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Public Act 097-0607 |
SB1799 Enrolled | LRB097 07217 NHT 47324 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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Section 10. The Counties Code is amended by changing |
Section 3-9005 as follows:
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(55 ILCS 5/3-9005) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9005)
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(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 96-1551 )
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Sec. 3-9005. Powers and duties of State's attorney.
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(a) The duty of each State's attorney shall be:
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(1) To commence and prosecute all actions, suits, |
indictments and
prosecutions, civil and criminal, in the |
circuit court for his county,
in which the people of the |
State or county may be concerned.
|
(2) To prosecute all forfeited bonds and |
recognizances, and all
actions and proceedings for the |
recovery of debts, revenues, moneys,
fines, penalties and |
forfeitures accruing to the State or his county, or
to any |
school district or road district in his county; also, to
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prosecute all suits in his county against railroad or |
transportation
companies, which may be prosecuted in the |
name of the People of the
State of Illinois.
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(3) To commence and prosecute all actions and |
proceedings brought by
any county officer in his official |
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capacity.
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(4) To defend all actions and proceedings brought |
against his
county, or against any county or State officer, |
in his official
capacity, within his county.
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(5) To attend the examination of all persons brought |
before any judge
on habeas corpus, when the prosecution is |
in his county.
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(6) To attend before judges and prosecute charges of |
felony or
misdemeanor, for which the offender is required |
to be recognized to appear
before the circuit court, when |
in his power so to do.
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(7) To give his opinion, without fee or reward, to any |
county officer
in his county, upon any question or law |
relating to any criminal or other
matter, in which the |
people or the county may be concerned.
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(8) To assist the attorney general whenever it may be |
necessary, and in
cases of appeal from his county to the |
Supreme Court, to which it is the
duty of the attorney |
general to attend, he shall furnish the attorney general
at |
least 10 days before such is due to be filed, a manuscript |
of a proposed
statement, brief and argument to be printed |
and filed on behalf of the people,
prepared in accordance |
with the rules of the Supreme Court. However, if
such |
brief, argument or other document is due to be filed by law |
or order
of court within this 10 day period, then the |
State's attorney shall furnish
such as soon as may be |
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reasonable.
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(9) To pay all moneys received by him in trust, without |
delay, to the
officer who by law is entitled to the custody |
thereof.
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(10) To notify, by first class mail, complaining |
witnesses of the ultimate
disposition of the cases arising |
from an indictment or an information.
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(11) To perform such other and further duties as may, |
from time to time,
be enjoined on him by law.
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(12) To appear in all proceedings by collectors of |
taxes against
delinquent taxpayers for judgments to sell |
real estate, and see that all the
necessary preliminary |
steps have been legally taken to make the judgment legal
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and binding.
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(13) To notify, by first-class mail, the State |
Superintendent of Education, the applicable regional |
superintendent of schools, and the superintendent of the |
employing school district or the chief school |
administrator of the employing nonpublic school, if any, |
upon the conviction of any individual known to possess a |
certificate or license issued pursuant to Article 21 or |
21B, respectively, of the School Code of any offense set |
forth in Section 21B-80 21-23a of the School Code or any |
other felony conviction, providing the name of the |
certificate holder, the fact of the conviction, and the |
name and location of the court where the conviction |
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occurred. The certificate holder must also be |
contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice. |
(b) The State's Attorney of each county shall have |
authority to
appoint one or more special investigators to serve |
subpoenas, make return
of process and conduct investigations |
which assist the State's Attorney in
the performance of his |
duties. A special investigator shall not carry
firearms except |
with permission of the State's Attorney and only while
carrying |
appropriate identification indicating his employment and in |
the
performance of his assigned duties.
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Subject to the qualifications set forth in this subsection, |
special
investigators shall be peace officers and shall have |
all the powers possessed
by investigators under the State's |
Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
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No special investigator employed by the State's Attorney |
shall have peace
officer status or exercise police powers |
unless he or she successfully
completes the basic police |
training course mandated and approved by the
Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board or such
board waives the |
training requirement by reason of the special
investigator's |
prior law enforcement experience or training or both. Any
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State's Attorney appointing a special investigator shall |
consult with all
affected local police agencies, to the extent |
consistent with the public
interest, if the special |
investigator is assigned to areas within that
agency's |
jurisdiction.
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Before a person is appointed as a special investigator, his
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fingerprints shall be taken and transmitted to the Department |
of State
Police. The Department shall examine its records and |
submit to the State's
Attorney of the county in which the |
investigator seeks appointment any
conviction information |
concerning the person on file with the Department.
No person |
shall be appointed as a special investigator if he has been
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convicted of a felony or other offense involving moral |
turpitude. A
special investigator shall be paid a salary and be |
reimbursed for actual
expenses incurred in performing his |
assigned duties. The county board
shall approve the salary and |
actual expenses and appropriate the salary
and expenses in the |
manner prescribed by law or ordinance.
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(c) The State's
Attorney may request and receive from |
employers, labor unions, telephone
companies, and utility |
companies
location information concerning putative fathers and |
noncustodial parents for
the purpose of establishing a child's |
paternity or establishing, enforcing, or
modifying a child |
support obligation. In this subsection, "location
information"
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means information about (i) the physical whereabouts of a |
putative father or
noncustodial parent, (ii) the putative |
father or noncustodial parent's
employer, or
(iii) the salary, |
wages, and other
compensation paid and the health insurance |
coverage provided to the putative
father or noncustodial parent |
by the employer of the putative father or
noncustodial parent
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or by a labor union of which the putative father or |
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noncustodial parent is a
member.
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(d) For each State fiscal year, the
State's Attorney of |
Cook County shall appear before the General Assembly and
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request appropriations to be made from the Capital Litigation |
Trust Fund to the
State Treasurer for the purpose of providing |
assistance in the prosecution of
capital cases in Cook County |
and for the purpose of providing assistance to the State in |
post-conviction proceedings in capital cases under Article 122 |
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 and in relation to |
petitions filed under Section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil |
Procedure in relation to capital cases. The State's Attorney |
may appear before the
General Assembly at other times during |
the State's fiscal year to request
supplemental appropriations |
from the Trust Fund to the State Treasurer.
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(e) The State's Attorney shall have the authority to enter |
into a written
agreement with the Department of Revenue for |
pursuit of civil
liability under Section 17-1a of the Criminal |
Code of 1961 against persons who
have issued to the Department |
checks or other orders in violation of the
provisions of |
paragraph (d) of subsection (B) of Section 17-1 of the Criminal
|
Code of 1961, with the Department to retain the amount owing |
upon the
dishonored check or order along with the dishonored |
check fee imposed under the
Uniform Penalty and Interest Act, |
with the balance of damages, fees, and costs
collected under |
Section 17-1a of the Criminal Code of 1961 to be retained by
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the State's Attorney. The agreement shall not affect the |
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allocation of fines
and costs imposed in any criminal |
prosecution.
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(Source: P.A. 96-431, eff. 8-13-09.)
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(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 96-1551 )
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Sec. 3-9005. Powers and duties of State's attorney.
|
(a) The duty of each State's attorney shall be:
|
(1) To commence and prosecute all actions, suits, |
indictments and
prosecutions, civil and criminal, in the |
circuit court for his county,
in which the people of the |
State or county may be concerned.
|
(2) To prosecute all forfeited bonds and |
recognizances, and all
actions and proceedings for the |
recovery of debts, revenues, moneys,
fines, penalties and |
forfeitures accruing to the State or his county, or
to any |
school district or road district in his county; also, to
|
prosecute all suits in his county against railroad or |
transportation
companies, which may be prosecuted in the |
name of the People of the
State of Illinois.
|
(3) To commence and prosecute all actions and |
proceedings brought by
any county officer in his official |
capacity.
|
(4) To defend all actions and proceedings brought |
against his
county, or against any county or State officer, |
in his official
capacity, within his county.
|
(5) To attend the examination of all persons brought |
|
before any judge
on habeas corpus, when the prosecution is |
in his county.
|
(6) To attend before judges and prosecute charges of |
felony or
misdemeanor, for which the offender is required |
to be recognized to appear
before the circuit court, when |
in his power so to do.
|
(7) To give his opinion, without fee or reward, to any |
county officer
in his county, upon any question or law |
relating to any criminal or other
matter, in which the |
people or the county may be concerned.
|
(8) To assist the attorney general whenever it may be |
necessary, and in
cases of appeal from his county to the |
Supreme Court, to which it is the
duty of the attorney |
general to attend, he shall furnish the attorney general
at |
least 10 days before such is due to be filed, a manuscript |
of a proposed
statement, brief and argument to be printed |
and filed on behalf of the people,
prepared in accordance |
with the rules of the Supreme Court. However, if
such |
brief, argument or other document is due to be filed by law |
or order
of court within this 10 day period, then the |
State's attorney shall furnish
such as soon as may be |
reasonable.
|
(9) To pay all moneys received by him in trust, without |
delay, to the
officer who by law is entitled to the custody |
thereof.
|
(10) To notify, by first class mail, complaining |
|
witnesses of the ultimate
disposition of the cases arising |
from an indictment or an information.
|
(11) To perform such other and further duties as may, |
from time to time,
be enjoined on him by law.
|
(12) To appear in all proceedings by collectors of |
taxes against
delinquent taxpayers for judgments to sell |
real estate, and see that all the
necessary preliminary |
steps have been legally taken to make the judgment legal
|
and binding.
|
(13) To notify, by first-class mail, the State |
Superintendent of Education, the applicable regional |
superintendent of schools, and the superintendent of the |
employing school district or the chief school |
administrator of the employing nonpublic school, if any, |
upon the conviction of any individual known to possess a |
certificate or license issued pursuant to Article 21 or |
21B, respectively, of the School Code of any offense set |
forth in Section 21B-80 21-23a of the School Code or any |
other felony conviction, providing the name of the |
certificate holder, the fact of the conviction, and the |
name and location of the court where the conviction |
occurred. The certificate holder must also be |
contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice. |
(b) The State's Attorney of each county shall have |
authority to
appoint one or more special investigators to serve |
subpoenas, make return
of process and conduct investigations |
|
which assist the State's Attorney in
the performance of his |
duties. A special investigator shall not carry
firearms except |
with permission of the State's Attorney and only while
carrying |
appropriate identification indicating his employment and in |
the
performance of his assigned duties.
|
Subject to the qualifications set forth in this subsection, |
special
investigators shall be peace officers and shall have |
all the powers possessed
by investigators under the State's |
Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
|
No special investigator employed by the State's Attorney |
shall have peace
officer status or exercise police powers |
unless he or she successfully
completes the basic police |
training course mandated and approved by the
Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board or such
board waives the |
training requirement by reason of the special
investigator's |
prior law enforcement experience or training or both. Any
|
State's Attorney appointing a special investigator shall |
consult with all
affected local police agencies, to the extent |
consistent with the public
interest, if the special |
investigator is assigned to areas within that
agency's |
jurisdiction.
|
Before a person is appointed as a special investigator, his
|
fingerprints shall be taken and transmitted to the Department |
of State
Police. The Department shall examine its records and |
submit to the State's
Attorney of the county in which the |
investigator seeks appointment any
conviction information |
|
concerning the person on file with the Department.
No person |
shall be appointed as a special investigator if he has been
|
convicted of a felony or other offense involving moral |
turpitude. A
special investigator shall be paid a salary and be |
reimbursed for actual
expenses incurred in performing his |
assigned duties. The county board
shall approve the salary and |
actual expenses and appropriate the salary
and expenses in the |
manner prescribed by law or ordinance.
|
(c) The State's
Attorney may request and receive from |
employers, labor unions, telephone
companies, and utility |
companies
location information concerning putative fathers and |
noncustodial parents for
the purpose of establishing a child's |
paternity or establishing, enforcing, or
modifying a child |
support obligation. In this subsection, "location
information"
|
means information about (i) the physical whereabouts of a |
putative father or
noncustodial parent, (ii) the putative |
father or noncustodial parent's
employer, or
(iii) the salary, |
wages, and other
compensation paid and the health insurance |
coverage provided to the putative
father or noncustodial parent |
by the employer of the putative father or
noncustodial parent
|
or by a labor union of which the putative father or |
noncustodial parent is a
member.
|
(d) For each State fiscal year, the
State's Attorney of |
Cook County shall appear before the General Assembly and
|
request appropriations to be made from the Capital Litigation |
Trust Fund to the
State Treasurer for the purpose of providing |
|
assistance in the prosecution of
capital cases in Cook County |
and for the purpose of providing assistance to the State in |
post-conviction proceedings in capital cases under Article 122 |
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 and in relation to |
petitions filed under Section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil |
Procedure in relation to capital cases. The State's Attorney |
may appear before the
General Assembly at other times during |
the State's fiscal year to request
supplemental appropriations |
from the Trust Fund to the State Treasurer.
|
(e) The State's Attorney shall have the authority to enter |
into a written
agreement with the Department of Revenue for |
pursuit of civil
liability under subsection (E) of Section 17-1 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 against persons who
have issued to |
the Department checks or other orders in violation of the
|
provisions of paragraph (1) of subsection (B) of Section 17-1 |
of the Criminal
Code of 1961, with the Department to retain the |
amount owing upon the
dishonored check or order along with the |
dishonored check fee imposed under the
Uniform Penalty and |
Interest Act, with the balance of damages, fees, and costs
|
collected under subsection (E) of Section 17-1 of the Criminal |
Code of 1961 or under Section 17-1a of that Code to be retained |
by
the State's Attorney. The agreement shall not affect the |
allocation of fines
and costs imposed in any criminal |
prosecution.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-431, eff. 8-13-09; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11.)
|
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Section 15. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
2-3.25o, 3-11.5, 3-12, 10-21.9, 14C-8, 21-1a, 21-1b, 21-2, |
21-2.1, 21-2a, 21-3, 21-4, 21-5, 21-5b, 21-5c, 21-5d, 21-7.1, |
21-7.5, 21-7.6, 21-9, 21-10, 21-11.1, 21-11.2, 21-11.3, |
21-11.4, 21-12, 21-14, 21-16, 21-22, 21-25, 21-27, 24-14, 34-6, |
and 34-18.5 and by adding Article 21B as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.25o)
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Sec. 2-3.25o. Registration and recognition of non-public |
elementary and
secondary schools.
