104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB3198

 

Introduced 2/18/2025, by Rep. Daniel Didech

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
105 ILCS 5/27-23.8a new
105 ILCS 5/27-23.8 rep.

    Amends the Courses of Study Article of the School Code. Repeals provisions regarding disability history and awareness. Provides instead that, beginning with the 2027-2028 school year, every public elementary school and high school shall include in its curriculum a unit of instruction studying disability history and culture. Requires the State Board of Education to prepare and make available to all school boards instructional materials, some of which must be used in the unit of instruction and others of which may be used as guidelines for development of a unit of instruction. Provides that the minimum amount of instructional time that qualifies as a unit of instruction is one hour and the minimum required cumulative total instructional time through grades kindergarten through 12 is 10 hours. Requires the regional superintendent of schools to monitor a school district's compliance with the curricular requirements during his or her annual compliance visit. Sets forth requirements concerning the unit of instruction. Provides for what the instruction, study, and discussion in grades kindergarten through 5 may include and what the instruction, study, and discussion in grades 6 through 12 shall include. Provides for collaboration.


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STATE MANDATES ACT MAY REQUIRE REIMBURSEMENT
MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

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1    AN ACT concerning education.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The School Code is amended by adding Section
527-23.8a as follows:
 
6    (105 ILCS 5/27-23.8a new)
7    Sec. 27-23.8a. Study of disability history and culture.
8    (a) Beginning with the 2027-2028 school year, every public
9elementary school and high school shall include in its
10curriculum a unit of instruction studying disability history
11and culture as provided in this Section. The studying of this
12material shall constitute an affirmation by students of their
13commitment to respect the inherent dignity of all people
14without prejudice based on disability and to forever eschew
15every form of discrimination in their lives and careers. By
16studying this material, students will recognize that
17disability is an inherent characteristic and is one of
18multiple components of individuals' identities.
19    (b) The State Board of Education shall prepare and make
20available to all school boards instructional materials, some
21of which must be used in the unit of instruction under this
22Section and others of which may be used as guidelines for
23development of a unit of instruction under this Section.

 

 

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1    The minimum amount of instructional time that qualifies as
2a unit of instruction satisfying the requirements of this
3Section is one hour. The minimum required cumulative total
4instructional time through grades kindergarten through 12 is
510 hours. This cumulative total time may be dispersed across
6multiple grade levels and subjects, though at least 5 hours of
7instruction must take place from grades 6 through 12.
8    (c) The regional superintendent of schools shall monitor a
9school district's compliance with this Section's curricular
10requirements during his or her annual compliance visit.
11    (d) The unit of instruction under this Section must be
12founded on the principle that all students, including disabled
13students, have the right to exercise self-determination. The
14unit of instruction shall teach future generations that
15disabled people have a rich history and have made valuable
16contributions throughout this State and the United States and
17teach future generations that disability is a natural part of
18life and that disabled people have a right to be treated with
19civil, legal, and human rights and as full human beings above
20all else.
21    (e) For grades kindergarten through 5, instruction, study,
22and discussion under this Section may include, as appropriate,
23each of the following:
24        (1) The importance of treating others with respect.
25        (2) What a disability is and how it manifests itself.
26            (A) The types of disabilities.

 

 

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1            (B) Apparent and nonapparent disabilities.
2        (3) Appropriate language to use when talking about a
3    disability.
4            (A) Person-first and identity-first language, and
5        the importance of respecting disabled individuals'
6        language preferences.
7            (B) The importance of refraining from use of terms
8        describing disability as insults.
9        (4) Etiquette.
10            (A) What to do:
11                (i) Ask questions when appropriate.
12                (ii) Keep your hands to yourself.
13            (B) What not to do:
14                (i) Talk down or condescend to disabled
15            people.
16                (ii) Try to assist without asking for
17            permission in advance.
18                (iii) Stare at a disabled person or
19            intentionally look away from them.
20                (iv) Assume whether somebody is disabled.
21    (f) For grades 6 through 12, instruction, study, and
22discussion under this Section shall include, at a minimum, all
23of the following:
24        (1) What a disability is and how it manifests itself.
25            (A) The types of disabilities.
26            (B) Apparent and nonapparent disabilities.

