State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Introduced ][ House Amendment 001 ]


92_HB1895eng

 
HB1895 Engrossed                               LRB9205325NTsb

 1        AN ACT relating to education.

 2        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section  5.   The  School  Code  is  amended  by changing
 5    Sections 2-3.25d, 2-3.64, and 10-17a as follows:

 6        (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25d) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25d)
 7        Sec. 2-3.25d.  Academic watch list.  Those  schools  that
 8    are   not  meeting  the  standards  of  academic  performance
 9    measured by the State assessment of  student  performance  as
10    specified by the State Board of Education may be placed on an
11    academic  watch  list established by the State Superintendent
12    of Education after serving for 2 years on the State Board  of
13    Education Early Academic Warning List and shall be subject to
14    an   on-site  visitation  to  determine  whether  extenuating
15    circumstances exist as to why a school or schools should  not
16    be   placed   on   an   academic  watch  list  by  the  State
17    Superintendent of Education.  However, only scores  on  State
18    assessments  of  students  enrolled  in a school on or before
19    November 1 of the school year in which a State assessment  is
20    given shall be used in determining whether a school is placed
21    on the Early Academic Warning List or an academic watch list.
22        A  school  district  that  has one or more schools on the
23    academic watch list shall submit a revised School Improvement
24    Plan or  amendments  thereto  setting  forth  the  district's
25    expectations  for  removing  each school in the district from
26    the academic watch list and for improving student performance
27    in that school. Districts operating under Article 34  of  The
28    School  Code  may submit the School Improvement Plan required
29    under Section 34-2.4.   If  any  district  submits  a  School
30    Improvement  Plan which exceeds 2 years in duration, the Plan
31    shall contain provisions for evaluation and determination  as
 
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 1    to   the   improvement   of  student  performance  or  school
 2    improvement after no later than 2 years. The  revised  School
 3    Improvement  Plan or amendments thereto shall be developed in
 4    consultation with the staff of the affected school  and  must
 5    be  approved by the local board of education and the school's
 6    local school council for districts operating under Article 34
 7    of the School Code. Revised School Improvement Plans must  be
 8    submitted   for  approval  to  the  State  Superintendent  of
 9    Education pursuant to rules and  regulations  promulgated  by
10    the State Board of Education.  The revised School Improvement
11    Plan   shall   address   specific,  measurable  outcomes  for
12    improving student performance so that such performance equals
13    or exceeds standards set for the school by the State Board of
14    Education.
15        A school or schools shall remain on  the  academic  watch
16    list  for  at  least  one  full  academic  year.  During each
17    academic year for which a school is  on  the  academic  watch
18    list  it  shall  continue to be evaluated and assessed by the
19    State Board of Education as to whether it is meeting outcomes
20    identified in its revised School Improvement Plan.
21        The  provisions  of  this  Section  are  subject  to  the
22    provisions of Section 2-3.25k.
23    (Source: P.A. 89-398, eff. 8-20-95; 89-698, eff. 1-14-97.)