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(a) Findings. The General Assembly finds and declares (i) |
that the
Constitution
of the State of Illinois provides that a |
"fundamental goal of the People of the
State is the
educational |
development of all persons to the limits of their capacities" |
and
(ii) that the
educational development of every school |
student serves the public purposes of
the State.
In order to |
ensure that all Illinois students and teachers have the |
opportunity
to enroll and
work in State-approved educational |
institutions and programs, the State Board
of
Education shall |
provide for the voluntary registration and recognition of
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non-public
elementary and secondary schools.
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(b) Registration. All non-public elementary and secondary |
schools in the
State
of
Illinois may voluntarily register with |
the State Board of Education on an
annual basis. Registration |
shall
be completed
in conformance with procedures prescribed by |
the State Board of Education.
Information
required for |
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registration shall include assurances of compliance (i) with
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federal
and State
laws regarding health examination and |
immunization, attendance, length of term,
and
|
nondiscrimination and (ii) with applicable fire and health |
safety requirements.
|
(c) Recognition. All non-public elementary and secondary |
schools in the
State of
Illinois may voluntarily seek the |
status of "Non-public School Recognition"
from
the State
Board |
of Education. This status may be obtained by compliance with
|
administrative
guidelines and review procedures as prescribed |
by the State Board of Education.
The
guidelines and procedures |
must recognize that some of the aims and the
financial bases of
|
non-public schools are different from public schools and will |
not be identical
to those for
public schools, nor will they be |
more burdensome. The guidelines and procedures
must
also |
recognize the diversity of non-public schools and shall not |
impinge upon
the
noneducational relationships between those |
schools and their clientele.
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(c-5) Prohibition against recognition. A non-public |
elementary or secondary school may not obtain "Non-public |
School Recognition" status unless the school requires all |
certified and non-certified applicants for employment with the |
school, after July 1, 2007, to authorize a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check as a condition of employment to |
determine if such applicants have been convicted of any of the |
enumerated criminal or drug offenses set forth in Section |
|
21-23a of this Code or have been convicted, within 7 years of |
the application for employment, of any other felony under the |
laws of this State or of any offense committed or attempted in |
any other state or against the laws of the United States that, |
if committed or attempted in this State, would have been |
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State. |
Authorization for the check shall be furnished by the |
applicant to the school, except that if the applicant is a |
substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one |
non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent part-time |
employment positions with more than one non-public school (as a |
reading specialist, special education teacher, or otherwise), |
or an educational support personnel employee seeking |
employment positions with more than one non-public school, then |
only one of the non-public schools employing the individual |
shall request the authorization. Upon receipt of this |
authorization, the non-public school shall submit the |
applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security |
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as |
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the Department |
of State Police. |
The Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of |
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check, records of convictions, |
forever and hereafter, until expunged, to the president or |
principal of the non-public school that requested the check. |
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The Department of State Police shall charge that school a fee |
for conducting such check, which fee must be deposited into the |
State Police Services Fund and must not exceed the cost of the |
inquiry. Subject to appropriations for these purposes, the |
State Superintendent of Education shall reimburse non-public |
schools for fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks |
under this Section. |
A non-public school may not obtain recognition status |
unless the school also performs a check of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database, as authorized by the Sex Offender Community |
Notification Law, for each applicant for employment, after July |
1, 2007, to determine whether the applicant has been |
adjudicated a sex offender. |
Any information concerning the record of convictions |
obtained by a non-public school's president or principal under |
this Section is confidential and may be disseminated only to |
the governing body of the non-public school or any other person |
necessary to the decision of hiring the applicant for |
employment. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from |
the Department of State Police shall be provided to the |
applicant for employment. Upon a check of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database, the non-public school shall notify the |
applicant as to whether or not the applicant has been |
identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex offender. Any |
information concerning the records of conviction obtained by |
the non-public school's president or principal under this |
|
Section for a substitute teacher seeking employment in more |
than one non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent |
part-time employment positions with more than one non-public |
school (as a reading specialist, special education teacher, or |
otherwise), or an educational support personnel employee |
seeking employment positions with more than one non-public |
school may be shared with another non-public school's principal |
or president to which the applicant seeks employment. Any |
person who releases any criminal history record information |
concerning an applicant for employment is guilty of a Class A |
misdemeanor and may be subject to prosecution under federal |
law, unless the release of such information is authorized by |
this Section. |
No non-public school may obtain recognition status that |
knowingly employs a person, hired after July 1, 2007, for whom |
a Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of |
Investigation fingerprint-based criminal history records check |
and a Statewide Sex Offender Database check has not been |
initiated or who has been convicted of any offense enumerated |
in Section 21B-80 21-23a of this Code or any offense committed |
or attempted in any other state or against the laws of the |
United States that, if committed or attempted in this State, |
would have been punishable as one or more of those offenses. No |
non-public school may obtain recognition status under this |
Section that knowingly employs a person who has been found to |
be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of a minor under |
|
18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
In order to obtain recognition status under this Section, a |
non-public school must require compliance with the provisions |
of this subsection (c-5) from all employees of persons or firms |
holding contracts with the school, including, but not limited |
to, food service workers, school bus drivers, and other |
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with |
pupils. Any information concerning the records of conviction or |
identification as a sex offender of any such employee obtained |
by the non-public school principal or president must be |
promptly reported to the school's governing body.
|
(d) Public purposes. The provisions of this Section are in |
the public
interest, for
the public benefit, and serve secular |
public purposes.
|
(e) Definition. For purposes of this Section, a non-public |
school means any
non-profit, non-home-based, and non-public |
elementary or secondary school that
is
in
compliance with Title |
VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and attendance at
which
|
satisfies the requirements of Section 26-1 of this Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-351, eff. 8-23-07; 96-431, eff. 8-13-09.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/3-11.5)
|
Sec. 3-11.5. Regional professional development review |
committee. The
regional superintendent of schools shall |
constitute a regional professional
development
review |
|
committee or committees, as provided in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (g)
of
Section 21-14 of this Code, to advise the |
regional superintendent of schools,
upon his
or her request, |
and to hear appeals relating to the renewal of teaching
|
certificates, in
accordance with Section 21-14 of this Code. |
The expenses of these review
committees
shall be funded, in |
part, from the fees collected pursuant to Section 21-16 or |
21B-40 of
this Code
and deposited into the institute fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/3-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-12)
|
Sec. 3-12. Institute fund. |
(a) All certificate
registration fees and
a portion of |
renewal and duplicate fees
shall be kept by the regional |
superintendent as described in Section 21-16 or 21B-40 of
this |
Code, together with a record of the
names of the persons paying |
them. Such fees shall be deposited
into the institute fund and
|
shall be used by the regional superintendent
to defray expenses |
associated with the
work of
the regional professional |
development review committees established pursuant to
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of Section 21-14 of this Code |
to advise the
regional
superintendent, upon his or her request, |
and to hear appeals relating to the
renewal of
teaching |
certificates, in accordance with Section 21-14 of this Code; to |
defray
expenses
connected with improving the technology |
necessary for the efficient processing
of
certificates; to |
|
defray all costs associated with the administration of teaching |
certificates;
to defray expenses incidental to
teachers' |
institutes,
workshops or meetings of a professional nature that |
are designed to promote the
professional growth of teachers or |
for the purpose of defraying the expense of
any general or |
special meeting of teachers or school personnel of the region,
|
which has been approved by the regional superintendent.
|
(b) In addition to the use of moneys in the institute fund |
to defray expenses under subsection (a) of this Section, the |
State Superintendent of Education, as authorized under Section |
2-3.105 of this Code, shall use moneys in the institute fund to |
defray all costs associated with the administration of teaching |
certificates within a city having a population exceeding |
500,000.
|
(c) The regional superintendent shall on or before January |
1 of each year
publish in a newspaper of general circulation |
published in the region or
shall post in each school building |
under his jurisdiction an accounting of
(1) the balance on hand |
in the Institute fund at the beginning of the
previous year; |
(2) all receipts within the previous year deposited in the
|
fund, with the sources from which they were derived; (3) the |
amount
distributed from the fund and the purposes for which |
such distributions
were made; and (4) the balance on hand in |
the fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-893, eff. 7-1-10.)
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|
(105 ILCS 5/10-21.9) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-21.9)
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Sec. 10-21.9. Criminal history records checks and checks of |
the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Child |
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.
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(a) Certified and noncertified applicants for employment |
with a school
district, except school bus driver applicants, |
are required as a condition
of employment to authorize a |
fingerprint-based criminal history records check to determine |
if such applicants have been convicted of any of
the enumerated |
criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) of this Section or
|
have been convicted, within 7 years of the application for |
employment with
the
school district, of any other felony under |
the laws of this State or of any
offense committed or attempted |
in any other state or against the laws of
the United States |
that, if committed or attempted in this State, would
have been |
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State.
|
Authorization for
the check shall be furnished by the applicant |
to
the school district, except that if the applicant is a |
substitute teacher
seeking employment in more than one school |
district, a teacher seeking
concurrent part-time employment |
positions with more than one school
district (as a reading |
specialist, special education teacher or otherwise),
or an |
educational support personnel employee seeking employment |
positions
with more than one district, any such district may |
require the applicant to
furnish authorization for
the check to |
the regional superintendent
of the educational service region |
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in which are located the school districts
in which the |
applicant is seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent
|
part-time teacher or concurrent educational support personnel |
employee.
Upon receipt of this authorization, the school |
district or the appropriate
regional superintendent, as the |
case may be, shall submit the applicant's
name, sex, race, date |
of birth, social security number, fingerprint images, and other |
identifiers, as prescribed by the Department
of State Police, |
to the Department. The regional
superintendent submitting the |
requisite information to the Department of
State Police shall |
promptly notify the school districts in which the
applicant is |
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
|
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee |
that
the
check of the applicant has been requested. The |
Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of |
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check, records of convictions, until |
expunged, to the president of the school board for the school |
district that requested the check, or to the regional |
superintendent who requested the check.
The
Department shall |
charge
the school district
or the appropriate regional |
superintendent a fee for
conducting
such check, which fee shall |
be deposited in the State
Police Services Fund and shall not |
exceed the cost of
the inquiry; and the
applicant shall not be |
charged a fee for
such check by the school
district or by the |
regional superintendent, except that those applicants seeking |
|
employment as a substitute teacher with a school district may |
be charged a fee not to exceed the cost of the inquiry. Subject |
to appropriations for these purposes, the State Superintendent |
of Education shall reimburse school districts and regional |
superintendents for fees paid to obtain criminal history |
records checks under this Section.
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(a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall |
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database, |
as authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law, |
for each applicant.
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(a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall |
further perform a check of the Statewide Child Murderer and |
Violent Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the |
Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Community |
Notification Law, for each applicant.
