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Public Act 101-0654 |
HB2170 Enrolled | LRB101 07409 AXK 52449 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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Article 5. |
Section 5-5. The School Code is amended by adding Section |
2-3.64a-10 and by changing Section 27A-5 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.64a-10 new) |
Sec. 2-3.64a-10. Kindergarten assessment. |
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "kindergarten" |
includes both full-day and
half-day kindergarten programs. |
(b) Beginning no later than the 2021-2022 school year, the |
State Board
of Education shall annually assess all public |
school students entering kindergarten using a common |
assessment tool, unless the State Board determines that a |
student is otherwise exempt. The common assessment tool must |
assess multiple developmental domains, including literacy, |
language, mathematics, and social and emotional development. |
The assessment must be valid, reliable, and developmentally |
appropriate to formatively assess a child's development and |
readiness for kindergarten. |
(c) Results from the assessment may be used by the school |
to understand the child's development and readiness for |
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kindergarten, to tailor instruction, and to measure the child's |
progress over time. Assessment results may also be used to |
identify a need for the professional development of teachers |
and early childhood educators and to inform State-level and |
district-level policies and resource allocation. |
The school shall make the assessment results available to |
the child's parent or guardian. |
The assessment results may not be used (i) to prevent a |
child from enrolling in kindergarten or (ii) as the sole |
measure used in determining the grade promotion or retention of |
a student. |
(d) On an annual basis, the State Board shall report |
publicly, at a minimum, data from the assessment for the State |
overall and for each school district. The State Board's report |
must disaggregate data by race and ethnicity, household income, |
students who are English learners, and students who have an |
individualized education program. |
(e) The State Superintendent of Education shall appoint a |
committee of no more than 21 members, consisting of parents, |
teachers, school administrators, assessment experts, and |
regional superintendents of schools, to review, on an ongoing |
basis, the content and design of the assessment, the collective |
results of the assessment as measured against |
kindergarten-readiness standards, and other issues involving |
the assessment as identified by the committee. |
The committee shall make periodic recommendations to the |
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State Superintendent of Education and the General Assembly |
concerning the assessments. |
(f) The State Board may adopt rules to implement and |
administer this Section.
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(105 ILCS 5/27A-5)
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Sec. 27A-5. Charter school; legal entity; requirements.
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(a) A charter school shall be a public, nonsectarian, |
nonreligious, non-home
based, and non-profit school. A charter |
school shall be organized and operated
as a nonprofit |
corporation or other discrete, legal, nonprofit entity
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authorized under the laws of the State of Illinois.
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(b) A charter school may be established under this Article |
by creating a new
school or by converting an existing public |
school or attendance center to
charter
school status.
Beginning |
on April 16, 2003 (the effective date of Public Act 93-3), in |
all new
applications to establish
a charter
school in a city |
having a population exceeding 500,000, operation of the
charter
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school shall be limited to one campus. The changes made to this |
Section by Public Act 93-3 do not apply to charter schools |
existing or approved on or before April 16, 2003 (the
effective |
date of Public Act 93-3). |
(b-5) In this subsection (b-5), "virtual-schooling" means |
a cyber school where students engage in online curriculum and |
instruction via the Internet and electronic communication with |
their teachers at remote locations and with students |
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participating at different times. |
From April 1, 2013 through December 31, 2016, there is a |
moratorium on the establishment of charter schools with |
virtual-schooling components in school districts other than a |
school district organized under Article 34 of this Code. This |
moratorium does not apply to a charter school with |
virtual-schooling components existing or approved prior to |
April 1, 2013 or to the renewal of the charter of a charter |
school with virtual-schooling components already approved |
prior to April 1, 2013.
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(c) A charter school shall be administered and governed by |
its board of
directors or other governing body
in the manner |
provided in its charter. The governing body of a charter school
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shall be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the Open |
Meetings Act. No later than January 1, 2021 ( one year after the |
effective date of Public Act 101-291) this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly , a charter school's board of |
directors or other governing body must include at least one |
parent or guardian of a pupil currently enrolled in the charter |
school who may be selected through the charter school or a |
charter network election, appointment by the charter school's |
board of directors or other governing body, or by the charter |
school's Parent Teacher Organization or its equivalent. |
(c-5) No later than January 1, 2021 ( one year after the |
effective date of Public Act 101-291) this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly or within the first year of his or |
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her first term, every voting member of a charter school's board |
of directors or other governing body shall complete a minimum |
of 4 hours of professional development leadership training to |
ensure that each member has sufficient familiarity with the |
board's or governing body's role and responsibilities, |
including financial oversight and accountability of the |
school, evaluating the principal's and school's performance, |
adherence to the Freedom of Information Act and the Open |
Meetings Act Acts , and compliance with education and labor law. |
In each subsequent year of his or her term, a voting member of |
a charter school's board of directors or other governing body |
shall complete a minimum of 2 hours of professional development |
training in these same areas. The training under this |
subsection may be provided or certified by a statewide charter |
school membership association or may be provided or certified |
by other qualified providers approved by the State Board of |
Education.
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(d) For purposes of this subsection (d), "non-curricular |
health and safety requirement" means any health and safety |
requirement created by statute or rule to provide, maintain, |
preserve, or safeguard safe or healthful conditions for |
students and school personnel or to eliminate, reduce, or |
prevent threats to the health and safety of students and school |
personnel. "Non-curricular health and safety requirement" does |
not include any course of study or specialized instructional |
requirement for which the State Board has established goals and |
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learning standards or which is designed primarily to impart |
knowledge and skills for students to master and apply as an |
outcome of their education. |
A charter school shall comply with all non-curricular |
health and safety
requirements applicable to public schools |
under the laws of the State of
Illinois. On or before September |
1, 2015, the State Board shall promulgate and post on its |
Internet website a list of non-curricular health and safety |
requirements that a charter school must meet. The list shall be |
updated annually no later than September 1. Any charter |
contract between a charter school and its authorizer must |
contain a provision that requires the charter school to follow |
the list of all non-curricular health and safety requirements |
promulgated by the State Board and any non-curricular health |
and safety requirements added by the State Board to such list |
during the term of the charter. Nothing in this subsection (d) |
precludes an authorizer from including non-curricular health |
and safety requirements in a charter school contract that are |
not contained in the list promulgated by the State Board, |
including non-curricular health and safety requirements of the |
authorizing local school board.
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(e) Except as otherwise provided in the School Code, a |
charter school shall
not charge tuition; provided that a |
charter school may charge reasonable fees
for textbooks, |
instructional materials, and student activities.
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(f) A charter school shall be responsible for the |
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management and operation
of its fiscal affairs including,
but |
not limited to, the preparation of its budget. An audit of each |
charter
school's finances shall be conducted annually by an |
outside, independent
contractor retained by the charter |
school. To ensure financial accountability for the use of |
public funds, on or before December 1 of every year of |
operation, each charter school shall submit to its authorizer |
and the State Board a copy of its audit and a copy of the Form |
990 the charter school filed that year with the federal |
Internal Revenue Service. In addition, if deemed necessary for |
proper financial oversight of the charter school, an authorizer |
may require quarterly financial statements from each charter |
school.
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(g) A charter school shall comply with all provisions of |
this Article, the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act, all |
federal and State laws and rules applicable to public schools |
that pertain to special education and the instruction of |
English learners, and
its charter. A charter
school is exempt |
from all other State laws and regulations in this Code
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governing public
schools and local school board policies; |
however, a charter school is not exempt from the following:
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(1) Sections 10-21.9 and 34-18.5 of this Code regarding |
criminal
history records checks and checks of the Statewide |
Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer and Violent |
Offender Against Youth Database of applicants for |
employment;
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(2) Sections 10-20.14, 10-22.6, 24-24, 34-19, and |
34-84a of this Code regarding discipline of
students;
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(3) the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees |
Tort Immunity Act;
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(4) Section 108.75 of the General Not For Profit |
Corporation Act of 1986
regarding indemnification of |
officers, directors, employees, and agents;
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(5) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act;
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(5.5) subsection (b) of Section 10-23.12 and |
subsection (b) of Section 34-18.6 of this Code; |
(6) the Illinois School Student Records Act;
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(7) Section 10-17a of this Code regarding school report |
cards;
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(8) the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System Act; |
(9) Section 27-23.7 of this Code regarding bullying |
prevention; |
(10) Section 2-3.162 of this Code regarding student |
discipline reporting; |
(11) Sections 22-80 and 27-8.1 of this Code; |
(12) Sections 10-20.60 and 34-18.53 of this Code; |
(13) Sections 10-20.63 and 34-18.56 of this Code; |
(14) Section 26-18 of this Code; |
(15) Section 22-30 of this Code; and |
(16) Sections 24-12 and 34-85 of this Code ; . |
(17) the (16) The Seizure Smart School Act ; and . |
(18) Section 2-3.64a-10 of this Code. |
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The change made by Public Act 96-104 to this subsection (g) |
is declaratory of existing law. |
(h) A charter school may negotiate and contract with a |
school district, the
governing body of a State college or |
university or public community college, or
any other public or |
for-profit or nonprofit private entity for: (i) the use
of a |
school building and grounds or any other real property or |
facilities that
the charter school desires to use or convert |
for use as a charter school site,
(ii) the operation and |
maintenance thereof, and
(iii) the provision of any service, |
activity, or undertaking that the charter
school is required to |
perform in order to carry out the terms of its charter.
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However, a charter school
that is established on
or
after April |
16, 2003 (the effective date of Public Act 93-3) and that |
operates
in a city having a population exceeding
500,000 may |
not contract with a for-profit entity to
manage or operate the |
school during the period that commences on April 16, 2003 (the
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effective date of Public Act 93-3) and
concludes at the end of |
the 2004-2005 school year.
Except as provided in subsection (i) |
of this Section, a school district may
charge a charter school |
reasonable rent for the use of the district's
buildings, |
grounds, and facilities. Any services for which a charter |
school
contracts
with a school district shall be provided by |
the district at cost. Any services
for which a charter school |
contracts with a local school board or with the
governing body |
of a State college or university or public community college
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shall be provided by the public entity at cost.
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(i) In no event shall a charter school that is established |
by converting an
existing school or attendance center to |
charter school status be required to
pay rent for space
that is |
deemed available, as negotiated and provided in the charter |
agreement,
in school district
facilities. However, all other |
costs for the operation and maintenance of
school district |
facilities that are used by the charter school shall be subject
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to negotiation between
the charter school and the local school |
board and shall be set forth in the
charter.
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(j) A charter school may limit student enrollment by age or |
grade level.
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(k) If the charter school is approved by the State Board or |
Commission, then the charter school is its own local education |
agency. |
(Source: P.A. 100-29, eff. 1-1-18; 100-156, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-163, eff. 1-1-18; 100-413, eff. 1-1-18; 100-468, eff. |
6-1-18; 100-726, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 101-50, |
eff. 7-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-291, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-531, eff. 8-23-19; 101-543, eff. 8-23-19; revised 8-4-20.) |
Article 10. |
Section 10-5. The Early Intervention Services System Act is |
amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
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(325 ILCS 20/11) (from Ch. 23, par. 4161)
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Sec. 11. Individualized Family Service Plans.
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(a) Each eligible infant or toddler and that infant's or |
toddler's family
shall receive:
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(1) timely, comprehensive, multidisciplinary |
assessment of the unique
strengths and needs of each |
eligible infant and toddler, and assessment of the concerns
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and priorities of the families to appropriately assist them |
in meeting
their needs and identify supports and services |
to meet those needs; and
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(2) a written Individualized Family Service Plan |
developed by a
multidisciplinary team which includes the |
parent or guardian. The
individualized family service plan |
shall be based on the
multidisciplinary team's assessment |
of the resources, priorities,
and concerns of the family |
and its identification of the supports
and services |
necessary to enhance the family's capacity to meet the
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developmental needs of the infant or toddler, and shall |
include the
identification of services appropriate to meet |
those needs, including the
frequency, intensity, and |
method of delivering services. During and as part of
the |
initial development of the individualized family services |
plan, and any
periodic reviews of the plan, the |
multidisciplinary team may seek consultation from the lead
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agency's designated experts, if any, to help
determine |
appropriate services and the frequency and intensity of |
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those
services. All services in the individualized family |
services plan must be
justified by the multidisciplinary |
assessment of the unique strengths and
needs of the infant |
or toddler and must be appropriate to meet those needs.
At |
the periodic reviews, the team shall determine whether |
modification or
revision of the outcomes or services is |
necessary.
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(b) The Individualized Family Service Plan shall be |
evaluated once a year
and the family shall be provided a review |
of the Plan at 6 month intervals or
more often where |
appropriate based on infant or toddler and family needs.
The |
lead agency shall create a quality review process regarding |
Individualized
Family Service Plan development and changes |
thereto, to monitor
and help assure that resources are being |
used to provide appropriate early
intervention services.
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(c) The initial evaluation and initial assessment and |
initial
Plan meeting must be held within 45 days after the |
initial
contact with the early intervention services system. |
The 45-day timeline does not apply for any period when the |
child or parent is unavailable to complete the initial |
evaluation, the initial assessments of the child and family, or |
the initial Plan meeting, due to exceptional family |
circumstances that are documented in the child's early |
intervention records, or when the parent has not provided |
consent for the initial evaluation or the initial assessment of |
the child despite documented, repeated attempts to obtain |
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parental consent. As soon as exceptional family circumstances |
no longer exist or parental consent has been obtained, the |
initial evaluation, the initial assessment, and the initial |
Plan meeting must be completed as soon as possible. With |
parental consent,
early intervention services may commence |
before the completion of the
comprehensive assessment and |
development of the Plan.
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(d) Parents must be informed that early
intervention
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services shall be provided to each eligible infant and toddler, |
to the maximum extent appropriate, in the natural
environment, |
which may include the home or other community settings. Parents
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shall make
the final decision to accept or decline
early |
intervention services. A decision to decline such services |
shall
not be a basis for administrative determination of |
parental fitness, or
other findings or sanctions against the |
parents. Parameters of the Plan
shall be set forth in rules.
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(e) The regional intake offices shall explain to each |
family, orally and
in
writing, all of the following:
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(1) That the early intervention program will pay for |
all early
intervention services set forth in the |
individualized family service plan that
are not
covered or |
paid under the family's public or private insurance plan or |
policy
and not
eligible for payment through any other third |
party payor.
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(2) That services will not be delayed due to any rules |
or restrictions
under the family's insurance plan or |
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policy.
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(3) That the family may request, with appropriate |
documentation
supporting the request, a
determination of |
an exemption from private insurance use under
Section |
13.25.
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(4) That responsibility for co-payments or
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co-insurance under a family's private insurance
plan or |
policy will be transferred to the lead
agency's central |
billing office.
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(5) That families will be responsible
for payments of |
family fees,
which will be based on a sliding scale
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according to the State's definition of ability to pay which |
is comparing household size and income to the sliding scale |
and considering out-of-pocket medical or disaster |
expenses, and that these fees
are payable to the central |
billing office. Families who fail to provide income |
information shall be charged the maximum amount on the |
sliding scale.
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(f) The individualized family service plan must state |
whether the family
has private insurance coverage and, if the |
family has such coverage, must
have attached to it a copy of |
the family's insurance identification card or
otherwise
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include all of the following information:
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(1) The name, address, and telephone number of the |
insurance
carrier.
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(2) The contract number and policy number of the |
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insurance plan.
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(3) The name, address, and social security number of |
the primary
insured.
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(4) The beginning date of the insurance benefit year.
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(g) A copy of the individualized family service plan must |
be provided to
each enrolled provider who is providing early |
intervention services to the
child
who is the subject of that |
plan.
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(h) Children receiving services under this Act shall |
receive a smooth and effective transition by their third |
birthday consistent with federal regulations adopted pursuant |
to Sections 1431 through 1444 of Title 20 of the United States |
Code. Beginning July 1, 2022, children who receive early |
intervention services prior to their third birthday and are |
found eligible for an individualized education program under |
the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. |
1414(d)(1)(A), and under Section 14-8.02 of the School Code and |
whose birthday falls between May 1 and August 31 may continue |
to receive early intervention services until the beginning of |
the school year following their third birthday in order to |
minimize gaps in services, ensure better continuity of care, |
and align practices for the enrollment of preschool children |
with special needs to the enrollment practices of typically |
developing preschool children. |
(Source: P.A. 97-902, eff. 8-6-12; 98-41, eff. 6-28-13.)
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Article 15. |
Section 15-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Equitable Early Childhood Education and Care Act. References in |
this Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 15-5. Findings; policies. |
(a) The General Assembly finds the following:
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(1) Long-standing research shows that high-quality |
early childhood experiences have an impact on children's |
short-term and long-term outcomes, such as educational |
attainment, health, and lifetime income, particularly for |
children from low-income families. |
(2) Early childhood education and care programs |
provide child care so parents can maintain stable |
employment, provide for themselves and their families, and |
advance their career or educational goals. |
(3) Illinois has a vigorous early childhood education |
and care industry composed of programs that serve children |
under the age of 6, including preschool and child care in |
schools, centers, and homes; these programs also include |
home visiting and services for young children with special |
needs. |
(4) A significant portion of the early childhood |
workforce and of family child care providers are Black and |
Latinx women. |
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(5) Illinois was among the first states in the nation |
to enact the Pre-K At-Risk program and services for infants |
and toddlers in the 1980s and reaffirmed this commitment to |
early childhood education in 2006 by creating Preschool for |
All to offer State-funded, high-quality preschool to |
3-year-olds and 4-year-olds. |
(6) Illinois was one of the first states in the nation |
to commit education funding to very young children and to |
have a statutory commitment to grow funding for |
infant-toddler services as it grows preschool services, |
including prenatal supports like home visitors and doulas. |
(7) Countless children and families have benefitted |
from these services over these decades and have had the |
opportunity to enter school ready to learn and succeed. |
(8) Despite progress made by the State, too few |
children, particularly those from Black, Latinx, and |
low-income households and child care deserts, have access |
to high-quality early childhood education and care |
services, due to both the availability and affordability of |
quality services.
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(9) In 2019, only 29% of all children in Illinois |
entered kindergarten "ready"; only 21% of Black children, |
17% of Latinx children, 14% of English Learners, 14% of |
children with IEPs, and 20% of children on free and reduced |
lunch demonstrated readiness, highlighting the critical |
work Illinois must do to close gaps in opportunity and |
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outcomes. |
(10) The State's early childhood education and care |
programs are maintained across 3 state agencies, which |
leads to inefficiencies, lack of alignment, challenges to |
collecting comprehensive data around services and needs of |
children and families, and obstacles for both children and |
families and the early childhood education and care |
providers to navigate the fragmented system and ensure |
children receive high-quality services that meet their |
needs. |
(11) The State's current mechanisms for payment to |
early childhood education and care providers may not |
incentivize quality services and can lead to payment |
delays, lack of stability of providers, and the inability |
of providers to provide appropriate compensation to the |
workforce and support quality programming. |
(12) Illinois must advance a just system for early |
childhood education and care that ensures racially and |
economically equitable opportunities and outcomes for all |
children. |
(13) In 2017, Illinois became a national leader in |
passing the K-12 Evidence-Based Funding formula for public |
schools, creating a mechanism to adequately fund and |
equitably disburse resources throughout the State and |
prioritize funding for school districts that need it most. |
(b) The General Assembly supports the following goals of |
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the Illinois Commission on Equitable Early Childhood Education |
and Care Funding: |
(1) To create a more equitable, efficient, and |
effective system and thereby increase access to |
high-quality services, particularly to serve more Black |
and Latinx children and populations of children where |
children of color may be disproportionately represented, |
such as: children from low-income households, with |
disabilities, experiencing homelessness, and participating |
in the child welfare system; English learners; and children |
from households in which English is not the primary |
language spoken. |
(2) To ensure a more equitable system, we support the |
Commission's goal of consolidating programs and services |
into a single, adequately staffed State agency to align and |
coordinate services, to decrease barriers to access for |
families and make it easier for them to navigate the |
system, and to better collect, use, and report |
comprehensive data to ensure disparities in services are |
addressed. |
(3) To ensure equitable and adequate funding to expand |
access to high-quality services and increase compensation |
of this vital workforce, a significant proportion of which |
are Black and Latinx women. The General Assembly encourages |
the State to commit to a multi-year plan designed to move |
the State toward adequate funding over time. |
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(4) To redesign the mechanisms by which the State pays |
providers of early childhood education and care services to |
ensure provider stability, capacity, and quality and to |
make sure providers and services are available to families |
throughout the State, including in areas of child care |
deserts and concentrated poverty. |
(5) To ensure comprehensive data on children and |
families' access to and participation in programs and |
resulting outcomes, including, but not limited to, |
kindergarten readiness, to understand and address the |
degree to which the State is reaching children and families |
and ensuring equitable opportunity and outcomes. |
(c) The General Assembly encourages the State to create a |
planning process and timeline, with a designated body |
accountable for implementing the Commission's recommendations, |
that includes engagement of parents, providers, communities, |
experts, and other stakeholders and to regularly evaluate the |
impact of the implementation of the Commission's |
recommendations to ensure they impact children, families, and |
communities as intended and lead to a more equitable early |
childhood education and care system for Illinois. |
Article 20.
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Section 20-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Data Governance and Organization to Support Equity and Racial |
|
Justice Act . References in this Article to "this Act" mean this |
Article. |
Section 20-5. Findings. The General Assembly finds the |
following: |
(1) The State of Illinois spends billions of dollars |
annually on grants and programs to ensure that all |
Illinoisans have the economic, health and safety, |
educational, and other opportunities to be successful, but |
it is still insufficient to serve all the needs of all |
Illinoisans. |
(2) To be good fiscal stewards of State funds, it is |
necessary to ensure that the limited State funding is spent |
on the right services, at the right time, in the right |
dosages, to the right individuals, and in the most |
equitable manner. |
(3) Historical equity gaps exist in the administration |
of programs across the State and understanding where these |
exist is necessary for adjusting program scopes and |
ensuring that gaps can be found and rectified quickly. |
(4) Different subpopulations of individuals may have |
different needs and may experience different outcomes from |
similar programs. |
(5) Measuring average outcomes across an entire |
population is insufficient to understand the equity |
impacts of a program on specific subpopulations. |
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(6) Silos in information sharing exist across agencies |
and that measuring the outcomes and impacts of programs |
requires multiple agencies to share data. |
(7) There is no existing mechanism for agencies to |
ensure they are collecting information on programs that can |
be easily matched to other agencies to understand program |
effectiveness, as well as equity and access gaps that may |
exist. |
(8) The establishment of a system of data governance |
and improved analytic capability is critical to support |
equitable provision of services and the evaluation of |
equitable outcomes for the citizens of Illinois. |
(9) Sound data collection, reporting, and analysis is |
necessary to ensure that practice and policy decisions and |
outcomes are driven by a culture of data use and actionable |
information that supports equity and engages stakeholders. |
(10) Data governance and the classification of data is |
a critical component of improving the security and privacy |
of data. |
(11) The P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System Act, |
enacted by Public Act 96-107, was created in 2009 to |
develop the capacity to match data across agencies and |
provide for improved data analytics across education |
agencies. |
(12) The P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System has
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expanded to include the incorporation of human services, |
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workforce, and education agencies. |
(13) The implementation of the P-20 Longitudinal |
Education Data System has allowed the State to improve its |
ability to manage and to bring together data across |
agencies. |
(14) Merging data across agencies has highlighted the |
degree to which there are different approaches to capturing |
similar data across agencies, including how race and |
ethnicity data are captured. |
(15) The State of Illinois needs to establish common |
processes and procedures for all of the following: |
(A) Cataloging data. |
(B) Managing data requests. |
(C) Sharing data. |
(D) Collecting data. |
(E) Matching data across agencies. |
(F) Developing research and analytic agendas. |
(G) Reporting on program participation |
disaggregated by race and ethnicity. |
(H) Evaluating equitable outcomes for underserved |
populations in Illinois. |
(I) Defining common roles for data management |
across agencies. |
Section 20-10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Board" means the State Board of Education. |
|
"Department" means any of the following: the Department on |
Aging, the Department of Central Management Services, the |
Department of Children and Family Services, the Department of |
Corrections, the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Illinois |
Department of Labor, the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services, the Department of Human Services, the Department of |
Public Health, or the Illinois Department of Transportation. |
Section 20-15. Data Governance and Organization to Support |
Equity and Racial Justice. |
(a) On or before July 1, 2022 and each July 1 thereafter, |
the Board and the Department shall report statistical data on |
the racial and ethnic demographics of program participants for |
each major program administered by the Board or the Department. |
Except as provided in subsection (b), when reporting the data |
required under this Section, the Board or the Department shall |
use the same racial and ethnic classifications for each |
program, which shall include, but not be limited to, the |
following: |
(1) American Indian and Alaska Native alone. |
(2) Asian alone. |
(3) Black or African American alone. |
(4) Hispanic or Latino of any race. |
(5) Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone. |
(6) White alone. |
(7) Some other race alone. |
|
(8) Two or more races.