24        (105 ILCS 5/2-3.64) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.64)
25        Sec. 2-3.64.  State goals and assessment.
26        (a)  Beginning in the 1998-1999 school  year,  the  State
27    Board    of   Education   shall   establish   standards   and
28    periodically, in collaboration with local  school  districts,
29    conduct  studies of student performance in the learning areas
30    of fine arts and physical development/health.  Beginning with
31    the 1998-1999 school year, the State Board of Education shall
32    annually test: (i) all pupils enrolled in the 3rd,  5th,  and
33    8th  grades  in  English language arts (reading, writing, and
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -3-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    English  grammar)  and  mathematics;  and  (ii)  all   pupils
 2    enrolled  in  the  4th  and  7th grades in the biological and
 3    physical  sciences  and   the   social   sciences   (history,
 4    geography,  civics,  economics,  and  government).  The State
 5    Board of Education shall  establish  the  academic  standards
 6    that  are to be applicable to pupils who are subject to State
 7    tests under this Section beginning with the 1998-1999  school
 8    year.   However,  the  State  Board  of  Education  shall not
 9    establish any such standards  in  final  form  without  first
10    providing  opportunities  for  public participation and local
11    input in the development of  the  final  academic  standards.
12    Those opportunities shall include a well-publicized period of
13    public  comment,  public  hearings  throughout the State, and
14    opportunities to file written comments.  Beginning  with  the
15    1998-99  school  year  and  thereafter,  the State tests will
16    identify pupils in the 3rd grade or 5th grade who do not meet
17    the State standards.  If, by performance on the  State  tests
18    or  local  assessments  or  by  teacher judgment, a student's
19    performance is determined  to  be  2  or  more  grades  below
20    current   placement,   the   student   shall  be  provided  a
21    remediation program developed by the district in consultation
22    with a parent or  guardian.  Such  remediation  programs  may
23    include,   but   shall   not  be  limited  to,  increased  or
24    concentrated instructional time,  a  remedial  summer  school
25    program  of  not  less  than 90 hours, improved instructional
26    approaches,  tutorial  sessions,  retention  in  grade,   and
27    modifications  to  instructional  materials.   Each pupil for
28    whom a remediation program is developed under this subsection
29    shall be required to enroll in and  attend  whatever  program
30    the   district  determines  is  appropriate  for  the  pupil.
31    Districts may combine students in remediation programs  where
32    appropriate  and  may  cooperate  with other districts in the
33    design  and  delivery  of  those  programs.   The  parent  or
34    guardian of  a  student  required  to  attend  a  remediation
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -4-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    program  under  this Section shall be given written notice of
 2    that requirement by the school  district  a  reasonable  time
 3    prior  to  commencement  of  the remediation program that the
 4    student is to attend.  The State  shall  be  responsible  for
 5    providing  school  districts  with  the  new  and  additional
 6    funding,  under  Section  2-3.51.5  or by other or additional
 7    means, that is required to enable the  districts  to  operate
 8    remediation  programs  for  the  pupils  who  are required to
 9    enroll in and  attend  those  programs  under  this  Section.
10    Every  individualized  educational  program  as  described in
11    Article 14 shall identify if the  State  test  or  components
12    thereof  are  appropriate for that student.  For those pupils
13    for whom the  State  tests  or  components  thereof  are  not
14    appropriate, the State Board of Education shall develop rules
15    and  regulations  governing the administration of alternative
16    tests  prescribed  within   each   student's   individualized
17    educational  program  which are appropriate to the disability
18    of each student.  All pupils who  are  in  a  State  approved
19    transitional  bilingual  education  program  or  transitional
20    program  of instruction shall participate in the State tests.
21    School  personnel  may  consider  not  giving  the   Illinois
22    Standards  Achievement  Test or the Prairie State Achievement
23    Examination to any student who has been enrolled in  a  State
24    approved  bilingual  education program less than 3 cumulative
25    academic years shall be exempted if  the  student's  lack  of