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(b)
Any information
concerning the record of convictions |
obtained by the president of the
school board or the regional |
superintendent shall be confidential and may
only be |
transmitted to the superintendent of the school district or his
|
designee, the appropriate regional superintendent if
the check |
was
requested by the school district, the presidents of the |
appropriate school
boards if
the check was requested from the |
Department of State
Police by the regional superintendent, the |
State Superintendent of
Education, the State Teacher |
Certification Board, any other person
necessary to the decision |
of hiring the applicant for employment, or for clarification |
|
purposes the Department of State Police or Statewide Sex |
Offender Database, or both. A copy
of the record of convictions |
obtained from the Department of State Police
shall be provided |
to the applicant for employment. Upon the check of the |
Statewide Sex Offender Database, the school district or |
regional superintendent shall notify an applicant as to whether |
or not the applicant has been identified in the Database as a |
sex offender. If a check of
an applicant for employment as a |
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher
or concurrent |
educational support personnel employee in more than one
school |
district was requested by the regional superintendent, and the
|
Department of State Police upon a check ascertains that the |
applicant
has not been convicted of any of the enumerated |
criminal or drug offenses
in subsection (c)
or has not been |
convicted, within 7 years of the
application for
employment |
with the
school district, of any other felony under the laws of |
this State or of any
offense committed or attempted in any |
other state or against the laws of
the United States that, if |
committed or attempted in this State, would
have been |
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State
and so |
notifies the regional
superintendent and if the regional |
superintendent upon a check ascertains that the applicant has |
not been identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex |
offender, then the
regional superintendent shall issue to the |
applicant a certificate
evidencing that as of the date |
specified by the Department of State Police
the applicant has |
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not been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or
drug |
offenses in subsection (c)
or has not been
convicted, within 7 |
years of the application for employment with the
school |
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or |
of any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or |
against the laws of
the United States that, if committed or |
attempted in this State, would
have been punishable as a felony |
under the laws of this State and evidencing that as of the date |
that the regional superintendent conducted a check of the |
Statewide Sex Offender Database, the applicant has not been |
identified in the Database as a sex offender. The school
board |
of
any
school district
may rely on the
certificate issued by |
any regional superintendent to that substitute teacher, |
concurrent part-time teacher, or concurrent educational |
support personnel employee or may
initiate its own criminal |
history records check of the applicant through the Department |
of
State Police and its own check of the Statewide Sex Offender |
Database as provided in subsection (a). Any person who releases |
any
confidential information concerning any criminal |
convictions of an
applicant for employment shall be guilty of a |
Class A misdemeanor, unless
the release of such information is |
authorized by this Section.
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(c) No school board shall knowingly employ a person who has |
been
convicted of any offense that would subject him or her to |
license certification suspension or revocation pursuant to |
Section 21B-80 21-23a of this Code.
Further, no school board |
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shall knowingly employ a person who has been found
to be the |
perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any minor under 18 |
years
of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the |
Juvenile Court Act of
1987.
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(d) No school board shall knowingly employ a person for |
whom a criminal
history records check and a Statewide Sex |
Offender Database check has not been initiated.
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(e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a |
finding of child
abuse by a holder of any
certificate issued |
pursuant to Article 21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the
School |
Code, the
State Superintendent of Education may initiate |
certificate suspension
and revocation proceedings as |
authorized by law.
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(e-5) The superintendent of the employing school board |
shall, in writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education |
and the applicable regional superintendent of schools of any |
certificate holder whom he or she has reasonable cause to |
believe has committed an intentional act of abuse or neglect |
with the result of making a child an abused child or a |
neglected child, as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the |
certificate holder's dismissal or resignation from the school |
district. This notification must be submitted within 30 days |
after the dismissal or resignation. The certificate holder must |
also be contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice by the |
superintendent. All correspondence, documentation, and other |
|
information so received by the regional superintendent of |
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State Board |
of Education, or the State Teacher Certification Board under |
this subsection (e-5) is confidential and must not be disclosed |
to third parties, except (i) as necessary for the State |
Superintendent of Education or his or her designee to |
investigate and prosecute pursuant to Article 21 of this Code, |
(ii) pursuant to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the |
certificate holder or his or her representative, or (iv) as |
otherwise provided in this Article and provided that any such |
information admitted into evidence in a hearing is exempt from |
this confidentiality and non-disclosure requirement. Except |
for an act of willful or wanton misconduct, any superintendent |
who provides notification as required in this subsection (e-5) |
shall have immunity from any liability, whether civil or |
criminal or that otherwise might result by reason of such |
action. |
(f) After January 1, 1990 the provisions of this Section |
shall apply
to all employees of persons or firms holding |
contracts with any school
district including, but not limited |
to, food service workers, school bus
drivers and other |
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact
with |
the pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of |
criminal
history records checks and checks of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding
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contracts with more than one school district and assigned to |
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more than one
school district, the regional superintendent of |
the educational service
region in which the contracting school |
districts are located may, at the
request of any such school |
district, be responsible for receiving the
authorization for
a |
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee |
and
submitting the same to the Department of State Police and |
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database |
for each employee. Any information
concerning the record of |
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such |
employee obtained by the
regional superintendent shall be |
promptly reported to the president of the
appropriate school |
board or school boards.
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(g) In order to student teach in the public schools, a |
person is required to authorize a fingerprint-based criminal |
history records check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender |
Database and Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender |
Against Youth Database prior to participating in any field |
experiences in the public schools. Authorization for and |
payment of the costs of the checks must be furnished by the |
student teacher. Results of the checks must be furnished to the |
higher education institution where the student teacher is |
enrolled and the superintendent of the school district where |
the student is assigned. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-431, eff. 8-13-09; |
96-1452, eff. 8-20-10; 96-1489, eff. 1-1-11; revised 1-4-11.)
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(105 ILCS 5/14C-8) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-8)
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Sec. 14C-8. Teacher certification - Qualifications - |
Issuance of
certificates. No person shall be eligible
for |
employment by a school district as a teacher of transitional
|
bilingual education without either (a) holding a valid teaching |
certificate
issued pursuant to Article 21 of this Code and |
meeting such additional language
and course requirements as |
prescribed by the State Board of Education or
(b) meeting the |
requirements
set forth in this Section.
The Certification Board |
shall issue certificates
valid for teaching in all grades of |
the common school in
transitional bilingual education programs |
to any person
who presents it with satisfactory evidence that |
he
possesses an adequate speaking and reading ability in a
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language other than English in which transitional bilingual
|
education is offered and communicative skills in
English, and |
possessed within 5 years previous to his or her
applying
for a |
certificate under this Section a valid teaching
certificate |
issued by a foreign country, or by a State or
possession or |
territory of the United States, or other evidence
of teaching |
preparation as may be determined to be
sufficient by the |
Certification Board, or holds
a degree from an institution of |
higher learning in a foreign country
which the Certification |
Board determines to be the equivalent of a
bachelor's degree |
from a recognized
institution of higher learning in the
United |
States; provided that any
person seeking a certificate under |
this
Section must meet the following additional requirements:
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(1) Such persons must be in good health;
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(2) Such persons must be of sound moral character;
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(3) Such persons must be legally present in the
United |
States and possess legal authorization for employment;
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(4) Such persons must not be employed to replace
any |
presently employed teacher who otherwise would not be
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replaced for any reason.
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Certificates issuable pursuant to
this Section shall be |
issuable only during the 5 years
immediately following the |
effective date of this Act and
thereafter for additional |
periods of one year only upon
a determination by the State |
Board of Education that a
school district lacks the number of |
teachers necessary to
comply with the mandatory requirements of |
Section 14C-3 of this Article for the establishment and |
maintenance
of programs of transitional bilingual education
|
and said certificates issued by the Certification Board
shall |
be valid for a period of 6 years following their
date of |
issuance and shall not be renewed, except that one renewal for
|
a period of two years may be granted if necessary to permit the |
holder of
a certificate issued under this Section to acquire a |
teaching certificate
pursuant to Article 21 of this Code. Such |
certificates
and the persons to whom they are issued shall be |
exempt
from the provisions of Article 21 or Article 21B of this |
Code , except that Sections 21-16, 21-22, 21B-75, 21B-90, and |
21B-105 of this Code shall continue to be applicable to all |
such certificates or licenses except
that Sections 21-12, |
|
21-13, 21-16, 21-17, 21-21,
21-22, 21-23 and 21-24 shall |
continue to be applicable to
all such certificates .
|
After the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1984, an |
additional
renewal for a period to expire August 31, 1985, may |
be granted. The State
Board of Education shall report to the |
General Assembly on or before
January 31, 1985 its |
recommendations for the qualification of teachers of
bilingual |
education and for the qualification of teachers of English as a
|
second language. Said qualification program shall take effect |
no later than
August 31, 1985.
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Beginning July 1, 2001, the State Board of Education shall |
implement a test
or
tests to assess the speaking, reading, |
writing, and grammar skills of
applicants for a
certificate |
issued under this Section in the English language and in the
|
language of the
transitional bilingual education program |
requested by the applicant and shall
establish
appropriate fees |
for these tests. The State Board of Education, in
consultation |
with the
Certification Board, shall promulgate rules to |
implement the required tests,
including
specific provisions to |
govern test selection, test validation,
determination of a |
passing
score, administration of the test or tests, frequency |
of administration,
applicant fees,
identification requirements |
for test takers, frequency of applicants taking the
tests, the
|
years for which a score is valid, waiving tests for individuals |
who have
satisfactorily
passed other tests, and the |
consequences of dishonest conduct in the
application for or
|
|
taking of the tests.
|
If the qualifications of an applicant for a certificate |
valid for
teaching in transitional bilingual education |
programs in all grades of the
common schools do not meet the |
requirements established for the issuance of
that certificate, |
the Certification Board nevertheless shall issue the
applicant |
a substitute teacher's certificate under Section 21-9
whenever |
it appears from the face of the
application submitted for |
certification as a teacher of transitional
bilingual education |
and the evidence presented in support thereof that the
|
applicant's qualifications meet the requirements established |
for the
issuance of a certificate under Section 21-9; provided, |
that if it
does not appear from the face of such application |
and supporting evidence
that the applicant is qualified for |
issuance of a certificate under Section
21-9 the Certification |
Board shall evaluate the application with
reference to the |
requirements for issuance of certificates under Section
21-9 |
and shall inform the applicant, at the time it denies the
|
application submitted for
certification as a teacher of |
transitional bilingual education, of the
additional |
qualifications which the applicant must possess in order to |
meet
the requirements established for issuance of (i) a |
certificate valid for
teaching in transitional bilingual |
education programs in all grades of the
common schools and (ii) |
a substitute teacher's certificate under Section 21-9.
|
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1105, eff. 6-1-07; 95-496, eff. 8-28-07; |
95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-1a) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-1a)
|
Sec. 21-1a. Tests required for certification and teacher |
preparation.
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(a) After July 1, 1988, in addition to all other |
requirements, early
childhood, elementary, special, high |
school, school service personnel, or,
except as provided in |
Section 34-6, administrative certificates shall be
issued to |
persons who have satisfactorily passed a test of basic skills, |
an assessment of professional teaching, and a test of subject |
matter knowledge, provided that a person who passed another |
state's test of basic skills as a condition of certification or |
of admission to a teacher preparation program shall not be |
required to pass this State's test of basic skills.
The tests |
of basic skills and subject matter
knowledge shall be the tests |
which from time to time are designated by the
State Board of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher
Certification |
Board and may be tests prepared by an educational testing
|
organization or tests designed by the State Board of Education |
in
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board. The |
areas to be
covered by the test of basic skills shall include |
the basic skills of
reading, writing, grammar and mathematics. |
The test of subject matter
knowledge shall assess content |
knowledge in the specific subject field. The
tests shall be |
|
designed to be racially neutral to assure that no
person in |
taking the tests is thereby discriminated against on the basis |
of
race, color, national origin or other factors unrelated to |
the person's
ability to perform as a certificated employee. The |
score required to pass
the tests of basic skills and subject |
matter knowledge shall be fixed by
the State Board of Education |
in consultation with the State Teacher
Certification Board. The |
tests shall be held not fewer than 3 times a year
at such time |
and place as may be designated by the State Board of Education
|
in consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board.
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(b) (Blank). Except as provided in Section 34-6, the |
provisions of subsection
(a) of this Section shall apply |
equally in any school district subject to
Article 34, provided |
that the State Board of Education shall determine
which |
certificates issued under Sections 34-8.1 and 34-83 prior to |
July 1,
1988 are comparable to any early childhood certificate, |
elementary school
certificate, special certificate, high |
school certificate, school service
personnel certificate or |
administrative certificate issued under this
Article as of July |
1, 1988.
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(c) (Blank). A person who holds an early childhood, |
elementary, special, high
school or school service personnel |
certificate issued under this Article on
or at any time before |
July 1, 1988, including a person who has been
issued any such |
certificate pursuant to Section 21-11.1 or in exchange for
a |
comparable certificate theretofore issued under Section 34-8.1 |
|
or Section
34-83, shall not be required to take or pass the |
tests in order to
thereafter have such certificate renewed.
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(d) The State Board of Education in consultation with the |
State Teacher
Certification Board shall conduct a pilot |
administration of the tests by
administering the test to |
students completing teacher education programs in
the 1986-87 |
school year for the purpose of determining the effect and
|
impact of testing candidates for certification.
|
Beginning with the 2002-2003 academic year, a student may |
not enroll
in a teacher preparation program at a recognized |
teacher training
institution until he or she has passed the |
basic skills test.
|
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 94th General Assembly, prior to completing an approved |
teacher preparation program, a preservice education candidate |
must satisfactorily pass the test of subject matter knowledge |
in the discipline in which he or she will be certified to |
teach. The teacher preparation program may require passage of |
the test of subject matter knowledge at any time during the |
program, including prior to student teaching.
|
(e) The rules and regulations developed to implement the |
required test
of basic skills and subject matter knowledge |
shall include the requirements
of subsections (a), (b), and (c) |
and shall include specific regulations to
govern test |
selection; test validation and determination of a passing
|
score; administration of the tests; frequency of |
|
administration; applicant
fees; frequency of applicants' |
taking the tests; the years for which a
score is valid; and, |
waiving certain additional tests for additional
certificates |
to individuals who have satisfactorily passed the test of
basic |
skills and subject matter knowledge as required in subsection |
(a).