|
The Board and the Department may further define, by rule, |
the racial and ethnic classifications, including, if |
necessary, a classification of "No Race Specified". |
(c) If a program administered by the Board or the |
Department is subject to federal reporting requirements that |
include the collection and public reporting of statistical data |
on the racial and ethnic demographics of program participants, |
the Department may maintain the same racial and ethnic |
classifications used under the federal requirements if such |
classifications differ from the classifications listed in |
subsection (a). |
(d) The Department of Innovation and Technology shall |
assist the Board and the Department by establishing common |
technological processes and procedures for the Board and the |
Department to: |
(1) Catalog data. |
(2) Identify similar fields in datasets. |
(3) Manage data requests. |
(4) Share data. |
(5) Collect data. |
(6) Improve and clean data. |
(7) Match data across the Board and Departments. |
(8) Develop research and analytic agendas. |
(9) Report on program participation disaggregated by |
race and ethnicity. |
|
(10) Evaluate equitable outcomes for underserved |
populations in Illinois. |
(11) Define common roles for data management. |
(12) Ensure that all major programs can report |
disaggregated data by race and ethnicity. |
The Board and the Department shall use the common |
technological processes and procedures established by the |
Department of Innovation and Technology. |
(e) If the Board or the Department is unable to begin |
reporting the data required by subsection (a) by July 1, 2022, |
the Board or the Department shall state the reasons for the |
delay under the reporting requirements. |
(f) By no later than March 31, 2022, the Board and the |
Department shall provide a progress report to the General |
Assembly to disclose: (i) the programs and datasets that have |
been cataloged for which race and ethnicity has been |
standardized; and (ii) to the extent possible, the datasets and |
programs that are outstanding for each agency and the datasets |
that are planned for the upcoming year. On or before March 31, |
2023, and each year thereafter, the Board and Departments shall |
provide an updated report to the General Assembly. |
(g) By no later than October 31, 2021, the Governor's |
Office shall provide a plan to establish processes for input |
from the Board and the Department into processes outlined in |
subsection (b). The plan shall incorporate ongoing efforts at |
data interoperability within the Department and the governance |
|
established to support the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data |
System enacted by Public Act 96-107. |
(h) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the |
rights granted to individuals or data sharing protections |
established under existing State and federal data privacy and |
security laws. |
Section 20-20. Construction of Act. Nothing in this Act |
shall be construed to limit the rights granted to individuals |
or data sharing protections established under existing State |
and federal data privacy and security laws. |
Article 25. |
Section 25-5. The School Code is amended by adding Section |
22-90 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/22-90 new) |
Sec. 22-90. Whole Child Task Force. |
(a) The General Assembly makes all of the following |
findings: |
(1) The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed systemic |
inequities in American society. Students, educators, and |
families throughout this State have been deeply affected by |
the pandemic, and the impact of the pandemic will be felt |
for years to come. The negative consequences of the |
|
pandemic have impacted students and communities |
differently along the lines of race, income, language, and |
special needs. However, students in this State faced |
significant unmet physical health, mental health, and |
social and emotional needs even prior to the pandemic. |
(2) The path to recovery requires a commitment from |
adults in this State to address our students cultural, |
physical, emotional, and mental health needs and to provide |
them with stronger and increased systemic support and |
intervention. |
(3) It is well documented that trauma and toxic stress |
diminish a child's ability to thrive. Forms of childhood |
trauma and toxic stress include adverse childhood |
experiences, systemic racism, poverty, food and housing |
insecurity, and gender-based violence. The COVID-19 |
pandemic has exacerbated these issues and brought them into |
focus. |
(4) It is estimated that, overall, approximately 40% of |
children in this State have experienced at least one |
adverse childhood experience and approximately 10% have |
experienced 3 or more adverse childhood experiences. |
However, the number of adverse childhood experiences is |
higher for Black and Hispanic children who are growing up |
in poverty. The COVID-19 pandemic has amplified the number |
of students who have experienced childhood trauma. Also, |
the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted preexisting |
|
inequities in school disciplinary practices that |
disproportionately impact Black and Brown students. |
Research shows, for example, that girls of color are |
disproportionately impacted by trauma, adversity, and |
abuse, and instead of receiving the care and |
trauma-informed support they may need, many Black girls in |
particular face disproportionately harsh disciplinary |
measures. |
(5) The cumulative effects of trauma and toxic stress |
adversely impact the physical health of students, as well |
as their ability to learn, form relationships, and |
self-regulate. If left unaddressed, these effects increase |
a student's risk for depression, alcoholism, anxiety, |
asthma, smoking, and suicide, all of which are risks that |
disproportionately affect Black youth and may lead to a |
host of medical diseases as an adult. Access to infant and |
early childhood mental health services is critical to |
ensure the social and emotional well-being of this State's |
youngest children, particularly those children who have |
experienced trauma. |
(6) Although this State enacted measures through |
Public Act 100-105 to address the high rate of early care |
and preschool expulsions of infants, toddlers, and |
preschoolers and the disproportionately higher rate of |
expulsion for Black and Hispanic children, a recent study |
found a wide variation in the awareness, understanding, and |
|
compliance with the law by providers of early childhood |
care. Further work is needed to implement the law, which |
includes providing training to early childhood care |
providers to increase their understanding of the law, |
increasing the availability and access to infant and early |
childhood mental health services, and building aligned |
data collection systems to better understand expulsion |
rates and to allow for accurate reporting as required by |
the law. |
(7) Many educators and schools in this State have |
embraced and implemented evidenced-based restorative |
justice and trauma-responsive and culturally relevant |
practices and interventions. However, the use of these |
interventions on students is often isolated or is |
implemented occasionally and only if the school has the |
appropriate leadership, resources, and partners available |
to engage seriously in this work. It would be malpractice |
to deny our students access to these practices and |
interventions, especially in the aftermath of a |
once-in-a-century pandemic. |
(b) The Whole Child Task Force is created for the purpose |
of establishing an equitable, inclusive, safe, and supportive |
environment in all schools for every student in this State. The |
task force shall have all of the following goals, which means |
key steps have to be taken to ensure that every child in every |
school in this State has access to teachers, social workers, |
|
school leaders, support personnel, and others who have been |
trained in evidenced-based interventions and restorative |
practices: |
(1) To create a common definition of a |
trauma-responsive school, a trauma-responsive district, |
and a trauma-responsive community. |
(2) To outline the training and resources required to |
create and sustain a system of support for |
trauma-responsive schools, districts, and communities and |
to identify this State's role in that work, including |
recommendations concerning options for redirecting |
resources from school resource officers to classroom-based |
support. |
(3) To identify or develop a process to conduct an |
analysis of the organizations that provide training in |
restorative practices, implicit bias, anti-racism, and |
trauma-responsive systems, mental health services, and |
social and emotional services to schools. |
(4) To provide recommendations concerning the key data |
to be collected and reported to ensure that this State has |
a full and accurate understanding of the progress toward |
ensuring that all schools, including programs and |
providers of care to pre-kindergarten children, employ |
restorative, anti-racist, and trauma-responsive strategies |
and practices. The data collected must include information |
relating to the availability of trauma responsive support |
|
structures in schools as well as disciplinary practices |
employed on students in person or through other means, |
including during remote or blended learning. It should also |
include information on the use of, and funding for, school |
resource officers and other similar police personnel in |
school programs. |
(5) To recommend an implementation timeline, including |
the key roles, responsibilities, and resources to advance |
this State toward a system in which every school, district, |
and community is progressing toward becoming |
trauma-responsive. |
(6) To seek input and feedback from stakeholders, |
including parents, students, and educators, who reflect |
the diversity of this State. |
(c) Members of the Whole Child Task Force shall be |
appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. Members of |
this task force must represent the diversity of this State and |
possess the expertise needed to perform the work required to |
meet the goals of the task force set forth under subsection |
(a). Members of the task force shall include all of the |
following: |
(1) One member of a statewide professional teachers' |
organization. |
(2) One member of another statewide professional |
teachers' organization. |
(3) One member who represents a school district serving |
|
a community with a population of 500,000 or more. |
(4) One member of a statewide organization |
representing social workers. |
(5) One member of an organization that has specific |
expertise in trauma-responsive school practices and |
experience in supporting schools in developing |
trauma-responsive and restorative practices. |
(6) One member of another organization that has |
specific expertise in trauma-responsive school practices |
and experience in supporting schools in developing |
trauma-responsive and restorative practices. |
(7) One member of a statewide organization that |
represents school administrators. |
(8) One member of a statewide policy organization that |
works to build a healthy public education system that |
prepares all students for a successful college, career, and |
civic life. |
(9) One member of a statewide organization that brings
|
teachers together to identify and address issues
critical |
to student success. |
(10) One member of the General Assembly recommended by |
the President of the Senate. |
(11) One member of the General Assembly recommended by |
the Speaker of the House of
Representatives. |
(12) One member of the General Assembly recommended by |
the Minority Leader of the Senate. |
|
(13) One member of the General Assembly recommended by |
the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. |
(14) One member of a civil rights organization that |
works actively on issues regarding student support. |
(15) One administrator from a school district that has |
actively worked to develop a system of student support that |
uses a trauma-informed lens. |
(16) One educator from a school district that has |
actively worked to develop a system of student support that |
uses a trauma-informed lens. |
(17) One member of a youth-led organization. |
(18) One member of an organization that has |
demonstrated expertise in restorative practices. |
(19) One member of a coalition of mental health and |
school practitioners who assist schools in developing and |
implementing trauma-informed and restorative strategies |
and systems. |
(20) One member of an organization whose mission is to |
promote the safety, health, and economic success of |
children, youth, and families in this State. |
(21) One member who works or has worked as a |
restorative justice coach or disciplinarian. |
(22) One member who works or has worked as a social |
worker. |
(23) One member of the State Board of Education. |
(24) One member who represents a statewide principals' |
|
organization. |
(25) One member who represents a statewide |
organization of school boards. |
(26) One member who has expertise in pre-kindergarten |
education. |
(27) One member who represents a school social worker |
association. |
(28) One member who represents an organization that |
represents school districts in both the south suburbs and |
collar counties. |
(29) One member who is a licensed clinical psychologist |
who (A) has a doctor of philosophy in the field of clinical |
psychology and has an appointment at an independent |
free-standing children's hospital located in Chicago, (B) |
serves as associate professor at a medical school located |
in Chicago, and (C) serves as the clinical director of a |
coalition of voluntary collaboration of organizations that |
are committed to applying a trauma lens to their efforts on |
behalf of families and children in the State. |
(30) One member who represents a west suburban school |
district. |
(d) The Whole Child Task Force shall meet at the call of |
the State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee, |
who shall serve as as the chairperson. The State Board of |
Education shall provide administrative and other support to the |
task force. Members of the task force shall serve without |
|
compensation. |
(e) The Whole Child Task Force shall submit a report of its |
findings and recommendations to the General Assembly, the |
Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, the State Board of |
Education, and the Governor on or before February 1, 2022. Upon |
submitting its report, the task force is dissolved. |
(f) This Section is repealed on February 1, 2023. |
Article 35. |
Section 35-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Infant/Early Childhood Mental Health Consultations Act. |
References in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 35-5. Findings; policies. |
(a) The General Assembly finds the following: |
(1) Social and emotional development is a core |
developmental domain in young children and is codified in |
the Illinois Early Learning Standards. |
(2) Fostering social and emotional development in |
early childhood means both providing the supportive |
settings and interactions to maximize healthy social and |
emotional development for all children, as well as |
providing communities, programs, and providers with |
systems of tiered supports with training to respond to more |
significant social and emotional challenges or where |
|
experiences of trauma may be more prevalent. |
(3) Early care and education programs and providers, |
across a range of settings, have an important role to play |
in supporting young children and families, especially |
those who face greater challenges, such as trauma exposure, |
social isolation, pervasive poverty, and toxic stress; if |
programs, teaching staff, caregivers, and providers are |
not provided with the support, services, and training |
needed to accomplish these goals, it can lead to children |
and families being asked to leave programs, particularly |
without connection to more appropriate services, thereby |
creating a disruption in learning and social-emotional |
development; investments in
reflective supervision, |
professional development specific to diversity, equity and |
inclusion practice, culturally responsive training, |
implicit bias training, and how trauma experienced during |
the early years can manifest in challenging behaviors will |
create systems for serving children that are informed in |
developmentally appropriate and responsive supports. |
(4) Studies have shown that the expulsion of infants, |
toddlers, and young children in early care and education |
settings is occurring at alarmingly high rates, more than 3 |
times that of students in K-12; further, expulsion occurs |
more frequently for Black children and Latinx children and |
more frequently for boys than for girls, with Black boys |
being most frequently expelled; there is evidence to show |
|
that the expulsion of Black girls is occurring with |
increasing frequency. |
(5) Illinois took its first steps toward addressing |
this disparity through Public Act 100-105 to prohibit |
expulsion due to child behavior in early care and education |
settings, but further work is needed to implement this law, |
including strengthening provider understanding of a |
successful transition and beginning to identify strategies |
to reduce "soft expulsions" and to ensure more young |
children and their teachers, providers, and caregivers, in |
a range of early care and education settings, can benefit |
from services, such as Infant/Early Childhood Mental |
Health Consultations (I/ECMHC) and positive behavior |
interventions and supports such as the Pyramid Model. |
(6) I/ECMHC is a critical component needed to align |
social-emotional well-being with the public health model |
of promotion, prevention, and intervention across early |
care and education systems. |
(b) The General Assembly encourages that all of the |
following actions be taken by: |
(1) the State to increase the availability of |
Infant/Early Childhood Mental Health Consultations |
(I/ECMHC) through increased funding in early childhood |
programs and sustainable funding for coordination of |
I/ECMHC and other social and emotional support at the State |
level; |
|
(2) the Department of Human Services (IDHS), the |
Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), the Governor's |
Office of Early Childhood Development (GOECD), and other |
relevant agencies to develop and promote |
provider-accessible and parent-accessible materials, |
including native language, on the role and value of |
I/ECMHC, including targeted promotion in underserved |
communities, and promote the use of existing I/ECMHCs, the |
I/ECMHC consultant database, or other existing services; |
(3) the State to increase funding to promote and |
provide training and implementation support for systems of |
tiered support, such as the Pyramid Model, across early |
childhood settings and urge DHS, ISBE, GOECD, and other |
relevant State agencies to coordinate efforts and develop |
strategies to provide outreach to and support providers in |
underserved communities and communities with fewer |
programmatic resources; and |
(4) ISBE and DCFS to provide the data required by |
Public Act 100-105, even if the data is incomplete at the |
time due to data system challenges. |
Article 40. |
Section 40-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
adding Section 5-39 as follows: |
|
(305 ILCS 5/5-39 new) |
Sec. 5-39. Behavioral health services for children; |
diagnostic assessment system. Beginning on July 1, 2022, if it |
is necessary to provide a diagnostic code for behavioral health |
services for children ages 5 and under, providers shall utilize |
a developmentally appropriate and age-appropriate diagnostic |
assessment system, such as the Diagnostic Classification of |
Mental Health and Developmental Disorders of Infancy and Early |
Childhood-Revised (DC:0-5), for diagnosis and treatment |
planning. If necessary for billing purposes, the provider, |
managed care organization, or Department shall utilize the |
existing crosswalk tool to convert the developmentally |
appropriate and age-appropriate diagnosis code to the relevant |
code available in the State system. |
By no later than January 1, 2022, the Department shall make |
recommendations to the General Assembly on the resources needed |
to integrate developmentally appropriate and age-appropriate |
diagnostic codes into the State system. |
Article 45. |
Section 45-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Early Childhood Workforce Act. References in this Article to |
"this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 45-5. Findings; policies. |
|
(a) The General Assembly finds the following: |
(1) Research shows that early childhood teacher |
effectiveness is a predictor for positive developmental |
and academic outcomes for children. |
(2) The work of early childhood educators is |
sophisticated and central to the healthy learning and |
development of young children and takes place in a range of |
settings, including schools, community-based centers, and |
homes. |
(3) It is critically important for children's outcomes |
to have educators that reflect the diversity of the |
families and communities they serve. |
(4) The early childhood workforce is more racially |
diverse than the K-12 workforce, and its members hold |
degrees, have earned credentials, and have years of |
experience in the field. |
(5) The early childhood workforce, particularly those |
working in community-based settings and those working with |
infants and toddlers, often are not paid wages aligned to |
the sophistication of their work and level of education. |
(6) All regions and settings have difficulty finding |
qualified teachers. |
(7) A disproportionate number of Black and Latinx women |
serve in essential, frontline positions but are |
underrepresented as lead teachers and in program |
leadership where credentials and degrees are required. |
|
(8) The early childhood workforce faces multiple |
barriers to additional credential and degree attainment |
that lead to career advancement and higher levels of |
compensation.
|
(b) The General Assembly encourages all of the following: |
(1) The Department of Human Services to undertake an |
analysis of teacher data in the Gateways Registry to |
determine those individuals who are close to their next |
credential or degree, including information where |
available in the Registry such as their geographic |
location, demographics, work setting, and age groups of |
children for whom they are responsible. |
(2) The Department of Human Services to conduct |
outreach and provide targeted coaching and access to |
financial supports, including, but not limited to, |
scholarships and debt relief, in a way that prioritizes |
increasing the diversity of the teacher pipeline, |
including bilingual providers and educators, regions of |
the State with the highest need, and children in age groups |
with the greatest teacher shortages. |
(3) The State Board of Education to provide additional |
financial support to candidates and provide this support to |
all candidates regardless of the setting in which they work |
and the credentials they are currently seeking, |
prioritizing those by greatest need in the early childhood |
field. |
|
(4) The Department of Human Services to provide annual |
reports on who receives these and other scholarships or |
other financial support administered by the Department or |
the State Board of Education by geographic location, |
demographics, work setting, age groups of children served, |
and credential/degree attainment as available. |
(5) The Board of Higher Education, in the course of |
their strategic planning process, to review the barriers |
experienced by the early childhood workforce and by |
teachers of color, in particular in accessing and |
completing the needed coursework to attain additional |
credentials and degrees, and to recommend policy or |
practice changes to better meet the needs of this |
workforce, which is largely comprised of non-traditional |
students and women of color. |
(6) The State Board of Education and the Department of |
Human Services to prioritize reducing compensation |
disparities between the early childhood workforce and |
their K-12 counterparts and disparities within the early |
childhood workforce between setting and age groups in which |
they work, as funding becomes available. |
Article 50. |
Section 50-5. The School Code is amended by adding Section |
2-3.183 and by changing Section 27-22 as follows: |
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.183 new) |
Sec. 2-3.183. Review of university admission coursework. |
(a) The State Board of Education shall make the review |
compiled under Section 9.40 of the Board of Higher Education |
Act available to the public on its Internet website. |
(b) To ensure that every public high school student |
understands the course expectations for admission into a public |
university in this State, a school district must make available |
to students in grades 8 through 12 and their parents or |
guardians the review compiled under Section 9.40 of the Board |
of Higher Education Act before the student's course schedule is |
finalized for the student's particular grade level. |
(c) To ensure that a public high school student is not |
excluded from enrolling in a public university in this State |
because of a lack of access to required or recommended |
coursework, beginning with the 2022-2023 school year and each |
school year thereafter, every public high school must provide |
access to each course identified in the review compiled under |
Section 9.40 of the Board of Higher Education Act to any of its |
students who request to enroll in the course. If the public |
high school is unable to offer the course through the school |
district, the public high school must find an alternative way |
to offer the course to the student, which may include |
partnering with another school district, a community college |
district, an institution of higher education, or some other |
|
course provider. No student shall be excluded from |
participation in a course identified in the review due to |
financial reasons. Any course offered pursuant to this Section |
as a dual credit course shall be developed and offered in |
accordance with the Dual Credit Quality Act. |
(105 ILCS 5/27-22) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-22)
|
Sec. 27-22. Required high school courses.
|
(a) (Blank).
|
(b) (Blank). |
(c) (Blank). |
(d) (Blank). |
(e) Through the 2023-2024 school year, as As a prerequisite |
to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil
entering the 9th |
grade must, in addition to other course requirements, |
successfully
complete all of the following courses: |
(1) Four years of language arts. |
(2) Two years of writing intensive courses, one of |
which must be English and the other of which may be English |
or any other subject. When applicable, writing-intensive |
courses may be counted towards the fulfillment of other |
graduation requirements.
|
(3) Three years of mathematics, one of which must be |
Algebra I, one of which must include geometry content, and |
one of which may be an Advanced Placement computer science |
course. A mathematics course that includes geometry |
|
content may be offered as an integrated, applied, |
interdisciplinary, or career and technical education |
course that prepares a student for a career readiness path. |
(4) Two years of science. |
(5) Two years of social studies, of which at least one |
year must be history of the United States or a combination |
of history of the United States and American government |
and, beginning with pupils entering the 9th grade in the |
2016-2017 school year and each school year thereafter, at |
least one semester must be civics, which shall help young |
people acquire and learn to use the skills, knowledge, and |
attitudes that will prepare them to be competent and |
responsible citizens throughout their lives. Civics course |
content shall focus on government institutions, the |
discussion of current and controversial issues, service |
learning, and simulations of the democratic process. |
School districts may utilize private funding available for |
the purposes of offering civics education. |
(6) One year chosen from (A) music, (B) art, (C) |
foreign language, which shall be deemed to include American |
Sign Language, or (D) vocational education. |
(e-5) Beginning with the 2024-2025 school year, as a |
prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil |
entering the 9th grade must, in addition to other course |
requirements, successfully complete all of the following |
courses: |
|
(1) Four years of language arts. |
(2) Two years of writing intensive courses, one of |
which must be English and the other of which may be English |
or any other subject. If applicable, writing-intensive |
courses may be counted toward the fulfillment of other |
graduation requirements. |
(3) Three years of mathematics, one of which must be |
Algebra I, one of which must include geometry content, and |
one of which may be an Advanced Placement computer science |
course. A mathematics course that includes geometry |
content may be offered as an integrated, applied, |
interdisciplinary, or career and technical education |
course that prepares a student for a career readiness path. |
(4) Two years of laboratory science. |
(5) Two years of social studies, of which at least one |
year must be history of the United States or a combination |
of history of the United States and American government and |
at least one semester must be civics, which shall help |
young people acquire and learn to use the skills, |
knowledge, and attitudes that will prepare them to be |
competent and responsible citizens throughout their lives. |
Civics course content shall focus on government |
institutions, the discussion of current and controversial |
issues, service learning, and simulations of the |
democratic process. School districts may utilize private |
funding available for the purposes of offering civics |
|
education. |
(6) One year chosen from (A) music, (B) art, (C) |
foreign language, which shall be deemed to include American |
Sign Language, or (D) vocational education. |
(e-10) Beginning with the 2028-2029 school year, as a |
prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil |
entering the 9th grade must, in addition to other course |
requirements, successfully complete 2 years of foreign |
language courses, which may include American Sign Language. A |
pupil may choose a third year of foreign language to satisfy |
the requirement under paragraph (6) of subsection (e-5). |
(f) The State Board of Education shall develop and inform |
school districts of standards for writing-intensive |
coursework.
|
(f-5) If a school district offers an Advanced Placement |
computer science course to high school students, then the |
school board must designate that course as equivalent to a high |
school mathematics course and must denote on the student's |
transcript that the Advanced Placement computer science course |
qualifies as a mathematics-based, quantitative course for |
students in accordance with subdivision (3) of subsection (e) |
of this Section. |
(g) This amendatory Act of 1983 does not apply to pupils |
entering the 9th grade
in 1983-1984 school year and prior |
school years or to students
with disabilities whose course of |
study is determined by an individualized
education program.
|
|
This amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly does not |
apply
to pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2004-2005 school |
year or a prior
school year or to students with disabilities |
whose course of study is
determined by an individualized |
education program.
|
Subsection (e-5) does not apply
to pupils entering the 9th |
grade in the 2023-2024 school year or a prior
school year or to |
students with disabilities whose course of study is
determined |
by an individualized education program. Subsection (e-10) does |
not apply
to pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2027-2028 |
school year or a prior
school year or to students with |
disabilities whose course of study is
determined by an |
individualized education program. |
(h) The provisions of this Section are subject to the |
provisions of
Section
27-22.05 of this Code and the |
Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
|
(i) The State Board of Education may adopt rules to modify |
the requirements of this Section for any students enrolled in |
grades 9 through 12 if the Governor has declared a disaster due |
to a public health emergency pursuant to Section 7 of the |
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. |
(Source: P.A. 100-443, eff. 8-25-17; 101-464, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
|
Section 50-10. The Board of Higher Education Act is amended |
by adding Section 9.40 as follows: |
|
(110 ILCS 205/9.40 new) |
Sec. 9.40. Review of university admission coursework. |
(a) On or before May 1, 2021 and as needed thereafter, the |
Board of Higher Education shall compile a review that |
identifies, for each public university in this State, all |
courses the university will require or recommend a high school |
student take to be admitted to the university as an |
undergraduate student for the following school year. The review |
shall also include any required coursework or recommended |
coursework for a undergraduate admission into a specific |
academic major, college, or department of the university for |
the following school year. In order to allow public school |
districts sufficient time to fulfill their obligations under |
subsection (c) of Section 2-3.183 of the School Code, the |
review must also identify any new courses that each public |
university in this State will add to the review the following |
year. No new required or recommended coursework may be added to |
a review that has not been identified in the previous year's |
review. |
(b) The Board of Higher Education shall make the review |
compiled under subsection (a) available to the public on its |
Internet website. |
(c) The Board of Higher Education may adopt any rules |
necessary to implement this Section. |
|
Article 60. |
Section 60-5. The School Code is amended by adding Sections |
2-3.185, 10-20.73, 10-20.74, and 27-23.15 and by changing |
Sections 10-17a and 27-22 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.185 new) |
Sec. 2-3.185. Computer science standards and courses. On or |
before December 1, 2021, the State Board of Education shall: |
(1) develop or adopt rigorous learning standards in the |
area of computer science; and |
(2) analyze and revise, if appropriate, existing |
course titles dedicated to computer science or develop a |
short list of existing course titles that are recommended |
for computer science courses.
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-17a) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-17a)
|
Sec. 10-17a. State, school district, and school report |
cards.
|
(1) By October 31, 2013 and October 31 of each subsequent |
school year, the State Board of Education, through the State |
Superintendent of Education, shall prepare a State report card, |
school district report cards, and school report cards, and |
shall by the most economic means provide to each school
|
district in this State, including special charter districts and |
districts
subject to the provisions of Article 34, the report |
|
cards for the school district and each of its schools. |
(2) In addition to any information required by federal law, |
the State Superintendent shall determine the indicators and |
presentation of the school report card, which must include, at |
a minimum, the most current data collected and maintained by |
the State Board of Education related to the following: |
(A) school characteristics and student demographics, |
including average class size, average teaching experience, |
student racial/ethnic breakdown, and the percentage of |
students classified as low-income; the percentage of |
students classified as English learners; the percentage of |
students who have individualized education plans or 504 |
plans that provide for special education services; the |
number and percentage of all students who have been |
assessed for placement in a gifted education or advanced |
academic program and, of those students: (i) the racial and |
ethnic breakdown, (ii) the percentage who are classified as |
low-income, and (iii) the number and percentage of students |
who received direct instruction from a teacher who holds a |
gifted education endorsement and, of those students, the |
percentage who are classified as low-income; the |
percentage of students scoring at the "exceeds |
expectations" level on the assessments required under |
Section 2-3.64a-5 of this Code; the percentage of students |
who annually transferred in or out of the school district; |
average daily attendance; the per-pupil operating |
|
expenditure of the school district; and the per-pupil State |
average operating expenditure for the district type |
(elementary, high school, or unit); |
(B) curriculum information, including, where |
applicable, Advanced Placement, International |
Baccalaureate or equivalent courses, dual enrollment |
courses, foreign language classes, computer science |
courses, school personnel resources (including Career |
Technical Education teachers), before and after school |
programs, extracurricular activities, subjects in which |
elective classes are offered, health and wellness |
initiatives (including the average number of days of |
Physical Education per week per student), approved |
programs of study, awards received, community |
partnerships, and special programs such as programming for |
the gifted and talented, students with disabilities, and |
work-study students; |
(C) student outcomes, including, where applicable, the |
percentage of students deemed proficient on assessments of |
State standards, the percentage of students in the eighth |
grade who pass Algebra, the percentage of students who |
participated in workplace learning experiences, the |
percentage of students enrolled in post-secondary |
institutions (including colleges, universities, community |
colleges, trade/vocational schools, and training programs |
leading to career certification within 2 semesters of high |
|
school graduation), the percentage of students graduating |
from high school who are college and career ready, and the |
percentage of graduates enrolled in community colleges, |
colleges, and universities who are in one or more courses |
that the community college, college, or university |
identifies as a developmental course; |
(D) student progress, including, where applicable, the |
percentage of students in the ninth grade who have earned 5 |
credits or more without failing more than one core class, a |
measure of students entering kindergarten ready to learn, a |
measure of growth, and the percentage of students who enter |
high school on track for college and career readiness; |
(E) the school environment, including, where |
applicable, the percentage of students with less than 10 |
absences in a school year, the percentage of teachers with |
less than 10 absences in a school year for reasons other |
than professional development, leaves taken pursuant to |
the federal Family Medical Leave Act of 1993, long-term |
disability, or parental leaves, the 3-year average of the |
percentage of teachers returning to the school from the |
previous year, the number of different principals at the |
school in the last 6 years, the number of teachers who hold |
a gifted education endorsement, the process and criteria |
used by the district to determine whether a student is |
eligible for participation in a gifted education program or |
advanced academic program and the manner in which parents |
|
and guardians are made aware of the process and criteria, 2 |
or more indicators from any school climate survey selected |
or approved by the State and administered pursuant to |
Section 2-3.153 of this Code, with the same or similar |
indicators included on school report cards for all surveys |
selected or approved by the State pursuant to Section |
2-3.153 of this Code, and the combined percentage of |
teachers rated as proficient or excellent in their most |
recent evaluation; |
(F) a school district's and its individual schools' |
balanced accountability measure, in accordance with |
Section 2-3.25a of this Code; |
(G) the total and per pupil normal cost amount the |
State contributed to the Teachers' Retirement System of the |
State of Illinois in the prior fiscal year for the school's |
employees, which shall be reported to the State Board of |
Education by the Teachers' Retirement System of the State |
of Illinois; |
(H) for a school district organized under Article 34 of |
this Code only, State contributions to the Public School |
Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of Chicago and State |
contributions for health care for employees of that school |
district; |
(I) a school district's Final Percent of Adequacy, as |
defined in paragraph (4) of subsection (f) of Section |
18-8.15 of this Code; |
|
(J) a school district's Local Capacity Target, as |
defined in paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of Section |
18-8.15 of this Code, displayed as a percentage amount; |
(K) a school district's Real Receipts, as defined in |
paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 18-8.15 of this |
Code, divided by a school district's Adequacy Target, as |
defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section |
18-8.15 of this Code, displayed as a percentage amount; |
(L) a school district's administrative costs; and |
(M) whether or not the school has participated in the |
Illinois Youth Survey. In this paragraph (M), "Illinois |
Youth Survey" means a self-report survey, administered in |
school settings every 2 years, designed to gather |
information about health and social indicators, including |
substance abuse patterns and the attitudes of students in |
grades 8, 10, and 12; and |
(N) whether the school offered its students career and |
technical education opportunities. |
The school report card shall also provide
information that |
allows for comparing the current outcome, progress, and |
environment data to the State average, to the school data from |
the past 5 years, and to the outcomes, progress, and |
environment of similar schools based on the type of school and |
enrollment of low-income students, special education students, |
and English learners.