26    English as determined by an English language proficiency test
27    would  keep  the  student  from  understanding the test., and
28    That student student's district shall  participate  in  State
29    assessments  developed  for  students  with  limited  English
30    proficiency,  unless  the  student was enrolled in a district
31    after September 30 and therefore has not attended  school  in
32    that  district  for  a full academic year have an alternative
33    test program in place for that student.  The State  Board  of
34    Education  shall  appoint  a task force of concerned parents,
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -5-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    teachers, school administrators and  other  professionals  to
 2    assist  in  identifying  such  alternative tests.  Reasonable
 3    accommodations as prescribed by the State Board of  Education
 4    shall  be  provided  for  individual  students in the testing
 5    procedure.  All test procedures prescribed by the State Board
 6    of Education shall require: (i) that each test used for State
 7    and local student testing under this Section identify by name
 8    the pupil taking the test; (ii) that the name  of  the  pupil
 9    taking the test be placed on the test at the time the test is
10    taken;  (iii)  that  the results or scores of each test taken
11    under this Section by a  pupil  of  the  school  district  be
12    reported  to that district and identify by name the pupil who
13    received the reported results or scores; and  (iv)  that  the
14    results  or  scores  of each test taken under this Section be
15    made available to the parents of  the  pupil.   In  addition,
16    beginning  with  the 2000-2001 school year and in each school
17    year thereafter, the highest scores  and  any  Prairie  State
18    Achievement  Awards  performance levels attained by a student
19    on the Prairie  State  Achievement  Examination  administered
20    under subsection (c) of this Section shall become part of the
21    student's  permanent  record  and  shall  be  entered  on the
22    student's transcript pursuant to regulations that  the  State
23    Board  of  Education  shall  promulgate  for  that purpose in
24    accordance with Section 3 and subsection (e) of Section 2  of
25    the  Illinois School Student Records Act.  Beginning with the
26    1998-1999 school year and in every  school  year  thereafter,
27    scores  received  by  students  on the State assessment tests
28    administered in grades 3  through  8  shall  be  placed  into
29    students'  temporary  records.   The State Board of Education
30    shall establish a common month in each school year for  which
31    State  testing  shall  occur  to  meet the objectives of this
32    Section.  However, if the schools of a  district  are  closed
33    and  classes  are  not  scheduled  during  any  week  that is
34    established by the State Board of Education as  the  week  of
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -6-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    the  month when State testing under this Section shall occur,
 2    the school district may administer the required State testing
 3    at any time up to 2 weeks following the week  established  by
 4    the  State Board of Education for the testing, so long as the
 5    school district gives the State Board  of  Education  written
 6    notice  of  its  intention  to  deviate  from the established
 7    schedule by December 1 of the school year in which falls  the
 8    week  established  by  the  State  Board of Education for the
 9    testing.  Mandatory make-up testing must occur on  designated
10    make-up  testing  dates  for  State  assessments.   A  school
11    district  shall  maintain  a  file that contains the names of
12    students  who  were  not  tested  and  statements  for  these
13    students that explain why they were not tested.  The  maximum
14    time  allowed  for  all  actual  testing  required under this
15    subsection during the school year shall not exceed  25  hours
16    as  allocated  among the required tests by the State Board of
17    Education.
18        (a-5) All tests administered  pursuant  to  this  Section
19    shall  be  academically  based.   For  the  purposes  of this
20    Section  "academically  based   tests"   shall   mean   tests
21    consisting  of  questions and answers that are measurable and
22    quantifiable to measure the knowledge, skill, and ability  of
23    students  in  the  subject  matters  covered  by  tests.  The
24    scoring of academically based tests shall be reliable, valid,
25    unbiased and shall meet the guidelines for  test  development
26    and use prescribed by the American Psychological Association,
27    the  National  Council of Measurement and Evaluation, and the
