be
24    limited to, increased or concentrated instructional  time,  a
25    remedial  summer  school  program  of not less than 90 hours,
26    improved   instructional   approaches,   tutorial   sessions,
27    retention  in  grade,  and  modifications  to   instructional
28    materials.   Each  pupil  for  whom  a remediation program is
29    developed under this subsection shall be required  to  enroll
30    in  and  attend  whatever  program the district determines is
31    appropriate for the pupil.  Districts may combine students in
32    remediation programs where appropriate and may cooperate with
33    other districts in the design and delivery of those programs.
34    The parent or guardian of a  student  required  to  attend  a
 
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 1    remediation program under this Section shall be given written
 2    notice   of   that  requirement  by  the  school  district  a
 3    reasonable time prior  to  commencement  of  the  remediation
 4    program  that  the  student is to attend.  The State shall be
 5    responsible for providing school districts with the  new  and
 6    additional  funding,  under  Section  2-3.51.5 or by other or
 7    additional means, that is required to enable the districts to
 8    operate remediation programs for the pupils who are  required
 9    to  enroll  in  and attend those programs under this Section.
10    Every individualized  educational  program  as  described  in
11    Article  14  shall  identify  if the State test or components
12    thereof are appropriate for that student.  For  those  pupils
13    for  whom  the  State  tests  or  components  thereof are not
14    appropriate, The State Board of Education shall develop rules
15    and regulations governing the administration  of  alternative
16    tests   prescribed   within   each  student's  individualized
17    educational program which are appropriate to  the  disability
18    of each student.
19        All  pupils  who  are  in  a  State approved transitional
20    bilingual  education  program  or  transitional  program   of
21    instruction  shall  participate  in  the  State  tests.   Any
22    student  who  has been enrolled in a State approved bilingual
23    education program less than 3 cumulative academic  years  may
24    take  an accommodated State test, to be known as the Illinois
25    Measure  of  Annual  Growth  in  English  (IMAGE),  shall  be
26    exempted if the student's lack of English as determined by an
27    English language proficiency test would keep the student from
28    understanding the regular State test. If the school  district
29    determines,  on  a  case-by-case individual basis, that IMAGE
30    would likely yield more accurate and reliable information  on
31    what  the  student  knows and can do, the school district may
32    make a determination to assess the student using IMAGE for  a
33    period  that  does not exceed 2 additional consecutive years,
34    provided that the student has not  yet  reached  a  level  of
 
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 1    English  language  proficiency  sufficient to yield valid and
 2    reliable information on what the student knows and can do  on
 3    the  regular  State  test., and that student's district shall
 4    have an alternative test program in place for  that  student.
 5    The  State  Board  of Education shall appoint a task force of
 6    concerned parents, teachers, school administrators and  other
 7    professionals  to  assist  in  identifying  such  alternative
 8    tests.
 9        Reasonable  accommodations  as  prescribed  by  the State
10    Board of Education shall be provided for individual  students
11    in  the testing procedure.  All test procedures prescribed by
12    the State Board of Education shall  require:  (i)  that  each
13    test  used  for  State  and  local student testing under this
14    Section identify by name the pupil taking the test; (ii) that
15    the name of the pupil taking the test be placed on  the  test
16    at  the  time  the  test  is taken; (iii) that the results or
17    scores of each test taken under this Section by  a  pupil  of
18    the school district be reported to that district and identify
19    by  name  the  pupil  who  received  the  reported results or
20    scores; and (iv) that the results  or  scores  of  each  test
21    taken  under this Section be made available to the parents of
22    the pupil.  In addition, beginning with the 2000-2001  school
23    year  and  in each school year thereafter, the highest scores
24    and performance levels attained by a student on  the  Prairie
25    State  Achievement  Examination administered under subsection
26    (c) of this Section and any Prairie State Achievement  Awards
27    received  by  the  student shall become part of the student's
28    permanent record  and  shall  be  entered  on  the  student's
29    transcript  pursuant  to  regulations that the State Board of
30    Education shall promulgate for  that  purpose  in  accordance
31    with  Section  3  and  subsection  (e)  of  Section  2 of the
32    Illinois School Student  Records  Act.   Beginning  with  the
33    1998-1999  school  year  and in every school year thereafter,
34    scores received by students on  the  State  assessment  tests
 