|
As used in this subsection (2): |
|
"Administrative costs" means costs associated with |
executive, administrative, or managerial functions within the |
school district that involve planning, organizing, managing, |
or directing the school district. |
"Advanced academic program" means a course of study to |
which students are assigned based on advanced cognitive ability |
or advanced academic achievement compared to local age peers |
and in which the curriculum is substantially differentiated |
from the general curriculum to provide appropriate challenge |
and pace. |
"Computer science" means the study of computers and |
algorithms, including their principles, their hardware and |
software designs, their implementation, and their impact on |
society. "Computer science" does not include the study of |
everyday uses of computers and computer applications, such as |
keyboarding or accessing the Internet. |
"Gifted education" means educational services, including |
differentiated curricula and instructional methods, designed |
to meet the needs of gifted children as defined in Article 14A |
of this Code. |
For the purposes of paragraph (A) of this subsection (2), |
"average daily attendance" means the average of the actual |
number of attendance days during the previous school year for |
any enrolled student who is subject to compulsory attendance by |
Section 26-1 of this Code at each school and charter school. |
(3) At the discretion of the State Superintendent, the |
|
school district report card shall include a subset of the |
information identified in paragraphs (A) through (E) of |
subsection (2) of this Section, as well as information relating |
to the operating expense per pupil and other finances of the |
school district, and the State report card shall include a |
subset of the information identified in paragraphs (A) through |
(E) and paragraph (N) of subsection (2) of this Section. The |
school district report card shall include the average daily |
attendance, as that term is defined in subsection (2) of this |
Section, of students who have individualized education |
programs and students who have 504 plans that provide for |
special education services within the school district. |
(4) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this |
Section, in consultation with key education stakeholders, the |
State Superintendent shall at any time have the discretion to |
amend or update any and all metrics on the school, district, or |
State report card. |
(5) Annually, no more than 30 calendar days after receipt |
of the school district and school report cards from the State |
Superintendent of Education, each school district, including |
special charter districts and districts subject to the |
provisions of Article 34, shall present such report
cards at a |
regular school board meeting subject to
applicable notice |
requirements, post the report cards
on the
school district's |
Internet web site, if the district maintains an Internet web
|
site, make the report cards
available
to a newspaper of general |
|
circulation serving the district, and, upon
request, send the |
report cards
home to a parent (unless the district does not |
maintain an Internet web site,
in which case
the report card |
shall be sent home to parents without request). If the
district |
posts the report card on its Internet web
site, the district
|
shall send a
written notice home to parents stating (i) that |
the report card is available on
the web site,
(ii) the address |
of the web site, (iii) that a printed copy of the report card
|
will be sent to
parents upon request, and (iv) the telephone |
number that parents may
call to
request a printed copy of the |
report card.
|
(6) Nothing contained in Public Act 98-648 repeals, |
supersedes, invalidates, or nullifies final decisions in |
lawsuits pending on July 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public |
Act 98-648) in Illinois courts involving the interpretation of |
Public Act 97-8. |
(Source: P.A. 100-227, eff. 8-18-17; 100-364, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-448, eff. 7-1-19; 100-465, eff. 8-31-17; 100-807, eff. |
8-10-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1121, eff. 1-1-19; 101-68, |
eff. 1-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; revised 9-9-19.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.73 new) |
Sec. 10-20.73. Computer literacy skills. All school |
districts shall ensure that students receive developmentally |
appropriate opportunities to gain computer literacy skills |
beginning in elementary school. |
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.74 new) |
Sec. 10-20.74. Educational technology capacity and |
policies; report. School districts shall submit to the State |
Board of Education, or its designee, an annual report that |
shall include, at a minimum, information regarding educational |
technology capacity and policies, including device |
availability for students, school-based access and |
infrastructure, professional learning and training |
opportunities, and documentation of developmentally |
appropriate computer literacy instruction embedded in the |
district's curriculum at each grade level. |
(105 ILCS 5/27-22) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-22)
|
Sec. 27-22. Required high school courses.
|
(a) (Blank).
|
(b) (Blank). |
(c) (Blank). |
(d) (Blank). |
(e) As a prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, |
each pupil
entering the 9th grade must, in addition to other |
course requirements, successfully
complete all of the |
following courses: |
(1) Four years of language arts. |
(2) Two years of writing intensive courses, one of |
which must be English and the other of which may be English |
|
or any other subject. When applicable, writing-intensive |
courses may be counted towards the fulfillment of other |
graduation requirements.
|
(3) Three years of mathematics, one of which must be |
Algebra I, one of which must include geometry content, and |
one of which may be an Advanced Placement computer science |
course. A mathematics course that includes geometry |
content may be offered as an integrated, applied, |
interdisciplinary, or career and technical education |
course that prepares a student for a career readiness path. |
(3.5) For pupils entering the 9th grade in the |
2022-2023 school year and each school year thereafter, one |
year of a course that includes intensive instruction in |
computer literacy, which may be English, social studies, or |
any other subject and which may be counted toward the |
fulfillment of other graduation requirements. |
(4) Two years of science. |
(5) Two years of social studies, of which at least one |
year must be history of the United States or a combination |
of history of the United States and American government |
and, beginning with pupils entering the 9th grade in the |
2016-2017 school year and each school year thereafter, at |
least one semester must be civics, which shall help young |
people acquire and learn to use the skills, knowledge, and |
attitudes that will prepare them to be competent and |
responsible citizens throughout their lives. Civics course |
|
content shall focus on government institutions, the |
discussion of current and controversial issues, service |
learning, and simulations of the democratic process. |
School districts may utilize private funding available for |
the purposes of offering civics education. |
(6) One year chosen from (A) music, (B) art, (C) |
foreign language, which shall be deemed to include American |
Sign Language, or (D) vocational education. |
(f) The State Board of Education shall develop and inform |
school districts of standards for writing-intensive |
coursework.
|
(f-5) If a school district offers an Advanced Placement |
computer science course to high school students, then the |
school board must designate that course as equivalent to a high |
school mathematics course and must denote on the student's |
transcript that the Advanced Placement computer science course |
qualifies as a mathematics-based, quantitative course for |
students in accordance with subdivision (3) of subsection (e) |
of this Section. |
(g) This amendatory Act of 1983 does not apply to pupils |
entering the 9th grade
in 1983-1984 school year and prior |
school years or to students
with disabilities whose course of |
study is determined by an individualized
education program.
|
This amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly does not |
apply
to pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2004-2005 school |
year or a prior
school year or to students with disabilities |
|
whose course of study is
determined by an individualized |
education program.
|
This amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly does not |
apply
to pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2021-2022 school |
year or a prior
school year or to students with disabilities |
whose course of study is
determined by an individualized |
education program. |
(h) The provisions of this Section are subject to the |
provisions of
Section
27-22.05 of this Code and the |
Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
|
(i) The State Board of Education may adopt rules to modify |
the requirements of this Section for any students enrolled in |
grades 9 through 12 if the Governor has declared a disaster due |
to a public health emergency pursuant to Section 7 of the |
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. |
(Source: P.A. 100-443, eff. 8-25-17; 101-464, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-23.15 new) |
Sec. 27-23.15. Computer science. |
(a) In this Section, "computer science" means the study of |
computers and algorithms, including their principles, their |
hardware and software designs, their implementation, and their |
impact on society. "Computer science" does not include the |
study of everyday uses of computers and computer applications, |
such as keyboarding or accessing the Internet. |
|
(b) Beginning with the 2023-2024 school year, the school |
board of a school district that maintains any of grades 9 |
through 12 shall provide an opportunity for every high school |
student to take at least one computer science course aligned to |
rigorous learning standards of the State Board of Education. |
Article 65. |
Section 65-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Sections 14A-10 and 14A-32 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/14A-10)
|
Sec. 14A-10. Legislative findings. The General Assembly |
finds the following: |
(1) that gifted and talented children (i) exhibit high |
performance capabilities in intellectual, creative, and |
artistic areas, (ii) possess an exceptional leadership |
potential, (iii) excel in specific academic fields, and |
(iv) have the potential to be influential in business, |
government, health care, the arts, and other critical |
sectors of our economic and cultural environment; |
(2) that gifted and talented children require services |
and activities that are not ordinarily provided by schools; |
and |
(3) that outstanding talents are present in children |
and youth from all cultural groups, across all economic |
|
strata, and in all areas of human endeavor ; and . |
(4) that inequitable access to advanced coursework and |
enrollment in accelerated placement programs exists |
between children enrolled in different school districts |
and even within the same school district and more must be |
done to eliminate the barriers to access to advanced |
coursework and enrollment in accelerated placement |
programs for all children.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-151, eff. 7-8-05; 94-410, eff. 8-2-05.) |
(105 ILCS 5/14A-32) |
Sec. 14A-32. Accelerated placement; school district |
responsibilities. |
(a) Each school district shall have a policy that allows |
for accelerated placement that includes or incorporates by |
reference the following components: |
(1) a provision that provides that participation in |
accelerated placement is not limited to those children who |
have been identified as gifted and talented, but rather is |
open to all children who demonstrate high ability and who |
may benefit from accelerated placement; |
(2) a fair and equitable decision-making process that |
involves multiple persons and includes a student's parents |
or guardians; |
(3) procedures for notifying parents or guardians of a |
child of a decision affecting that child's participation in |
|
an accelerated placement program; and |
(4) an assessment process that includes multiple |
valid, reliable indicators. |
(a-5) By no later than the beginning of the 2023-2024 |
school year, a school district's accelerated placement policy |
shall allow for the automatic enrollment, in the following |
school term, of a student into the next most rigorous level of |
advanced coursework offered by the high school if the student |
meets or exceeds State standards in English language arts, |
mathematics, or science on a State assessment administered |
under Section 2-3.64a-5 as follows: |
(1) A student who meets or exceeds State standards in |
English language arts shall be automatically enrolled into |
the next most rigorous level of advanced coursework in |
English, social studies, humanities, or related subjects. |
(2) A student who meets or exceeds State standards in |
mathematics shall be automatically enrolled into the next |
most rigorous level of advanced coursework in mathematics. |
(3) A student who meets or exceeds State standards in |
science shall be automatically enrolled into the next most |
rigorous level of advanced coursework in science. |
The next most rigorous level of advanced coursework under |
this subsection (a-5) may include a dual credit course, as |
defined in the Dual Credit Quality Act, an Advanced Placement |
course as defined in Section 10 of the College and Career |
Success for All Students Act, an International Baccalaureate |
|
course, an honors class, an enrichment opportunity, a gifted |
program, or another program offered by the district. |
A school district may use the student's most recent State |
assessment results to determine whether a student meets or |
exceeds State standards. For a student entering grade 9, |
results from the State assessment taken in grades 6 through 8 |
may be used. For other high school grades, the results from a |
locally selected, nationally normed assessment may be used |
instead of the State assessment if those results are the most |
recent. |
A school district must provide the parent or guardian of a |
student eligible for automatic enrollment under this |
subsection (a-5) with the option to instead have the student |
enroll in alternative coursework that better aligns with the |
student's postsecondary education or career goals. |
Nothing in this subsection (a-5) may be interpreted to |
preclude other students from enrolling in advanced coursework |
per the policy of a school district. |
(b) Further, a school district's accelerated placement |
policy may include or incorporate by reference, but need not be |
limited to, the following components: |
(1) procedures for annually informing the community |
at-large, including parents or guardians, community-based |
organizations, and providers of out-of-school programs, |
about the accelerated placement program and the methods |
used for the identification of children eligible for |
|
accelerated placement , including strategies to reach |
groups of students and families who have been historically |
underrepresented in accelerated placement programs and |
advanced coursework ; |
(2) a process for referral that allows for multiple |
referrers, including a child's parents or guardians; other |
referrers may include licensed education professionals, |
the child, with the written consent of a parent or |
guardian, a peer, through a licensed education |
professional who has knowledge of the referred child's |
abilities, or, in case of possible early entrance, a |
preschool educator, pediatrician, or psychologist who |
knows the child; and |
(3) a provision that provides that children |
participating in an accelerated placement program and |
their parents or guardians will be provided a written plan |
detailing the type of acceleration the child will receive |
and strategies to support the child ; . |
(4) procedures to provide support and promote success |
for students who are newly enrolled in an accelerated |
placement program; and |
(5) a process for the school district to review and |
utilize disaggregated data on participation in an |
accelerated placement program to address gaps among |
demographic groups in accelerated placement opportunities. |
(c) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules to |
|
determine data to be collected and disaggregated by demographic |
group regarding accelerated placement , including the rates of |
students who participate in and successfully complete advanced |
coursework, and a method of making the information available to |
the public.
|
(d) On or before November 1, 2022, following a review of |
disaggregated data on the participation and successful |
completion rates of students enrolled in an accelerated |
placement program, each school district shall develop a plan to |
expand access to its accelerated placement program and to |
ensure the teaching capacity necessary to meet the increased |
demand. |
(Source: P.A. 100-421, eff. 7-1-18 .) |
Article 70. |
Section 70-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 22-45 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/22-45) |
Sec. 22-45. Illinois P-20 Council. |
(a) The General Assembly finds that preparing Illinoisans |
for success in school and the workplace requires a continuum of |
quality education from preschool through graduate school. This |
State needs a framework to guide education policy and integrate |
education at every level. A statewide coordinating council to |
|
study and make recommendations concerning education at all |
levels can avoid fragmentation of policies, promote improved |
teaching and learning, and continue to cultivate and |
demonstrate strong accountability and efficiency. Establishing |
an Illinois P-20 Council will develop a statewide agenda that |
will move the State towards the common goals of improving |
academic achievement, increasing college access and success, |
improving use of existing data and measurements, developing |
improved accountability, fostering innovative approaches to |
education, promoting lifelong learning, easing the transition |
to college, and reducing remediation. A pre-kindergarten |
through grade 20 agenda will strengthen this State's economic |
competitiveness by producing a highly-skilled workforce. In |
addition, lifelong learning plans will enhance this State's |
ability to leverage funding. |
(b) There is created the Illinois P-20 Council. The |
Illinois P-20 Council shall include all of the following |
members: |
(1) The Governor or his or her designee, to serve as |
chairperson. |
(2) Four members of the General Assembly, one appointed |
by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, one |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives, one appointed by the President of the |
Senate, and one appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate. |
|
(3) Six at-large members appointed by the Governor as |
follows, with 2 members being from the City of Chicago, 2
|
members being from Lake County, McHenry County, Kane
|
County, DuPage County, Will County, or that part of Cook
|
County outside of the City of Chicago, and 2 members being
|
from the remainder of the State: |
(A) one representative of civic leaders; |
(B) one representative of local government; |
(C) one representative of trade unions; |
(D) one representative of nonprofit organizations |
or foundations; |
(E) one representative of parents' organizations; |
and |
(F) one education research expert. |
(4) Five members appointed by statewide business |
organizations and business trade associations. |
(5) Six members appointed by statewide professional |
organizations and associations representing |
pre-kindergarten through grade 20 teachers, community |
college faculty, and public university faculty. |
(6) Two members appointed by associations representing |
local school administrators and school board members. One |
of these members must be a special education administrator. |
(7) One member representing community colleges, |
appointed by the Illinois Council of Community College |
Presidents. |
|
(8) One member representing 4-year independent |
colleges and universities, appointed by a statewide |
organization representing private institutions of higher |
learning. |
(9) One member representing public 4-year |
universities, appointed jointly by the university |
presidents and chancellors. |
(10) Ex-officio members as follows: |
(A) The State Superintendent of Education or his or |
her designee. |
(B) The Executive Director of the Board of Higher
|
Education or his or her designee. |
(C) The Executive Director of the Illinois |
Community College Board or his or her designee. |
(D) The Executive Director of the Illinois Student |
Assistance Commission or his or her designee. |
(E) The Co-chairpersons of the Illinois Workforce |
Investment Board or their designee. |
(F) The Director of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity or his or her designee. |
(G) The Chairperson of the Illinois Early Learning |
Council or his or her designee. |
(H) The President of the Illinois Mathematics and |
Science Academy or his or her designee. |
(I) The president of an association representing |
educators of adult learners or his or her
designee. |
|
Ex-officio members shall have no vote on the Illinois P-20 |
Council. |
Appointed members shall serve for staggered terms expiring |
on July 1 of the first, second, or third calendar year |
following their appointments or until their successors are |
appointed and have qualified. Staggered terms shall be |
determined by lot at the organizing meeting of the Illinois |
P-20 Council. |
Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as original |
appointments, and any member so appointed shall serve during |
the remainder of the term for which the vacancy occurred. |
(c) The Illinois P-20 Council shall be funded through State |
appropriations to support staff activities, research, |
data-collection, and dissemination. The Illinois P-20 Council |
shall be staffed by the Office of the Governor, in coordination |
with relevant State agencies, boards, and commissions. The |
Illinois Education Research Council shall provide research and |
coordinate research collection activities for the Illinois |
P-20 Council. |
(d) The Illinois P-20 Council shall have all of the |
following duties: |
(1) To make recommendations to do all of the following: |
(A) Coordinate pre-kindergarten through grade 20 |
(graduate school) education in this State through |
working at the intersections of educational systems to |
promote collaborative infrastructure. |
|
(B) Coordinate and leverage strategies, actions, |
legislation, policies, and resources of all |
stakeholders to support fundamental and lasting |
improvement in this State's public schools, community |
colleges, and universities. |
(C) Better align the high school curriculum with |
postsecondary expectations. |
(D) Better align assessments across all levels of |
education. |
(E) Reduce the need for students entering |
institutions of higher education to take remedial |
courses. |
(F) Smooth the transition from high school to |
college. |
(G) Improve high school and college graduation |
rates. |
(H) Improve the rigor and relevance of academic |
standards for college and workforce readiness. |
(I) Better align college and university teaching |
programs with the needs of Illinois schools. |
(2) To advise the Governor, the General Assembly, the |
State's education and higher education agencies, and the
|
State's workforce and economic development boards and
|
agencies on policies related to lifelong learning for |
Illinois students and families. |
(3) To articulate a framework for systemic educational |
|
improvement and innovation that will enable every student |
to meet or exceed Illinois learning standards and be |
well-prepared to succeed in the workforce and community. |
(4) To provide an estimated fiscal impact for |
implementation of all Council recommendations. |
(5) To make recommendations for short-term and |
long-term learning recovery actions for public school |
students in this State in the wake of the COVID-19 |
pandemic. The Illinois P-20 Council shall submit a report |
with its recommendations for a multi-year recovery plan by |
December 31, 2021 to the Governor, the State Board of |
Education, the Board of Higher Education, the Illinois |
Community College Board, and the General Assembly that |
addresses all of the following: |
(A) Closing the digital divide for all students, |
including access to devices, Internet connectivity, |
and ensuring that educators have the necessary support |
and training to provide high quality remote and blended |
learning to students. |
(B) Evaluating the academic growth and proficiency |
of students in order to understand the impact of school |
closures and remote and blended remote learning |
conditions on student academic outcomes, including |
disaggregating data by race, income, diverse learners, |
and English learners, in ways that balance the need to |
understand that impact with the need to support student |
|
well-being and also take into consideration the |
logistical constraints facing schools and districts. |
(C) Establishing a system for the collection and |
review of student data at the State level, including |
data about prekindergarten through higher education |
student attendance, engagement and participation, |
discipline, and social-emotional and mental health |
inputs and outcomes, in order to better understand the |
full impact of disrupted learning. |
(D) Providing students with resources and programs |
for academic support, such as enrichment |
opportunities, tutoring corps, summer bridge programs, |
youth leadership and development programs, youth and |
community-led restorative and transformative justice |
programs, and youth internship and apprenticeship |
programs. |
(E) Providing students with resources and support |
to ensure access to social-emotional learning, mental |
health services, and trauma responsive, restorative |
justice and anti-racist practices in order to support |
the growth of the whole child, such as investing in |
community schools and providing comprehensive |
year-round services and support for both students and |
their families. |
(F) Ensuring more time for students' academic, |
social-emotional, and mental health needs by |
|
considering such strategies as: (i) extending planning |
time for teachers, (ii) extending the school day and |
school year, and (iii) transitioning to year-round |
schooling. |
(G) Strengthening the transition from secondary |
education to postsecondary education in the wake of |
threats to alignment and affordability created by the |
pandemic and related conditions. |
(e) The chairperson of the Illinois P-20 Council may |
authorize the creation of working groups focusing on areas of |
interest to Illinois educational and workforce development, |
including without limitation the following areas: |
(1) Preparation, recruitment, and certification of |
highly qualified teachers. |
(2) Mentoring and induction of highly qualified |
teachers. |
(3) The diversity of highly qualified teachers. |
(4) Funding for highly qualified teachers, including |
developing a strategic and collaborative plan to seek |
federal and private grants to support initiatives |
targeting teacher preparation and its impact on student |
achievement. |
(5) Highly effective administrators. |
(6) Illinois birth through age 3 education, |
pre-kindergarten, and early childhood education. |
(7) The assessment, alignment, outreach, and network |
|
of college and workforce readiness efforts. |
(8) Alternative routes to college access. |
(9) Research data and accountability. |
(10) Community schools, community participation, and |
other innovative approaches to education that foster |
community partnerships. |
(11) Tuition, financial aid, and other issues related |
to keeping postsecondary education affordable for Illinois |
residents. |
(12) Learning recovery in the wake of the COVID-19 |
pandemic. |
The chairperson of the Illinois P-20 Council may designate |
Council members to serve as working group chairpersons. Working |
groups may invite organizations and individuals representing |
pre-kindergarten through grade 20 interests to participate in |
discussions, data collection, and dissemination.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-719, eff. 1-1-15; |
99-643, eff. 1-1-17 .) |
Article 75. |
Section 75-5. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Section 5.935 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/5.935 new) |
Sec. 5.935. The Freedom Schools Fund. |
|
Section 75-10. The School Code is amended by adding Section |
2-3.186 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.186 new) |
Sec. 2-3.186. Freedom Schools; grant program. |
(a) The General Assembly recognizes and values the |
contributions that Freedom Schools make to enhance the lives of |
Black students. The General Assembly makes all of the following |
findings: |
(1) The fundamental goal of the Freedom Schools of the |
1960s was to provide quality education for all students, to |
motivate active civic engagement, and to empower |
disenfranchised communities. The renowned and progressive |
curriculum of Freedom Schools allowed students of all ages |
to experience a new and liberating form of education that |
directly related to the imperatives of their lives, their |
communities, and the Freedom Movement. |
(2) Freedom Schools continue to demonstrate the proven |
benefits of critical civic engagement and |
intergenerational effects by providing historically |
disadvantaged students, including African American |
students and other students of color, with quality |
instruction that fosters student confidence, critical |
thinking, and social and emotional development. |
(3) Freedom Schools offer culturally relevant learning |
|
opportunities with the academic and social supports that |
Black children need by utilizing quality teaching, |
challenging and engaging curricula, wrap-around supports, |
a positive school climate, and strong ties to family and |
community. Freedom Schools have a clear focus on results. |
(4) Public schools serve a foundational role in the |
education of over 2,000,000 students in this State. |
(b) The State Board of Education shall establish a Freedom |
School network to supplement the learning taking place in |
public schools by creating a 6-week summer program with an |
organization with a mission to improve the odds for children in |
poverty that operates Freedom Schools in multiple states using |
a research-based and multicultural curriculum for |
disenfranchised communities most affected by the opportunity |
gap and learning loss caused by the pandemic, and by expanding |
the teaching of African American history, developing |
leadership skills, and providing an understanding of the tenets |
of the civil rights movement. The teachers in Freedom Schools |
must be from the local community, with an emphasis on |
historically disadvantaged youth, including African American |
students and other students of color, so that (i) these |
individuals have access to summer jobs and teaching experiences |
that serve as a long-term pipeline to educational careers and |
the hiring of minority educators in public schools, (ii) these |
individuals are elevated as content experts and community |
leaders, and (iii) Freedom School students have access to both |
|
mentorship and equitable educational resources. |
(c) A Freedom School shall intentionally and imaginatively |
implement strategies that focus on all of the following: |
(1) Racial justice and equity. |
(2) Transparency and building trusting relationships. |
(3) Self-determination and governance. |
(4) Building on community strengths and community |
wisdom. |
(5) Utilizing current data, best practices, and |
evidence. |
(6) Shared leadership and collaboration. |
(7) A reflective learning culture. |
(8) A whole-child approach to education. |
(9) Literacy. |
(d) The State Board of Education, in the establishment of |
Freedom Schools, shall strive for authentic parent and |
community engagement during the development of Freedom Schools |
and their curriculum. Authentic parent and community |
engagement includes all of the following: |
(1) A shared responsibility that values equal |
partnerships between families and professionals. |
(2) Ensuring that students and families who are |
directly impacted by Freedom School policies and practices |
are the decision-makers in the creation, design, |
implementation, and assessment of those policies and |
practices. |
|
(3) Genuine respect for the culture and diversity of |
families. |
(4) Relationships that center around the goal of |
supporting family well-being and children's development |
and learning. |
(e) Subject to appropriation, the State Board of Education |
shall establish and implement a grant program to provide grants |
to public schools, public community colleges, and |
not-for-profit, community-based organizations to facilitate |
improved educational outcomes for Black students in grades |
pre-kindergarten through 12 in alignment with the integrity and |
practices of the Freedom School model established during the |
civil rights movement. Grant recipients under the program may |
include, but are not limited to, entities that work with the |
Children's Defense Fund or offer established programs with |
proven results and outcomes. The State Board of Education shall |
award grants to eligible entities that demonstrate a likelihood |
of reasonable success in achieving the goals identified in the |
grant application, including, but not limited to, all of the |
following: |
(1) Engaging, culturally relevant, and challenging |
curricula. |
(2) High-quality teaching. |
(3) Wrap-around supports and opportunities. |
(4) Positive discipline practices, such as restorative |
justice. |
|
(5) Inclusive leadership. |
(f) The Freedom Schools Fund is created as a special fund |
in the State treasury. the Fund shall consist of appropriations |
from the General Revenue Fund, grant funds from the
federal |
government, and donations from educational and private |
foundations. All money in the Fund shall be used, subject to |
appropriation, by the State Board of Education for the purposes |
of this Section and to support related activities. |
(g) The State Board of Education may adopt any rules |
necessary to implement this Section. |
Article 85. |
Section 85-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 18-8.15 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/18-8.15) |
Sec. 18-8.15. Evidence-Based Funding for student success |
for the 2017-2018 and subsequent school years. |
(a) General provisions. |