28    American Educational Research Association. Academically based
29    tests  shall  not  include  assessments  or  evaluations   of
30    attitudes,  values,  or  beliefs,  or testing of personality,
31    self-esteem, or self-concept. Nothing in this amendatory  Act
32    is   intended,   nor  shall  it  be  construed,  to  nullify,
33    supersede, or contradict the legislative intent  on  academic
34    testing expressed during the passage of HB 1005/P.A. 90-296.
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -7-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1        Beginning  in  the 1998-1999 school year, the State Board
 2    of Education may, on a pilot  basis,  include  in  the  State
 3    assessments in reading and math at each grade level tested no
 4    more  than  2  short answer questions, where students have to
 5    respond  in  brief  to   questions   or   prompts   or   show
 6    computations,  rather  than select from alternatives that are
 7    presented.  In the first year that such questions  are  used,
 8    scores on the short answer questions shall not be reported on
 9    an  individual student basis but shall be aggregated for each
10    school building in which the tests are  given.   State-level,
11    school,  and  district scores shall be reported both with and
12    without the results of the short answer questions so that the
13    effect of short  answer  questions  is  clearly  discernible.
14    Beginning in the second year of this pilot program, scores on
15    the  short  answer  questions  shall  be  reported both on an
16    individual student basis and on a school  building  basis  in
17    order   to  monitor  the  effects  of  teacher  training  and
18    curriculum improvements on score results.
19        The State Board of Education shall not continue  the  use
20    of   short   answer   questions   in  the  math  and  reading
21    assessments, or extend the use of  such  questions  to  other
22    State  assessments,  unless  this  pilot project demonstrates
23    that  the  use  of  short  answer  questions  results  in   a
24    statistically  significant improvement in student achievement
25    as measured on the State assessments for math and reading and
26    is justifiable in terms of cost and student performance.
27        Beginning in the 2001-2002 school year, the  State  Board
28    of Education shall not make significant changes in the design
29    of  State  assessments,  other  than  changing  test items as
30    needed  to  maintain  the  validity  and   security   of   an
31    assessment,  for  a  minimum  of  5  school years in order to
32    ensure   a   continuous,   comparable   record   of   student
33    performance.
34        (b)  It shall be the policy of  the  State  to  encourage
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -8-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    school  districts  to  continuously test pupil proficiency in
 2    the fundamental learning areas  in  order  to:   (i)  provide
 3    timely   information   on  individual  students'  performance
 4    relative  to  State  standards  that  is  adequate  to  guide
 5    instructional strategies; (ii)  improve  future  instruction;
 6    and  (iii)  complement  the information provided by the State
 7    testing system described in this  Section.   Each  district's
 8    school  improvement plan must address specific activities the
 9    district intends to implement to assist pupils who by teacher
10    judgment and test results as prescribed in subsection (a)  of
11    this  Section  demonstrate  that  they  are not meeting State
12    standards or local objectives. Such activities  may  include,
13    but  shall  not be limited to, summer school, extended school
14    day,   special   homework,   tutorial   sessions,    modified
15    instructional   materials,   other   modifications   in   the
16    instructional  program,  reduced  class  size or retention in
17    grade.   To  assist  school  districts   in   testing   pupil
18    proficiency in reading in the primary grades, the State Board
19    shall   make  optional  reading  inventories  for  diagnostic
20    purposes available to each school district that requests such
21    assistance.    Districts   that   administer   the    reading
22    inventories may develop remediation programs for students who
23    perform  in the bottom half of the student population.  Those
24    remediation programs may be funded by moneys  provided  under
25    the  School  Safety  and  Educational Improvement Block Grant
26    Program established under Section 2-3.51.5.  Nothing in  this
27    Section  shall  prevent  school  districts  from implementing
28    testing and remediation  policies  for  grades  not  required
29    under this Section.