The State Board of Education shall provide, by rule, |
specific policies that
assure uniformity in the difficulty |
level of each form of the basic skills
test and each subject |
matter knowledge test from test-to-test and
year-to-year. The |
State Board of Education shall also set a passing
score for the |
tests.
|
(f) (Blank). The State Teacher Certification Board may |
issue a nonrenewable
temporary certificate between July 1, 1988 |
and August 31, 1988 to
individuals who have taken the tests of |
basic skills and subject matter
knowledge prescribed by this |
Section but have not received such test scores
by August 31, |
1988. Such temporary certificates shall expire on
December 31, |
1988.
|
(g) (Blank). Beginning February 15, 2000, the State Board |
of
Education, in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board,
shall implement and administer a new |
system of certification for teachers in
the State of Illinois. |
The State Board of Education, in consultation with the
State |
Teacher Certification Board, shall design
and implement a |
system of examinations and various other criteria which
shall |
be required prior to the issuance of Initial Teaching |
|
Certificates and
Standard Teaching Certificates. These |
examinations and indicators shall be
based on national and |
State professional teaching standards,
as determined by
the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board. The State
Board of Education may |
adopt any and all regulations necessary to implement and
|
administer
this Section.
|
(h) (Blank). The State Board of Education shall report to |
the Illinois
General Assembly and the Governor with |
recommendations for further changes and
improvements to the |
teacher certification system no later than July 1,
1999
and on |
an annual basis until July 1, 2001.
|
(i) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2012. |
(Source: P.A. 96-689, eff. 8-25-09.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-1b) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-1b)
|
Sec. 21-1b. Subject endorsement on certificates. |
(a) All certificates
initially issued under this Article |
after June 30, 1986, shall be
specifically endorsed by the |
State Board of Education for each subject the
holder of the |
certificate is legally qualified to teach, such endorsements
to |
be made in accordance with standards promulgated by the State |
Board of
Education in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board. The regional superintendent of schools, |
however, has the duty, after appropriate training, to accept |
and review all transcripts for new initial certificate |
|
applications and ensure that each applicant has met all of the |
criteria established by the State Board of Education in |
consultation with with the State Teacher Certification Board. |
All
certificates which are issued under this Article prior to |
July 1, 1986 may,
by application to the State Board of |
Education, be specifically endorsed
for each subject the holder |
is legally qualified to teach. Endorsements
issued under this |
Section shall not apply to substitute teacher's
certificates |
issued under Section 21-9 of this Code.
|
(b) Until December 31, 2011 Commencing July 1, 1999 , each |
application for endorsement of an existing
teaching |
certificate shall be accompanied by a $30 nonrefundable fee. |
(c) Beginning on January 1, 2012, each application for |
endorsement of an existing teaching certificate must be |
accompanied by a $50 nonrefundable fee. |
(d) There is hereby created a Teacher Certificate
Fee
|
Revolving Fund as a special fund within the State Treasury. The |
proceeds of
each endorsement $30 fee shall be paid into the |
Teacher
Certificate Fee Revolving
Fund; and the moneys in that |
Fund shall be appropriated and used to provide the
technology |
and other resources necessary for the timely and efficient
|
processing of certification requests. The Teacher Certificate |
Fee Revolving Fund is not subject to administrative charge |
transfers authorized under Section 8h of the State Finance Act |
from the Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund into any other |
fund of this State.
|
|
(e) The State Board of Education and each regional office |
of education are authorized to charge a service or convenience |
fee for the use of credit cards for the payment of |
certification fees. This service or convenience fee may not |
exceed the amount required by the credit card processing |
company or vendor that has entered into a contract with the |
State Board or regional office of education for this purpose, |
and the fee must be paid to that company or vendor.
|
(f) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-403, eff. 8-13-09.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2)
|
Sec. 21-2. Grades of certificates.
|
(a) All certificates issued under this Article shall be |
State certificates
valid , except as limited in Section 21-1, in |
every school district coming
under the provisions of this Act |
and shall be limited in time and designated
as follows: |
Provisional vocational certificate, temporary provisional
|
vocational certificate, early childhood certificate, |
elementary school
certificate, special certificate, secondary |
certificate, school service
personnel certificate, |
administrative certificate, provisional
certificate, and |
substitute certificate. The requirement of student teaching
|
under close and competent supervision for obtaining a teaching |
certificate
may be waived by the State Teacher Certification |
Board upon presentation to
the Board by the teacher of evidence |
|
of one year or more of 5 years successful teaching
experience |
on a valid certificate and graduation from
a recognized |
institution of higher learning with a bachelor's degree or |
higher .
|
(b) Initial Teaching Certificate.
Persons who (1) have |
completed an approved teacher preparation program,
(2) are |
recommended by an
approved teacher preparation program, (3) |
have successfully completed the
Initial Teaching Certification |
examinations required by the State Board of
Education, and (4) |
have met all other criteria established by the State Board
of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board, shall
be issued an Initial Teaching Certificate valid |
for 4 years of teaching, as
defined in Section 21-14 of this |
Code. Initial Teaching Certificates shall be
issued for |
categories corresponding to Early Childhood, Elementary, |
Secondary,
and Special K-12, with special certification |
designations for Special
Education, Bilingual Education, |
fundamental learning areas (including Language
Arts, Reading, |
Mathematics, Science, Social Science, Physical Development and
|
Health, Fine Arts, and Foreign Language), and other areas
|
designated by the State Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State
Teacher Certification Board. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Article, an Initial Teaching |
Certificate shall be automatically extended for one year for |
all persons who (i) have been issued an Initial Teaching |
Certificate that expires on June 30, 2004 and (ii) have not |
|
met, prior to July 1, 2004, the Standard Certificate |
requirements under paragraph (c) of this Section. An |
application and fee shall not be required for this extension.
|
(b-5) A person who holds an out-of-state certificate and |
who is otherwise eligible for a comparable Illinois certificate |
may be issued an Initial Certificate if that person has not |
completed 4 years of teaching. Upon completion of 4 years of |
teaching, the person is eligible for a Standard Certificate. |
Beginning July 1, 2004, an out-of-state candidate who has |
already earned a second-tier certificate in another state is |
not subject to any Standard Certificate eligibility |
requirements stated in paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this |
Section other than completion of the 4 years of teaching. An |
out-of-state candidate who has completed less than 4 years of |
teaching and does not hold a second-tier certificate from |
another state must meet the requirements stated in paragraph |
(2) of subsection (c) of this Section, proportionately reduced |
by the amount of time remaining to complete the 4 years of |
teaching.
|
(c) Standard Certificate.
|
(1) Persons who (i)
have completed 4 years of teaching, as |
defined in Section 21-14 of this Code,
with an Initial |
Certificate or an Initial Alternative Teaching Certificate and
|
have met all other criteria established by the State Board of |
Education in
consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board, (ii) have
completed 4
years of teaching on a valid |
|
equivalent certificate in another State or
territory of the |
United States, or have completed 4 years of teaching in a
|
nonpublic Illinois elementary or secondary school with an |
Initial Certificate
or an Initial Alternative Teaching |
Certificate, and have met all other criteria
established by the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board, or (iii) were issued teaching
|
certificates prior to
February 15, 2000 and are renewing those |
certificates after February 15, 2000,
shall be issued a |
Standard Certificate valid for 5 years, which may be renewed
|
thereafter every 5 years by the State Teacher Certification |
Board based on
proof of continuing education or professional |
development.
Beginning July 1,
2003, persons who have completed |
4 years of teaching, as described in clauses
(i) and (ii) of |
this paragraph (1), have successfully completed the
|
requirements of paragraphs (2) through (4) of this subsection |
(c),
and have met all other criteria
established by the State |
Board of Education, in consultation with the State
Teacher |
Certification Board, shall be issued Standard Certificates. |
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, |
beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold valid out-of-state |
certificates and have completed 4 years of teaching on a valid |
equivalent certificate in another State or territory of the |
United States shall be issued comparable Standard |
Certificates. Beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold valid |
out-of-state certificates as described in subsection (b-5) of |
|
this Section are subject to the requirements of paragraphs (2) |
through (4) of this subsection (c), as required in subsection |
(b-5) of this Section, in order to receive a Standard |
Certificate. Standard
Certificates shall be issued for |
categories corresponding to Early Childhood,
Elementary, |
Secondary, and Special K-12, with special certification
|
designations for Special Education, Bilingual Education,
|
fundamental learning areas (including Language Arts, Reading, |
Mathematics,
Science, Social Science, Physical Development and |
Health, Fine Arts, and
Foreign Language), and other areas |
designated by the State Board of
Education, in consultation |
with the State
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(2) This paragraph (2) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1)
of this subsection (c). In order |
to receive a Standard Teaching Certificate,
a person must |
satisfy one of the following requirements:
|
(A) Completion of a program of induction and mentoring |
for new teachers
that is
based upon a specific plan |
approved by the State Board of Education, in
consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board. Nothing in this |
Section, however, prohibits an induction or mentoring |
program from operating prior to approval. Holders of |
Initial Certificates issued before September 1, 2007 must |
complete, at a minimum, an approved one-year induction and |
mentoring program. Holders of Initial Certificates issued |
|
on or after September 1, 2007 must complete an approved |
2-year induction and mentoring program. The plan must
|
describe the role of mentor teachers, the criteria and |
process for their
selection, and how all the following |
components are to be provided:
|
(i) Assignment of a formally trained mentor |
teacher to each new
teacher
for a specified period of |
time, which shall be established by the employing
|
school or school district,
provided that a mentor |
teacher may not directly or indirectly participate in
|
the evaluation of a new teacher pursuant to Article 24A |
of this Code or the
evaluation procedure of the school.
|
(ii) Formal mentoring for each new teacher.
|
(iii) Support for each new teacher in relation to |
the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards, the |
content-area standards applicable to
the new teacher's |
area of certification, and any applicable local school
|
improvement and professional development plans.
|
(iv) Professional development specifically |
designed to foster the
growth of each new teacher's |
knowledge and skills.
|
(v) Formative assessment that is based on the |
Illinois Professional
Teaching Standards and designed |
to provide feedback to the new teacher and
|
opportunities for reflection on his or her |
performance, which must not
be used directly or |
|
indirectly in any evaluation of a new teacher
pursuant |
to Article 24A of this Code or the evaluation procedure |
of the
school and which must include the activities |
specified
in clauses (B)(i), (B)(ii), and (B)(iii) of |
this paragraph (2).
|
(vi) Assignment of responsibility for coordination |
of the induction
and mentoring program within each |
school district participating in the program.
|
(B) Successful completion of 4 semester hours of |
graduate-level
coursework on the assessment of one's own |
performance in relation to the
Illinois Professional |
Teaching Standards. The coursework must be approved
by the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board; must be offered either by an |
institution of higher
education, by such an institution in |
partnership with a teachers' association
or union or with a |
regional office of education, or by another entity
|
authorized to issue college credit; and must include |
demonstration of
performance through all of the following |
activities for each of the Illinois
Professional Teaching |
Standards:
|
(i) Observation, by the course instructor or |
another experienced
teacher, of the new teacher's |
classroom practice (the observation may be
recorded |
for later viewing) for the purpose of identifying and |
describing how
the new teacher made content meaningful |
|
for students; how the teacher motivated
individuals |
and the group and created an environment conducive to |
positive
social interactions, active learning, and |
self-motivation; what instructional
strategies the |
teacher used to encourage students' development of |
critical
thinking, problem solving, and performance; |
how the teacher communicated using
written, verbal, |
nonverbal, and visual communication techniques; and |
how the
teacher maintained standards of professional |
conduct and provided leadership to
improve students' |
learning.
|
(ii) Review and analysis, by the course instructor |
or another
experienced
teacher, of written |
documentation (i.e., lesson plans, assignments, |
assessment
instruments, and samples of students' work) |
prepared by the new teacher for
at least 2 lessons. The |
documentation must provide evidence of classroom
|
performance related to Illinois Professional Teaching |
Standards 1 through 9,
with an emphasis on how the |
teacher used his or her understanding of students,
|
assessment data, and subject matter to decide on |
learning goals; how the
teacher designed or selected |
activities and instructional materials and
aligned |
instruction to the relevant Illinois Learning |
Standards; how the
teacher adapted or modified |
curriculum to meet individual students' needs;
and how |
|
the teacher sequenced instruction and designed or |
selected student
assessment strategies.
|
(iii) Demonstration of professional expertise on |
the part of the new
teacher in reflecting on his or her |
practice, which was observed under clause
(B)(i) of |
this paragraph (2) and documented under clause (B)(ii) |
of this
paragraph (2), in terms of teaching strengths, |
weaknesses, and implications
for improvement according |
to the Illinois Professional Teaching Standards.