(1) The purpose of this Section is to ensure that, by |
June 30, 2027 and beyond, this State has a kindergarten |
through grade 12 public education system with the capacity |
to ensure the educational development of all persons to the |
limits of their capacities in accordance with Section 1 of |
Article X of the Constitution of the State of Illinois. To |
|
accomplish that objective, this Section creates a method of |
funding public education that is evidence-based; is |
sufficient to ensure every student receives a meaningful |
opportunity to learn irrespective of race, ethnicity, |
sexual orientation, gender, or community-income level; and |
is sustainable and predictable. When fully funded under |
this Section, every school shall have the resources, based |
on what the evidence indicates is needed, to: |
(A) provide all students with a high quality |
education that offers the academic, enrichment, social |
and emotional support, technical, and career-focused |
programs that will allow them to become competitive |
workers, responsible parents, productive citizens of |
this State, and active members of our national |
democracy; |
(B) ensure all students receive the education they |
need to graduate from high school with the skills |
required to pursue post-secondary education and |
training for a rewarding career; |
(C) reduce, with a goal of eliminating, the |
achievement gap between at-risk and non-at-risk |
students by raising the performance of at-risk |
students and not by reducing standards; and |
(D) ensure this State satisfies its obligation to |
assume the primary responsibility to fund public |
education and simultaneously relieve the |
|
disproportionate burden placed on local property taxes |
to fund schools. |
(2) The Evidence-Based Funding formula under this |
Section shall be applied to all Organizational Units in |
this State. The Evidence-Based Funding formula outlined in |
this Act is based on the formula outlined in Senate Bill 1 |
of the 100th General Assembly, as passed by both |
legislative chambers. As further defined and described in |
this Section, there are 4 major components of the |
Evidence-Based Funding model: |
(A) First, the model calculates a unique Adequacy |
Target for each Organizational Unit in this State that |
considers the costs to implement research-based |
activities, the unit's student demographics, and |
regional wage differences. |
(B) Second, the model calculates each |
Organizational Unit's Local Capacity, or the amount |
each Organizational Unit is assumed to contribute |
toward its Adequacy Target from local resources. |
(C) Third, the model calculates how much funding |
the State currently contributes to the Organizational |
Unit and adds that to the unit's Local Capacity to |
determine the unit's overall current adequacy of |
funding. |
(D) Finally, the model's distribution method |
allocates new State funding to those Organizational |
|
Units that are least well-funded, considering both |
Local Capacity and State funding, in relation to their |
Adequacy Target. |
(3) An Organizational Unit receiving any funding under |
this Section may apply those funds to any fund so received |
for which that Organizational Unit is authorized to make |
expenditures by law. |
(4) As used in this Section, the following terms shall |
have the meanings ascribed in this paragraph (4): |
"Adequacy Target" is defined in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (b) of this Section. |
"Adjusted EAV" is defined in paragraph (4) of |
subsection (d) of this Section. |
"Adjusted Local Capacity Target" is defined in |
paragraph (3) of subsection (c) of this Section. |
"Adjusted Operating Tax Rate" means a tax rate for all |
Organizational Units, for which the State Superintendent |
shall calculate and subtract for the Operating Tax Rate a |
transportation rate based on total expenses for |
transportation services under this Code, as reported on the |
most recent Annual Financial Report in Pupil |
Transportation Services, function 2550 in both the |
Education and Transportation funds and functions 4110 and |
4120 in the Transportation fund, less any corresponding |
fiscal year State of Illinois scheduled payments excluding |
net adjustments for prior years for regular, vocational, or |
|
special education transportation reimbursement pursuant to |
Section 29-5 or subsection (b) of Section 14-13.01 of this |
Code divided by the Adjusted EAV. If an Organizational |
Unit's corresponding fiscal year State of Illinois |
scheduled payments excluding net adjustments for prior |
years for regular, vocational, or special education |
transportation reimbursement pursuant to Section 29-5 or |
subsection (b) of Section 14-13.01 of this Code exceed the |
total transportation expenses, as defined in this |
paragraph, no transportation rate shall be subtracted from |
the Operating Tax Rate. |
"Allocation Rate" is defined in paragraph (3) of |
subsection (g) of this Section. |
"Alternative School" means a public school that is |
created and operated by a regional superintendent of |
schools and approved by the State Board. |
"Applicable Tax Rate" is defined in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (d) of this Section. |
"Assessment" means any of those benchmark, progress |
monitoring, formative, diagnostic, and other assessments, |
in addition to the State accountability assessment, that |
assist teachers' needs in understanding the skills and |
meeting the needs of the students they serve. |
"Assistant principal" means a school administrator |
duly endorsed to be employed as an assistant principal in |
this State. |
|
"At-risk student" means a student who is at risk of not |
meeting the Illinois Learning Standards or not graduating |
from elementary or high school and who demonstrates a need |
for vocational support or social services beyond that |
provided by the regular school program. All students |
included in an Organizational Unit's Low-Income Count, as |
well as all English learner and disabled students attending |
the Organizational Unit, shall be considered at-risk |
students under this Section. |
"Average Student Enrollment" or "ASE" for fiscal year |
2018 means, for an Organizational Unit, the greater of the |
average number of students (grades K through 12) reported |
to the State Board as enrolled in the Organizational Unit |
on October 1 in the immediately preceding school year, plus |
the pre-kindergarten students who receive special |
education services of 2 or more hours a day as reported to |
the State Board on December 1 in the immediately preceding |
school year, or the average number of students (grades K |
through 12) reported to the State Board as enrolled in the |
Organizational Unit on October 1, plus the |
pre-kindergarten students who receive special education |
services of 2 or more hours a day as reported to the State |
Board on December 1, for each of the immediately preceding |
3 school years. For fiscal year 2019 and each subsequent |
fiscal year, "Average Student Enrollment" or "ASE" means, |
for an Organizational Unit, the greater of the average |
|
number of students (grades K through 12) reported to the |
State Board as enrolled in the Organizational Unit on |
October 1 and March 1 in the immediately preceding school |
year, plus the pre-kindergarten students who receive |
special education services as reported to the State Board |
on October 1 and March 1 in the immediately preceding |
school year, or the average number of students (grades K |
through 12) reported to the State Board as enrolled in the |
Organizational Unit on October 1 and March 1, plus the |
pre-kindergarten students who receive special education |
services as reported to the State Board on October 1 and |
March 1, for each of the immediately preceding 3 school |
years. For the purposes of this definition, "enrolled in |
the Organizational Unit" means the number of students |
reported to the State Board who are enrolled in schools |
within the Organizational Unit that the student attends or |
would attend if not placed or transferred to another school |
or program to receive needed services. For the purposes of |
calculating "ASE", all students, grades K through 12, |
excluding those attending kindergarten for a half day and |
students attending an alternative education program |
operated by a regional office of education or intermediate |
service center, shall be counted as 1.0. All students |
attending kindergarten for a half day shall be counted as |
0.5, unless in 2017 by June 15 or by March 1 in subsequent |
years, the school district reports to the State Board of |
|
Education the intent to implement full-day kindergarten |
district-wide for all students, then all students |
attending kindergarten shall be counted as 1.0. Special |
education pre-kindergarten students shall be counted as |
0.5 each. If the State Board does not collect or has not |
collected both an October 1 and March 1 enrollment count by |
grade or a December 1 collection of special education |
pre-kindergarten students as of August 31, 2017 (the |
effective date of Public Act 100-465), it shall establish |
such collection for all future years. For any year in which |
a count by grade level was collected only once, that count |
shall be used as the single count available for computing a |
3-year average ASE. Funding for programs operated by a |
regional office of education or an intermediate service |
center must be calculated using the Evidence-Based Funding |
formula under this Section for the 2019-2020 school year |
and each subsequent school year until separate adequacy |
formulas are developed and adopted for each type of |
program. ASE for a program operated by a regional office of |
education or an intermediate service center must be |
determined by the March 1 enrollment for the program. For |
the 2019-2020 school year, the ASE used in the calculation |
must be the first-year ASE and, in that year only, the |
assignment of students served by a regional office of |
education or intermediate service center shall not result |
in a reduction of the March enrollment for any school |
|
district. For the 2020-2021 school year, the ASE must be |
the greater of the current-year ASE or the 2-year average |
ASE. Beginning with the 2021-2022 school year, the ASE must |
be the greater of the current-year ASE or the 3-year |
average ASE. School districts shall submit the data for the |
ASE calculation to the State Board within 45 days of the |
dates required in this Section for submission of enrollment |
data in order for it to be included in the ASE calculation. |
For fiscal year 2018 only, the ASE calculation shall |
include only enrollment taken on October 1. |
"Base Funding Guarantee" is defined in paragraph (10) |
of subsection (g) of this Section. |
"Base Funding Minimum" is defined in subsection (e) of |
this Section. |
"Base Tax Year" means the property tax levy year used |
to calculate the Budget Year allocation of primary State |
aid. |
"Base Tax Year's Extension" means the product of the |
equalized assessed valuation utilized by the county clerk |
in the Base Tax Year multiplied by the limiting rate as |
calculated by the county clerk and defined in PTELL. |
"Bilingual Education Allocation" means the amount of |
an Organizational Unit's final Adequacy Target |
attributable to bilingual education divided by the |
Organizational Unit's final Adequacy Target, the product |
of which shall be multiplied by the amount of new funding |
|
received pursuant to this Section. An Organizational |
Unit's final Adequacy Target attributable to bilingual |
education shall include all additional investments in |
English learner students' adequacy elements. |
"Budget Year" means the school year for which primary |
State aid is calculated and awarded under this Section. |
"Central office" means individual administrators and |
support service personnel charged with managing the |
instructional programs, business and operations, and |
security of the Organizational Unit. |
"Comparable Wage Index" or "CWI" means a regional cost |
differentiation metric that measures systemic, regional |
variations in the salaries of college graduates who are not |
educators. The CWI utilized for this Section shall, for the |
first 3 years of Evidence-Based Funding implementation, be |
the CWI initially developed by the National Center for |
Education Statistics, as most recently updated by Texas A & |
M University. In the fourth and subsequent years of |
Evidence-Based Funding implementation, the State |
Superintendent shall re-determine the CWI using a similar |
methodology to that identified in the Texas A & M |
University study, with adjustments made no less frequently |
than once every 5 years. |
"Computer technology and equipment" means computers |
servers, notebooks, network equipment, copiers, printers, |
instructional software, security software, curriculum |
|
management courseware, and other similar materials and |
equipment. |
"Computer technology and equipment investment |
allocation" means the final Adequacy Target amount of an |
Organizational Unit assigned to Tier 1 or Tier 2 in the |
prior school year attributable to the additional $285.50 |
per student computer technology and equipment investment |
grant divided by the Organizational Unit's final Adequacy |
Target, the result of which shall be multiplied by the |
amount of new funding received pursuant to this Section. An |
Organizational Unit assigned to a Tier 1 or Tier 2 final |
Adequacy Target attributable to the received computer |
technology and equipment investment grant shall include |
all additional investments in computer technology and |
equipment adequacy elements. |
"Core subject" means mathematics; science; reading, |
English, writing, and language arts; history and social |
studies; world languages; and subjects taught as Advanced |
Placement in high schools. |
"Core teacher" means a regular classroom teacher in |
elementary schools and teachers of a core subject in middle |
and high schools. |
"Core Intervention teacher (tutor)" means a licensed |
teacher providing one-on-one or small group tutoring to |
students struggling to meet proficiency in core subjects. |
"CPPRT" means corporate personal property replacement |
|
tax funds paid to an Organizational Unit during the |
calendar year one year before the calendar year in which a |
school year begins, pursuant to "An Act in relation to the |
abolition of ad valorem personal property tax and the |
replacement of revenues lost thereby, and amending and |
repealing certain Acts and parts of Acts in connection |
therewith", certified August 14, 1979, as amended (Public |
Act 81-1st S.S.-1). |
"EAV" means equalized assessed valuation as defined in |
paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of this Section and |
calculated in accordance with paragraph (3) of subsection |
(d) of this Section. |
"ECI" means the Bureau of Labor Statistics' national |
employment cost index for civilian workers in educational |
services in elementary and secondary schools on a |
cumulative basis for the 12-month calendar year preceding |
the fiscal year of the Evidence-Based Funding calculation. |
"EIS Data" means the employment information system |
data maintained by the State Board on educators within |
Organizational Units. |
"Employee benefits" means health, dental, and vision |
insurance offered to employees of an Organizational Unit, |
the costs associated with the statutorily required payment |
of the normal cost of the Organizational Unit's teacher |
pensions, Social Security employer contributions, and |
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund employer contributions. |
|
"English learner" or "EL" means a child included in the |
definition of "English learners" under Section 14C-2 of |
this Code participating in a program of transitional |
bilingual education or a transitional program of |
instruction meeting the requirements and program |
application procedures of Article 14C of this Code. For the |
purposes of collecting the number of EL students enrolled, |
the same collection and calculation methodology as defined |
above for "ASE" shall apply to English learners, with the |
exception that EL student enrollment shall include |
students in grades pre-kindergarten through 12. |
"Essential Elements" means those elements, resources, |
and educational programs that have been identified through |
academic research as necessary to improve student success, |
improve academic performance, close achievement gaps, and |
provide for other per student costs related to the delivery |
and leadership of the Organizational Unit, as well as the |
maintenance and operations of the unit, and which are |
specified in paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of this |
Section. |
"Evidence-Based Funding" means State funding provided |
to an Organizational Unit pursuant to this Section. |
"Extended day" means academic and enrichment programs |
provided to students outside the regular school day before |
and after school or during non-instructional times during |
the school day. |
|
"Extension Limitation Ratio" means a numerical ratio |
in which the numerator is the Base Tax Year's Extension and |
the denominator is the Preceding Tax Year's Extension. |
"Final Percent of Adequacy" is defined in paragraph (4) |
of subsection (f) of this Section. |
"Final Resources" is defined in paragraph (3) of |
subsection (f) of this Section. |
"Full-time equivalent" or "FTE" means the full-time |
equivalency compensation for staffing the relevant |
position at an Organizational Unit. |
"Funding Gap" is defined in paragraph (1) of subsection |
(g). |
"Guidance counselor" means a licensed guidance |
counselor who provides guidance and counseling support for |
students within an Organizational Unit. |
"Hybrid District" means a partial elementary unit |
district created pursuant to Article 11E of this Code. |
"Instructional assistant" means a core or special |
education, non-licensed employee who assists a teacher in |
the classroom and provides academic support to students. |
"Instructional facilitator" means a qualified teacher |
or licensed teacher leader who facilitates and coaches |
continuous improvement in classroom instruction; provides |
instructional support to teachers in the elements of |
research-based instruction or demonstrates the alignment |
of instruction with curriculum standards and assessment |
|
tools; develops or coordinates instructional programs or |
strategies; develops and implements training; chooses |
standards-based instructional materials; provides teachers |
with an understanding of current research; serves as a |
mentor, site coach, curriculum specialist, or lead |
teacher; or otherwise works with fellow teachers, in |
collaboration, to use data to improve instructional |
practice or develop model lessons. |
"Instructional materials" means relevant instructional |
materials for student instruction, including, but not |
limited to, textbooks, consumable workbooks, laboratory |
equipment, library books, and other similar materials. |
"Laboratory School" means a public school that is |
created and operated by a public university and approved by |
the State Board. |
"Librarian" means a teacher with an endorsement as a |
library information specialist or another individual whose |
primary responsibility is overseeing library resources |
within an Organizational Unit. |
"Limiting rate for Hybrid Districts" means the |
combined elementary school and high school limiting rates. |
"Local Capacity" is defined in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (c) of this Section. |
"Local Capacity Percentage" is defined in subparagraph |
(A) of paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this Section. |
"Local Capacity Ratio" is defined in subparagraph (B) |
|
of paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this Section. |
"Local Capacity Target" is defined in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (c) of this Section. |
"Low-Income Count" means, for an Organizational Unit |
in a fiscal year, the higher of the average number of |
students for the prior school year or the immediately |
preceding 3 school years who, as of July 1 of the |
immediately preceding fiscal year (as determined by the |
Department of Human Services), are eligible for at least |
one of the following low-income programs: Medicaid, the |
Children's Health Insurance Program, Temporary Assistance |
for Needy Families (TANF), or the Supplemental Nutrition |
Assistance Program, excluding pupils who are eligible for |
services provided by the Department of Children and Family |
Services. Until such time that grade level low-income |
populations become available, grade level low-income |
populations shall be determined by applying the low-income |
percentage to total student enrollments by grade level. The |
low-income percentage is determined by dividing the |
Low-Income Count by the Average Student Enrollment. The |
low-income percentage for programs operated by a regional |
office of education or an intermediate service center must |
be set to the weighted average of the low-income |
percentages of all of the school districts in the service |
region. The weighted low-income percentage is the result of |
multiplying the low-income percentage of each school |
|
district served by the regional office of education or |
intermediate service center by each school district's |
Average Student Enrollment, summarizing those products and |
dividing the total by the total Average Student Enrollment |
for the service region. |
"Maintenance and operations" means custodial services, |
facility and ground maintenance, facility operations, |
facility security, routine facility repairs, and other |
similar services and functions. |
"Minimum Funding Level" is defined in paragraph (9) of |
subsection (g) of this Section. |
"New Property Tax Relief Pool Funds" means, for any |
given fiscal year, all State funds appropriated under |
Section 2-3.170 of this the School Code. |
"New State Funds" means, for a given school year, all |
State funds appropriated for Evidence-Based Funding in |
excess of the amount needed to fund the Base Funding |
Minimum for all Organizational Units in that school year. |
"Net State Contribution Target" means, for a given |
school year, the amount of State funds that would be |
necessary to fully meet the Adequacy Target of an |
Operational Unit minus the Preliminary Resources available |
to each unit. |
"Nurse" means an individual licensed as a certified |
school nurse, in accordance with the rules established for |
nursing services by the State Board, who is an employee of |
|
and is available to provide health care-related services |
for students of an Organizational Unit. |
"Operating Tax Rate" means the rate utilized in the |
previous year to extend property taxes for all purposes, |
except Bond and Interest, Summer School, Rent, Capital |
Improvement, and Vocational Education Building purposes. |
For Hybrid Districts, the Operating Tax Rate shall be the |
combined elementary and high school rates utilized in the |
previous year to extend property taxes for all purposes, |
except Bond and Interest, Summer School, Rent, Capital |
Improvement, and Vocational Education Building purposes. |
"Organizational Unit" means a Laboratory School or any |
public school district that is recognized as such by the |
State Board and that contains elementary schools typically |
serving kindergarten through 5th grades, middle schools |
typically serving 6th through 8th grades, high schools |
typically serving 9th through 12th grades, a program |
established under Section 2-3.66 or 2-3.41, or a program |
operated by a regional office of education or an |
intermediate service center under Article 13A or 13B. The |
General Assembly acknowledges that the actual grade levels |
served by a particular Organizational Unit may vary |
slightly from what is typical. |
"Organizational Unit CWI" is determined by calculating |
the CWI in the region and original county in which an |
Organizational Unit's primary administrative office is |
|
located as set forth in this paragraph, provided that if |
the Organizational Unit CWI as calculated in accordance |
with this paragraph is less than 0.9, the Organizational |
Unit CWI shall be increased to 0.9. Each county's current |
CWI value shall be adjusted based on the CWI value of that |
county's neighboring Illinois counties, to create a |
"weighted adjusted index value". This shall be calculated |
by summing the CWI values of all of a county's adjacent |
Illinois counties and dividing by the number of adjacent |
Illinois counties, then taking the weighted value of the |
original county's CWI value and the adjacent Illinois |
county average. To calculate this weighted value, if the |
number of adjacent Illinois counties is greater than 2, the |
original county's CWI value will be weighted at 0.25 and |
the adjacent Illinois county average will be weighted at |
0.75. If the number of adjacent Illinois counties is 2, the |
original county's CWI value will be weighted at 0.33 and |
the adjacent Illinois county average will be weighted at |
0.66. The greater of the county's current CWI value and its |
weighted adjusted index value shall be used as the |
Organizational Unit CWI. |
"Preceding Tax Year" means the property tax levy year |
immediately preceding the Base Tax Year. |
"Preceding Tax Year's Extension" means the product of |
the equalized assessed valuation utilized by the county |
clerk in the Preceding Tax Year multiplied by the Operating |
|
Tax Rate. |
"Preliminary Percent of Adequacy" is defined in |
paragraph (2) of subsection (f) of this Section. |
"Preliminary Resources" is defined in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (f) of this Section. |
"Principal" means a school administrator duly endorsed |
to be employed as a principal in this State. |
"Professional development" means training programs for |
licensed staff in schools, including, but not limited to, |
programs that assist in implementing new curriculum |
programs, provide data focused or academic assessment data |
training to help staff identify a student's weaknesses and |
strengths, target interventions, improve instruction, |
encompass instructional strategies for English learner, |
gifted, or at-risk students, address inclusivity, cultural |
sensitivity, or implicit bias, or otherwise provide |
professional support for licensed staff. |
"Prototypical" means 450 special education |
pre-kindergarten and kindergarten through grade 5 students |
for an elementary school, 450 grade 6 through 8 students |
for a middle school, and 600 grade 9 through 12 students |
for a high school. |
"PTELL" means the Property Tax Extension Limitation |
Law. |
"PTELL EAV" is defined in paragraph (4) of subsection |
(d) of this Section. |
|
"Pupil support staff" means a nurse, psychologist, |
social worker, family liaison personnel, or other staff |
member who provides support to at-risk or struggling |
students. |
"Real Receipts" is defined in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (d) of this Section. |
"Regionalization Factor" means, for a particular |
Organizational Unit, the figure derived by dividing the |
Organizational Unit CWI by the Statewide Weighted CWI. |
"School site staff" means the primary school secretary |
and any additional clerical personnel assigned to a school. |
"Special education" means special educational |
facilities and services, as defined in Section 14-1.08 of |
this Code. |
"Special Education Allocation" means the amount of an |
Organizational Unit's final Adequacy Target attributable |
to special education divided by the Organizational Unit's |
final Adequacy Target, the product of which shall be |
multiplied by the amount of new funding received pursuant |
to this Section. An Organizational Unit's final Adequacy |
Target attributable to special education shall include all |
special education investment adequacy elements. |
"Specialist teacher" means a teacher who provides |
instruction in subject areas not included in core subjects, |
including, but not limited to, art, music, physical |
education, health, driver education, career-technical |
|
education, and such other subject areas as may be mandated |
by State law or provided by an Organizational Unit. |
"Specially Funded Unit" means an Alternative School, |
safe school, Department of Juvenile Justice school, |
special education cooperative or entity recognized by the |
State Board as a special education cooperative, |
State-approved charter school, or alternative learning |
opportunities program that received direct funding from |
the State Board during the 2016-2017 school year through |
any of the funding sources included within the calculation |
of the Base Funding Minimum or Glenwood Academy. |
"Supplemental Grant Funding" means supplemental |
general State aid funding received by an Organizational |
Unit during the 2016-2017 school year pursuant to |
subsection (H) of Section 18-8.05 of this Code (now |
repealed). |
"State Adequacy Level" is the sum of the Adequacy |
Targets of all Organizational Units. |
"State Board" means the State Board of Education. |
"State Superintendent" means the State Superintendent |
of Education. |
"Statewide Weighted CWI" means a figure determined by |
multiplying each Organizational Unit CWI times the ASE for |
that Organizational Unit creating a weighted value, |
summing all Organizational Units' weighted values, and |
dividing by the total ASE of all Organizational Units, |
|
thereby creating an average weighted index. |
"Student activities" means non-credit producing |
after-school programs, including, but not limited to, |
clubs, bands, sports, and other activities authorized by |
the school board of the Organizational Unit. |
"Substitute teacher" means an individual teacher or |
teaching assistant who is employed by an Organizational |
Unit and is temporarily serving the Organizational Unit on |
a per diem or per period-assignment basis to replace |
another staff member. |
"Summer school" means academic and enrichment programs |
provided to students during the summer months outside of |
the regular school year. |
"Supervisory aide" means a non-licensed staff member |
who helps in supervising students of an Organizational |
Unit, but does so outside of the classroom, in situations |
such as, but not limited to, monitoring hallways and |
playgrounds, supervising lunchrooms, or supervising |
students when being transported in buses serving the |
Organizational Unit. |
"Target Ratio" is defined in paragraph (4) of |
subsection (g). |
"Tier 1", "Tier 2", "Tier 3", and "Tier 4" are defined |
in paragraph (3) of subsection (g). |
"Tier 1 Aggregate Funding", "Tier 2 Aggregate |
Funding", "Tier 3 Aggregate Funding", and "Tier 4 Aggregate |
|
Funding" are defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (g). |
(b) Adequacy Target calculation. |
(1) Each Organizational Unit's Adequacy Target is the |
sum of the Organizational Unit's cost of providing |
Essential Elements, as calculated in accordance with this |
subsection (b), with the salary amounts in the Essential |
Elements multiplied by a Regionalization Factor calculated |
pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (b). |
(2) The Essential Elements are attributable on a pro |
rata basis related to defined subgroups of the ASE of each |
Organizational Unit as specified in this paragraph (2), |
with investments and FTE positions pro rata funded based on |
ASE counts in excess of or less than the thresholds set |
forth in this paragraph (2). The method for calculating |
attributable pro rata costs and the defined subgroups |
thereto are as follows: |
(A) Core class size investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding required |
to support that number of FTE core teacher positions as |
is needed to keep the respective class sizes of the |
Organizational Unit to the following maximum numbers: |
(i) For grades kindergarten through 3, the |
Organizational Unit shall receive funding required |
to support one FTE core teacher position for every |
15 Low-Income Count students in those grades and |
one FTE core teacher position for every 20 |
|
non-Low-Income Count students in those grades. |
(ii) For grades 4 through 12, the |
Organizational Unit shall receive funding required |
to support one FTE core teacher position for every |
20 Low-Income Count students in those grades and |
one FTE core teacher position for every 25 |
non-Low-Income Count students in those grades. |
The number of non-Low-Income Count students in a |
grade shall be determined by subtracting the |
Low-Income students in that grade from the ASE of the |
Organizational Unit for that grade. |
(B) Specialist teacher investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
to cover that number of FTE specialist teacher |
positions that correspond to the following |
percentages: |
(i) if the Organizational Unit operates an |
elementary or middle school, then 20.00% of the |
number of the Organizational Unit's core teachers, |
as determined under subparagraph (A) of this |
paragraph (2); and |
(ii) if such Organizational Unit operates a |
high school, then 33.33% of the number of the |
Organizational Unit's core teachers. |
(C) Instructional facilitator investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
|
to cover one FTE instructional facilitator position |
for every 200 combined ASE of pre-kindergarten |
children with disabilities and all kindergarten |
through grade 12 students of the Organizational Unit. |
(D) Core intervention teacher (tutor) investments. |
Each Organizational Unit shall receive the funding |
needed to cover one FTE teacher position for each |
prototypical elementary, middle, and high school. |
(E) Substitute teacher investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
to cover substitute teacher costs that is equal to |
5.70% of the minimum pupil attendance days required |
under Section 10-19 of this Code for all full-time |
equivalent core, specialist, and intervention |
teachers, school nurses, special education teachers |
and instructional assistants, instructional |
facilitators, and summer school and extended day |
teacher positions, as determined under this paragraph |
(2), at a salary rate of 33.33% of the average salary |
for grade K through 12 teachers and 33.33% of the |
average salary of each instructional assistant |
position. |
(F) Core guidance counselor investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
to cover one FTE guidance counselor for each 450 |
combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
|
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 5 |
students, plus one FTE guidance counselor for each 250 |
grades 6 through 8 ASE middle school students, plus one |
FTE guidance counselor for each 250 grades 9 through 12 |
ASE high school students. |
(G) Nurse investments. Each Organizational Unit |
shall receive the funding needed to cover one FTE nurse |
for each 750 combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children |
with disabilities and all kindergarten through grade |