30        (c)  Beginning  with  the  2000-2001  school  year,  each
31    school  district  that  operates  a  high  school program for
32    students in grades 9 through 12 shall annually administer the
33    Prairie State Achievement Examination established under  this
34    subsection  to  its students as set forth below.  The Prairie
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -9-                LRB9205325NTsb
 1    State Achievement Examination shall be developed by the State
 2    Board of Education to  measure  student  performance  in  the
 3    academic areas of reading, writing, mathematics, science, and
 4    social   sciences.    The  State  Board  of  Education  shall
 5    establish  the  academic  standards  that  are  to  apply  in
 6    measuring  student   performance   on   the   Prairie   State
 7    Achievement  Examination  including  the  minimum examination
 8    score in each area that will qualify a student to  receive  a
 9    Prairie State Achievement Award from the State in recognition
10    of the student's excellent performance.  Each school district
11    that  is  subject  to the requirements of this subsection (c)
12    shall afford all students 2 opportunities to take the Prairie
13    State Achievement Examination beginning as late as  practical
14    during  the  second  semester  of  grade  11, but in no event
15    before March 1.  The State Board of Education shall  annually
16    notify  districts of the specific dates on weeks during which
17    these  test  administrations  shall  be  required  to  occur.
18    Mandatory make-up testing must occur  on  designated  make-up
19    testing  dates.  A school district shall maintain a file that
20    contains the names  of  students  who  were  not  tested  and
21    statements  for these students that explain why they were not
22    tested. Every individualized educational program as described
23    in Article 14 shall identify if the Prairie State Achievement
24    Examination or components thereof are  appropriate  for  that
25    student.   Each   student,   exclusive  of  a  student  whose
26    individualized educational program developed under Article 14
27    identifies  the  Prairie  State  Achievement  Examination  as
28    inappropriate  for  the   student   or   a   student   in   a
29    State-approved  transitional bilingual education program or a
30    transitional program of instruction  who  is  administered  a
31    State  assessment developed for students with limited English
32    proficiency in accordance with the requirements of subsection
33    (a)  of  this  Section,  shall  be  required  to   take   the
34    examination  in  grade  11.  For each academic area the State
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -10-               LRB9205325NTsb
 1    Board of Education shall establish the score  that  qualifies
 2    for  the  Prairie  State Achievement Award on that portion of
 3    the examination.  Any student who fails to earn a  qualifying
 4    score  for  a  Prairie  State Achievement Award in any one or
 5    more of the academic areas on the initial test administration
 6    or who wishes to improve his or her score on any  portion  of
 7    the  examination shall be permitted to retake such portion or
 8    portions of the examination during grade 12.  Districts shall
 9    inform  their  students  of  the  timelines  and   procedures
10    applicable   to   their   participation   in   every   yearly
11    administration  of the Prairie State Achievement Examination.
12    Students   receiving   special   education   services   whose
13    individualized  educational  programs  identify  the  Prairie
14    State  Achievement  Examination  as  inappropriate  for  them
15    nevertheless shall have the option of taking the examination,
16    which shall be administered to those students  in  accordance
17    with  standards  adopted   by the State Board of Education to
18    accommodate the respective disabilities  of  those  students.
19    All  pupils who are enrolled in a State-approved transitional
20    bilingual  education  program  or  transitional  program   of
21    instruction  and  whose  lack  of English as determined by an
22    English  language  proficiency  test  would  keep  them  from
23    understanding  the  Prairie  State  Achievement   Examination
24    nevertheless shall have the option of taking the examination.
25    A  student  who  successfully  completes all other applicable
26    high school graduation requirements but fails  to  receive  a
27    score  on  the  Prairie  State  Achievement  Examination that
28    qualifies  the  student  for  receipt  of  a  Prairie   State
29    Achievement  Award shall nevertheless qualify for the receipt
30    of a regular high school diploma.
31    (Source:  P.A. 90-566, eff.  1-2-98;  90-789,  eff.  8-14-98;
32    91-283, eff. 7-29-99.)