|
(C) Successful completion of a minimum of 4 semester |
hours of
graduate-level coursework addressing preparation |
to meet the requirements
for certification by the National |
Board for Professional Teaching Standards
(NBPTS). The |
coursework must be approved by the State Board of |
Education, in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board, and must be offered
either by an |
institution of higher education, by such an institution in
|
partnership with a teachers' association or union or with a |
regional office
of education, or by another entity |
authorized to issue college credit. The
course must address |
the 5 NBPTS Core Propositions and relevant standards
|
through such means as the following:
|
(i) Observation, by the course instructor or |
another experienced
teacher, of the new teacher's |
classroom practice (the observation may be
recorded |
for later viewing) for the purpose of identifying and |
|
describing how
the new teacher made content meaningful |
for students; how the teacher motivated
individuals |
and the group and created an environment conducive to |
positive
social interactions, active learning, and |
self-motivation; what instructional
strategies the |
teacher used to encourage students' development of |
critical
thinking, problem solving, and
performance; |
how the teacher communicated using written, verbal, |
nonverbal, and
visual communication techniques; and |
how the teacher maintained standards of
professional |
conduct and provided leadership to improve students' |
learning.
|
(ii) Review and analysis, by the course instructor |
or another
experienced
teacher, of written |
documentation (i.e., lesson plans, assignments, |
assessment
instruments, and samples of students' work) |
prepared by the new teacher for
at least 2 lessons. The |
documentation must provide evidence of classroom
|
performance, including how the teacher used his or her |
understanding of
students, assessment data, and |
subject matter to decide on learning goals;
how the |
teacher designed or selected activities and |
instructional materials
and aligned instruction to the |
relevant Illinois Learning Standards; how
the teacher |
adapted or modified curriculum to meet individual |
students' needs;
and how the teacher sequenced |
|
instruction and designed or selected student
|
assessment strategies.
|
(iii) Demonstration of professional expertise on |
the part of the new
teacher in reflecting on his or her |
practice, which was observed under clause
(C)(i) of |
this paragraph (2) and documented under clause (C)(ii) |
of this
paragraph (2), in terms of teaching strengths, |
weaknesses, and implications
for improvement.
|
(C-5) Satisfactory completion of a minimum of 12 |
semester hours of graduate credit towards an advanced |
degree in an education-related field from an accredited |
institution of higher education.
|
(D)
Receipt of an advanced degree from an accredited |
institution of
higher education in an education-related |
field that is earned by a person either while he or she |
holds an Initial Teaching Certificate or prior to his or |
her receipt of that certificate.
|
(E) Accumulation of 60 continuing professional |
development units
(CPDUs), earned by completing selected |
activities that comply with paragraphs
(3) and (4) of this |
subsection (c). However, for an individual who holds an
|
Initial Teaching Certificate on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the number of |
CPDUs shall be reduced to reflect the
teaching time |
remaining on the Initial Teaching Certificate.
|
(F) Completion of a nationally normed, |
|
performance-based assessment, if
made available by the |
State Board of Education in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board, provided that the cost to the |
person shall not
exceed the cost of the coursework |
described in clause (B) of this paragraph
(2).
|
(G) Completion of requirements for meeting the |
Illinois criteria for becoming "highly qualified" (for |
purposes of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Public |
Law 107-110) in an additional teaching area. |
(H) Receipt of a minimum 12-hour, post-baccalaureate, |
education-related professional development certificate |
issued by an Illinois institution of higher education and |
developed in accordance with rules adopted by the State |
Board of Education in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board. |
(I) Completion of the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards (NBPTS) process.
|
(J) Receipt of a subsequent Illinois certificate or |
endorsement pursuant to Article 21 of this Code.
|
(3) This paragraph (3) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1)
of this subsection (c). Persons |
who seek to satisfy the requirements of clause (E) of paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (c) through accumulation of CPDUs may |
earn credit through
completion of coursework, workshops, |
seminars, conferences, and other similar
training events that |
|
are pre-approved by the State Board of Education, in
|
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board, for |
the purpose of
reflection on teaching practices in order to |
address all of the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards |
necessary to obtain a Standard Teaching
Certificate. These |
activities must meet all of the following requirements:
|
(A) Each activity must be designed to advance a |
person's knowledge and
skills in relation to one or more of |
the Illinois Professional Teaching
Standards or in |
relation to the content-area standards applicable to the
|
teacher's field of certification.
|
(B) Taken together, the activities completed must |
address each of the
Illinois Professional Teaching |
Standards as provided in clauses (B)(i),
(B)(ii), and |
(B)(iii) of paragraph (2) of this subsection (c).
|
(C) Each activity must be provided by an entity |
approved by the State
Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board,
for this |
purpose.
|
(D) Each activity, integral to its successful |
completion, must require
participants to demonstrate the |
degree to which they have acquired new
knowledge or skills, |
such as through performance, through preparation of a
|
written product, through assembling samples of students' |
or teachers' work, or
by some other means that is |
appropriate to the subject matter of the activity.
|
|
(E) One CPDU shall be available for each hour of direct |
participation
by a holder of an Initial Teaching |
Certificate in a qualifying activity.
An activity may be |
attributed to more than one of the Illinois Professional
|
Teaching Standards, but credit for any activity shall be |
counted only once.
|
(4) This paragraph (4) applies only to those persons |
required to
successfully complete the requirements of this |
paragraph under paragraph (1) of
this subsection (c). Persons |
who seek to satisfy the requirements of clause (E) of paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (c) through accumulation of CPDUs may |
earn credit from the following, provided that each activity is |
designed to advance a person's
knowledge and skills in relation |
to one or more of the Illinois
Professional Teaching Standards |
or in relation to the content-area
standards applicable to the |
person's field or fields of certification:
|
(A) Collaboration and partnership activities related |
to improving a
person's knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including all of the following:
|
(i) Peer review and coaching.
|
(ii) Mentoring in a formal mentoring program, |
including service as a
consulting teacher |
participating in a remediation process formulated |
under
Section 24A-5 of this Code.
|
(iii) Facilitating parent education programs |
directly related to
student achievement for a school, |
|
school district, or regional office of
education.
|
(iv) Participating in business, school, or |
community partnerships
directly related to student |
achievement.
|
(B) Teaching college or university courses in areas |
relevant to a
teacher's field of certification, provided |
that the teaching may only be
counted once during the |
course of 4 years.
|
(C) Conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, and |
symposiums related
to improving a person's knowledge and |
skills as a teacher, including all of the
following:
|
(i) Completing non-university credit directly |
related to student
achievement, the Illinois |
Professional Teaching Standards, or content-area
|
standards.
|
(ii) Participating in or presenting at workshops, |
seminars,
conferences, institutes, and symposiums.
|
(iii) (Blank).
|
(iv) Training as reviewers of university teacher |
preparation programs.
|
An activity listed in this clause (C) is creditable
|
only if its provider is approved for this purpose by the |
State Board of
Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(D) Other educational experiences related to improving |
a person's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, including all |
|
of the following:
|
(i) Participating in action research and inquiry |
projects.
|
(ii) Observing programs or teaching in schools, |
related businesses, or
industry that is systematic, |
purposeful, and relevant to a teacher's field of
|
certification.
|
(iii)
Participating in study groups related to |
student achievement,
the Illinois Professional |
Teaching Standards, or content-area standards.
|
(iv) Participating in work/learn programs or |
internships.
|
(v) Developing a portfolio of students' and |
teacher's work.
|
(E) Professional leadership experiences related to |
improving a person's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including all of the following:
|
(i) Participating in curriculum development or |
assessment activities
at the school, school district, |
regional office of education, State, or
national level.
|
(ii) Participating in team or department |
leadership in a school or
school district.
|
(iii) (Blank).
|
(iv) Publishing educational articles, columns, or |
books relevant to
a teacher's field of certification.
|
(v) Participating in non-strike related activities |
|
of a professional
association or labor organization |
that are related to professional development.
|
(5) A person must complete the requirements of this |
subsection (c) before the expiration of his or her Initial
|
Teaching Certificate and must submit assurance of having done |
so to the regional superintendent of schools or a local
|
professional development committee authorized by the regional |
superintendent to submit recommendations to him or her for this |
purpose.
|
Within 30 days after receipt, the regional superintendent |
of schools shall review the assurance
of
completion submitted |
by a person and, based upon compliance with all of the
|
requirements for receipt of a Standard Teaching Certificate, |
shall forward to
the State Board of Education a recommendation |
for issuance of the Standard Certificate or non-issuance.
The |
regional superintendent of schools shall notify the affected |
person
if the recommendation is for non-issuance of the |
Standard Certificate. A person who is considered not to be |
eligible for a Standard Certificate and who has received the |
notice of non-issuance may appeal this determination to the |
Regional Professional Development Review Committee (RPDRC). |
The recommendation of the regional superintendent and the |
RPDRC, along with all supporting materials, must then be |
forwarded to the State Board of Education for a final |
determination.
|
Upon review of a regional superintendent of school's |
|
recommendations, the
State Board of Education shall issue |
Standard Teaching Certificates to those
who qualify and shall |
notify a person, in writing, of a decision denying a
Standard |
Teaching Certificate. Any decision denying issuance of a |
Standard
Teaching Certificate to a person may be appealed to |
the State Teacher
Certification Board.
|
(6) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Teacher
Certification Board, may adopt rules to implement |
this subsection (c) and may
periodically evaluate any of the |
methods of qualifying for a Standard Teaching
Certificate |
described in this subsection (c).
|
(7) The changes made to paragraphs (1) through (5) of this |
subsection (c) by this amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly shall apply to those persons who hold or are eligible |
to hold an Initial Certificate on or after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly and shall |
be given effect upon their application for a Standard |
Certificate.
|
(8) Beginning July 1, 2004, persons who hold a Standard |
Certificate and have acquired one master's degree in an |
education-related field are eligible for certificate renewal |
upon completion of two-thirds of the continuing professional |
development units specified in subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) |
of subsection (e) of Section 21-14 of this Code. Persons who |
hold a Standard Certificate and have acquired a second master's |
degree, an education specialist, or a doctorate in an |
|
education-related field or hold a Master Certificate are |
eligible for certificate renewal upon completion of one-third |
of the continuing professional development units specified in |
subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) of subsection (e) of Section |
21-14 of this Code.
|
(d) Master Certificate. Persons who have
successfully |
achieved National Board certification through the National |
Board
for Professional Teaching Standards shall be issued a |
Master Certificate, valid
for 10 years and renewable thereafter |
every 10 years through compliance with
requirements set forth |
by the State Board of Education, in consultation with
the State |
Teacher Certification Board. Beginning on July 1, 2012, |
individuals holding a Master's Certificate in specific areas |
may work only in an area in which they have a comparable |
Illinois endorsement or only if the individual has an Illinois |
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards endorsement |
issued prior to June 30, 2012. However, each teacher who holds |
a
Master Certificate shall be eligible for a teaching position |
in this State in
the areas for which he or she holds a Master |
Certificate without satisfying any
other requirements of this |
Code, except for those requirements pertaining to
criminal |
background checks. A holder of a Master Certificate in an area |
of science or social science is eligible to teach in any of the |
subject areas within those fields, including those taught at |
the advanced level, as defined by the State Board of Education |
in consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board. A |
|
teacher who holds a Master Certificate shall be
deemed to meet |
State certification renewal requirements in the area or areas
|
for which he or she holds a Master Certificate for the 10-year |
term of the
teacher's Master Certificate.
|
(e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 95-793, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-2.1) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2.1)
|
Sec. 21-2.1. Early childhood certificate.
|
(a) An early childhood certificate
shall be valid for 4 |
years for teaching children up to 6 years of age,
exclusive
of |
children enrolled in kindergarten, in facilities approved by |
the State
Superintendent of Education.
Beginning July 1, 1988, |
such certificate shall be valid for 4 years for
Teaching |
children through grade 3 in facilities approved by the State
|
Superintendent of Education. Subject to the provisions of |
Section 21-1a,
it shall be issued to persons who have graduated
|
from a recognized institution of higher learning with a |
bachelor's degree
and with not fewer than 120 semester hours |
including professional education
or human development or, |
until July 1, 1992, to persons who have early
childhood |
education instruction and practical
experience involving |
supervised work with children under 6 years of age
or with |
children through grade 3.