12 students across all grade levels it serves. |
(H) Supervisory aide investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
to cover one FTE for each 225 combined ASE of |
pre-kindergarten children with disabilities and all |
kindergarten through grade 5 students, plus one FTE for |
each 225 ASE middle school students, plus one FTE for |
each 200 ASE high school students. |
(I) Librarian investments. Each Organizational |
Unit shall receive the funding needed to cover one FTE |
librarian for each prototypical elementary school, |
middle school, and high school and one FTE aide or |
media technician for every 300 combined ASE of |
pre-kindergarten children with disabilities and all |
kindergarten through grade 12 students. |
(J) Principal investments. Each Organizational |
Unit shall receive the funding needed to cover one FTE |
|
principal position for each prototypical elementary |
school, plus one FTE principal position for each |
prototypical middle school, plus one FTE principal |
position for each prototypical high school. |
(K) Assistant principal investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
to cover one FTE assistant principal position for each |
prototypical elementary school, plus one FTE assistant |
principal position for each prototypical middle |
school, plus one FTE assistant principal position for |
each prototypical high school. |
(L) School site staff investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the funding needed |
for one FTE position for each 225 ASE of |
pre-kindergarten children with disabilities and all |
kindergarten through grade 5 students, plus one FTE |
position for each 225 ASE middle school students, plus |
one FTE position for each 200 ASE high school students. |
(M) Gifted investments. Each Organizational Unit |
shall receive $40 per kindergarten through grade 12 |
ASE. |
(N) Professional development investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive $125 per student of |
the combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students for trainers and other professional |
|
development-related expenses for supplies and |
materials. |
(O) Instructional material investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive $190 per student of |
the combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students to cover instructional material costs. |
(P) Assessment investments. Each Organizational |
Unit shall receive $25 per student of the combined ASE |
of pre-kindergarten children with disabilities and all |
kindergarten through grade 12 students to cover |
assessment costs. |
(Q) Computer technology and equipment investments. |
Each Organizational Unit shall receive $285.50 per |
student of the combined ASE of pre-kindergarten |
children with disabilities and all kindergarten |
through grade 12 students to cover computer technology |
and equipment costs. For the 2018-2019 school year and |
subsequent school years, Organizational Units assigned |
to Tier 1 and Tier 2 in the prior school year shall |
receive an additional $285.50 per student of the |
combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students to cover computer technology and equipment |
costs in the Organizational Unit's Adequacy Target. |
The State Board may establish additional requirements |
|
for Organizational Unit expenditures of funds received |
pursuant to this subparagraph (Q), including a |
requirement that funds received pursuant to this |
subparagraph (Q) may be used only for serving the |
technology needs of the district. It is the intent of |
Public Act 100-465 that all Tier 1 and Tier 2 districts |
receive the addition to their Adequacy Target in the |
following year, subject to compliance with the |
requirements of the State Board. |
(R) Student activities investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive the following |
funding amounts to cover student activities: $100 per |
kindergarten through grade 5 ASE student in elementary |
school, plus $200 per ASE student in middle school, |
plus $675 per ASE student in high school. |
(S) Maintenance and operations investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive $1,038 per student |
of the combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students for day-to-day maintenance and operations |
expenditures, including salary, supplies, and |
materials, as well as purchased services, but |
excluding employee benefits. The proportion of salary |
for the application of a Regionalization Factor and the |
calculation of benefits is equal to $352.92. |
(T) Central office investments. Each |
|
Organizational Unit shall receive $742 per student of |
the combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students to cover central office operations, including |
administrators and classified personnel charged with |
managing the instructional programs, business and |
operations of the school district, and security |
personnel. The proportion of salary for the |
application of a Regionalization Factor and the |
calculation of benefits is equal to $368.48. |
(U) Employee benefit investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive 30% of the total of |
all salary-calculated elements of the Adequacy Target, |
excluding substitute teachers and student activities |
investments, to cover benefit costs. For central |
office and maintenance and operations investments, the |
benefit calculation shall be based upon the salary |
proportion of each investment. If at any time the |
responsibility for funding the employer normal cost of |
teacher pensions is assigned to school districts, then |
that amount certified by the Teachers' Retirement |
System of the State of Illinois to be paid by the |
Organizational Unit for the preceding school year |
shall be added to the benefit investment. For any |
fiscal year in which a school district organized under |
Article 34 of this Code is responsible for paying the |
|
employer normal cost of teacher pensions, then that |
amount of its employer normal cost plus the amount for |
retiree health insurance as certified by the Public |
School Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of |
Chicago to be paid by the school district for the |
preceding school year that is statutorily required to |
cover employer normal costs and the amount for retiree |
health insurance shall be added to the 30% specified in |
this subparagraph (U). The Teachers' Retirement System |
of the State of Illinois and the Public School |
Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of Chicago shall |
submit such information as the State Superintendent |
may require for the calculations set forth in this |
subparagraph (U). |
(V) Additional investments in low-income students. |
In addition to and not in lieu of all other funding |
under this paragraph (2), each Organizational Unit |
shall receive funding based on the average teacher |
salary for grades K through 12 to cover the costs of: |
(i) one FTE intervention teacher (tutor) |
position for every 125 Low-Income Count students; |
(ii) one FTE pupil support staff position for |
every 125 Low-Income Count students; |
(iii) one FTE extended day teacher position |
for every 120 Low-Income Count students; and |
(iv) one FTE summer school teacher position |
|
for every 120 Low-Income Count students. |
(W) Additional investments in English learner |
students. In addition to and not in lieu of all other |
funding under this paragraph (2), each Organizational |
Unit shall receive funding based on the average teacher |
salary for grades K through 12 to cover the costs of: |
(i) one FTE intervention teacher (tutor) |
position for every 125 English learner students; |
(ii) one FTE pupil support staff position for |
every 125 English learner students; |
(iii) one FTE extended day teacher position |
for every 120 English learner students; |
(iv) one FTE summer school teacher position |
for every 120 English learner students; and |
(v) one FTE core teacher position for every 100 |
English learner students. |
(X) Special education investments. Each |
Organizational Unit shall receive funding based on the |
average teacher salary for grades K through 12 to cover |
special education as follows: |
(i) one FTE teacher position for every 141 |
combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students; |
(ii) one FTE instructional assistant for every |
141 combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children with |
|
disabilities and all kindergarten through grade 12 |
students; and |
(iii) one FTE psychologist position for every |
1,000 combined ASE of pre-kindergarten children |
with disabilities and all kindergarten through |
grade 12 students. |
(3) For calculating the salaries included within the |
Essential Elements, the State Superintendent shall |
annually calculate average salaries to the nearest dollar |
using the employment information system data maintained by |
the State Board, limited to public schools only and |
excluding special education and vocational cooperatives, |
schools operated by the Department of Juvenile Justice, and |
charter schools, for the following positions: |
(A) Teacher for grades K through 8. |
(B) Teacher for grades 9 through 12. |
(C) Teacher for grades K through 12. |
(D) Guidance counselor for grades K through 8. |
(E) Guidance counselor for grades 9 through 12. |
(F) Guidance counselor for grades K through 12. |
(G) Social worker. |
(H) Psychologist. |
(I) Librarian. |
(J) Nurse. |
(K) Principal. |
(L) Assistant principal. |
|
For the purposes of this paragraph (3), "teacher" |
includes core teachers, specialist and elective teachers, |
instructional facilitators, tutors, special education |
teachers, pupil support staff teachers, English learner |
teachers, extended day teachers, and summer school |
teachers. Where specific grade data is not required for the |
Essential Elements, the average salary for corresponding |
positions shall apply. For substitute teachers, the |
average teacher salary for grades K through 12 shall apply. |
For calculating the salaries included within the |
Essential Elements for positions not included within EIS |
Data, the following salaries shall be used in the first |
year of implementation of Evidence-Based Funding: |
(i) school site staff, $30,000; and |
(ii) non-instructional assistant, instructional |
assistant, library aide, library media tech, or |
supervisory aide: $25,000. |
In the second and subsequent years of implementation of |
Evidence-Based Funding, the amounts in items (i) and (ii) |
of this paragraph (3) shall annually increase by the ECI. |
The salary amounts for the Essential Elements |
determined pursuant to subparagraphs (A) through (L), (S) |
and (T), and (V) through (X) of paragraph (2) of subsection |
(b) of this Section shall be multiplied by a |
Regionalization Factor. |
(c) Local Capacity calculation. |
|
(1) Each Organizational Unit's Local Capacity |
represents an amount of funding it is assumed to contribute |
toward its Adequacy Target for purposes of the |
Evidence-Based Funding formula calculation. "Local |
Capacity" means either (i) the Organizational Unit's Local |
Capacity Target as calculated in accordance with paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (c) if its Real Receipts are equal |
to or less than its Local Capacity Target or (ii) the |
Organizational Unit's Adjusted Local Capacity, as |
calculated in accordance with paragraph (3) of this |
subsection (c) if Real Receipts are more than its Local |
Capacity Target. |
(2) "Local Capacity Target" means, for an |
Organizational Unit, that dollar amount that is obtained by |
multiplying its Adequacy Target by its Local Capacity |
Ratio. |
(A) An Organizational Unit's Local Capacity |
Percentage is the conversion of the Organizational |
Unit's Local Capacity Ratio, as such ratio is |
determined in accordance with subparagraph (B) of this |
paragraph (2), into a cumulative distribution |
resulting in a percentile ranking to determine each |
Organizational Unit's relative position to all other |
Organizational Units in this State. The calculation of |
Local Capacity Percentage is described in subparagraph |
(C) of this paragraph (2). |
|
(B) An Organizational Unit's Local Capacity Ratio |
in a given year is the percentage obtained by dividing |
its Adjusted EAV or PTELL EAV, whichever is less, by |
its Adequacy Target, with the resulting ratio further |
adjusted as follows: |
(i) for Organizational Units serving grades |
kindergarten through 12 and Hybrid Districts, no |
further adjustments shall be made; |
(ii) for Organizational Units serving grades |
kindergarten through 8, the ratio shall be |
multiplied by 9/13; |
(iii) for Organizational Units serving grades |
9 through 12, the Local Capacity Ratio shall be |
multiplied by 4/13; and |
(iv) for an Organizational Unit with a |
different grade configuration than those specified |
in items (i) through (iii) of this subparagraph |
(B), the State Superintendent shall determine a |
comparable adjustment based on the grades served. |
(C) The Local Capacity Percentage is equal to the |
percentile ranking of the district. Local Capacity |
Percentage converts each Organizational Unit's Local |
Capacity Ratio to a cumulative distribution resulting |
in a percentile ranking to determine each |
Organizational Unit's relative position to all other |
Organizational Units in this State. The Local Capacity |
|
Percentage cumulative distribution resulting in a |
percentile ranking for each Organizational Unit shall |
be calculated using the standard normal distribution |
of the score in relation to the weighted mean and |
weighted standard deviation and Local Capacity Ratios |
of all Organizational Units. If the value assigned to |
any Organizational Unit is in excess of 90%, the value |
shall be adjusted to 90%. For Laboratory Schools, the |
Local Capacity Percentage shall be set at 10% in
|
recognition of the absence of EAV and resources from |
the public university that are allocated to
the |
Laboratory School. For programs operated by a regional |
office of education or an intermediate service center, |
the Local Capacity Percentage must be set at 10% in |
recognition of the absence of EAV and resources from |
school districts that are allocated to the regional |
office of education or intermediate service center. |
The weighted mean for the Local Capacity Percentage |
shall be determined by multiplying each Organizational |
Unit's Local Capacity Ratio times the ASE for the unit |
creating a weighted value, summing the weighted values |
of all Organizational Units, and dividing by the total |
ASE of all Organizational Units. The weighted standard |
deviation shall be determined by taking the square root |
of the weighted variance of all Organizational Units' |
Local Capacity Ratio, where the variance is calculated |
|
by squaring the difference between each unit's Local |
Capacity Ratio and the weighted mean, then multiplying |
the variance for each unit times the ASE for the unit |
to create a weighted variance for each unit, then |
summing all units' weighted variance and dividing by |
the total ASE of all units. |
(D) For any Organizational Unit, the |
Organizational Unit's Adjusted Local Capacity Target |
shall be reduced by either (i) the school board's |
remaining contribution pursuant to paragraph (ii) of |
subsection (b-4) of Section 16-158 of the Illinois |
Pension Code in a given year or (ii) the board of |
education's remaining contribution pursuant to |
paragraph (iv) of subsection (b) of Section 17-129 of |
the Illinois Pension Code absent the employer normal |
cost portion of the required contribution and amount |
allowed pursuant to subdivision (3) of Section |
17-142.1 of the Illinois Pension Code in a given year. |
In the preceding sentence, item (i) shall be certified |
to the State Board of Education by the Teachers' |
Retirement System of the State of Illinois and item |
(ii) shall be certified to the State Board of Education |
by the Public School Teachers' Pension and Retirement |
Fund of the City of Chicago. |
(3) If an Organizational Unit's Real Receipts are more |
than its Local Capacity Target, then its Local Capacity |
|
shall equal an Adjusted Local Capacity Target as calculated |
in accordance with this paragraph (3). The Adjusted Local |
Capacity Target is calculated as the sum of the |
Organizational Unit's Local Capacity Target and its Real |
Receipts Adjustment. The Real Receipts Adjustment equals |
the Organizational Unit's Real Receipts less its Local |
Capacity Target, with the resulting figure multiplied by |
the Local Capacity Percentage. |
As used in this paragraph (3), "Real Percent of |
Adequacy" means the sum of an Organizational Unit's Real |
Receipts, CPPRT, and Base Funding Minimum, with the |
resulting figure divided by the Organizational Unit's |
Adequacy Target. |
(d) Calculation of Real Receipts, EAV, and Adjusted EAV for |
purposes of the Local Capacity calculation. |
(1) An Organizational Unit's Real Receipts are the |
product of its Applicable Tax Rate and its Adjusted EAV. An |
Organizational Unit's Applicable Tax Rate is its Adjusted |
Operating Tax Rate for property within the Organizational |
Unit. |
(2) The State Superintendent shall calculate the |
equalized assessed valuation, or EAV, of all taxable |
property of each Organizational Unit as of September 30 of |
the previous year in accordance with paragraph (3) of this |
subsection (d). The State Superintendent shall then |
determine the Adjusted EAV of each Organizational Unit in |
|
accordance with paragraph (4) of this subsection (d), which |
Adjusted EAV figure shall be used for the purposes of |
calculating Local Capacity. |
(3) To calculate Real Receipts and EAV, the Department |
of Revenue shall supply to the State Superintendent the |
value as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue |
of all taxable property of every Organizational Unit, |
together with (i) the applicable tax rate used in extending |
taxes for the funds of the Organizational Unit as of |
September 30 of the previous year and (ii) the limiting |
rate for all Organizational Units subject to property tax |
extension limitations as imposed under PTELL. |
(A) The Department of Revenue shall add to the |
equalized assessed value of all taxable property of |
each Organizational Unit situated entirely or |
partially within a county that is or was subject to the |
provisions of Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property |
Tax Code (i) an amount equal to the total amount by |
which the homestead exemption allowed under Section |
15-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax Code for real |
property situated in that Organizational Unit exceeds |
the total amount that would have been allowed in that |
Organizational Unit if the maximum reduction under |
Section 15-176 was (I) $4,500 in Cook County or $3,500 |
in all other counties in tax year 2003 or (II) $5,000 |
in all counties in tax year 2004 and thereafter and |
|
(ii) an amount equal to the aggregate amount for the |
taxable year of all additional exemptions under |
Section 15-175 of the Property Tax Code for owners with |
a household income of $30,000 or less. The county clerk |
of any county that is or was subject to the provisions |
of Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax Code |
shall annually calculate and certify to the Department |
of Revenue for each Organizational Unit all homestead |
exemption amounts under Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the |
Property Tax Code and all amounts of additional |
exemptions under Section 15-175 of the Property Tax |
Code for owners with a household income of $30,000 or |
less. It is the intent of this subparagraph (A) that if |
the general homestead exemption for a parcel of |
property is determined under Section 15-176 or 15-177 |
of the Property Tax Code rather than Section 15-175, |
then the calculation of EAV shall not be affected by |
the difference, if any, between the amount of the |
general homestead exemption allowed for that parcel of |
property under Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property |
Tax Code and the amount that would have been allowed |
had the general homestead exemption for that parcel of |
property been determined under Section 15-175 of the |
Property Tax Code. It is further the intent of this |
subparagraph (A) that if additional exemptions are |
allowed under Section 15-175 of the Property Tax Code |
|
for owners with a household income of less than |
$30,000, then the calculation of EAV shall not be |
affected by the difference, if any, because of those |
additional exemptions. |
(B) With respect to any part of an Organizational |
Unit within a redevelopment project area in respect to |
which a municipality has adopted tax increment |
allocation financing pursuant to the Tax Increment |
Allocation Redevelopment Act, Division 74.4 of Article |
11 of the Illinois Municipal Code, or the Industrial |
Jobs Recovery Law, Division 74.6 of Article 11 of the |
Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the current EAV of |
real property located in any such project area that is |
attributable to an increase above the total initial EAV |
of such property shall be used as part of the EAV of |
the Organizational Unit, until such time as all |
redevelopment project costs have been paid, as |
provided in Section 11-74.4-8 of the Tax Increment |
Allocation Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35 |
of the Industrial Jobs Recovery Law. For the purpose of |
the EAV of the Organizational Unit, the total initial |
EAV or the current EAV, whichever is lower, shall be |
used until such time as all redevelopment project costs |
have been paid. |
(B-5) The real property equalized assessed |
valuation for a school district shall be adjusted by |
|
subtracting from the real property value, as equalized |
or assessed by the Department of Revenue, for the |
district an amount computed by dividing the amount of |
any abatement of taxes under Section 18-170 of the |
Property Tax Code by 3.00% for a district maintaining |
grades kindergarten through 12, by 2.30% for a district |
maintaining grades kindergarten through 8, or by 1.05% |
for a district maintaining grades 9 through 12 and |
adjusted by an amount computed by dividing the amount |
of any abatement of taxes under subsection (a) of |
Section 18-165 of the Property Tax Code by the same |
percentage rates for district type as specified in this |
subparagraph (B-5). |
(C) For Organizational Units that are Hybrid |
Districts, the State Superintendent shall use the |
lesser of the adjusted equalized assessed valuation |
for property within the partial elementary unit |
district for elementary purposes, as defined in |
Article 11E of this Code, or the adjusted equalized |
assessed valuation for property within the partial |
elementary unit district for high school purposes, as |
defined in Article 11E of this Code. |
(4) An Organizational Unit's Adjusted EAV shall be the |
average of its EAV over the immediately preceding 3 years |
or its EAV in the immediately preceding year if the EAV in |
the immediately preceding year has declined by 10% or more |
|
compared to the 3-year average. In the event of |
Organizational Unit reorganization, consolidation, or |
annexation, the Organizational Unit's Adjusted EAV for the |
first 3 years after such change shall be as follows: the |
most current EAV shall be used in the first year, the |
average of a 2-year EAV or its EAV in the immediately |
preceding year if the EAV declines by 10% or more compared |
to the 2-year average for the second year, and a 3-year |
average EAV or its EAV in the immediately preceding year if |
the Adjusted EAV declines by 10% or more compared to the |
3-year average for the third year. For any school district |
whose EAV in the immediately preceding year is used in |
calculations, in the following year, the Adjusted EAV shall |
be the average of its EAV over the immediately preceding 2 |
years or the immediately preceding year if that year |
represents a decline of 10% or more compared to the 2-year |
average. |
"PTELL EAV" means a figure calculated by the State |
Board for Organizational Units subject to PTELL as |
described in this paragraph (4) for the purposes of |
calculating an Organizational Unit's Local Capacity Ratio. |
Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (4), the |
PTELL EAV of an Organizational Unit shall be equal to the |
product of the equalized assessed valuation last used in |
the calculation of general State aid under Section 18-8.05 |
of this Code (now repealed) or Evidence-Based Funding under |
|
this Section and the Organizational Unit's Extension |
Limitation Ratio. If an Organizational Unit has approved or |
does approve an increase in its limiting rate, pursuant to |
Section 18-190 of the Property Tax Code, affecting the Base |
Tax Year, the PTELL EAV shall be equal to the product of |
the equalized assessed valuation last used in the |
calculation of general State aid under Section 18-8.05 of |
this Code (now repealed) or Evidence-Based Funding under |
this Section multiplied by an amount equal to one plus the |
percentage increase, if any, in the Consumer Price Index |
for All Urban Consumers for all items published by the |
United States Department of Labor for the 12-month calendar |
year preceding the Base Tax Year, plus the equalized |
assessed valuation of new property, annexed property, and |
recovered tax increment value and minus the equalized |
assessed valuation of disconnected property. |
As used in this paragraph (4), "new property" and |
"recovered tax increment value" shall have the meanings set |
forth in the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law. |
(e) Base Funding Minimum calculation. |
(1) For the 2017-2018 school year, the Base Funding |
Minimum of an Organizational Unit or a Specially Funded |
Unit shall be the amount of State funds distributed to the |
Organizational Unit or Specially Funded Unit during the |
2016-2017 school year prior to any adjustments and |
specified appropriation amounts described in this |
|
paragraph (1) from the following Sections, as calculated by |
the State Superintendent: Section 18-8.05 of this Code (now |
repealed); Section 5 of Article 224 of Public Act 99-524 |
(equity grants); Section 14-7.02b of this Code (funding for |
children requiring special education services); Section |
14-13.01 of this Code (special education facilities and |
staffing), except for reimbursement of the cost of |
transportation pursuant to Section 14-13.01; Section |
14C-12 of this Code (English learners); and Section 18-4.3 |
of this Code (summer school), based on an appropriation |
level of $13,121,600. For a school district organized under |
Article 34 of this Code, the Base Funding Minimum also |
includes (i) the funds allocated to the school district |
pursuant to Section 1D-1 of this Code attributable to |
funding programs authorized by the Sections of this Code |
listed in the preceding sentence and (ii) the difference |
between (I) the funds allocated to the school district |
pursuant to Section 1D-1 of this Code attributable to the |
funding programs authorized by Section 14-7.02 (non-public |
special education reimbursement), subsection (b) of |
Section 14-13.01 (special education transportation), |
Section 29-5 (transportation), Section 2-3.80 |
(agricultural education), Section 2-3.66 (truants' |
alternative education), Section 2-3.62 (educational |
service centers), and Section 14-7.03 (special education - |
orphanage) of this Code and Section 15 of the Childhood |
|
Hunger Relief Act (free breakfast program) and (II) the |
school district's actual expenditures for its non-public |
special education, special education transportation, |
transportation programs, agricultural education, truants' |
alternative education, services that would otherwise be |
performed by a regional office of education, special |
education orphanage expenditures, and free breakfast, as |
most recently calculated and reported pursuant to |
subsection (f) of Section 1D-1 of this Code. The Base |
Funding Minimum for Glenwood Academy shall be $625,500. For |
programs operated by a regional office of education or an |
intermediate service center, the Base Funding Minimum must |
be the total amount of State funds allocated to those |
programs in the 2018-2019 school year and amounts provided |
pursuant to Article 34 of Public Act 100-586 and Section |
3-16 of this Code. All programs established after June 5, |
2019 (the effective date of Public Act 101-10) and |
administered by a regional office of education or an |
intermediate service center must have an initial Base |
Funding Minimum set to an amount equal to the first-year |
ASE multiplied by the amount of per pupil funding received |
in the previous school year by the lowest funded similar |
existing program type. If the enrollment for a program |
operated by a regional office of education or an |
intermediate service center is zero, then it may not |
receive Base Funding Minimum funds for that program in the |
|
next fiscal year, and those funds must be distributed to |
Organizational Units under subsection (g). |
(2) For the 2018-2019 and subsequent school years, the |
Base Funding Minimum of Organizational Units and Specially |
Funded Units shall be the sum of (i) the amount of |
Evidence-Based Funding for the prior school year, (ii) the |
Base Funding Minimum for the prior school year, and (iii) |
any amount received by a school district pursuant to |
Section 7 of Article 97 of Public Act 100-21. |
(3) Subject to approval by the General Assembly as |
provided in this paragraph (3), an Organizational Unit that |
meets all of the following criteria, as determined by the |
State Board, shall have District Intervention Money added |
to its Base Funding Minimum at the time the Base Funding |
Minimum is calculated by the State Board: |
(A) The Organizational Unit is operating under an |
Independent Authority under Section 2-3.25f-5 of this |
Code for a minimum of 4 school years or is subject to |
the control of the State Board pursuant to a court |
order for a minimum of 4 school years. |
(B) The Organizational Unit was designated as a |
Tier 1 or Tier 2 Organizational Unit in the previous |
school year under paragraph (3) of subsection (g) of |
this Section. |
(C) The Organizational Unit demonstrates |
sustainability through a 5-year financial and |
|
strategic plan. |
(D) The Organizational Unit has made sufficient |
progress and achieved sufficient stability in the |
areas of governance, academic growth, and finances. |
As part of its determination under this paragraph (3), |
the State Board may consider the Organizational Unit's |
summative designation, any accreditations of the |
Organizational Unit, or the Organizational Unit's |
financial profile, as calculated by the State Board. |
If the State Board determines that an Organizational |
Unit has met the criteria set forth in this paragraph (3), |
it must submit a report to the General Assembly, no later |
than January 2 of the fiscal year in which the State Board |
makes it determination, on the amount of District |
Intervention Money to add to the Organizational Unit's Base |
Funding Minimum. The General Assembly must review the State |
Board's report and may approve or disapprove, by joint |
resolution, the addition of District Intervention Money. |
If the General Assembly fails to act on the report within |
40 calendar days from the receipt of the report, the |
addition of District Intervention Money is deemed |
approved. If the General Assembly approves the amount of |
District Intervention Money to be added to the |
Organizational Unit's Base Funding Minimum, the District |
Intervention Money must be added to the Base Funding |
Minimum annually thereafter. |
|
For the first 4 years following the initial year that |
the State Board determines that an Organizational Unit has |
met the criteria set forth in this paragraph (3) and has |
received funding under this Section, the Organizational |
Unit must annually submit to the State Board, on or before |
November 30, a progress report regarding its financial and |
strategic plan under subparagraph (C) of this paragraph |
(3). The plan shall include the financial data from the |
past 4 annual financial reports or financial audits that |
must be presented to the State Board by November 15 of each |
year and the approved budget financial data for the current |
year. The plan shall be developed according to the |
guidelines presented to the Organizational Unit by the |
State Board. The plan shall further include financial |
projections for the next 3 fiscal years and include a |
discussion and financial summary of the Organizational |
Unit's facility needs. If the Organizational Unit does not |
demonstrate sufficient progress toward its 5-year plan or |
if it has failed to file an annual financial report, an |
annual budget, a financial plan, a deficit reduction plan, |
or other financial information as required by law, the |
State Board may establish a Financial Oversight Panel under |
Article 1H of this Code. However, if the Organizational |
Unit already has a Financial Oversight Panel, the State |
Board may extend the duration of the Panel. |
(f) Percent of Adequacy and Final Resources calculation. |
|
(1) The Evidence-Based Funding formula establishes a |
Percent of Adequacy for each Organizational Unit in order |
to place such units into tiers for the purposes of the |
funding distribution system described in subsection (g) of |
this Section. Initially, an Organizational Unit's |
Preliminary Resources and Preliminary Percent of Adequacy |
are calculated pursuant to paragraph (2) of this subsection |
(f). Then, an Organizational Unit's Final Resources and |
Final Percent of Adequacy are calculated to account for the |
Organizational Unit's poverty concentration levels |
pursuant to paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subsection (f). |
(2) An Organizational Unit's Preliminary Resources are |
equal to the sum of its Local Capacity Target, CPPRT, and |
Base Funding Minimum. An Organizational Unit's Preliminary |
Percent of Adequacy is the lesser of (i) its Preliminary |
Resources divided by its Adequacy Target or (ii) 100%. |
(3) Except for Specially Funded Units, an |
Organizational Unit's Final Resources are equal to the sum |
of its Local Capacity, CPPRT, and Adjusted Base Funding |
Minimum. The Base Funding Minimum of each Specially Funded |
Unit shall serve as its Final Resources, except that the |
Base Funding Minimum for State-approved charter schools |
shall not include any portion of general State aid |
allocated in the prior year based on the per capita tuition |
charge times the charter school enrollment. |
(4) An Organizational Unit's Final Percent of Adequacy |
|
is its Final Resources divided by its Adequacy Target. An |
Organizational Unit's Adjusted Base Funding Minimum is |
equal to its Base Funding Minimum less its Supplemental |
Grant Funding, with the resulting figure added to the |
product of its Supplemental Grant Funding and Preliminary |