33        (105 ILCS 5/10-17a) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-17a)
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -11-               LRB9205325NTsb
 1        Sec. 10-17a.  Better schools accountability.
 2        (1)  Policy  and  Purpose.  It shall be the policy of the
 3    State of Illinois that each school district  in  this  State,
 4    including  special charter districts and districts subject to
 5    the provisions  of  Article  34,  shall  submit  to  parents,
 6    taxpayers   of  such  district,  the  Governor,  the  General
 7    Assembly, and the State Board of Education  a  school  report
 8    card  assessing  the performance of its schools and students.
 9    The report card shall  be  an  index  of  school  performance
10    measured  against  statewide  and  local  standards  and will
11    provide information to make prior year comparisons and to set
12    future year targets through the school improvement plan.
13        (2)  Reporting Requirements.  Each school district  shall
14    prepare  a  report card in accordance with the guidelines set
15    forth in this Section which describes the performance of  its
16    students by school attendance centers and by district and the
17    district's  use  of  financial  resources.   Such report card
18    shall be presented at a regular school board meeting  subject
19    to  applicable  notice  requirements,  and  such report cards
20    shall be made available to a newspaper of general circulation
21    serving the district and shall be sent home  to  parents.  In
22    addition,  each  school  district  shall submit the completed
23    report  card  to  the  office  of  the  district's   Regional
24    Superintendent  which  shall  make  copies  available  to any
25    individuals requesting them.
26        The report card shall be completed and disseminated prior
27    to October 31 in each school year.   The  report  card  shall
28    contain,   but   not  be  limited  to,  actual  local  school
29    attendance  center,  school  district  and   statewide   data
30    indicating  the  present performance of the school, the State
31    norms and the areas for planned improvement  for  the  school
32    and school district.
33        (3) (a)  The  report  card  shall  include  the following
34    applicable indicators of  attendance  center,  district,  and
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -12-               LRB9205325NTsb
 1    statewide student performance: percentage percent of students
 2    who exceed, meet, or do not meet standards established by the
 3    State   Board  of  Education  pursuant  to  Section  2-3.25a;
 4    composite and subtest means on nationally normed  achievement
 5    tests  for  college bound students; student attendance rates;
 6    chronic truancy rate;  dropout  rate;  graduation  rate;  and
 7    student  mobility,  turnover  shown as a percent of transfers
 8    out and a percent of transfers in.  Beginning with  the  2002
 9    report card, the indicator for an attendance center and for a
10    district  of  the percentage of students who exceed, meet, or
11    do not meet standards shall be only for students enrolled  in
12    the  school or district on or before November 1 of the school
13    year in which a State assessment is given.
14        (b)  The  report  card  shall   include   the   following
15    descriptions  for  the  school, district, and State:  average
16    class size; amount of time per day  devoted  to  mathematics,
17    science,  English  and  social science at primary, middle and
18    junior high  school  grade  levels;  percentage  of  students
19    taking  required State assessments; number of students taking
20    the Prairie State Achievement  Examination  under  subsection
21    (c)  of  Section  2-3.64,  the  number  of those students who
22    received a score of  excellent,  and  the  average  score  by
23    school  of  students  taking  the  examination; pupil-teacher
24    ratio; pupil-administrator ratio; operating  expenditure  per
25    pupil;  district  expenditure  by fund; average administrator
26    salary; and average teacher salary.  Beginning with the  2002
27    report   card,  the  Prairie  State  Achievement  Examination
28    descriptions for a school and for a district  shall  be  only
29    for  students enrolled in the school or district on or before
30    November 1 of the school year in  which  the  examination  is
31    given.
32        (c)  The  report card shall include applicable indicators
33    of parental  involvement  in  each  attendance  center.   The
34    parental  involvement  component  of  the  report  card shall
 
HB1895 Engrossed            -13-               LRB9205325NTsb
 1    include the percentage of students whose parents or guardians
 2    have had one or more personal  contacts  with  the  students'
 3    teachers  during  the  school  year  concerning the students'
 4    education,  and  such  other  information,  commentary,   and
 5    suggestions as the school district desires.  For the purposes
 6    of  this  paragraph,  "personal contact" includes, but is not
 7    limited to, parent-teacher conferences,  parental  visits  to
 8    school,  school  visits to home, telephone conversations, and
 9    written correspondence.  The parental  involvement  component
10    shall   not  single  out  or  identify  individual  students,
11    parents, or guardians by name.
12        (d)  The report card form shall be prepared by the  State
13    Board of Education and provided to school districts.
14    (Source: P.A. 89-610, eff. 8-6-96.)

15        Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
16    becoming law.

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