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 1    administered  in  grades  3  through  8  shall be placed into
 2    students' temporary records.
 3        The State Board of Education shall establish a period  of
 4    time,  to  be  referred  to  as the State test window, common
 5    month in each school year for which State testing shall occur
 6    to meet the objectives of  this  Section.   However,  if  the
 7    schools  of  a  district  are  closed  and  classes  are  not
 8    scheduled  during  any  week that is established by the State
 9    Board of Education as the State test window week of the month
10    when State testing under this Section shall occur, the school
11    district may  (at  the  discretion  of  the  State  Board  of
12    Education) move its State test window one week earlier or one
13    week later than the established State test window, administer
14    the  required  State  testing  at  any  time  up  to  2 weeks
15    following  the  week  established  by  the  State  Board   of
16    Education  for  the  testing,  so long as the school district
17    gives the State Board of  Education  written  notice  of  its
18    intention   to  deviate  from  the  established  schedule  by
19    December 1 of the school year in which falls the  State  test
20    window  week  established by the State Board of Education for
21    the testing.  The maximum time allowed for all actual testing
22    required under this subsection during the school  year  shall
23    not  exceed 25 hours as allocated among the required tests by
24    the State Board of Education.
25        (a-5)  All tests administered pursuant  to  this  Section
26    shall  be  academically  based.   For  the  purposes  of this
27    Section  "academically  based   tests"   shall   mean   tests
28    consisting  of  questions and answers that are measurable and
29    quantifiable to measure the knowledge, skill, and ability  of
30    students  in  the  subject  matters  covered  by  tests.  The
31    scoring of academically based tests shall be reliable, valid,
32    unbiased and shall meet the guidelines for  test  development
33    and use prescribed by the American Psychological Association,
34    the  National  Council of Measurement and Evaluation, and the
 
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 1    American Educational Research Association. Academically based
 2    tests  shall  not  include  assessments  or  evaluations   of
 3    attitudes,  values,  or  beliefs,  or testing of personality,
 4    self-esteem, or self-concept. Nothing in this amendatory  Act
 5    is   intended,   nor  shall  it  be  construed,  to  nullify,
 6    supersede, or contradict the legislative intent  on  academic
 7    testing  expressed during the passage of HB 1005/P.A. 90-296.
 8    Nothing  in  this  Section  is  intended,  nor  shall  it  be
 9    construed,  to  nullify,   supersede,   or   contradict   the
10    legislative  intent  on  academic  testing  expressed  in the
11    preamble of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly.
12        Beginning in the 1998-1999 school year, the  State  Board
13    of  Education  may,  on  a  pilot basis, include in the State
14    assessments in reading and math at each grade level tested no
15    more than 2 short answer questions, where  students  have  to
16    respond   in   brief   to   questions   or  prompts  or  show
17    computations, rather than select from alternatives  that  are
18    presented.   In  the first year that such questions are used,
19    scores on the short answer questions shall not be reported on
20    an individual student basis but shall be aggregated for  each
21    school  building  in which the tests are given.  State-level,
22    school, and district scores shall be reported both  with  and
23    without the results of the short answer questions so that the
24    effect  of  short  answer  questions  is clearly discernible.
25    Beginning in the second year of this pilot program, scores on
26    the short answer questions  shall  be  reported  both  on  an
27    individual  student  basis  and on a school building basis in
28    order  to  monitor  the  effects  of  teacher  training   and
29    curriculum improvements on score results.
30        The  State  Board of Education shall monitor not continue
31    the use of short answer questions in  the  math  and  reading
32    assessments  or in other assessments in order to demonstrate,
33    or  extend  the  use  of  such  questions  to   other   State
34    assessments,  unless this pilot project demonstrates that the
 
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 1    use of short answer  questions  results  in  a  statistically
 2    significant improvement in student achievement as measured on
 3    the  State assessments for math and reading or on other State
 4    assessments and is justifiable in terms of cost  and  student
 5    performance.
 6        (b)  It  shall  be  the  policy of the State to encourage
 7    school districts to continuously test  pupil  proficiency  in
 8    the  fundamental  learning  areas  in  order to:  (i) provide
 9    timely  information  on  individual   students'   performance
10    relative  to  State  standards  that  is  adequate  to  guide
11    instructional  strategies;  (ii)  improve future instruction;
12    and (iii) complement the information provided  by  the  State
13    testing  system  described  in this Section.  Each district's
14    school improvement plan must address specific activities  the
15    district intends to implement to assist pupils who by teacher
16    judgment  and test results as prescribed in subsection (a) of
17    this Section demonstrate that  they  are  not  meeting  State
18    standards  or  local objectives. Such activities may include,
19    but shall not be limited to, summer school,  extended  school
20    day,    special   homework,   tutorial   sessions,   modified
21    instructional   materials,   other   modifications   in   the
22    instructional program, reduced class  size  or  retention  in
23    grade.    To   assist   school  districts  in  testing  pupil
24    proficiency in reading in the primary grades, the State Board
25    shall  make  optional  reading  inventories  for   diagnostic
26    purposes available to each school district that requests such
27    assistance.     Districts   that   administer   the   reading
28    inventories may develop remediation programs for students who
29    perform in the bottom half of the student population.   Those
30    remediation  programs  may be funded by moneys provided under
31    the School Safety and  Educational  Improvement  Block  Grant
32    Program  established under Section 2-3.51.5.  Nothing in this
33    Section shall  prevent  school  districts  from  implementing
34    testing  and  remediation  policies  for  grades not required
 