Percent of Adequacy. |
(g) Evidence-Based Funding formula distribution system. |
(1) In each school year under the Evidence-Based |
Funding formula, each Organizational Unit receives funding |
equal to the sum of its Base Funding Minimum and the unit's |
allocation of New State Funds determined pursuant to this |
subsection (g). To allocate New State Funds, the |
Evidence-Based Funding formula distribution system first |
places all Organizational Units into one of 4 tiers in |
accordance with paragraph (3) of this subsection (g), based |
on the Organizational Unit's Final Percent of Adequacy. New |
State Funds are allocated to each of the 4 tiers as |
follows: Tier 1 Aggregate Funding equals 50% of all New |
State Funds, Tier 2 Aggregate Funding equals 49% of all New |
State Funds, Tier 3 Aggregate Funding equals 0.9% of all |
New State Funds, and Tier 4 Aggregate Funding equals 0.1% |
of all New State Funds. Each Organizational Unit within |
Tier 1 or Tier 2 receives an allocation of New State Funds |
equal to its tier Funding Gap, as defined in the following |
sentence, multiplied by the tier's Allocation Rate |
determined pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection |
|
(g). For Tier 1, an Organizational Unit's Funding Gap |
equals the tier's Target Ratio, as specified in paragraph |
(5) of this subsection (g), multiplied by the |
Organizational Unit's Adequacy Target, with the resulting |
amount reduced by the Organizational Unit's Final |
Resources. For Tier 2, an Organizational Unit's Funding Gap |
equals the tier's Target Ratio, as described in paragraph |
(5) of this subsection (g), multiplied by the |
Organizational Unit's Adequacy Target, with the resulting |
amount reduced by the Organizational Unit's Final |
Resources and its Tier 1 funding allocation. To determine |
the Organizational Unit's Funding Gap, the resulting |
amount is then multiplied by a factor equal to one minus |
the Organizational Unit's Local Capacity Target |
percentage. Each Organizational Unit within Tier 3 or Tier |
4 receives an allocation of New State Funds equal to the |
product of its Adequacy Target and the tier's Allocation |
Rate, as specified in paragraph (4) of this subsection (g). |
(2) To ensure equitable distribution of dollars for all |
Tier 2 Organizational Units, no Tier 2 Organizational Unit |
shall receive fewer dollars per ASE than any Tier 3 |
Organizational Unit. Each Tier 2 and Tier 3 Organizational |
Unit shall have its funding allocation divided by its ASE. |
Any Tier 2 Organizational Unit with a funding allocation |
per ASE below the greatest Tier 3 allocation per ASE shall |
get a funding allocation equal to the greatest Tier 3 |
|
funding allocation per ASE multiplied by the |
Organizational Unit's ASE. Each Tier 2 Organizational |
Unit's Tier 2 funding allocation shall be multiplied by the |
percentage calculated by dividing the original Tier 2 |
Aggregate Funding by the sum of all Tier 2 Organizational |
Units' Tier 2 funding allocation after adjusting |
districts' funding below Tier 3 levels. |
(3) Organizational Units are placed into one of 4 tiers |
as follows: |
(A) Tier 1 consists of all Organizational Units, |
except for Specially Funded Units, with a Percent of |
Adequacy less than the Tier 1 Target Ratio. The Tier 1 |
Target Ratio is the ratio level that allows for Tier 1 |
Aggregate Funding to be distributed, with the Tier 1 |
Allocation Rate determined pursuant to paragraph (4) |
of this subsection (g). |
(B) Tier 2 consists of all Tier 1 Units and all |
other Organizational Units, except for Specially |
Funded Units, with a Percent of Adequacy of less than |
0.90. |
(C) Tier 3 consists of all Organizational Units, |
except for Specially Funded Units, with a Percent of |
Adequacy of at least 0.90 and less than 1.0. |
(D) Tier 4 consists of all Organizational Units |
with a Percent of Adequacy of at least 1.0. |
(4) The Allocation Rates for Tiers 1 through 4 are |
|
determined as follows: |
(A) The Tier 1 Allocation Rate is 30%. |
(B) The Tier 2 Allocation Rate is the result of the |
following equation: Tier 2 Aggregate Funding, divided |
by the sum of the Funding Gaps for all Tier 2 |
Organizational Units, unless the result of such |
equation is higher than 1.0. If the result of such |
equation is higher than 1.0, then the Tier 2 Allocation |
Rate is 1.0. |
(C) The Tier 3 Allocation Rate is the result of the |
following equation: Tier 3
Aggregate Funding, divided |
by the sum of the Adequacy Targets of all Tier 3 |
Organizational
Units. |
(D) The Tier 4 Allocation Rate is the result of the |
following equation: Tier 4
Aggregate Funding, divided |
by the sum of the Adequacy Targets of all Tier 4 |
Organizational
Units. |
(5) A tier's Target Ratio is determined as follows: |
(A) The Tier 1 Target Ratio is the ratio level that |
allows for Tier 1 Aggregate Funding to be distributed |
with the Tier 1 Allocation Rate. |
(B) The Tier 2 Target Ratio is 0.90. |
(C) The Tier 3 Target Ratio is 1.0. |
(6) If, at any point, the Tier 1 Target Ratio is |
greater than 90%, then than all Tier 1 funding shall be |
allocated to Tier 2 and no Tier 1 Organizational Unit's |
|
funding may be identified. |
(7) In the event that all Tier 2 Organizational Units |
receive funding at the Tier 2 Target Ratio level, any |
remaining New State Funds shall be allocated to Tier 3 and |
Tier 4 Organizational Units. |
(8) If any Specially Funded Units, excluding Glenwood |
Academy, recognized by the State Board do not qualify for |
direct funding following the implementation of Public Act |
100-465 from any of the funding sources included within the |
definition of Base Funding Minimum, the unqualified |
portion of the Base Funding Minimum shall be transferred to |
one or more appropriate Organizational Units as determined |
by the State Superintendent based on the prior year ASE of |
the Organizational Units. |
(8.5) If a school district withdraws from a special |
education cooperative, the portion of the Base Funding |
Minimum that is attributable to the school district may be |
redistributed to the school district upon withdrawal. The |
school district and the cooperative must include the amount |
of the Base Funding Minimum that is to be reapportioned in |
their withdrawal agreement and notify the State Board of |
the change with a copy of the agreement upon withdrawal. |
(9) The Minimum Funding Level is intended to establish |
a target for State funding that will keep pace with |
inflation and continue to advance equity through the |
Evidence-Based Funding formula. The target for State |
|
funding of New Property Tax Relief Pool Funds is |
$50,000,000 for State fiscal year 2019 and subsequent State |
fiscal years. The Minimum Funding Level is equal to |
$350,000,000. In addition to any New State Funds, no more |
than $50,000,000 New Property Tax Relief Pool Funds may be |
counted toward the Minimum Funding Level. If the sum of New |
State Funds and applicable New Property Tax Relief Pool |
Funds are less than the Minimum Funding Level, than funding |
for tiers shall be reduced in the following manner: |
(A) First, Tier 4 funding shall be reduced by an |
amount equal to the difference between the Minimum |
Funding Level and New State Funds until such time as |
Tier 4 funding is exhausted. |
(B) Next, Tier 3 funding shall be reduced by an |
amount equal to the difference between the Minimum |
Funding Level and New State Funds and the reduction in |
Tier 4 funding until such time as Tier 3 funding is |
exhausted. |
(C) Next, Tier 2 funding shall be reduced by an |
amount equal to the difference between the Minimum |
Funding Level and New State Funds and the reduction in |
Tier 4 and Tier 3. |
(D) Finally, Tier 1 funding shall be reduced by an |
amount equal to the difference between the Minimum |
Funding level and New State Funds and the reduction in |
Tier 2, 3, and 4 funding. In addition, the Allocation |
|
Rate for Tier 1 shall be reduced to a percentage equal |
to the Tier 1 Allocation Rate set by paragraph (4) of |
this subsection (g), multiplied by the result of New |
State Funds divided by the Minimum Funding Level. |
(9.5) For State fiscal year 2019 and subsequent State |
fiscal years, if New State Funds exceed $300,000,000, then |
any amount in excess of $300,000,000 shall be dedicated for |
purposes of Section 2-3.170 of this Code up to a maximum of |
$50,000,000. |
(10) In the event of a decrease in the amount of the |
appropriation for this Section in any fiscal year after |
implementation of this Section, the Organizational Units |
receiving Tier 1 and Tier 2 funding, as determined under |
paragraph (3) of this subsection (g), shall be held |
harmless by establishing a Base Funding Guarantee equal to |
the per pupil kindergarten through grade 12 funding |
received in accordance with this Section in the prior |
fiscal year. Reductions shall be
made to the Base Funding |
Minimum of Organizational Units in Tier 3 and Tier 4 on a
|
per pupil basis equivalent to the total number of the ASE |
in Tier 3-funded and Tier 4-funded Organizational Units |
divided by the total reduction in State funding. The Base
|
Funding Minimum as reduced shall continue to be applied to |
Tier 3 and Tier 4
Organizational Units and adjusted by the |
relative formula when increases in
appropriations for this |
Section resume. In no event may State funding reductions to
|
|
Organizational Units in Tier 3 or Tier 4 exceed an amount |
that would be less than the
Base Funding Minimum |
established in the first year of implementation of this
|
Section. If additional reductions are required, all school |
districts shall receive a
reduction by a per pupil amount |
equal to the aggregate additional appropriation
reduction |
divided by the total ASE of all Organizational Units. |
(11) The State Superintendent shall make minor |
adjustments to the distribution formula set forth in this |
subsection (g) to account for the rounding of percentages |
to the nearest tenth of a percentage and dollar amounts to |
the nearest whole dollar. |
(h) State Superintendent administration of funding and |
district submission requirements. |
(1) The State Superintendent shall, in accordance with |
appropriations made by the General Assembly, meet the |
funding obligations created under this Section. |
(2) The State Superintendent shall calculate the |
Adequacy Target for each Organizational Unit and Net State |
Contribution Target for each Organizational Unit under |
this Section. No Evidence-Based Funding shall be |
distributed within an Organizational Unit without the |
approval of the unit's school board. |
(3) Annually, the State Superintendent shall calculate |
and report to each Organizational Unit the unit's aggregate |
financial adequacy amount, which shall be the sum of the |
|
Adequacy Target for each Organizational Unit. The State |
Superintendent shall calculate and report separately for |
each Organizational Unit the unit's total State funds |
allocated for its students with disabilities. The State |
Superintendent shall calculate and report separately for |
each Organizational Unit the amount of funding and |
applicable FTE calculated for each Essential Element of the |
unit's Adequacy Target. |
(4) Annually, the State Superintendent shall calculate |
and report to each Organizational Unit the amount the unit |
must expend on special education and bilingual education |
and computer technology and equipment for Organizational |
Units assigned to Tier 1 or Tier 2 that received an |
additional $285.50 per student computer technology and |
equipment investment grant to their Adequacy Target |
pursuant to the unit's Base Funding Minimum, Special |
Education Allocation, Bilingual Education Allocation, and |
computer technology and equipment investment allocation. |
(5) Moneys distributed under this Section shall be |
calculated on a school year basis, but paid on a fiscal |
year basis, with payments beginning in August and extending |
through June. Unless otherwise provided, the moneys |
appropriated for each fiscal year shall be distributed in |
22 equal payments at least 2 times monthly to each |
Organizational Unit. If moneys appropriated for any fiscal |
year are distributed other than monthly, the distribution |
|
shall be on the same basis for each Organizational Unit. |
(6) Any school district that fails, for any given |
school year, to maintain school as required by law or to |
maintain a recognized school is not eligible to receive |
Evidence-Based Funding. In case of non-recognition of one |
or more attendance centers in a school district otherwise |
operating recognized schools, the claim of the district |
shall be reduced in the proportion that the enrollment in |
the attendance center or centers bears to the enrollment of |
the school district. "Recognized school" means any public |
school that meets the standards for recognition by the |
State Board. A school district or attendance center not |
having recognition status at the end of a school term is |
entitled to receive State aid payments due upon a legal |
claim that was filed while it was recognized. |
(7) School district claims filed under this Section are |
subject to Sections 18-9 and 18-12 of this Code, except as |
otherwise provided in this Section. |
(8) Each fiscal year, the State Superintendent shall |
calculate for each Organizational Unit an amount of its |
Base Funding Minimum and Evidence-Based Funding that shall |
be deemed attributable to the provision of special |
educational facilities and services, as defined in Section |
14-1.08 of this Code, in a manner that ensures compliance |
with maintenance of State financial support requirements |
under the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education |
|
Act. An Organizational Unit must use such funds only for |
the provision of special educational facilities and |
services, as defined in Section 14-1.08 of this Code, and |
must comply with any expenditure verification procedures |
adopted by the State Board. |
(9) All Organizational Units in this State must submit |
annual spending plans by the end of September of each year |
to the State Board as part of the annual budget process, |
which shall describe how each Organizational Unit will |
utilize the Base Funding Minimum and Evidence-Based |
Funding it receives from this State under this Section with |
specific identification of the intended utilization of |
Low-Income, English learner, and special education |
resources. Additionally, the annual spending plans of each |
Organizational Unit shall describe how the Organizational |
Unit expects to achieve student growth and how the |
Organizational Unit will achieve State education goals, as |
defined by the State Board. The State Superintendent may, |
from time to time, identify additional requisites for |
Organizational Units to satisfy when compiling the annual |
spending plans required under this subsection (h). The |
format and scope of annual spending plans shall be |
developed by the State Superintendent and the State Board |
of Education. School districts that serve students under |
Article 14C of this Code shall continue to submit |
information as required under Section 14C-12 of this Code. |
|
(10) No later than January 1, 2018, the State |
Superintendent shall develop a 5-year strategic plan for |
all Organizational Units to help in planning for adequacy |
funding under this Section. The State Superintendent shall |
submit the plan to the Governor and the General Assembly, |
as provided in Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act. The plan shall include recommendations |
for: |
(A) a framework for collaborative, professional, |
innovative, and 21st century learning environments |
using the Evidence-Based Funding model; |
(B) ways to prepare and support this State's |
educators for successful instructional careers; |
(C) application and enhancement of the current |
financial accountability measures, the approved State |
plan to comply with the federal Every Student Succeeds |
Act, and the Illinois Balanced Accountability Measures |
in relation to student growth and elements of the |
Evidence-Based Funding model; and |
(D) implementation of an effective school adequacy |
funding system based on projected and recommended |
funding levels from the General Assembly. |
(11) On an annual basis, the State Superintendent
must |
recalibrate all of the following per pupil elements of the |
Adequacy Target and applied to the formulas, based on the |
study of average expenses and as reported in the most |
|
recent annual financial report: |
(A) Gifted under subparagraph (M) of paragraph
(2) |
of subsection (b). |
(B) Instructional materials under subparagraph
(O) |
of paragraph (2) of subsection (b). |
(C) Assessment under subparagraph (P) of
paragraph |
(2) of subsection (b). |
(D) Student activities under subparagraph (R) of
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (b). |
(E) Maintenance and operations under subparagraph
|
(S) of paragraph (2) of subsection (b). |
(F) Central office under subparagraph (T) of
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (b). |
(i) Professional Review Panel. |
(1) A Professional Review Panel is created to study and |
review topics related to the implementation and effect of |
Evidence-Based Funding, as assigned by a joint resolution |
or Public Act of the General Assembly or a motion passed by |
the State Board of Education. The Panel must provide |
recommendations to and serve the Governor, the General |
Assembly, and the State Board. The State Superintendent or |
his or her designee must serve as a voting member and |
chairperson of the Panel. The State Superintendent must |
appoint a vice chairperson from the membership of the |
Panel. The Panel must advance recommendations based on a |
three-fifths majority vote of Panel members present and |
|
voting. A minority opinion may also accompany any |
recommendation of the Panel. The Panel shall be appointed |
by the State Superintendent, except as otherwise provided |
in paragraph (2) of this subsection (i) and include the |
following members: |
(A) Two appointees that represent district |
superintendents, recommended by a statewide |
organization that represents district superintendents. |
(B) Two appointees that represent school boards, |
recommended by a statewide organization that |
represents school boards. |
(C) Two appointees from districts that represent |
school business officials, recommended by a statewide |
organization that represents school business |
officials. |
(D) Two appointees that represent school |
principals, recommended by a statewide organization |
that represents school principals. |
(E) Two appointees that represent teachers, |
recommended by a statewide organization that |
represents teachers. |
(F) Two appointees that represent teachers, |
recommended by another statewide organization that |
represents teachers. |
(G) Two appointees that represent regional |
superintendents of schools, recommended by |
|
organizations that represent regional superintendents. |
(H) Two independent experts selected solely by the |
State Superintendent. |
(I) Two independent experts recommended by public |
universities in this State. |
(J) One member recommended by a statewide |
organization that represents parents. |
(K) Two representatives recommended by collective |
impact organizations that represent major metropolitan |
areas or geographic areas in Illinois. |
(L) One member from a statewide organization |
focused on research-based education policy to support |
a school system that prepares all students for college, |
a career, and democratic citizenship. |
(M) One representative from a school district |
organized under Article 34 of this Code. |
The State Superintendent shall ensure that the |
membership of the Panel includes representatives from |
school districts and communities reflecting the |
geographic, socio-economic, racial, and ethnic diversity |
of this State. The State Superintendent shall additionally |
ensure that the membership of the Panel includes |
representatives with expertise in bilingual education and |
special education. Staff from the State Board shall staff |
the Panel. |
(2) In addition to those Panel members appointed by the |
|
State Superintendent, 4 members of the General Assembly |
shall be appointed as follows: one member of the House of |
Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives, one member of the Senate appointed by the |
President of the Senate, one member of the House of |
Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, and one member of the Senate |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate. There shall |
be one additional member appointed by the Governor. All |
members appointed by legislative leaders or the Governor |
shall be non-voting, ex officio members. |
(3) The Panel must study topics at the direction of the |
General Assembly or State Board of Education, as provided |
under paragraph (1). The Panel may also study the following |
topics at the direction of the chairperson: |
(A) The format and scope of annual spending plans |
referenced in paragraph (9) of subsection (h) of this |
Section. |
(B) The Comparable Wage Index under this Section. |
(C) Maintenance and operations, including capital |
maintenance and construction costs. |
(D) "At-risk student" definition. |
(E) Benefits. |
(F) Technology. |
(G) Local Capacity Target. |
(H) Funding for Alternative Schools, Laboratory |
|
Schools, safe schools, and alternative learning |
opportunities programs. |
(I) Funding for college and career acceleration |
strategies. |
(J) Special education investments. |
(K) Early childhood investments, in collaboration |
with the Illinois Early Learning Council. |
(4) (Blank). |
(5) Within 5 years after the implementation of this |
Section, and every 5 years thereafter, the Panel shall |
complete an evaluative study of the entire Evidence-Based |
Funding model, including an assessment of whether or not |
the formula is achieving State goals. The Panel shall |
report to the State Board, the General Assembly, and the |
Governor on the findings of the study. |
(6) (Blank). |
(7) To ensure that (i) the Adequacy Target calculation |
under subsection (b) accurately reflects the needs of |
students living in poverty or attending schools located in |
areas of high poverty, (ii) racial equity within the |
Evidence-Based Funding formula is explicitly explored and |
advanced, and (iii) the funding goals of the formula |
distribution system established under this Section are |
sufficient to provide adequate funding for every student |
and to fully fund every school in this State, the Panel |
shall review the Essential Elements under paragraph (2) of |
|
subsection (b). The Panel shall consider all of the |
following in its review: |
(A) The financial ability of school districts to |
provide instruction in a foreign language to every |
student and whether an additional Essential Element |
should be added to the formula to ensure that every |
student has access to instruction in a foreign |
language. |
(B) The adult-to-student ratio for each Essential |
Element in which a ratio is identified. The Panel shall |
consider whether the ratio accurately reflects the |
staffing needed to support students living in poverty |
or who have traumatic backgrounds. |
(C) Changes to the Essential Elements that may be |
required to better promote racial equity and eliminate |
structural racism within schools. |
(D) The impact of investing $350,000,000 in |
additional funds each year under this Section and an |
estimate of when the school system will become fully |
funded under this level of appropriation. |
(E) Provide an overview of alternative funding |
structures that would enable the State to become fully |
funded at an earlier date. |
(F) The potential to increase efficiency and to |
find cost savings within the school system to expedite |
the journey to a fully funded system. |
|
(G) The appropriate levels for reenrolling and |
graduating high-risk high school students who have |
been previously out of school. These outcomes shall |
include enrollment, attendance, skill gains, credit |
gains, graduation or promotion to the next grade level, |
and the transition to college, training, or |
employment, with an emphasis on progressively |
increasing the overall attendance. |
(H) The evidence-based or research-based practices |
that are shown to reduce the gaps and disparities |
experienced by African American students in academic |
achievement and educational performance, including |
practices that have been shown to reduce parities in |
disciplinary rates, drop-out rates, graduation rates, |
college matriculation rates, and college completion |
rates. |
On or before December 31, 2021, the Panel shall report |
to the State Board, the General Assembly, and the Governor |
on the findings of its review. This paragraph (7) is |
inoperative on and after July 1, 2022. |
(j) References. Beginning July 1, 2017, references in other |
laws to general State aid funds or calculations under Section |
18-8.05 of this Code (now repealed) shall be deemed to be |
references to evidence-based model formula funds or |
calculations under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-465, eff. 8-31-17; 100-578, eff. 1-31-18; |
|
100-582, eff. 3-23-18; 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-17, eff. |
6-14-19; 101-643, eff. 6-18-20; revised 8-21-20.) |
Article 95. |
Section 95-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Equity in Higher Education Act. References in this Article to |
"this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 95-5. Findings; policies. |
(a) The General Assembly finds the following: |
(1) Historic and continuous systemic racism has |
created significant disparities in college access, |
affordability, and completion for Black, Latinx, |
low-income, and other underrepresented and historically |
underserved students. |
(2) Higher education is examining its role as a |
contributor to systemic racism, while recognizing its |
place in providing opportunity and upward mobility, and its |
role as a powerful actor in dismantling systemic racism. |
(3) Chicago State University has created the Equity |
Working Group, which includes statewide representation of |
private, community, and public sector stakeholders, to |
create an action plan for employers, the secondary and |
postsecondary education systems, philanthropic |
organizations, community-based organizations, and our |
|
executive and legislative bodies to improve college |
access, completion, and post-graduation outcomes for Black |
college students in Illinois. |
(4) Despite similar numbers of Black high school |
graduates, Illinois saw about 25,000 fewer Black enrollees |
in Illinois higher education in 2018 compared to 2008. |
(5) Illinois must address wide disparities in degree |
completion at Illinois community colleges, which currently |
graduate Black and Latinx students at a rate of 14% and 26% |
respectively compared to the rate of 38% for White |
students, as well as at public universities, which |
currently graduate Black and Latinx students at a rate of |
34% and 49% respectively compared to 66% of White students, |
within 6 years. |
(6) The State of Illinois benefits from a diverse |
public higher education system that includes universities |
and community colleges with different missions and scopes |
that maximize college enrollment, persistence, and |
completion of underrepresented and historically |
underserved students, including Black and Latinx students |
and students from low-income families. |
(7) Illinois has a moral obligation and an economic |
interest in dismantling and reforming structures that |
create or exacerbate racial and socioeconomic inequities |
in K-12 and higher education. |
(8) The Board of Higher Education has a statutory |
|
obligation to create a strategic plan for higher education |
and has adopted core principles to guide this plan. |
(9) The Board of Higher Education has included among |
its core principles designed to guide the strategic plan |
the assumption that excellence coupled with equity should |
drive the higher education system and that the higher |
education system will make equity-driven decisions, |
elevating the voices of those who have been underserved, |
and actively identify and remove systemic barriers that |
have prevented students of color, first generation college |
students, low-income students, adult learners, and rural |
students from accessing and succeeding in higher |
education; access and affordability as well as high quality |
are embedded in the definition of equity. |
(b) The General Assembly supports all of the following work |
and goals of the Board of Higher Education: |
(1) Its work on the strategic plan for higher education |
and the vision it has set forth that over the next 10 years |
Illinois will have an equitable, accessible, innovative, |
nimble, and aligned higher education ecosystem that |
ensures individuals, families, and communities across the |
state thrive. |
(2) Its goal to close equity gaps in higher education |
in Illinois and that the strategic plan will identify |
multiple strategies to achieve this goal. |
(3) Its goal to increase postsecondary |
|
credential/degree attainment and develop talent to drive |
the economy of Illinois and that the strategic plan will |
identify strategies to achieve this goal, including |
embedding equity in the State's attainment goal. |
(4) Its goal to improve higher education |
affordability, increase access, and manage costs and the |
expectation that the strategic plan will identify |
strategies for stakeholders to achieve these goals, |
including opportunities to improve efficiency and |
principles for equitable and adequate ways to fund higher |
education.
|
(c) The General Assembly encourages the Board of Higher |
Education to prepare an array of policy, practice, and proposed |
legislative changes required to implement the strategic plan, |
along with an implementation process and timeline by May 1, |
2021 and to regularly evaluate the impact of the implementation |
of the strategic plan and publicly report the evaluation to |
ensure that the goals are achieved as intended and lead to a |
high-quality, equitable, and diverse higher education system |
in Illinois. |
Article 100. |
Section 100-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Developmental Education Reform Act. References in this Article |
to "this Act" mean this Article. |
|
Section 100-5. Findings. The General Assembly makes all of |
the following findings: |
(1) Nearly 50% of this State's high school graduates |
who enroll full-time in a community college are placed in |
developmental education coursework in at least one |
subject. Community colleges place nearly 71% of Black |
students in developmental education courses compared to |
42% of white students. |
(2) Traditional developmental education courses cost |
students time and money and expend their financial aid |
because a student does not receive college credit for the |
successful completion of a traditional developmental |
education course. This can be a barrier to enrollment, |
persistence, and certificate or degree completion. |
(3) Developmental education courses can exacerbate |
inequities in higher education. Community colleges |
graduate Black students who are placed in developmental |
education courses at a rate of approximately 8% compared to |
a graduation rate of 26% for white students who are placed |
in developmental education courses. |
(4) A history of inconsistent and inadequate |
approaches to student placement in community college |
coursework, such as the reliance on standardized test |
scores, has resulted in too many students being placed in |
developmental education coursework who could otherwise |
|
succeed in introductory college-level coursework or |
introductory college-level coursework with concurrent |
support. |
(5) Developmental education reform is in progress, and |
public institutions of higher education and State agencies |
have undertaken voluntary efforts and committed resources |
to improve placement and to address disparities in the |
successful completion of introductory college-level |
coursework. |
(6) The Illinois Council of Community College |
Presidents, the Illinois Community College Chief Academic |
Officers Commission, the Illinois Community College Chief |
Student Services Officers Commission, and the Illinois |
Mathematics Association of Community Colleges have already |
developed and approved a more equitable, multiple measures |
framework for placement in coursework that is currently |
implemented at many but not all community colleges. |
(7) In 2019, members of the General Assembly, faculty |
and administrators from public institutions of higher |
education, board trustees from community college |
districts, representatives from the Board of Higher |
Education, the Illinois Community College Board, and other |
appointed stakeholders convened a task force to inventory |
and study developmental education models employed by |
public community colleges and universities in this State |
and to submit a detailed plan for scaling developmental |
|
education reforms in which all students who are placed in |
developmental education coursework are enrolled in an |
evidence-based developmental education model that |
maximizes a student's likelihood of completing an |
introductory college-level course within his or her first 2 |
semesters at an institution of higher education. The data |
released by the task force indicates all of the following: |
(A) Despite more effective developmental education |
models, community colleges and universities use the |
traditional developmental education model for 77% of |
students who place in a developmental education |
mathematics course and for 67% of students who place in |
a developmental English language course. |
(B) Improved policies, programs, and practices are |
essential to address the systemic inequities that |
exist in postsecondary education in this State, such as |
the disproportionate enrollment of Black students in |
developmental education courses. |
(8) To support further reform to developmental |
education in mathematics, additional work needs to be done |
in order to more adequately define the math pathways and |
the various ways that students satisfy mathematics credit |
requirements depending upon their academic and career |
pathways. |
Section 100-10. Definitions. In this Act: |
|
"College-level English language or mathematics course" or |
"college-level English language or mathematics coursework" |
means a course that bears credit and fulfills English language |
or mathematics credit requirements for a baccalaureate degree, |
a certificate, or an associate degree from a postsecondary |
educational institution. |
"Community college" means a public community college in |
this State.
|
"Developmental education" means instruction through which |
a high school graduate who applies to a college credit program |
may attain the communication and computation skills necessary |
to successfully complete college-level coursework.