Such persons shall be recommended for |
the early childhood certificate by
a recognized institution as |
having completed an approved program of preparation
which |
|
includes the requisite hours and academic and professional |
courses
and practical experience approved by the State |
Superintendent of Education
in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board. The student teaching portion of |
such practical experience may be satisfied through placement in |
any of grades pre-kindergarten (which consists of children from |
3 years through 5 years of age) through 3, provided that the |
student is under the active supervision of a cooperating |
teacher who is certified and qualified (i) in early childhood |
education or (ii) in self-contained, general elementary |
education. Candidates for the early childhood certificate |
(including paraprofessionals) with at least one year of |
experience in a school or community-based early childhood |
setting who are enrolled in early-childhood teacher |
preparation programs may be paid and receive credit while |
student teaching with their current employer, provided that |
their student teaching experience meets the requirements of |
their early-childhood teacher preparation program.
|
(b) Beginning February 15, 2000, Initial and Standard
Early
|
Childhood
Education
Certificates shall be issued to persons who |
meet the criteria established by
the State Board of Education.
|
(c) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 94-1034, eff. 1-1-07; 94-1110, eff. 2-23-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-2a) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2a)
|
Sec. 21-2a. Required instruction for all teachers. After
|
|
September 1, 1981
and until January 1, 1999,
in addition to all |
other requirements, the successful completion of course
work |
which includes instruction on the psychology of the exceptional |
child,
the identification of the exceptional child, including, |
but not limited
to the learning disabled and methods of |
instruction for the exceptional
child, including, but not |
limited to the learning disabled shall be a
prerequisite to a |
person receiving any of the following certificates:
early |
childhood, elementary, special and high school. After January |
1, 1999, the State Board of Education shall ensure that the
|
curriculum for all approved teacher preparation programs |
includes, and that all
prospective teachers pursuing Early |
Childhood, Elementary,
Secondary, or Special certificates |
receive,
instruction on the psychology of,
the identification |
of, and the methods of instruction for the exceptional
child, |
including without limitation the learning disabled. This |
instruction on
exceptional children may be provided in one |
concentrated course or may be
integrated among other courses |
within the teacher preparation program as shall
be determined |
by the State Board of
Education.
|
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 90-653, eff. 7-29-98; |
91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-3) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-3)
|
Sec. 21-3. Elementary certificate.
|
|
(a) An elementary school certificate shall be valid for 4 |
years for
teaching in the kindergarten and lower 9 grades of |
the common schools.
Subject to the provisions of Section 21-1a,
|
it shall be issued to persons who have graduated from a |
recognized
institution of higher learning with a bachelor's |
degree and with not
fewer than 120 semester hours and with a |
minimum of 16 semester hours in
professional education, |
including 5 semester hours in student teaching
under competent |
and close supervision. Such persons shall be recommended
for |
the elementary certificate by a recognized institution as |
having completed
an approved program of preparation which |
includes intensive preservice
training in the humanities, |
natural sciences, mathematics and the
academic and |
professional courses approved by the State Superintendent of
|
Education in consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board.
|
(b) Beginning February 15, 2000, Initial and Standard
|
Elementary
Certificates
shall be issued to persons who meet all |
of the criteria established by the
State Board of Education for |
elementary education.
|
(c) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 90-811, eff. 1-26-99; |
91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-4) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-4)
|
Sec. 21-4. Special certificate.
|
|
(a) A special certificate shall be valid for 4 years for |
teaching the
special subjects named therein in all grades of |
the common schools. Subject
to the provisions of Section 21-1a, |
it shall be issued to persons who have
graduated from a |
recognized institution of higher learning with a bachelor's
|
degree and with not fewer than 120 semester hours including a |
minimum of
16 semester hours in professional education, 5 of |
which shall be in student
teaching under
competent and close |
supervision. When the holder of such certificate has
earned a |
master's degree, including eight semester hours of graduate
|
professional education from a recognized institution of higher |
learning
and with two years' teaching experience, it may be |
endorsed for
supervision.
|
Such persons shall be recommended for the special |
certificate by a recognized
institution as having completed an |
approved program of preparation which
includes academic and |
professional courses approved by the State Superintendent
of |
Education in consultation
with the State Teacher Certification |
Board.
|
(b) Those persons holding special certificates on February |
15, 2000 shall
be
eligible for one of the following:
|
(1) The issuance of Standard Elementary and Standard |
Secondary
Certificates with appropriate special |
certification designations as determined
by the State |
Board of Education, in consultation with the State Teacher
|
Certification Board, and consistent with rules adopted by |
|
the State Board of
Education. These certificates shall be |
renewed as provided in subsection (c)
of Section 21-2.
|
(2) The issuance of Standard Special K-12 Certificates |
with appropriate
special
certification designations, which |
shall be renewed as provided in subsection
(c) of Section |
21-2. These certificates shall not be eligible for |
additional
certification designations except as approved |
by the State Board of Education,
in consultation with the |
State Teacher Certification Board.
|
(c) Those persons eligible to receive K-12 certification |
after February
15, 2000 shall be issued Initial Elementary and |
Initial
Secondary Certificates with
appropriate special |
certification designations pursuant to this Section or
Initial
|
Special K-12 Certificates with appropriate special |
certification designations
pursuant to this Section. These |
Initial K-12 Special Certificates shall not
be eligible for |
additional certification designations except as approved by
|
the State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board.
|
(d) All persons holding
a special
certificate
with a |
special education endorsement
are exempt from the provisions of |
Section 2-3.71
of this Code, provided they meet all the other |
requirements for teaching
as established by the
State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification
Board.
|
Beginning February 15, 2000, all persons exchanging a |
|
special certificate
pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section |
with a special
education endorsement or
receiving a special |
education
designation on either a special certificate or an |
elementary certificate issued
pursuant to subsection (c) of |
this Section are exempt from the provisions of
Section 2-3.71 |
of
this Code, provided they meet all the other requirements for |
teaching
as established by the State Board
of Education, in |
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board.
|
Certificates exchanged or issued pursuant to this |
subsection (d) shall be
valid for teaching children with |
disabilities, as defined in Section 14-1.02 of
this Code, and |
these special certificates shall be called Initial or Standard
|
Special Preschool - Age 21 Certificates. Nothing in this |
subsection (d) shall
be construed to adversely affect the |
rights of any person presently
certificated, any person whose |
certification is currently pending, or any
person who is |
currently enrolled or enrolls prior to February 15, 2000 in an
|
approved Special K-12 certification program.
|
(e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 90-653, eff. 7-29-98; |
90-811, eff.
1-26-99; 91-102, eff. 7-12-99; 91-765, eff. |
6-9-00.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-5)
|
Sec. 21-5. High school certificate.
|
(a) A high school certificate shall be
valid for 4 years |
|
for teaching in grades 6 to 12 inclusive of the common
schools. |
Subject to the provisions of Section 21-1a, it shall be issued
|
to persons who have graduated from a recognized institution of |
higher learning
with a bachelor's degree and with not fewer |
than 120 semester hours including
16 semester hours in |
professional education, 5 of which shall be in student
teaching |
under competent and close supervision and with one or more |
teaching
fields. Such persons shall be recommended
for the high |
school certificate by a recognized institution as having |
completed
an approved program of preparation which includes the |
academic and professional
courses approved by the State |
Superintendent of Education in consultation
with the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(b) Beginning February 15, 2000, Initial and Standard
|
Secondary
Certificates
shall be issued to persons who meet all |
of the criteria established by the
State Board of Education for |
secondary education.
|
(c) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 90-811, eff. 1-26-99; |
91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-5b) |
Sec. 21-5b. Alternative certification. The State Board of |
Education, in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board, shall
establish and implement an |
alternative certification program under which
persons who meet |
|
the requirements of and successfully complete the program
|
established by this Section shall be issued an alternative |
teaching certificate
for teaching in the schools. The program |
shall be
limited to not more than 260 new participants during |
each year that the program
is in effect. The State Board of |
Education, in cooperation with one or more not-for-profit |
organizations in the State that support excellence in teaching, |
which may be in partnership
with a university that offers |
4-year baccalaureate and masters degree
programs and that is a |
recognized institution as defined in Section 21B-105 of this |
Code 21-21 , may within
30 days after submission by the program |
sponsor approve
a course of study developed by the program |
sponsor that persons
in the program must successfully complete |
in order to satisfy one
criterion for issuance of an |
alternative certificate under this Section.
The Alternative |
Teacher Certification program course of study must include |
content and skills which have been approved by the State Board |
of Education,
in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board, as meeting the requirement
for State |
teacher certification. |
The alternative certification program established under |
this Section shall be
known as the Alternative Teacher |
Certification program. The Alternative
Teacher Certification |
Program shall be offered by the submitting partnership,
and |
such partnership may be offered by one or more not-for-profit
|
organizations in the State which support excellence in |
|
teaching. The program
shall be
comprised of the following 3 |
phases: (a) the first phase is the
course of study offered on |
an intensive basis in education theory,
instructional methods, |
and
practice
teaching; (b) the second phase is the person's |
assignment to a full-time
teaching position for one school |
year; and (c) the third phase is a
comprehensive assessment of |
the person's teaching performance by school
officials and the |
partnership participants
and a recommendation by the program |
sponsor to the
State Board of Education that the person be |
issued a standard alternative
teaching certificate. Successful |
completion of the Alternative Teacher
Certification program |
shall be deemed to satisfy any other
practice or student |
teaching and subject matter requirements established by
law. |
A provisional alternative teaching certificate, valid for |
one year of
teaching
in the common schools and not renewable, |
shall be issued under this Section
21-5b to persons who at the |
time of applying for the provisional alternative
teaching |
certificate under this Section: |
(1) have graduated from an accredited college or |
university with a
bachelor's degree; |
(2) have successfully completed the first phase of the |
Alternative Teacher
Certification program as provided in |
this Section; |
(3) have passed the tests of basic skills and subject |
matter knowledge
required by Section
21-1a; and |
(4) (i) have been employed for a period of at least 5 |
|
years in an area
requiring application of the individual's |
education or (ii) have attained at least a cumulative grade |
average of a "B" if the individual is assigned either to a |
school district that has not met the annual measurable |
objective for highly qualified teachers required by the |
Illinois Revised Highly Qualified Teachers (HQT) Plan or to |
a school district whose data filed with the State Board of |
Education indicates that the district's poor and minority |
students are taught by teachers who are not highly |
qualified at a higher rate than other students; however, |
this item (4)
does not apply with respect to a provisional |
alternative teaching certificate
for
teaching in schools |
situated in a school district that is located in a city
|
having a
population in excess of 500,000 inhabitants. |
Assignment may be made under clause (ii) of this item (4) |
only if the district superintendent and the exclusive |
bargaining representative of the district's teachers, if |
any, jointly agree to permit the assignment.
|
A person possessing a provisional alternative certificate |
under this Section
shall be treated as a regularly certified |
teacher for purposes of compensation,
benefits, and other terms |
and conditions of employment afforded teachers in the
school |
who are members of a bargaining unit represented by an |
exclusive
bargaining representative, if any. |
Until February 15, 2000, a standard alternative teaching |
certificate,
valid for 4 years for teaching
in the schools and |
|
renewable as provided in
Section 21-14, shall be
issued under |
this Section 21-5b to persons who first complete the |
requirements
for the provisional alternative teaching |
certificate
and who at the time of applying for a standard |
alternative teaching certificate
under this Section have |
successfully completed the second and third phases of
the |
Alternative Teacher Certification program as provided in this |
Section.
Alternatively, beginning February 15, 2000, at the end |
of the 4-year
validity
period,
persons who were issued a |
standard alternative teaching certificate shall be
eligible, |
on
the same basis as holders of an Initial Teaching Certificate |
issued under
subsection (b) of
Section 21-2 of this Code, to |
apply for a Standard Teaching Certificate,
provided they
meet |
the requirements of
subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code |
and further provided that a
person who
does not
apply for and |
receive a Standard Teaching Certificate shall be able to teach
|
only in
schools situated in a school district that is located |
in a city having a
population in excess
of 500,000 inhabitants. |
Beginning February 15, 2000, persons who have completed the |
requirements for
a
standard alternative teaching certificate |
under this Section shall be issued an
Initial
Alternative |
Teaching Certificate valid for 4 years of teaching and not
|
renewable. At the end of the 4-year validity period, these |
persons shall be
eligible, on the same
basis as
holders of an |
Initial Teaching Certificate issued under subsection (b) of
|
Section 21-2 of
this Code, to apply for a Standard Teaching |
|
Certificate, provided they meet the
requirements of subsection |
(c) of Section 21-2. |
Such alternative certification program shall be |
implemented so that the first
provisional alternative teaching |
certificates issued under this Section are
effective upon the |
commencement of the 1997-1998 academic year and the first
|
standard alternative teaching certificates issued under this |
Section are
effective upon the commencement of the 1998-1999 |
academic year. |
The State Board of Education, in cooperation with the |
partnership or partnerships
establishing such Alternative |
Teacher Certification programs, shall adopt rules
and |
regulations that are consistent with this Section and that the |
State Board
of Education deems necessary to establish and |
implement the program. |
No one may be admitted to an alternative certification |
program under this Section after September 1, 2012, and those |
candidates who are admitted on or before September 1, 2012 must |
complete the program before September 1, 2013. |
This Section is repealed on September 1, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 95-270, eff. 8-17-07; 96-862, eff. 1-15-10.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-5c) |
Sec. 21-5c. Alternative route to teacher certification. |
The State Board
of Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board, shall
establish and implement one |
|
or more alternative route to teacher certification programs
|
under which persons who meet the requirements of and |
successfully complete the programs
established by this Section |
shall be issued an initial teaching
certificate for teaching in |
schools in this State.