 

 

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1        (2) Appropriate language to use when talking about a
2    disability.
3            (A) Person-first and identity-first language.
4                (i) The importance of respecting disabled
5            individuals' language preferences.
6                (ii) The problem with the use of person-first
7            language to describe disabled individuals who
8            prefer identity-first language.
9            (B) The importance of refraining from the use of
10        terms describing a disability as an insult.
11            (C) The importance of refraining from labeling
12        disabled people as "afflicted by", "suffering from",
13        or being a "victim of" a disability.
14            (D) The controversy around common terms used to
15        describe a disability, including, but not limited to,
16        "special needs", "twice exceptional", "differently
17        abled", and "high functioning" or "low functioning".
18        (3) Models of disability.
19            (A) The social, medical, and charity or tragedy
20        models of disability.
21            (B) Why the social model of disability best
22        represents disabilities.
23        (4) Disability history in the United States.
24            (A) A selection of all of the following events and
25        laws:
26                (i) The eugenics movement in the early 20th

 

 

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1            century.
2                (ii) The federal Social Security Act and the
3            establishment of Social Security Disability
4            Insurance.
5                (iii) The federal Veterans' Rehabilitation and
6            Education Amendments of 1980.
7                (iv) The Community Mental Health Act.
8                (v) The federal Architectural Barriers Act of
9            1968.
10                (vi) The federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
11                (vii) Repeal of the "Ugly Laws" in the City of
12            Chicago.
13                (viii) The federal Individuals with
14            Disabilities Education Act and the 504 sit-ins in
15            1977.
16                (ix) The federal Americans with Disabilities
17            Act of 1990 and the Capitol Crawl in 1990.
18                (x) 21st century events.
19                    (I) The founding of the Autistic Self
20                Advocacy Network in 2006.
21                    (II) The U.S. Senate's rejection of the
22                ratification of the United Nations' Convention
23                on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
24            (B) Notable disabled activists, including those
25        from this State.
26            (C) How barriers still exist despite progress.

 

 

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1        (5) Etiquette and effective allyship strategies.
2            (A) Etiquette.
3                (i) What to do as follows:
4                    (I) Ask questions when appropriate.
5                    (II) Keep your hands to yourself.
6                    (III) Communicate with disabled people in
7                the same way that you would with nondisabled
8                people.
9                (ii) What not to do as follows:
10                    (I) Ask nosy questions or give unsolicited
11                advice.
12                    (II) Record disabled people or share such
13                recordings without permission.
14                    (III) Talk down or condescend to disabled
15                people.
16                    (IV) Try to assist without asking for
17                permission in advance.
18                    (V) Stare at a disabled person or
19                intentionally look away from the person.
20                    (VI) Assume whether somebody is disabled.
21                    (VII) Pretend you understand what another
22                person's life experience is like.
23            (B) Allyship.
24                (i) The importance of letting disabled people
25            lead accessibility movements.
26                (ii) The problems with disability simulations

 

 

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1            and better alternatives for understanding disabled
2            people's life experiences.
3        (6) Disability and education.
4            (A) An explanation of what individualized
5        education programs and federal Section 504 plans are
6        and how those apply to students.
7            (B) A description of how ostracization and
8        structural exclusion of disabled people manifests in
9        school environments.
10            (C) Encouragement of mutual respect through
11        indifference toward others' disabilities inside and
12        outside the classroom.
13        (7) Recognizing and challenging ableism.
14            (A) What ableism is.
15            (B) Accessibility practices and their role in
16        combating ableism.
17            (C) Recognizing ableist tropes as follows:
18                (i) The idea that disabled people are
19            inherently inspirational, such that an "inspiring"
20            action of theirs would not be inspiring were they
21            nondisabled.
22                    (I) Stories of "overcoming adversity".
23                    (II) Stories of normal life events that
24                become notable because the subject of the
25                event is disabled.
26                    (III) Stories of nondisabled people

 

 

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1                "helping" nondisabled people.
2                (ii) The idea that disabled people are
3            deserving of pity.
4    If possible, disabled individuals should be incorporated
5into the development and delivery of this unit of instruction.
6The instruction may be supplemented by knowledgeable guest
7speakers from the disability community. A school board may
8collaborate with community-based organizations, such as
9centers for independent living, parent training and
10information centers, and other consumer-driven groups, and
11disability membership organizations in creating this unit of
12instruction.
 
13    (105 ILCS 5/27-23.8 rep.)
14    Section 10. The School Code is amended by repealing
15Section 27-23.8.