|
"Developmental education course" or "developmental |
education coursework" means a course or a category of courses |
in which students are placed based on an institution's finding |
that a student does not have the proficiency necessary to |
succeed in an introductory college-level English language or |
mathematics course. |
"Institution of higher education" or "institution" means a |
public community college or university in this State. |
"University" means a public university in this State. |
Section 100-15. Placement measures. |
(a) On or before May 1, 2022, a community college shall use |
each of the following measures, as appropriate, to determine |
the placement of a student in introductory college-level |
|
English language or mathematics coursework and shall use the |
scores set forth in recommendations approved by the Illinois |
Council of Community College Presidents on June 1, 2018: |
(1) A student's cumulative high school grade point |
average. |
(2) A student's successful completion of an |
appropriate high school transition course in mathematics |
or English. |
(3) A student's successful completion of an |
appropriate developmental education or introductory |
college-level English language or mathematics course at |
another regionally accredited postsecondary educational |
institution. |
(b) In determining the placement of a student in |
introductory college-level English language or mathematics |
coursework, a community college shall consider the |
standardized test scores provided by the student for placement |
in an introductory college-level English language or |
mathematics course. |
In addition, a community college is encouraged to use the |
scores set forth in recommendations approved by the Illinois |
Council of Community College Presidents on June 1, 2018 and |
should also consider other individual measures for placement in |
an introductory college-level English language or mathematics |
course, as set forth in recommendations approved by the |
Illinois Council of Community College Presidents on June 1, |
|
2018, and the scores set forth in those recommendations. |
In its discretion, a community college may accept a lower |
score on individual placement measures or accept lower scores |
in combination with other placement measures than those set |
forth in the recommendations. |
(c) If a student qualifies for placement in an introductory |
college-level English language or mathematics course using a |
single measure under subsection (a) or (b), no additional |
measures need to be considered for placement of the student in |
the introductory college-level English language or mathematics |
course. |
Section 100-20. Recommendations of Illinois Council of |
Community College Presidents recommendation revisions; math |
pathways. |
(a) If the Illinois Council of Community College Presidents |
approves any revised recommendations for determining the |
placement of students in introductory college-level English |
language or mathematics courses in response to changes in |
scoring systems, the introduction and use of additional |
measures, or evidence that demonstrates the inaccuracy in the |
use of scores in previous recommendations, then, within one |
year after the date of the adoption of those revised |
recommendations, references in this Act to recommendations |
approved by the Illinois Council of Community College |
Presidents on June 1, 2018 shall mean the revised |
|
recommendations. The General Assembly may request that the |
Illinois Council of Community College Presidents provide to the |
General Assembly the rationale and supporting evidence for any |
revision to the Council's recommendations. |
(b) Beginning no later than December 1, 2021, the Illinois |
Board of Higher Education shall convene stakeholders to |
consider a multiple measures framework for placement into |
college-level coursework for Illinois public universities with |
considerations for math pathways and major requirements. |
Section 100-25. Placement policy; report. |
(a) Each institution of higher education shall publicly |
post its placement policy in a manner that is easily accessible |
to both students and prospective students. |
(b) On or before July 1, 2023, the Illinois Community |
College Board shall issue a report, which shall be made |
available to the public on its Internet website, concerning |
each community college's developmental education and |
college-level coursework placement policy and the policy's |
outcomes. The data disclosed in the report must be consistent |
with the Illinois Community College Board's requirements for |
data collection and should be disaggregated by developmental |
education course model, as defined by the Illinois Community |
College Board, and by gender, race and ethnicity, and federal |
Pell Grant status. |
|
Section 100-30. Institutional plans; report. |
(a) On or before May 1, 2022, each university shall submit |
to the Board of Higher Education and each community college |
shall submit to the Illinois Community College Board its |
institutional plan for scaling evidence-based developmental |
education reforms to maximize the probability that a student |
will be placed in and successfully complete introductory |
college-level English language or mathematics coursework |
within 2 semesters at the institution. At a minimum, a plan |
submitted by an institution shall include all of the following: |
(1) A description of the current developmental |
education models offered by the institution. If the |
institution does not currently offer developmental |
education coursework, it must provide details regarding |
its decision not to offer developmental education |
coursework and the pathways that are available to students |
deemed to be insufficiently prepared for introductory |
college-level English language or mathematics coursework. |
(2) A description of the developmental education |
models that will be implemented and scaled and the basis of |
the evidence and associated data that the institution |
considered in making the decision to scale each model. |
(3) Baseline data and benchmarks for progress, |
including, but not limited to, (i) enrollment in |
credit-bearing English language or mathematics courses, |
(ii) rates of successful completion of introductory |
|
college-level English language or mathematics courses, and |
(iii) college-credit accumulation. |
(4) Detailed plans for scaling reforms and improving |
outcomes for all students placed in traditional |
developmental education models or models with comparable |
introductory college-level course completion rates. The |
plan shall provide details about the expected improvements |
in educational outcomes for Black students as result of the |
proposed reforms. |
(b) On or before January 1, 2023 and every 2 years |
thereafter, the Board of Higher Education and Illinois |
Community College Board shall collect data and report to the |
General Assembly and the public the status of developmental |
education reforms at institutions. The report must include data |
on the progress of the developmental education reforms, |
including, but not limited to, (i) enrollment in credit-bearing |
English language or mathematics courses, (ii) rates of |
successful completion of introductory college-level English |
language or mathematics courses, and (iii) college-credit |
accumulation. The data should be disaggregated by gender, race |
and ethnicity, federal Pell Grant status, and other variables |
of interest to the Board of Higher Education and the Illinois |
Community College Board. |
(c) On or before January 1, 2024 and every 2 years |
thereafter, the Board of Higher Education and Illinois |
Community College Board, in consultation with institutions of |
|
higher education and other stakeholders, shall consider |
additional data reporting requirements to facilitate the |
rigorous and continuous evaluation of each institution's |
implementation plan and its impact on improving outcomes for |
students in developmental education, particularly for Black |
students.
|
Section 100-90. Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act |
of 1974. Nothing in this Act supersedes the federal Family |
Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 or rules adopted |
pursuant to the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy |
Act of 1974. |
Article 115. |
Section 115-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 21B-50 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-50) |
Sec. 21B-50. Alternative Educator Licensure Program. |
(a) There is established an alternative educator licensure |
program, to be known as the Alternative Educator Licensure |
Program for Teachers. |
(b) The Alternative Educator Licensure Program for |
Teachers may be offered by a recognized institution approved to |
offer educator preparation programs by the State Board of |
|
Education, in consultation with the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board. |
The program shall be comprised of 4 phases: |
(1) A course of study that at a minimum includes |
instructional planning; instructional strategies, |
including special education, reading, and English language |
learning; classroom management; and the assessment of |
students and use of data to drive instruction. |
(2) A year of residency, which is a candidate's |
assignment to a full-time teaching position or as a |
co-teacher for one full school year. An individual must |
hold an Educator License with Stipulations with an |
alternative provisional educator endorsement in order to |
enter the residency and must complete additional program |
requirements that address required State and national |
standards, pass the State Board's teacher performance |
assessment no later than the end of the first semester of |
the second year of residency, as required under phase (3) |
of this subsection (b), and be recommended by the principal |
or qualified equivalent of a principal, as required under |
subsection (d) of this Section, and the program coordinator |
to continue with the second year of the residency. |
(3) A second year of residency, which shall include the |
candidate's assignment to a full-time teaching position |
for one school year. The candidate must be assigned an |
experienced teacher to act as a mentor and coach the |
|
candidate through the second year of residency. |
(4) A comprehensive assessment of the candidate's |
teaching effectiveness, as evaluated by the principal or |
qualified equivalent of a principal, as required under |
subsection (d) of this Section, and the program |
coordinator, at the end of the second year of residency. If |
there is disagreement between the 2 evaluators about the |
candidate's teaching effectiveness, the candidate may |
complete one additional year of residency teaching under a |
professional development plan developed by the principal |
or qualified equivalent and the preparation program. At the |
completion of the third year, a candidate must have |
positive evaluations and a recommendation for full |
licensure from both the principal or qualified equivalent |
and the program coordinator or no Professional Educator |
License shall be issued. |
Successful completion of the program shall be deemed to |
satisfy any other practice or student teaching and content |
matter requirements established by law. |
(c) An alternative provisional educator endorsement on an |
Educator License with Stipulations is valid for 2 years of |
teaching in the public schools, including without limitation a |
preschool educational program under Section 2-3.71 of this Code |
or charter school, or in a State-recognized nonpublic school in |
which the chief administrator is required to have the licensure |
necessary to be a principal in a public school in this State |
|
and in which a majority of the teachers are required to have |
the licensure necessary to be instructors in a public school in |
this State, but may be renewed for a third year if needed to |
complete the Alternative Educator Licensure Program for |
Teachers. The endorsement shall be issued only once to an |
individual who meets all of the following requirements: |
(1) Has graduated from a regionally accredited college |
or university with a bachelor's degree or higher. |
(2) (Blank). Has a cumulative grade point average of |
3.0 or greater on a 4.0 scale or its equivalent on another |
scale. |
(3) Has completed a major in the content area if |
seeking a middle or secondary level endorsement or, if |
seeking an early childhood, elementary, or special |
education endorsement, has completed a major in the content |
area of reading, English/language arts, mathematics, or |
one of the sciences. If the individual does not have a |
major in a content area for any level of teaching, he or |
she must submit transcripts to the State Board of Education |
to be reviewed for equivalency. |
(4) Has successfully completed phase (1) of subsection |
(b) of this Section. |
(5) Has passed a content area test required for the |
specific endorsement for admission into the program, as |
required under Section 21B-30 of this Code. |
A candidate possessing the alternative provisional |
|
educator endorsement may receive a salary, benefits, and any |
other terms of employment offered to teachers in the school who |
are members of an exclusive bargaining representative, if any, |
but a school is not required to provide these benefits during |
the years of residency if the candidate is serving only as a |
co-teacher. If the candidate is serving as the teacher of |
record, the candidate must receive a salary, benefits, and any |
other terms of employment. Residency experiences must not be |
counted towards tenure. |
(d) The recognized institution offering the Alternative |
Educator Licensure Program for Teachers must partner with a |
school district, including without limitation a preschool |
educational program under Section 2-3.71 of this Code or |
charter school, or a State-recognized, nonpublic school in this |
State in which the chief administrator is required to have the |
licensure necessary to be a principal in a public school in |
this State and in which a majority of the teachers are required |
to have the licensure necessary to be instructors in a public |
school in this State. A recognized institution that partners |
with a public school district administering a preschool |
educational program under Section 2-3.71 of this Code must |
require a principal to recommend or evaluate candidates in the |
program. A recognized institution that partners with an |
eligible entity administering a preschool educational program |
under Section 2-3.71 of this Code and that is not a public |
school district must require a principal or qualified |
|
equivalent of a principal to recommend or evaluate candidates |
in the program. The program presented for approval by the State |
Board of Education must demonstrate the supports that are to be |
provided to assist the provisional teacher during the 2-year |
residency period. These supports must provide additional |
contact hours with mentors during the first year of residency. |
(e) Upon completion of the 4 phases outlined in subsection |
(b) of this Section and all assessments required under Section |
21B-30 of this Code, an individual shall receive a Professional |
Educator License. |
(f) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may adopt such |
rules as may be necessary to establish and implement the |
Alternative Educator Licensure Program for Teachers.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-596, eff. 7-1-18; 100-822, eff. 1-1-19; |
101-220, eff. 8-7-19; 101-570, eff. 8-23-19; 101-643, eff. |
6-18-20.) |
Article 120. |
Section 120-5. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act |
is amended by changing Section 50 as follows: |
(110 ILCS 947/50)
|
Sec. 50. Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship |
program.
|
|
(a) As used in this Section:
|
"Eligible applicant" means a minority student who has |
graduated
from high school or has received a high school |
equivalency certificate
and has
maintained a cumulative |
grade point average of
no
less than 2.5 on a 4.0 scale, and |
who by reason thereof is entitled to
apply for scholarships |
to be awarded under this Section.
|
"Minority student" means a student who is any of the |
following: |
(1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person |
having origins in any of the original peoples of North |
and South America, including Central America, and who |
maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment). |
(2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the |
original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or |
the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited |
to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, |
Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and |
Vietnam). |
(3) Black or African American (a person having |
origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa). |
Terms such as "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in |
addition to "Black or African American". |
(4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican, |
Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other |
Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race). |
|
(5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a |
person having origins in any of the original peoples of |
Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
|
"Qualified bilingual minority applicant" means a |
qualified student who demonstrates proficiency in a |
language other than English by (i) receiving a State Seal |
of Biliteracy from the State Board of Education or (ii) |
receiving a passing score on an educator licensure target |
language proficiency test. |
"Qualified student" means a person (i) who is a |
resident of this State
and a citizen or permanent resident |
of the United States; (ii) who is a
minority student, as |
defined in this Section; (iii) who, as an eligible
|
applicant, has made a timely application for a minority |
teaching
scholarship under this Section; (iv) who is |
enrolled on at least a
half-time basis at a
qualified |
Illinois institution of
higher learning; (v) who is |
enrolled in a course of study leading to
teacher licensure, |
including alternative teacher licensure, or, if the |
student is already licensed to teach, in a course of study |
leading to an additional teaching endorsement or a master's |
degree in an academic field in which he or she is teaching |
or plans to teach or who has received one or more College |
and Career Pathway Endorsements pursuant to Section 80 of |
the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act and commits |
to enrolling in a course of study leading to teacher |
|
licensure, including alternative teacher licensure ; (vi)
|
who maintains a grade point average of no
less than 2.5 on |
a 4.0 scale;
and (vii) who continues to advance |
satisfactorily toward the attainment
of a degree.
|
(b) In order to encourage academically talented Illinois |
minority
students to pursue teaching careers at the preschool |
or elementary or
secondary
school
level and to address and |
alleviate the teacher shortage crisis in this State described |
under the provisions of the Transitions in Education Act , each |
qualified student shall be awarded a minority teacher
|
scholarship to any qualified Illinois institution of higher |
learning.
However, preference may be given to qualified |
applicants enrolled at or above
the
junior level.
|
(c) Each minority teacher scholarship awarded under this |
Section shall
be in an amount sufficient to pay the tuition and |
fees and room and board
costs of the qualified Illinois |
institution of higher learning at which the
recipient is |
enrolled, up to an annual maximum of $5,000;
except that
in
the |
case of a recipient who does not reside on-campus at the |
institution at
which he or she is enrolled, the amount of the |
scholarship shall be
sufficient to pay tuition and fee expenses |
and a commuter allowance, up to
an annual maximum of $5,000.
|
However, if at least $2,850,000 is appropriated in a given |
fiscal year for the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship |
program, then, in each fiscal year thereafter, each scholarship |
awarded under this Section shall
be in an amount sufficient to |
|
pay the tuition and fees and room and board
costs of the |
qualified Illinois institution of higher learning at which the
|
recipient is enrolled, up to an annual maximum of $7,500;
|
except that
in
the case of a recipient who does not reside |
on-campus at the institution at
which he or she is enrolled, |
the amount of the scholarship shall be
sufficient to pay |
tuition and fee expenses and a commuter allowance, up to
an |
annual maximum of $7,500.
|
(d) The total amount of minority teacher scholarship |
assistance awarded by
the Commission under this Section to an |
individual in any given fiscal
year, when added to other |
financial assistance awarded to that individual
for that year, |
shall not exceed the cost of attendance at the institution
at |
which the student is enrolled. If the amount of minority |
teacher
scholarship to be awarded to a qualified student as |
provided in
subsection (c) of this Section exceeds the cost of |
attendance at the
institution at which the student is enrolled, |
the minority teacher
scholarship shall be reduced by an amount |
equal to the amount by which the
combined financial assistance |
available to the student exceeds the cost
of attendance.
|
(e) The maximum number of academic terms for which a |
qualified
student
can receive minority teacher scholarship |
assistance shall be 8 semesters or
12 quarters.
|
(f) In any academic year for which an eligible applicant |
under this
Section accepts financial assistance through the |
Paul Douglas Teacher
Scholarship Program, as authorized by |
|
Section 551 et seq. of the Higher
Education Act of 1965, the |
applicant shall not be eligible for scholarship
assistance |
awarded under this Section.
|
(g) All applications for minority teacher scholarships to |
be awarded
under this Section shall be made to the Commission |
on forms which the
Commission shall provide for eligible |
applicants. The form of applications
and the information |
required to be set forth therein shall be determined by
the |
Commission, and the Commission shall require eligible |
applicants to
submit with their applications such supporting |
documents or recommendations
as the Commission deems |
necessary.
|
(h) Subject to a separate appropriation for such purposes, |
payment of
any minority teacher scholarship awarded under this |
Section shall be
determined by the Commission. All scholarship |
funds distributed in
accordance with this subsection shall be |
paid to the institution and used
only for payment of the |
tuition and fee and room and board expenses
incurred by the |
student in connection with his or her attendance at a qualified |
Illinois institution of higher
learning. Any minority teacher |
scholarship awarded under this Section
shall be applicable to 2 |
semesters or 3 quarters of enrollment. If a
qualified student |
withdraws from enrollment prior to completion of the
first |
semester or quarter for which the minority teacher scholarship |
is
applicable, the school shall refund to the Commission the |
full amount of the
minority teacher scholarship.
|
|
(i) The Commission shall administer the minority teacher |
scholarship aid
program established by this Section and shall |
make all necessary and proper
rules not inconsistent with this |
Section for its effective implementation.
|
(j) When an appropriation to the Commission for a given |
fiscal year is
insufficient to provide scholarships to all |
qualified students, the
Commission shall allocate the |
appropriation in accordance with this
subsection. If funds are |
insufficient to provide all qualified students
with a |
scholarship as authorized by this Section, the Commission shall
|
allocate the available scholarship funds for that fiscal year |
to qualified students who submit a complete application form on |
or before a date specified by the Commission based on the |
following order of priority: |
(1) To students who received a scholarship under this |
Section in the prior academic year and who remain eligible |
for a minority teacher scholarship under this Section. |
(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (k), to |
students who demonstrate financial need, as determined by |
the Commission. on the basis
of the date the Commission |
receives a complete application form.
|
(k) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of the provisions of |
subsection (j) or any other
provision of this Section , at least |
35% 30% of the funds appropriated for
scholarships awarded |
under this Section in each fiscal year shall be reserved
for |
qualified male minority applicants , with priority being given |
|
to qualified Black male applicants beginning with fiscal year |
2023 .
If the Commission does not receive enough applications |
from qualified male
minorities on or before
January 1 of each |
fiscal year to award 35% 30% of the funds appropriated for |
these
scholarships to qualified
male minority applicants, then |
the Commission may award a portion of the
reserved funds to |
qualified
female minority applicants in accordance with |
subsection (j) .
|
Beginning with fiscal year 2023, if at least $2,850,000 but |
less than $4,200,000 is appropriated in a given fiscal year for |
scholarships awarded under this Section, then at least 10% of |
the funds appropriated shall be reserved for qualified |
bilingual minority applicants, with priority being given to |
qualified bilingual minority applicants who are enrolled in an |
educator preparation program with a concentration in |
bilingual, bicultural education. Beginning with fiscal year |
2023, if at least $4,200,000 is appropriated in a given fiscal |
year for the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship program, |
then at least 30% of the funds appropriated shall be reserved |
for qualified bilingual minority applicants, with priority |
being given to qualified bilingual minority applicants who are |
enrolled in an educator preparation program with a |
concentration in bilingual, bicultural education. Beginning |
with fiscal year 2023, if at least $2,850,000 is appropriated |
in a given fiscal year for scholarships awarded under this |
Section but the Commission does not receive enough applications |
|
from qualified bilingual minority applicants on or before |
January 1 of that fiscal year to award at least 10% of the |
funds appropriated to qualified bilingual minority applicants, |
then the Commission may, in its discretion, award a portion of |
the reserved funds to other qualified students in accordance |
with subsection (j).
|
(l) Prior to receiving scholarship assistance for any |
academic year,
each recipient of a minority teacher scholarship |
awarded under this Section
shall be required by the Commission |
to sign an agreement under which the
recipient pledges that, |
within the one-year period following the
termination
of the |
program for which the recipient was awarded a minority
teacher |
scholarship, the recipient (i) shall begin teaching for a
|
period of not less
than one year for each year of scholarship |
assistance he or she was awarded
under this Section; and (ii) |
shall fulfill this teaching obligation at a
nonprofit Illinois |
public, private, or parochial preschool, elementary school,
or |
secondary school at which no less than 30% of the enrolled |
students are
minority students in the year during which the |
recipient begins teaching at the
school or may instead, if the |
recipient received a scholarship as a qualified bilingual |
minority applicant, fulfill this teaching obligation in a |
program in transitional bilingual education pursuant to |
Article 14C of the School Code or in a school in which 20 or |
more English learner students in the same language |
classification are enrolled ; and (iii) shall, upon request by |
|
the Commission, provide the Commission
with evidence that he or |
she is fulfilling or has fulfilled the terms of the
teaching |
agreement provided for in this subsection.
|
(m) If a recipient of a minority teacher scholarship |
awarded under this
Section fails to fulfill the teaching |
obligation set forth in subsection
(l) of this Section, the |
Commission shall require the recipient to repay
the amount of |
the scholarships received, prorated according to the fraction
|
of the teaching obligation not completed, at a rate of interest |
equal to
5%, and, if applicable, reasonable collection fees.
|
The Commission is authorized to establish rules relating to its |
collection
activities for repayment of scholarships under this |
Section. All repayments
collected under this Section shall be |
forwarded to the State Comptroller for
deposit into the State's |
General Revenue Fund.
|
(n) A recipient of minority teacher scholarship shall not |
be considered
in violation of the agreement entered into |
pursuant to subsection (l) if
the recipient (i) enrolls on a |
full time basis as a graduate student in a
course of study |
related to the field of teaching at a qualified Illinois
|
institution of higher learning; (ii) is serving, not in excess |
of 3 years,
as a member of the armed services of the United |
States; (iii) is
a person with a temporary total disability for |
a period of time not to exceed 3 years as
established by sworn |
affidavit of a qualified physician; (iv) is seeking
and unable |
to find full time employment as a teacher at an Illinois |
|
public,
private, or parochial preschool or elementary or |
secondary school that
satisfies the
criteria set forth in |
subsection (l) of this Section and is able to provide
evidence |
of that fact; (v) becomes a person with a permanent total |
disability as
established by sworn affidavit of a qualified |
physician; (vi) is taking additional courses, on at least a |
half-time basis, needed to obtain licensure as a teacher in |
Illinois; or (vii) is fulfilling teaching requirements |
associated with other programs administered by the Commission |
and cannot concurrently fulfill them under this Section in a |
period of time equal to the length of the teaching obligation.
|
(o) Scholarship recipients under this Section who withdraw |
from
a program of teacher education but remain enrolled in |
school
to continue their postsecondary studies in another |
academic discipline shall
not be required to commence repayment |
of their Minority Teachers of Illinois
scholarship so long as |
they remain enrolled in school on a full-time basis or
if they |
can document for the Commission special circumstances that |
warrant
extension of repayment.
|
(p) If the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship |
program does not expend at least 90% of the amount appropriated |
for the program in a given fiscal year for 3 consecutive fiscal |
years and the Commission does not receive enough applications |
from the groups identified in subsection (k) on or before |
January 1 in each of those fiscal years to meet the percentage |
reserved for those groups under subsection (k), then up to 3% |
|
of amount appropriated for the program for each of next 3 |
fiscal years shall be allocated to increasing awareness of the |
program and for the recruitment of Black male applicants. The |
Commission shall make a recommendation to the General Assembly |
by January 1 of the year immediately following the end of that |
third fiscal year regarding whether the amount allocated to |
increasing awareness and recruitment should continue. |
(q) Each qualified Illinois institution of higher learning |
that receives funds from the Minority Teachers of Illinois |
scholarship program shall host an annual information session at |
the institution about the program for teacher candidates of |
color in accordance with rules adopted by the Commission. |
Additionally, the institution shall ensure that each |
scholarship recipient enrolled at the institution meets with an |
academic advisor at least once per academic year to facilitate |
on-time completion of the recipient's educator preparation |
program. |
(r) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
of the 101st General Assembly will first take effect with |
awards made for the 2022-2023 academic year. |
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-235, eff. 6-1-18 .)