The State Board of Education may
approve |
a course of study
that persons in such programs must |
successfully complete in order to
satisfy one criterion for |
issuance of a certificate under this Section. The
Alternative |
Route to Teacher Certification programs course of study must |
include
content and skills which have been approved by the |
State Board of
Education, in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board, as meeting the
requirement for |
State teacher certification. |
Programs established under this Section shall be
known as |
Alternative Route to Teacher Certification programs. The |
programs
may be offered by a university that offers 4-year |
baccalaureate and masters degree programs and that is a |
recognized institution as defined in Section 21B-105 of this |
Code 21-21 , by one or more not-for-profit
organizations in the |
State, or a combination thereof. The programs shall be |
comprised of the following 3
phases: (a) a
course of study |
offered on an intensive basis in education theory,
|
instructional methods, and
practice teaching; (b) the person's |
assignment to a full-time
teaching position for one school |
year, including the designation of a
mentor teacher to advise |
and assist the person with that
teaching assignment; and (c) a |
|
comprehensive assessment of the person's
teaching performance |
by school officials and program participants
and a |
recommendation by the program sponsor to the
State Board of |
Education that the person be issued an initial
teaching |
certificate. Successful completion of Alternative Route to
|
Teacher
Certification programs shall be deemed to satisfy any |
other
practice or student teaching and subject matter |
requirements established by
law. |
A provisional alternative teaching certificate, valid for |
one year of
teaching
in the common schools and not renewable, |
shall be issued under this Section
21-5c to persons who at the |
time of applying for the provisional alternative
teaching |
certificate under this Section: |
(1) have graduated from an accredited college or |
university with a
bachelor's degree; |
(2) have been employed for a period of at least 5 years |
in an area
requiring application of the individual's |
education; |
(3) have successfully completed the first phase of the |
Alternative Teacher
Certification program as provided in |
this Section; and |
(4) have passed the tests of basic skills and subject |
matter knowledge
required by Section 21-1a. |
An initial teaching certificate, valid for teaching
in the |
common schools,
shall be
issued under Section 21-3 or 21-5 to |
persons who first complete the
requirements
for the provisional |
|
alternative teaching certificate
and who at the time of |
applying for an initial teaching certificate
have successfully |
completed the second and third phases of
the Alternative Route |
to Teacher Certification program as provided in this
Section. |
A person possessing a provisional alternative certificate |
or an initial
teaching certificate earned under this Section
|
shall be treated as a regularly certified teacher for purposes |
of compensation,
benefits, and other terms and conditions of |
employment afforded teachers in the
school who are members of a |
bargaining unit represented by an exclusive
bargaining |
representative, if any. |
The State Board of Education may adopt rules
and |
regulations that are consistent with this Section and that the |
State Board
deems necessary to establish and implement the |
program. |
No one may be admitted to an alternative certification |
program under this Section after September 1, 2012, and those |
candidates who are admitted on or before September 1, 2012 must |
complete the program before September 1, 2013. |
This Section is repealed on September 1, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-862, eff. 1-15-10.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-5d) |
Sec. 21-5d. Alternative route to administrative |
certification. The State
Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board
and an advisory |
|
panel consisting of no less than 7 administrators appointed by
|
the State Superintendent of Education,
shall establish and |
implement one or more alternative route to administrative
|
certification program under which persons who meet the |
requirements of and
successfully complete the program |
established by this Section shall be issued a
standard |
administrative certificate for serving as an administrator
in |
schools in this State. For the purposes of this Section only,
|
"administrator" means a person holding any administrative |
position for which a
standard administrative certificate with a |
general administrative endorsement,
chief school business |
official endorsement, or superintendent endorsement
is |
required, except a principal or an assistant principal. The |
State Board of
Education may approve a course of study that |
persons in the program must
successfully complete in order to |
satisfy one criterion for issuance of a
certificate under this |
Section. The Alternative Route to Administrative
Certification |
program course of study must include content and
skills
which |
have been approved by the State Board of Education, in |
consultation with
the State Teacher Certification Board, as |
meeting the requirement for administrative
certification. |
Programs established under this Section shall be known as |
the Alternative
Route to Administrative Certification |
programs. The programs shall be comprised
of the following 3 |
phases: (a) a course of study offered on an intensive basis
in |
education management, governance, organization, and planning; |
|
(b) the
person's assignment to a full-time position for one |
school year as an
administrator; and (c) a comprehensive
|
assessment of the person's performance by school officials and |
a recommendation
to the State Board of Education
that the |
person be issued a standard administrative certificate. |
Successful
completion of an Alternative Route to |
Administrative Certification program
shall be deemed to |
satisfy any other supervisory, administrative, or management
|
experience requirements established by law. |
A provisional alternative administrative certificate, |
valid for one year of
serving as an administrator in the common
|
schools and not renewable, shall be issued under this Section |
21-5d to persons
who at the time of applying for the |
provisional alternative administrative
certificate under this |
Section: |
(1) have graduated from an accredited college or |
university with a
master's degree in a management field or |
with a bachelor's degree and the life
experience equivalent |
of a master's degree in a management field as determined
by |
the State Board of Education; |
(2) have been employed for a period of at least 5 years |
in
a management level position; |
(3) have successfully completed the first phase of the |
Alternative Route
to Administrative Certification program |
as provided in this Section; and |
(4) have passed any examination required by the State |
|
Board of Education. |
A standard administrative certificate with a general |
administrative
endorsement, chief school business official |
endorsement, or superintendent
endorsement,
renewable as |
provided in Section
21-14, shall be issued under Section 21-7.1 |
to persons who first complete the
requirements for the |
provisional alternative administrative certificate and who
at |
the time of applying for a standard administrative certificate |
have
successfully completed the second and third phases of an |
Alternative Route to
Administrative Certification program as |
provided in this Section. |
The State Board of Education may adopt rules and |
regulations that are
consistent with this Section and that the |
State Board deems necessary to
establish and implement those |
programs. |
No one may be admitted to an alternative certification |
program under this Section after September 1, 2012, and those |
candidates must complete the program before September 1, 2013. |
This Section is repealed on September 1, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-862, eff. 1-15-10.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-7.1) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-7.1) |
Sec. 21-7.1. Administrative certificate. |
(a) After July 1, 1999, an administrative
certificate valid |
for 5
years of supervising and administering in the public |
common schools (unless
changed under subsection (a-5) of this |
|
Section) may be
issued to persons who have graduated from a |
regionally accredited institution
of higher learning with a |
master's degree or its equivalent and who have been recommended |
by a
recognized institution of higher learning, a |
not-for-profit entity, or a combination thereof, as having |
completed a program of
preparation for one or more of these |
endorsements. Such programs of
academic and professional |
preparation required for endorsement shall be
administered by |
an institution or not-for-profit entity approved to offer such |
programs by the State Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Teacher Certification Board, and shall be operated in |
accordance with this Article and the standards set forth by
the |
State Superintendent of Education in consultation with the |
State
Teacher Certification Board. Any program offered in whole |
or in part by a not-for-profit entity must also be approved by |
the Board of Higher Education. |
(a-5) Beginning July 1, 2003, if an administrative |
certificate holder
holds a Standard Teaching Certificate, the |
validity period of the
administrative certificate shall be |
changed, if necessary, so that the
validity period of the |
administrative certificate coincides with the validity
period |
of the Standard Teaching Certificate. Beginning July 1, 2003, |
if
an administrative certificate holder holds a Master Teaching |
Certificate,
the validity period of the administrative |
certificate shall be changed so
that the validity period of the |
administrative certificate coincides with the
validity period |
|
of the Master Teaching Certificate. |
(b) No administrative certificate shall be issued for the |
first time
after June 30, 1987 and no endorsement provided for |
by this Section shall
be made or affixed to an administrative |
certificate for the first time
after June 30, 1987 unless the |
person to whom such administrative
certificate is to be issued |
or to whose administrative certificate such
endorsement is to |
be affixed has been required to demonstrate as a part of
a |
program of academic or professional preparation for such |
certification or
endorsement: (i) an understanding of the |
knowledge called for in
establishing productive parent-school |
relationships and of the procedures
fostering the involvement |
which such relationships demand; and (ii) an
understanding of |
the knowledge required for establishing a high quality
school |
climate and promoting good classroom organization and |
management,
including rules of conduct and instructional |
procedures appropriate to
accomplishing the tasks of |
schooling; and (iii) a demonstration of the
knowledge and |
skills called for in providing instructional leadership. The
|
standards for demonstrating an understanding of such knowledge |
shall be set
forth by the State Board of Education in |
consultation with the
State Teacher Certification Board, and |
shall be administered by the
recognized institutions of higher |
learning as part of the programs of
academic and professional |
preparation required for certification and
endorsement under |
this Section. As used in this subsection: "establishing
|
|
productive parent-school relationships" means the ability to |
maintain
effective communication between parents and school |
personnel, to encourage
parental involvement in schooling, and |
to motivate school personnel to
engage parents in encouraging |
student achievement, including the
development of programs and |
policies which serve to accomplish this
purpose; and |
"establishing a high quality school climate" means the ability
|
to promote academic achievement, to maintain discipline, to |
recognize
substance abuse problems among students and utilize |
appropriate law
enforcement and other community resources to |
address these problems, to support
teachers and students in |
their education endeavors, to establish learning
objectives |
and to provide instructional leadership, including the
|
development of policies and programs which serve to accomplish |
this
purpose; and "providing instructional leadership" means |
the ability to
effectively evaluate school personnel, to |
possess general communication and
interpersonal skills, and to |
establish and maintain appropriate classroom
learning |
environments. The provisions of this subsection shall not apply |
to
or affect the initial issuance or making on or before June |
30, 1987 of any
administrative certificate or endorsement |
provided for under this Section,
nor shall such provisions |
apply to or affect the renewal after June 30, 1987
of any such |
certificate or endorsement initially issued or made on or |
before
June 30, 1987. |
(c) Administrative certificates shall be renewed every 5 |
|
years
with
the first renewal being 5 years following the |
initial receipt of
an
administrative certificate, unless the |
validity period for the administrative
certificate has been
|
changed under subsection (a-5) of this Section, in which case |
the
certificate shall be renewed at the same time that the |
Standard or Master
Teaching Certificate is renewed. |
(c-5) (Blank). |
(c-10) Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(c-15) of |
this Section, persons holding administrative
certificates must |
follow the certificate renewal procedure set forth in this
|
subsection (c-10), provided that those persons holding |
administrative
certificates on June 30, 2003 who are renewing |
those certificates on or
after July 1, 2003 shall be issued new |
administrative certificates valid for
5 years (unless changed |
under subsection (a-5) of this Section), which
may be renewed |
thereafter as set forth in this subsection (c-10). |
A person holding an administrative certificate and
|
employed in a position requiring administrative certification,
|
including a regional superintendent of schools, must satisfy |
the continuing
professional development requirements of this |
Section to renew his or her
administrative certificate. The |
continuing professional development must include without
|
limitation the following continuing professional development
|
purposes: |
(1) To improve the administrator's knowledge of
|
instructional practices and administrative procedures in
|
|
accordance with the Illinois Professional School Leader
|
Standards. |
(2) To maintain the basic level of competence required
|
for initial certification. |
(3) To improve the administrator's mastery of skills
|
and knowledge regarding the improvement of teaching
|
performance in clinical settings and assessment of the |
levels
of student performance in the schools. |
The continuing professional development must
include the |
following in order for the certificate to be renewed: |
(A) Participation in continuing professional
|
development activities, which must total a minimum of 100
|
hours of continuing professional development. The |
participation must consist of a minimum
of 5 activities per |
validity period of the certificate, and the certificate |
holder must maintain documentation of completion of each |
activity. |
(B) Participation every year in an Illinois
|
Administrators' Academy course, which participation must
|
total a minimum of 30 continuing professional development
|
hours during the period of the certificate's validity and |
which
must include completion of applicable required
|
coursework, including completion of a communication, |
dissemination, or application component, as defined by the |
State Board of
Education. |
The certificate holder must complete a verification form |
|
developed by the State Board of Education and certify that 100 |
hours of continuing professional development activities and 5 |
Administrators' Academy courses have been completed. The |
regional superintendent of schools shall review and
validate |
the verification form for a certificate holder. Based on
|
compliance with all of the requirements for renewal, the |
regional
superintendent of schools shall forward a |
recommendation for
renewal or non-renewal to the State |
Superintendent of Education
and shall notify the certificate |
holder of the recommendation. The
State Superintendent of |
Education shall review the
recommendation to renew or non-renew |
and shall notify, in writing,
the certificate holder of a |
decision denying renewal of his or her
certificate. Any |
decision regarding non-renewal of an
administrative |
certificate may be appealed to the State Teacher
Certification |
Board. |
The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State
Teacher Certification Board, shall adopt rules to |
implement this
subsection (c-10). |
The regional superintendent of schools shall monitor the |
process
