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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, Research-based prevention and wellness promotion |
3 | | efforts that strengthen positive parenting practices and |
4 | | enhance a child's resilience in the face of adversity have been |
5 | | shown to have a significant impact on the child's mental and |
6 | | physical health and their educational outcomes; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, The Center for Disease Control defines positive |
8 | | parenting skills as good communication, appropriate |
9 | | discipline, and responding to children's physical and |
10 | | emotional needs; and
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11 | | WHEREAS, Studies in the last decade point to the wisdom and |
12 | | efficacy of prevention and early intervention; well-designed |
13 | | programs created to promote healthy cognitive, emotional, and |
14 | | social development can improve the prospects and the quality of |
15 | | life of many children; and
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16 | | WHEREAS, Evidence-based parenting programs have been shown |
17 | | to provide critical information on child development and |
18 | | safety, promote positive parenting behaviors, teach effective |
19 | | discipline strategies, alter negative family patterns, and |
20 | | reduce levels of child abuse and neglect; and
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21 | | WHEREAS, Positive parenting practices are directly linked |
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1 | | to adaptive behaviors in children and can buffer negative |
2 | | outcomes, even among at-risk families; and
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3 | | WHEREAS, While positive parenting strategies can promote |
4 | | adjustment and achievement, child abuse and neglect can |
5 | | interrupt healthy development in children and lead to |
6 | | maladaptive functioning; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, Child abuse and neglect is a serious public health |
8 | | problem that costs the United States $103 billion annually; |
9 | | these costs include $33 billion in direct costs for foster care |
10 | | services, hospitalization, mental health treatment, and law |
11 | | enforcement and $70 billion for indirect costs, such as loss of |
12 | | productivity, chronic health problems, and special education; |
13 | | and
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14 | | WHEREAS, Research shows an association between child |
15 | | maltreatment and a broad range of social problems, including |
16 | | substance abuse, violence, criminal behavior, teenage |
17 | | pregnancy, anxiety, sexually transmitted diseases, smoking, |
18 | | obesity, and diabetes; and
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19 | | WHEREAS, Nobel prize-winning economist James J. Heckman |
20 | | and others have shown that for every dollar devoted to the |
21 | | nurturing of young children, we can mitigate the need for far |
22 | | greater government spending on remedial education, teenage |
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1 | | pregnancy, and prison incarceration; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, By almost any statistical measure, children in the |
3 | | United States today are losing ground compared to the recent |
4 | | past; the educational performance of American children is lower |
5 | | and does not compare well with many other developed nations; |
6 | | the general health of American children has grown worse, as |
7 | | shown in the incidence and increased prevalence of obesity, |
8 | | juvenile diabetes, and other disorders and diseases; more |
9 | | American children as exhibiting troubling and violent |
10 | | behavior, resulting in increases in children being expelled |
11 | | from pre-school, elementary school, and high school, and |
12 | | approximately 40% of children are dropping out of high school; |
13 | | children and youth homicide rates are also on the rise |
14 | | throughout the nation; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, Researchers have found that, left untreated, the |
16 | | effects of child abuse and neglect can profoundly influence |
17 | | victims' physical and mental health, their ability to control |
18 | | emotions and impulses, their achievement in school, and the |
19 | | relationships they form as children and as adults; and
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20 | | WHEREAS, In the first major study of child abuse and |
21 | | neglect in 20 years, researchers with the National Academy of |
22 | | Sciences reported that the damaging consequences of abuse can |
23 | | reshape a child's brain, resulting in consequences that last |
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1 | | throughout their lives; abuse and neglect can influence the |
2 | | amygdala, the part of the brain that regulates emotions, |
3 | | particularly fear and anxiety; abuse also has been shown to |
4 | | change the functioning of the prefrontal cortex, the part of |
5 | | the brain responsible for thinking, planning, reasoning, and |
6 | | decision making, which can lead to behavioral and academic |
7 | | problems; and
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8 | | WHEREAS, The effects of abuse on a child's brain and |
9 | | behavioral development are not static and can be reduced with |
10 | | high-quality, sustained intervention; the negative changes |
11 | | present in a child's brain can be countered by positive brain |
12 | | changes that take place when the abuse ends and the child is |
13 | | given the support he or she requires; parenting education is an |
14 | | important way to address mental illness before it results in |
15 | | negative outcomes for children and families; therefore, be it
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16 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
17 | | NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
18 | | we state our belief that human services, healthcare, education |
19 | | and justice authorities on the federal, State, and local levels |
20 | | must include parenting education and early childhood education |
21 | | funding in their budgets in order to combat this growing |
22 | | menace; and be it further
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23 | | RESOLVED, That we state our belief that access to |
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1 | | universal, high-quality, and research-based parenting |
2 | | education will equip parents with skills that can help them to |
3 | | do the most important job they will ever have: raising |
4 | | confident, well-adjusted, and productive members of society; |
5 | | and be it further
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6 | | RESOLVED, That we urge the State Board of Education to |
7 | | identify potential federal grants for states that can be used |
8 | | for parenting programs and early care and education programs; |
9 | | and be it further |
10 | | RESOLVED, That we urge the State Board of Education to |
11 | | require early care and education programs and to require |
12 | | elementary, middle, and high schools to have family engagement |
13 | | policies and procedures in place that welcome and involve |
14 | | families in meaningful partnerships focused on children's |
15 | | learning; programs should seek to include a high-quality |
16 | | parenting education component, as well as to reduce barriers to |
17 | | family engagement and offer diverse opportunities and pathways |
18 | | for families to be involved in programs that enable them to be |
19 | | successful partners in their child's education; and be it |
20 | | further |
21 | | RESOLVED, That we urge the State Board of Education to |
22 | | consider the potential benefits of requiring a course in |
23 | | parenting education as a prerequisite for high school |