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 1    under this Section.
 2        (c)  Beginning  with  the  2000-2001  school  year,  each
 3    school district that  operates  a  high  school  program  for
 4    students in grades 9 through 12 shall annually administer the
 5    Prairie  State Achievement Examination established under this
 6    subsection to its students as set forth below.   The  Prairie
 7    State Achievement Examination shall be developed by the State
 8    Board  of  Education  to  measure  student performance in the
 9    academic areas of reading, writing, mathematics, science, and
10    social  sciences.   The  State  Board  of   Education   shall
11    establish  the  academic  standards  that  are  to  apply  in
12    measuring   student   performance   on   the   Prairie  State
13    Achievement Examination  including  the  minimum  examination
14    score  in  each area that will qualify a student to receive a
15    Prairie State Achievement Award from the State in recognition
16    of the student's excellent performance.  Each school district
17    that is subject to the requirements of  this  subsection  (c)
18    shall afford all students 2 opportunities to take the Prairie
19    State  Achievement Examination beginning as late as practical
20    during the second semester of  grade  11,  but  in  no  event
21    before  March 1.  The State Board of Education shall annually
22    notify  districts  of  the  weeks  during  which  these  test
23    administrations  shall   be   required   to   occur.    Every
24    individualized educational program as described in Article 14
25    shall  identify  if the Prairie State Achievement Examination
26    or components thereof are appropriate for that student.  Each
27    student,   exclusive   of   a  student  whose  individualized
28    educational program developed under Article 14 identifies the
29    Prairie State Achievement Examination  as  inappropriate  for
30    the  student,  shall  be  required to take the examination in
31    grade  11.   For  each  academic  area  the  State  Board  of
32    Education shall establish the score that  qualifies  for  the
33    Prairie  State  Achievement  Award  on  that  portion  of the
34    examination.  Any student who  fails  to  earn  a  qualifying
 
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 1    score  for  a  Prairie  State Achievement Award in any one or
 2    more of the academic areas on the initial test administration
 3    or who wishes to improve his or her score on any  portion  of
 4    the  examination shall be permitted to retake such portion or
 5    portions of the examination during grade 12.  Districts shall
 6    inform  their  students  of  the  timelines  and   procedures
 7    applicable   to   their   participation   in   every   yearly
 8    administration  of the Prairie State Achievement Examination.
 9    Students   receiving   special   education   services   whose
10    individualized  educational  programs  identify  the  Prairie
11    State  Achievement  Examination  as  inappropriate  for  them
12    nevertheless shall have the option of taking the examination,
13    which shall be administered to those students  in  accordance
14    with  standards  adopted   by the State Board of Education to
15    accommodate the respective disabilities of those students.  A
16    student who successfully completes all other applicable  high
17    school  graduation  requirements but fails to receive a score
18    on the Prairie State Achievement Examination  that  qualifies
19    the  student for receipt of a Prairie State Achievement Award
20    shall nevertheless qualify for the receipt of a regular  high
21    school diploma.
22        (d)  Beginning   with  the  2002-2003  school  year,  all
23    schools in this State that are part of the  sample  drawn  by
24    the    National   Center   for   Education   Statistics,   in
25    collaboration with their school districts and the State Board
26    of Education, shall administer the  biennial  State  academic
27    assessments  of  4th  and  8th  grade reading and mathematics
28    under the National Assessment of Educational Progress carried
29    out  under  Section  m11(b)(2)  of  the  National   Education
30    Statistics  Act  of 1994 (20 U.S.C. 9010) if the Secretary of
31    Education pays the costs of administering the assessments.
32        (e) Beginning no later than the  2005-2006  school  year,
33    subject  to  available  federal  funds  to this State for the
34    purpose of student assessment, the State Board  of  Education
 
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 1    shall  provide additional tests and assessment resources that
 2    may  be  used  by  school  districts  for  local   diagnostic
 3    purposes.  These  tests  and  resources shall include without
 4    limitation   additional   high   school   writing,   physical
 5    development and health, and fine arts assessments. The  State
 6    Board  of  Education  shall  annually distribute a listing of
 7    these additional tests and resources, using  funds  available
 8    from appropriations made for student assessment purposes.
 9        (f)  For  the  assessment  and accountability purposes of
10    this Section, "all pupils" includes those pupils enrolled  in
11    a  public  or  State-operated  elementary  school,  secondary
12    school,  or  cooperative  or joint agreement with a governing
13    body or board of  control,  a  charter  school  operating  in
14    compliance with the Charter Schools Law, a school operated by
15    a  regional  office  of education under Section 13A-3 of this
16    Code, or a public  school  administered  by  a  local  public
17    agency or the Department of Human Services.
18    (Source:  P.A. 91-283, eff. 7-29-99; 92-604, eff. 7-1-02.)

19        Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
20    becoming law.