|
Article 125. |
Section 125-5. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act |
is amended by changing Section 65.100 as follows: |
|
(110 ILCS 947/65.100) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on October 1, 2024) |
Sec. 65.100. AIM HIGH Grant Pilot Program. |
(a) The General Assembly makes all of the following |
findings: |
(1) Both access and affordability are important |
aspects of the Illinois Public Agenda for College and |
Career Success report. |
(2) This State is in the top quartile with respect to |
the percentage of family income needed to pay for college. |
(3) Research suggests that as loan amounts increase, |
rather than an increase in grant amounts, the probability |
of college attendance decreases. |
(4) There is further research indicating that |
socioeconomic status may affect the willingness of |
students to use loans to attend college. |
(5) Strategic use of tuition discounting can decrease |
the amount of loans that students must use to pay for |
tuition. |
(6) A modest, individually tailored tuition discount |
can make the difference in a student choosing to attend |
college and enhance college access for low-income and |
middle-income families. |
(7) Even if the federally calculated financial need for |
college attendance is met, the federally determined |
|
Expected Family Contribution can still be a daunting |
amount. |
(8) This State is the second largest exporter of |
students in the country. |
(9) When talented Illinois students attend |
universities in this State, the State and those |
universities benefit. |
(10) State universities in other states have adopted |
pricing and incentives that allow many Illinois residents |
to pay less to attend an out-of-state university than to |
remain in this State for college. |
(11) Supporting Illinois student attendance at |
Illinois public universities can assist in State efforts to |
maintain and educate a highly trained workforce. |
(12) Modest tuition discounts that are individually |
targeted and tailored can result in enhanced revenue for |
public universities. |
(13) By increasing a public university's capacity to |
strategically use tuition discounting, the public |
university will be capable of creating enhanced tuition |
revenue by increasing enrollment yields. |
(b) In this Section: |
"Eligible applicant" means a student from any high school |
in this State, whether or not recognized by the State Board of |
Education, who is engaged in a program of study that in due |
course will be completed by the end of the school year and who |
|
meets all of the qualifications and requirements under this |
Section. |
"Tuition and other necessary fees" includes the customary |
charge for instruction and use of facilities in general and the |
additional fixed fees charged for specified purposes that are |
required generally of non-grant recipients for each academic |
period for which the grant applicant actually enrolls, but does |
not include fees payable only once or breakage fees and other |
contingent deposits that are refundable in whole or in part. |
The Commission may adopt, by rule not inconsistent with this |
Section, detailed provisions concerning the computation of |
tuition and other necessary fees. |
(c) Beginning with the 2019-2020 academic year, each public |
university may establish a merit-based scholarship pilot |
program known as the AIM HIGH Grant Pilot Program. Each year, |
the Commission shall receive and consider applications from |
public universities under this Section. Subject to |
appropriation and any tuition waiver limitation established by |
the Board of Higher Education, a public university campus may |
award a grant to a student under this Section if it finds that |
the applicant meets all of the following criteria: |
(1) He or she is a resident of this State and a citizen |
or eligible noncitizen of the United States. |
(2) He or she files a Free Application for Federal |
Student Aid and demonstrates financial need with a |
household income no greater than 6 times the poverty |
|
guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register by |
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the |
authority of 42 U.S.C. 9902(2). The household income of the |
applicant at the time of initial application shall be |
deemed to be the household income of the applicant for the |
duration of the pilot program. |
(3) He or she meets the minimum cumulative grade point |
average or ACT or SAT college admissions test score, as |
determined by the public university campus. |
(4) He or she is enrolled in a public university as an |
undergraduate student on a full-time basis. |
(5) He or she has not yet received a baccalaureate |
degree or the equivalent of 135 semester credit hours. |
(6) He or she is not incarcerated. |
(7) He or she is not in default on any student loan or |
does not owe a refund or repayment on any State or federal |
grant or scholarship. |
(8) Any other reasonable criteria, as determined by the |
public university campus. |
(d) Each public university campus shall determine grant |
renewal criteria consistent with the requirements under this |
Section. |
(e) Each participating public university campus shall post |
on its Internet website criteria and eligibility requirements |
for receiving awards that use funds under this Section that |
include a range in the sizes of these individual awards. The |
|
criteria and amounts must also be reported to the Commission |
and the Board of Higher Education, who shall post the |
information on their respective Internet websites. |
(f) After enactment of an appropriation for this Program, |
the Commission shall determine an allocation of funds to each |
public university in an amount proportionate to the number of |
undergraduate students who are residents of this State and |
citizens or eligible noncitizens of the United States and who |
were enrolled at each public university campus in the previous |
academic year. All applications must be made to the Commission |
on or before a date determined by the Commission and on forms |
that the Commission shall provide to each public university |
campus. The form of the application and the information |
required shall be determined by the Commission and shall |
include, without limitation, the total public university |
campus funds used to match funds received from the Commission |
in the previous academic year under this Section, if any, the |
total enrollment of undergraduate students who are residents of |
this State from the previous academic year, and any supporting |
documents as the Commission deems necessary. Each public |
university campus shall match the amount of funds received by |
the Commission with financial aid for eligible students. |
A public university in which an average of at least 49% of |
the students seeking a bachelor's degree or certificate |
received a Pell Grant over the prior 3 academic years, as |
reported to the Commission, shall match 20% of the amount of |
|
funds awarded in a given academic year with non-loan financial |
aid for eligible students. A public university in which an |
average of less than 49% of the students seeking a bachelor's |
degree or certificate received a Pell Grant over the prior 3 |
academic years, as reported to the Commission, shall match 60% |
of the amount of funds awarded in a given academic year with |
non-loan financial aid for eligible students. |
A public university campus is not required to claim its |
entire allocation. The Commission shall make available to all |
public universities, on a date determined by the Commission, |
any unclaimed funds and the funds must be made available to |
those public university campuses in the proportion determined |
under this subsection (f), excluding from the calculation those |
public university campuses not claiming their full |
allocations. |
Each public university campus may determine the award |
amounts for eligible students on an individual or broad basis, |
but, subject to renewal eligibility, each renewed award may not |
be less than the amount awarded to the eligible student in his |
or her first year attending the public university campus. |
Notwithstanding this limitation, a renewal grant may be reduced |
due to changes in the student's cost of attendance, including, |
but not limited to, if a student reduces the number of credit |
hours in which he or she is enrolled, but remains a full-time |
student, or switches to a course of study with a lower tuition |
rate. |
|
An eligible applicant awarded grant assistance under this |
Section is eligible to receive other financial aid. Total grant |
aid to the student from all sources may not exceed the total |
cost of attendance at the public university campus. |
(g) All money allocated to a public university campus under |
this Section may be used only for financial aid purposes for |
students attending the public university campus during the |
academic year, not including summer terms. Notwithstanding any |
other provision of law to the contrary, any funds received by a |
public university campus under this Section that are not |
granted to students in the academic year for which the funds |
are received may be retained by the public university campus |
for expenditure on students participating in the Program or |
students eligible to participate in the Program. |
(h) Each public university campus that establishes a |
Program under this Section must annually report to the |
Commission, on or before a date determined by the Commission, |
the number of undergraduate students enrolled at that campus |
who are residents of this State. |
(i) Each public university campus must report to the |
Commission the total non-loan financial aid amount given by the |
public university campus to undergraduate students in the |
2017-2018 academic year, not including the summer term. To be |
eligible to receive funds under the Program, a public |
university campus may not decrease the total amount of non-loan |
financial aid it gives to undergraduate students, not including |
|
any funds received from the Commission under this Section or |
any funds used to match grant awards under this Section, to an |
amount lower than the reported amount for the 2017-2018 |
academic year, not including the summer term. |
(j) On or before a date determined by the Commission, each |
public university campus that participates in the Program under |
this Section shall annually submit a report to the Commission |
with all of the following information: |
(1) The Program's impact on tuition revenue and |
enrollment goals and increase in access and affordability |
at the public university campus. |
(2) Total funds received by the public university |
campus under the Program. |
(3) Total non-loan financial aid awarded to |
undergraduate students attending the public university |
campus. |
(4) Total amount of funds matched by the public |
university campus. |
(5) Total amount of claimed and unexpended funds |
retained by the public university campus. |
(6) The percentage of total financial aid distributed |
under the Program by the public university campus. |
(7) The total number of students receiving grants from |
the public university campus under the Program and those |
students' grade level, race, gender, income level, family |
size, Monetary Award Program eligibility, Pell Grant |
|
eligibility, and zip code of residence and the amount of |
each grant award. This information shall include unit |
record data on those students regarding variables |
associated with the parameters of the public university's |
Program, including, but not limited to, a student's ACT or |
SAT college admissions test score, high school or |
university cumulative grade point average, or program of |
study. |
On or before October 1, 2020 and annually on or before |
October 1 thereafter, the Commission shall submit a report with |
the findings under this subsection (j) and any other |
information regarding the AIM HIGH Grant Pilot Program to (i) |
the Governor, (ii) the Speaker of the House of Representatives, |
(iii) the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, (iv) |
the President of the Senate, and (v) the Minority Leader of the |
Senate. The reports to the General Assembly shall be filed with |
the Clerk of the House of Representatives and the Secretary of |
the Senate in electronic form only, in the manner that the |
Clerk and the Secretary shall direct. The Commission's report |
may not disaggregate data to a level that may disclose |
personally identifying information of individual students. |
The sharing and reporting of student data under this |
subsection (j) must be in accordance with the requirements |
under the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of |
1974 and the Illinois School Student Records Act. All parties |
must preserve the confidentiality of the information as |
|
required by law. The names of the grant recipients under this |
Section are not subject to disclosure under the Freedom of |
Information Act. |
Public university campuses that fail to submit a report |
under this subsection (j) or that fail to adhere to any other |
requirements under this Section may not be eligible for |
distribution of funds under the Program for the next academic |
year, but may be eligible for distribution of funds for each |
academic year thereafter. |
(k) The Commission shall adopt rules to implement this |
Section. |
(l) This Section is repealed on October 1, 2024.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-1015, eff. 8-21-18; |
100-1183, eff. 4-4-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-613, eff. |
6-1-20; 101-643, eff. 6-18-20.) |
Article 130. |
Section 130-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as |
the Transitions in Education Act. References in this Article to |
"this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 130-5. Findings; policies. |
(a) The General Assembly finds the following: |
(1) Teachers are the single most important in-school |
factor in supporting student outcomes and success; yet, |
|
Illinois is suffering from a profound teacher shortage |
across the State. |
(2) To reverse this shortage, Illinois needs to develop |
and invest in a robust and diverse educator pipeline, |
addressing any barriers or gaps that limit high quality |
candidates, particularly candidates of color, from |
becoming teachers. |
(3) Illinois loses many high quality, diverse educator |
candidates in postsecondary programs due to confusion or |
lack of course transfer credits and course articulation |
from Illinois's 2-year to 4-year institutions. |
(4) Lack of alignment and transferability of course |
credits may often force candidates to spend additional time |
and money to earn a degree or lead to an inability to |
complete a degree. |
(5) In 1993, the Board of Higher Education, the |
Illinois Community College Board, and the Transfer |
Coordinators of Illinois Colleges and Universities brought |
together faculty from public and independent, associate, |
and baccalaureate degree-granting institutions across the |
State to develop the Illinois Articulation Initiative |
(IAI). |
(6) The goal of IAI is to facilitate the transfer of |
courses from one participating college or university to |
another in order to complete a baccalaureate degree. |
(7) The Student Transfer Achievement Reform (STAR) |
|
Act, as mandated by subsection (b) of Section 25 of the |
Act, is designed to facilitate transfer among Illinois |
public institutions, particularly for students with a |
completed Associate of Arts or an Associate of Science |
degree. |
(8) While Illinois is a leading state for college |
completion rates for adult learners and transfer students |
from community colleges, it needs to increase the number of |
high-quality postsecondary teaching credentials to meet |
the demands of our schools and education workforce. |
(9) With the rising costs of higher education for |
Illinois students and families, the State needs to ensure |
to the maximize extent possible that community college |
courses will transfer with full credit for the student and |
be accepted at an Illinois public or private institution as |
they pursue a baccalaureate degree in education. |
(10) Illinois can do this by improving transitions all |
along the education pipeline; for postsecondary education, |
this means strengthening articulation through stable |
funding and the expansion of transfer tools, such as |
Transferology and the IAI through development of an |
objective measure of transfer and acceptance of credits in |
education degrees. |
(11) The IAI Education Pathway can be modeled off of |
existing IAI major pathways like Early Childhood Education |
and Criminal Justice.
|
|
(b) The General Assembly encourages the Board of Higher |
Education, the State Board of Education, and the Illinois |
Community College Board, as part of the IAI, to do the |
following: |
(1) The Board of Higher Education, the State Board of |
Education, and the Illinois Community College Board are |
encouraged to jointly establish a task force for a Major |
Panel in Education and identify respective recommended |
major courses that would be accepted as credit toward the |
education major at the receiving institutions. |
(2) As part of the report on the status of the Illinois |
Articulation Initiative pursuant to Section 25 of the |
Illinois Articulation Initiative Act, the Board of Higher |
Education and the Illinois Community College Board are |
encouraged to include in the annual report to the General |
Assembly, the Governor, and the Illinois P-20 Council the |
progress made on the task force on the Education Major |
Panel. |
(3) The Board of Higher Education, the State Board of |
Education, and the Illinois Community College Board are |
encouraged to further promote and encourage the enrollment |
of minority students into educator preparation programs, |
such as the annual information session about the Minority |
Teachers of Illinois scholarship program pursuant to |
subsection (q) of Section 50 of the Higher Education |
Student Assistance Act. |
|
Article 135. |
Section 135-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Sections 2-3.25 and 27-20.4 and by adding Section 2-3.187 as |
follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.25) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25)
|
Sec. 2-3.25. Standards for schools.
|
(a) To determine for all types of
schools conducted under |
this Act efficient and adequate standards for the
physical |
plant, heating, lighting, ventilation, sanitation, safety,
|
equipment and supplies, instruction and teaching, curriculum, |
library,
operation, maintenance, administration and |
supervision, and to issue,
refuse to issue or revoke |
certificates of recognition for schools or school
districts |
pursuant to standards established hereunder; to determine and
|
establish efficient and adequate standards for approval of |
credit for
courses given and conducted by schools outside of |
the regular school term.
|
(a-5) On or before July 1, 2021, the State Board of |
Education must adopt revised social science learning standards |
that are inclusive and reflective of all individuals in this |
country. |
(b) Whenever it appears that a secondary or unit school |
district may
be unable to offer courses enabling students in |
|
grades 9 through 12 to meet
the minimum preparation and |
admission requirements for public colleges and
universities |
adopted by the Board of Higher Education, the State Board of
|
Education shall assist the district in reviewing and analyzing |
its existing
curriculum with particular reference to the |
educational needs of all pupils
of the district and the |
sufficiency of existing and future revenues and
payments |
available to the district for development of a curriculum which
|
will provide maximum educational opportunity to pupils of the |
district.
The review and analysis may consider achievement of |
this goal not only
through implementation of traditional |
classroom methods but also through
development of and |
participation in joint educational programs with other
school |
districts or institutions of higher education, or alternative
|
programs employing modern technological methods including but |
not limited
to the use of television, telephones, computers, |
radio and other electronic
devices.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-559.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.187 new) |
Sec. 2-3.187. Inclusive American History Commission. |
(a) The Inclusive American History Commission is created to |
provide assistance to the State Board of Education in revising |
its social science learning standards under subsection (a-5) of |
Section 2-3.25. |
(b) The State Board of Education shall convene the |
|
Inclusive American History Commission to do all of the |
following: |
(1) Review available resources for use in school |
districts that reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of |
this State and country. The resources identified by the |
Commission may be posted on the State Board of Education's |
Internet website. |
(2) Provide guidance for each learning standard |
developed for educators on how to ensure that instruction |
and content are not biased to value specific cultures, time |
periods, and experiences over other cultures, time |
periods, and experiences. |
(3) Develop guidance, tools, and support for |
professional learning on how to locate and utilize |
resources for non-dominant cultural narratives and sources |
of historical information. |
(c) The Commission shall consist of all of the following |
members: |
(1) One Representative appointed by the Speaker of the |
House of Representatives. |
(2) One Representative appointed by the Minority |
Leader of the House of Representatives. |
(3) One Senator appointed by the President of the |
Senate. |
(4) One Senator appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate. |
|
(5) Two members who are history scholars appointed by |
the State Superintendent of Education. |
(6) Eight members who are teachers at schools in this |
State recommended by professional teachers' organizations |
and appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. |
(7) One representative of the State Board of Education |
appointed by the State Superintendent of Education who |
shall serve as chairperson. |
(8) One member who represents a statewide organization |
that represents south suburban school districts appointed |
by the State Superintendent of Education. |
(9) One member who represents a west suburban school |
district appointed by the State Superintendent of |
Education. |
(10) One member who represents a school district |
organized under Article 34 appointed by the State |
Superintendent of Education. |
(11) One member who represents a statewide |
organization that represents school librarians appointed |
by the State Superintendent of Education. |
(12) One member who represents a statewide |
organization that represents principals appointed by the |
State Superintendent of Education. |
(13) One member who represents a statewide |
organization that represents superintendents appointed by |
the State Superintendent of Education. |
|
(14) One member who represents a statewide |
organization that represents school boards appointed by |
the State Superintendent of Education. |
Members appointed to the Commission must reflect the |
racial, ethnic, and geographic diversity of this State. |
(d) Members of the Commission shall serve without |
compensation but may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses from |
funds appropriated to the State Board of Education for that |
purpose, including travel, subject to the rules of the |
appropriate travel control board. |
(e) The State Board of Education shall provide |
administrative and other support to the Commission. |
(f) The Commission must submit a report about its work to |
the State Board of Education, the Governor, and the General |
Assembly on or before December 31, 2021. The Commission is |
dissolved upon the submission of its report. |
(g) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023.
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-20.4) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-20.4)
|
Sec. 27-20.4. Black History study. Every public elementary |
school and
high school shall include in its curriculum a unit |
of instruction studying
the events of Black History, including |
the history of the pre-enslavement of Black people from 3,000 |
BCE to AD 1619, the African slave trade, slavery in America, |
the study of the reasons why Black people came to be enslaved, |
and the vestiges of slavery in this country , and the study of |
|
the American civil rights renaissance . These events shall |
include not only the
contributions made by individual |
African-Americans in government and in the
arts, humanities and |
sciences to the economic, cultural and political
development of |
the United States and Africa, but also the socio-economic
|
struggle which African-Americans experienced collectively in |
striving to
achieve fair and equal treatment under the laws of |
this nation. The
studying of this material shall constitute an |
affirmation by students of
their commitment to respect the |
dignity of all races and peoples and to
forever eschew every |
form of discrimination in their lives and careers.
|
The State Superintendent of Education may prepare and make |
available to
all school boards instructional materials, |
including those established by the Amistad Commission, which |
may be used as guidelines
for development of a unit of |
instruction under this Section; provided,
however, that each |
school board shall itself determine the minimum amount
of |
instruction time which shall qualify as a unit of instruction |
satisfying
the requirements of this Section.
|
A school may meet the requirements of this Section through |
an online program or course. |
(Source: P.A. 100-634, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
Article 145. |
Section 145-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as |
|
the Early Education Act. References in this Article to "this |
Act" means this Article. |
Section 145-5. Findings; policies.
|
(a) The General Assembly finds the following:
|
(1) Part C of the federal Individuals with Disabilities |
Education Act and the Early Intervention Services System |
Act provide that all eligible infants and toddlers and |
their families are entitled to receive a broad range of |
developmental, social, and emotional services designed to |
maximize their development, including speech and language, |
developmental, occupational, and physical therapies and |
social work services.
|
(2) The General Assembly finds that early intervention |
services as outlined in Part C of the federal Individuals |
with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) are cost-effective |
and effectively serve the developmental needs of eligible |
infants and toddlers and their families.
|
(3) Early intervention services to young children who |
have or are at risk for developmental delays have been |
shown to positively impact outcomes across developmental |
domains, including language and communication, cognitive |
development, and social and emotional development.
|
(4) Families benefit by being able to better meet their |
child's developmental needs from an early age and |
throughout their lives.
|
|
(5) Benefits to society include reducing the economic |
burden through a decreased need for special education.
|
(6) Data shows that early intervention services in |
Illinois are at least two and a half times less costly |
annually than special education services in preschool and |
elementary years.
|
(7) Nationwide, nearly 70% of children in early |
intervention programs exhibit growth greater than |
expected; this includes acquiring skills at a faster rate |
even after they leave the program.
|
(8) Nationwide, nearly half of children leave early |
intervention programs functioning at age level and do not |
need special education at kindergarten age.
|
(9) Early intervention services are underutilized in |
Illinois and nationally with only 4% of Illinois infants |
and toddlers currently receiving services, while the |
research shows that about 13% of Illinois children are |
eligible.
|
(10) In Illinois and nationally, only approximately 1% |
of infants are enrolled in early intervention,
which is far |
below the percentage of children who should be receiving |
these services; this is of concern because intervention at |
the earliest possible point improves children's outcomes, |
and children born with low or very low birth weights or |
otherwise leaving the NICU too often do not receive the |
needed connection to early intervention services, |
|
particularly those children on Medicaid.
|
(11) Data indicates that early intervention services |
in Illinois are underutilized in the medical diagnosis and |
environmental factors with substantial risk of delay |
categories; these are the 2 eligibility areas in which |
infants and toddlers are automatically eligible.
|
(12) Experts conclude that early intervention |
eligibility needs to be clearly understood and documented |
so that children and families who meet eligibility |
requirements can be appropriately referred, served, and |
supported.
|
(13) The Early Intervention Services System Act |
requires the State to provide a comprehensive, |
coordinated, interagency, and interdisciplinary early |
intervention services system for eligible infants and |
toddlers and their families by enhancing the capacity to |
provide quality early intervention services, expanding and |
improving existing services, and facilitating coordination |
of payments for early intervention
services from various |
public and private sources.
|
(14) Black and Latinx children in Illinois are more |
likely to be on a waiting list for services. This is due to |
a number of reasons, including the reluctance to provide |
services in certain neighborhoods due to the perception of |
safety issues and in cases in which families experience |
multiple challenges, such as child welfare involvement or |
|
families experiencing homelessness, which are all |
predictive factors of children that could benefit from |
early intervention services.
|
(15) Inequitable access to appropriate early |
intervention services is disproportionately more likely to |
be experienced by Black and Latinx families.
|
(b) The General Assembly encourages the Department of Human |
Services, in consultation with advocates and experts in the |
field, including the Interagency Council on Early |
Intervention, to take all of the following actions:
|
(1) to re-examine the definition of "at-risk" and also |
the diagnosed medical conditions that typically result in |
delay to ensure that they effectively increase eligibility |
and access to early intervention services;
|
(2) to charge the Early Intervention Training Program, |
in collaboration with experts and beneficiaries, to create |
and execute a plan for designing and disseminating |
affirmative outreach through multiple modalities to |
primary referral services as defined by statute, |
providers, and families;
|
(3) to include explanations and provide examples in the |
affirmative outreach plan about how the medical conditions |
resulting in high probability of developmental delay and |
at-risk of developmental delay categories do not require |
the child to have any present delay;
|
(4) to present to the General Assembly a report that |
|
includes the affirmative outreach plan and plans for |
disseminating that information, including data on the |
all-children-served eligibility category, services |
provided, and information on race and geographic area to |
the General Assembly no later than June 30, 2022;
|
(5) to develop a plan for the State to launch early |
intervention specialized teams that can address the |
complex needs that families face; the General Assembly |
urges recommendations for the plan to be developed by a |
public-private early intervention specialized teams work |
group and to include the participation of at least 2 Child |
Family Connection Providers in an early intervention |
specialized team pilot; this plan should build on work by |
the Illinois Interagency Council on Early Intervention and |
should specifically address modifications to billing and |
other policies to support new teaming structure, budget |
implications for pilot execution, corresponding |
professional development opportunities for early |
intervention providers, a prearranged mechanism to collect |
feedback from both families and providers, a mechanism for |
tracking outcomes, and ways to refine the approach for |
scale; the General Assembly urges this plan to be developed |
and launched by January 1, 2022; and
|
(6) to work in a public-private partnership to |
establish demonstration projects with at least 2 hospital |
neo-natal intensive care departments, in-patient and |
|
out-patient, with the goal of better coordination and |
timely connections to early intervention services; the |
General Assembly encourages this implementation to be |
underway no later than January 1, 2022.
|
Article 150. |
Section 150-20. The Illinois Workforce Investment Board |
Act is amended by changing Section 4.5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3975/4.5)
|
Sec. 4.5. Duties.
|
(a) The Board must perform all the functions of a state |
workforce
innovation
board under
the federal Workforce
|
Innovation and Opportunity Act, any amendments to that Act, and
|
any
other applicable federal statutes. The Board must also |
perform all other
functions that are
not inconsistent with the |
federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act or this Act
|
and that
are assumed by the Board under its bylaws or assigned |
to it by the Governor.
|
(b) The Board must cooperate with the General Assembly and |
make
recommendations
to the
Governor and the General Assembly |
concerning legislation necessary to improve
upon
statewide and |
local workforce development systems in order to increase
|
occupational skill
attainment, employment, retention, or |
earnings of participants and thereby
improve the
quality of the |
|
workforce, reduce welfare dependency, and enhance the
|
productivity and
competitiveness of the State. The Board must |
annually submit a report to the
General
Assembly on the |
progress of the State in achieving state performance measures
|
under the
federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act, |
including information on the levels
of performance achieved by |
the State with respect to the core indicators of
performance |
and the customer satisfaction indicator
under that Act. The |
report must include any other
items that
the Governor may be |
required to report to the Secretary of the United States
|
Department
of Labor.
|
(b-5) The Board shall implement a method for measuring the |
progress of the
State's workforce development system by using |
benchmarks specified in the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act.
|
The Board shall identify the most significant early
|
indicators for each benchmark, establish a mechanism to collect |
data and
track the benchmarks on an annual basis, and then use |
the results to set goals
for each benchmark, to inform |
planning, and to ensure the effective use of
State resources.
|
(c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require or
|
allow the
Board to assume or supersede the statutory authority |
granted
to, or impose
any duties or requirements on, the State
|
Board of Education, the Board of Higher Education, the Illinois |
Community
College Board, any State agencies created under the |
Civil Administrative Code
of Illinois, or any local education |
|
agencies.
|
(d) No actions taken by the Illinois Human Resource |
Investment Council
before the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 92nd General Assembly
and no rights, powers, duties, |
or obligations from those actions are impaired
solely by this |
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly. All actions taken
|
by the Illinois Human Resource Investment Council before the |
effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General |
Assembly are ratified and validated.
|
(e) Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
101st General Assembly, the Board shall conduct a feasibility |
study regarding the consolidation of all workforce development |
programs funded by the federal Workforce Innovation and |
Opportunity Act and conducted by the State of Illinois into one |
solitary agency to create greater access to job training for |
underserved populations. The Board shall utilize resources |
currently made available to them, including, but not limited |
to, partnering with institutions of higher education and those |
agencies currently charged with overseeing or administering |
workforce programs. The feasibility study shall: |
(1) assess the impact of consolidation on access for |
participants, including minority persons as defined in |
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, |
and Persons with Disabilities Act, persons with limited |
English proficiency, persons with disabilities, and youth, |
and how consolidation would increase equitable access to |
|
workforce resources; |
(2) assess the cost of consolidation and estimate any |
long-term savings anticipated from the action; |
(3) assess the impact of consolidation on agencies in |
which the programs currently reside, including, but not |
limited to, the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, the Department of Employment Security, the |
Department of Human Services, the Community College Board, |
the Board of Higher Education, the Department of |
Corrections, the Department on Aging, the Department of |
Veterans' Affairs, and the Department of Children and |
Family Services; |
(4) assess the impact of consolidation on State |
government employees and union contracts; |
(5) consider if the consolidation will provide avenues |
to maximize federal funding; |
(6) provide recommendations for the future structure |
of workforce development programs, including a proposed |
timeline for implementation; |
(7) provide direction for implementation by July 1, |
2022 with regard to recommendations that do not require |
legislative change; |
(8) if legislative change is necessary, include |
legislative language for consideration by the 102nd |
General Assembly. |
The Board shall submit its recommendations the Governor and |
|
the General Assembly by May 1, 2021. |
(Source: P.A. 100-477, eff. 9-8-17.)
|
Article 155. |
Section 155-5. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 21B-70 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-70) |
Sec. 21B-70. Illinois Teaching Excellence Program. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Diverse candidate" means a candidate who identifies with |
any of the ethnicities reported on the Illinois Report Card |
other than White. |
"National Board certified teacher candidate cohort |
facilitator" means a National Board certified teacher who |
collaborates to advance the goal of supporting all other |
candidate cohorts other than diverse candidate cohorts through |
the Illinois National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards Comprehensive Support System. |
"National Board certified teacher diverse candidate cohort |
facilitator" means a National Board certified teacher who |
collaborates to advance the goal of supporting racially and |
ethnically diverse candidates through the Illinois National |
Board for Professional Teaching Standards Comprehensive |
Support System. |
|
"National Board certified teacher diverse liaison" means |
an individual or entity that supports the National Board |
certified teacher leading a diverse candidate cohort. |
"National Board certified teacher liaison" means an |
individual or entity that supports the National Board certified |
teacher leading candidate cohorts other than diverse candidate |
cohorts. |
"National Board certified teacher rural or remote or |
distant candidate cohort facilitator" means a National Board |
certified teacher who collaborates to advance the goal of |
supporting rural or remote candidates through the Illinois |
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
Comprehensive Support System. |
"National Board certified teacher rural or remote or |
distant liaison" means an individual or entity that who |
supports the National Board certified teacher leading a rural |
or remote candidate cohort. |
"Qualified educator" means a teacher or school counselor |
currently employed in a school district who is in the process |
of obtaining certification through the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards or who has completed |
certification and holds a current Professional Educator |
License with a National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards designation or a retired teacher or school counselor |
who holds a Professional Educator License with a National Board |
for Professional Teaching Standards designation. |
|
"Rural or remote" or "rural or remote or distant" means |
local codes 32, 33, 41, 42, and 43 of the New Urban-Centric |
Locale Codes, as defined by the National Center for Education |
Statistics. |
"Tier 1" has the meaning given to that term under Section |
18-8.15. |
"Tier 2" has the meaning given to that term under Section |
18-8.15. |
(b) Any funds appropriated for the Illinois Teaching |
Excellence Program must be used to provide monetary assistance |
and incentives for qualified educators who are employed by or |
retired from school districts and who have or are in the |
process of obtaining licensure through the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards. The goal of the program is to |
improve instruction and student performance. |
The State Board of Education shall allocate an amount as |
annually appropriated by the General Assembly for the Illinois |
Teaching Excellence Program for (i) application or re-take fees |
for each qualified educator seeking to complete certification |
through the National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards, to be paid directly to the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards, and (ii) incentives under |
paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subsection (c) for each |
qualified educator, to be distributed to the respective school |
district, and incentives under paragraph (5) of subsection (c), |
to be distributed to the respective school district or directly |
|
to the qualified educator. The school district shall distribute |
this payment to each eligible teacher or school counselor as a |
single payment. |
The State Board of Education's annual budget must set out |
by separate line item the appropriation for the program. Unless |
otherwise provided by appropriation, qualified educators are |
eligible for monetary assistance and incentives outlined in |
subsections (c) and (d) of this Section. |
(c) When there are adequate funds available, monetary |
assistance and incentives shall include the following: |
(1) A maximum of $2,000 towards the application or |
re-take fee for teachers or school counselors in a Tier 1 |
school district who apply on a first-come, first-serve |
basis for National Board certification. |
(2) A maximum of $2,000 towards the application or |
re-take fee for teachers or school counselors in a school |
district other than a Tier 1 school district who apply on a |
first-come, first-serve basis for National Board |
certification. |
(3) A maximum of $1,000 towards the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards' renewal application fee. |
(4) (Blank). |
(5) An annual incentive of no more than equal to $1,500 |
prorated at $50 per hour , which shall be paid to each |
qualified educator currently employed in a school district |
who holds both a National Board for Professional Teaching |
|
Standards designation and a current corresponding |
certificate issued by the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards and who agrees, in writing, to provide |
up to at least 30 hours of mentoring or National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards professional development |
or both during the school year to classroom teachers or |
school counselors, as applicable. Funds must be disbursed |
on a first-come, first-serve basis, with priority given to |
Tier 1 school districts. Mentoring shall include, either |
singly or in combination, the following: |
(A) National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards certification candidates. |
(B) National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards re-take candidates. |
(C) National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards renewal candidates. |
(D) (Blank).
|
Funds may also be used for instructional leadership |
training for qualified educators interested in supporting |
implementation of the Illinois Learning Standards or teaching |
and learning priorities of the State Board of Education or |
both. |
(d) In addition to the monetary assistance and incentives |
provided under subsection (c), if adequate funds are available, |
incentives shall include the following incentives for the |
program in rural or remote schools or school districts or for |
|
programs working with diverse candidates , to be distributed to |
the respective school district or directly to the qualified |
educator or entity : |
(1) A one-time incentive of $3,000 payable to National |
Board certified teachers teaching in Tier 1 or Tier 2 rural |
or remote school districts or rural or remote schools in |
Tier 1 or Tier 2 school districts, with priority given to |
teachers teaching in Tier 1 rural or remote school |
districts or rural or remote schools in Tier 1 school |
districts . |
(2) An annual incentive of $3,200 for National Board |
certified teacher rural or remote or distant candidate |
cohort facilitators , diverse candidate cohort |
facilitators, and candidate cohort facilitators. Priority |
shall be given to rural or remote candidate cohort |
facilitators and diverse candidate cohort facilitators . |
(3) An annual incentive of $2,500 for National Board |
certified teacher rural or remote or distant liaisons , |
diverse liaisons, and liaisons. Priority shall be given to |
rural or remote liaisons and diverse liaisons . |
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 101-333, eff. 1-1-20 .) |
Article 999. |
Section 999-999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law. |