for renewal of administrative certificates established |
in this subsection
(c-10). |
(c-15) This subsection (c-15) applies to the first period |
of an
administrative certificate's validity during which the |
holder becomes
subject to the requirements of subsection (c-10) |
of this Section if the
certificate has less than 5 years' |
|
validity or has less than 5 years' validity
remaining when the |
certificate holder becomes subject to the
requirements of |
subsection (c-10) of this Section. With respect to this
period, |
the 100 hours of continuing professional development and 5
|
activities per validity period specified in clause (A) of
|
subsection (c-10) of this Section shall instead be deemed to |
mean 20
hours of continuing professional development and one |
activity per year of
the certificate's validity or remaining |
validity and the 30 continuing
professional development hours |
specified in clause (B) of
subsection (c-10) of this Section |
shall instead be deemed to mean
completion of at least one |
course per year of the certificate's validity or
remaining |
validity. Certificate holders who evaluate certified staff |
must complete a 2-day teacher evaluation course, in addition to |
the 30 continuing professional development hours. |
(c-20) The State
Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Teacher Certification Board,
shall develop |
procedures for implementing this Section and shall administer |
the
renewal of administrative certificates. Failure to submit |
satisfactory evidence
of continuing professional education |
which contributes to promoting the goals
of this Section shall |
result in a loss of administrative certification. |
(d) Any limited or life supervisory certificate issued |
prior to July 1, 1968
shall continue to be valid for all |
administrative and supervisory positions
in the public schools |
for which it is valid as of that date as long as its
holder |
|
meets the requirements for registration or renewal as set forth |
in
the statutes or until revoked according to law. |
(e) The administrative or supervisory positions for which |
the certificate
shall be valid shall be determined by one or |
more of the following endorsements: general
supervisory, |
general administrative, principal, chief school business |
official, and superintendent. |
Subject to the provisions of Section 21-1a, endorsements |
shall be
made under conditions set forth in this Section. The |
State Board of
Education shall, in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification
Board, adopt rules pursuant to the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
establishing |
requirements for obtaining administrative certificates where
|
the minimum administrative or supervisory requirements surpass |
those set
forth in this Section. |
The State Teacher Certification Board shall file with the |
State Board of
Education a written recommendation when |
considering additional
administrative or supervisory |
requirements. All additional requirements
shall be based upon |
the requisite knowledge necessary to perform those
tasks |
required by the certificate. The State Board of Education shall |
in
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board, |
establish
standards within its rules which shall include the |
academic and
professional requirements necessary for |
certification. These standards
shall at a minimum contain, but |
not be limited to, those used by the State
Board of Education |
|
in determining whether additional knowledge will be
required. |
Additionally, the State Board of Education shall in |
consultation
with the State Teacher Certification Board, |
establish provisions within its
rules whereby any member of the |
educational community or the public may
file a formal written |
recommendation or inquiry regarding requirements. |
(1) Until July 1, 2003, the general supervisory |
endorsement shall be
affixed to the
administrative |
certificate of any holder who has at least 16 semester |
hours
of graduate credit in professional education |
including 8 semester hours of
graduate credit in curriculum |
and research and who has at least 2 years of
full-time |
teaching experience or school service personnel experience |
in
public schools, schools under the supervision of the |
Department of Corrections,
schools under the |
administration of the Department of
Rehabilitation |
Services, or nonpublic schools meeting the standards
|
established by the State Superintendent of Education or |
comparable out-of-state
recognition standards approved by |
the State Superintendent of Education. |
Such endorsement shall be required for supervisors, |
curriculum directors
and for such similar and related |
positions as determined by the State
Superintendent of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher
|
Certification Board. |
(2) Until August 31 June 30 , 2014, the general |
|
administrative endorsement shall be affixed to the
|
administrative certificate of any holder who has at least |
20 semester hours
of graduate credit in educational |
administration and supervision and who
has at least 2 years |
of full-time teaching experience or school service
|
personnel experience in public schools, schools under the |
supervision of
the Department of Corrections, schools |
under the administration of
the Department of |
Rehabilitation Services, or
nonpublic schools meeting the |
standards
established by the State Superintendent of |
Education or comparable
out-of-state recognition standards |
approved by the State Superintendent
of Education. |
Such endorsement or a principal endorsement shall be |
required for principal, assistant principal,
assistant or |
associate superintendent, and junior college dean and for |
related
or similar positions as determined by the State |
Superintendent of Education
in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification Board. |
(2.5) The principal endorsement shall be affixed to the |
administrative certificate of any holder who qualifies by: |
(A) successfully completing a principal |
preparation program approved in accordance with |
Section 21-7.6 of this Code and any applicable rules; |
(B) having 4 years of teaching experience; |
however, the State Board of Education shall allow, by |
rules, for fewer than 4 years of experience based on |
|
meeting standards set forth in such rules, including |
without limitation a review of performance evaluations |
or other evidence of demonstrated qualifications; and |
(C) having a master's degree. |
(3) The chief school business official endorsement |
shall be affixed to
the administrative certificate of any |
holder who qualifies by having
a Master's degree, 2 years |
of administrative experience in school business
management |
or 2 years of university-approved practical experience, |
and a minimum of 20 semester hours of graduate credit in a |
program
established by the State Superintendent of |
Education in consultation with the
State Teacher |
Certification Board for the preparation of school business
|
administrators. Such endorsement shall also be affixed to |
the administrative
certificate of any holder who qualifies |
by having a Master's Degree in Business
Administration, |
Finance or Accounting and 6 semester hours of internship in |
school business management from a regionally accredited |
institution
of higher education. |
After June 30, 1977, such endorsement shall be required |
for any individual
first employed as a chief school |
business official. |
(4) The superintendent endorsement shall be affixed to |
the administrative
certificate of any holder who has |
completed 30 semester hours of graduate
credit beyond the |
master's degree in a program for the preparation of
|
|
superintendents of schools including 16 semester hours of |
graduate credit
in professional education and who has at |
least 2 years experience as an
administrator or supervisor |
in the public schools or the State Board of
Education or |
education service regions or in nonpublic schools meeting |
the
standards established by the State Superintendent of |
Education or
comparable out-of-state recognition standards |
approved by the State
Superintendent of Education and holds |
general supervisory or general
administrative endorsement, |
or who has had 2 years of experience as a
supervisor, chief |
school business official, or administrator while holding |
an all-grade supervisory
certificate or a certificate |
comparable in validity and educational and
experience |
requirements. |
After June 30, 1968, such endorsement shall be required |
for a
superintendent of schools, except as provided in the |
second paragraph of this
Section and in Section 34-6. |
Any person appointed to the position of superintendent |
between the
effective date of this Act and June 30, 1993 in |
a school district organized
pursuant to Article 32 with an |
enrollment of at least 20,000 pupils shall
be exempt from |
the provisions of this paragraph (4) until
June 30, 1996. |
(f) All official interpretations or acts of issuing or |
denying
administrative certificates or endorsements by the |
State Teacher's
Certification Board, State Board of Education |
or the State Superintendent
of Education, from the passage of |
|
P.A. 81-1208 on November 8, 1979 through
September 24, 1981 are |
hereby declared valid and legal acts in all respects and
|
further that the purported repeal of the provisions of this |
Section by P.A.
81-1208 and P.A. 81-1509 is declared null and |
void. |
(g) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-56, eff. 1-1-10; 96-903, eff. 7-1-10; 96-982, |
eff. 1-1-11; 96-1423, eff. 8-3-10; revised 9-2-10.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-7.5)
|
Sec. 21-7.5. Teacher leader endorsement. It shall be the |
policy of the State of Illinois to improve the quality of |
instructional leaders by providing a career pathway for |
teachers interested in serving in leadership roles.
Beginning |
on July 1, 2007, the State Board, in consultation with the |
State Teacher Certification Board, shall establish and |
implement a teacher leader endorsement, to be known as a |
teacher leader endorsement. Persons who meet the requirements |
of and successfully complete the requirements of the |
endorsement established under this Section on or before August |
31, 2012 shall be issued a teacher leader endorsement for |
serving in schools in this State. No teacher leader endorsement |
under this Section shall be issued after December 31, 2012. The |
endorsement shall be a career path endorsement but not a |
restrictive endorsement available to: (i) teachers who are |
certified through the National Board for Professional Teaching |
|
Standards and complete a specially designed strand of teacher |
leadership courses; (ii) teachers who have completed a master's |
degree program in teacher leadership; and (iii) proven teacher |
leaders with a master's degree who complete a specially |
designed strand of teacher leadership courses. Colleges and |
universities shall have the authority to qualify the |
proficiency of proven teacher leaders under clause (iii) of |
this Section. A teacher who meets any of clauses (i) through |
(iii) of this Section shall be deemed to satisfy the |
requirements for the teacher leader endorsement.
The State |
Board may adopt rules that are consistent with this Section and |
that the State Board deems necessary to establish and implement |
this teacher leadership endorsement program.
|
This Section is repealed on January 1, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 94-1039, eff. 7-20-06.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-7.6) |
Sec. 21-7.6. Principal preparation programs. |
(a) It is the policy of this State that an essential |
element of improving student learning is supporting and |
employing highly effective school principals in leadership |
roles who improve teaching and learning and increase academic |
achievement and the development of all students. |
(b) No later than September July 1, 2014, all institutions |
of higher education and not-for-profit entities approved by the |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
|
Teacher Certification Board, to offer principal preparation |
programs must do all of the following: |
(1) Meet the standards and requirements for such |
programs in accordance with this Section and any rules |
adopted by the State Board of Education. |
(2) Prepare candidates to meet approved standards for |
principal skills, knowledge, and responsibilities, which |
shall include a focus on instruction and student learning |
and which must be used for principal professional |
development, mentoring, and evaluation. |
(3) Include specific requirements for (i) the |
selection and assessment of candidates, (ii) training in |
the evaluation of staff, (iii) an internship, and (iv) a |
partnership with one or more school districts or |
State-recognized, non-public schools where the chief |
administrator is required to have the certification |
necessary to be a principal in an Illinois public school |
and where a majority of the instructors are required to |
have the certification necessary to be instructors in an |
Illinois public school. |
In accordance with subsection (a) of Section 21-7.1 of this |
Code, any principal preparation program offered in whole or in |
part by a not-for-profit entity must also be approved by the |
Board of Higher Education. |
(c) No candidates may be admitted to an approved general |
administrative preparation program after September 1, 2012. |
|
Institutions of higher education currently offering general |
administrative preparation programs may no longer entitle |
principals with a general administrative endorsement after |
August 31 June 30 , 2014. |
(d) Candidates successfully completing a principal |
preparation program established pursuant to this Section shall |
obtain a principal endorsement on an administrative |
certificate and are eligible to work in, at a minimum, those |
capacities set forth in paragraph (2) of subsection (e) of |
Section 21-7.1 of this Code. Beginning on August 31 July 1 , |
2014, the general administrative endorsement shall no longer be |
issued. Individuals who hold a valid and registered |
administrative certificate with a general administrative |
endorsement prior to July 1, 2014 and who have served for at |
least one full year during the 5 years prior in a position |
requiring a general administrative endorsement shall, upon |
request to the State Board of Education and through July 1, |
2015, have their respective general administrative endorsement |
converted to a principal endorsement. All other individuals |
holding a valid and registered administrative certificate with |
a general administrative endorsement prior to August 31 July 1 , |
2014 shall have such general administrative endorsement |
converted to a principal endorsement upon request to the State |
Board of Education and by completing one of the following |
pathways: |
(1) Take and pass a State principal assessment |
|
developed by the State Board of Education. |
(2) Through July 1, 2019, complete an Illinois |
Administrators' Academy course designated by the State |
Superintendent of Education. |
(3) Complete a principal preparation program |
established and approved pursuant to this Section and |
applicable rules. |
Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly |
shall prevent an individual having a general administrative |
endorsement from serving at any time in any position identified |
in paragraph (2) of subsection (e) of Section 21-7.1 of this |
Code. |
(e) The State Board of Education may adopt rules necessary |
to implement and administer principal preparation programs |
under this Section.
|
(f) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-903, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-9) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-9)
|
Sec. 21-9. Substitute certificates and substitute |
teaching.
|
(a) A
substitute teacher's certificate
may
be issued for |
teaching in all grades of the
common schools. Such certificate
|
may be issued upon
request of the regional superintendent of
|
schools of any region in which the teacher is to
teach. A |
substitute teacher's certificate is valid for teaching in the
|
|
public schools of
any county. Such certificate may be issued to |
persons who either (a) hold
a certificate
valid for teaching in |
the common schools as shown on the face of the
certificate,
(b) |
hold a bachelor's degree or higher bachelor of arts degree from |
an institution of higher learning
accredited by the North |
Central Association or other comparable regional
accrediting |
association or have been graduated from a recognized |
institution
of higher learning with a bachelor's degree or |
higher , or (c) (blank) have had 2 years of
teaching experience |
and meet such other
rules and regulations as may be adopted by |
the State
Board of Education in consultation with the State |
Teacher Certification
Board . Such certificate shall expire on |
June 30 in the fourth year from date
of issue.
Substitute |
teacher's certificates are not subject to endorsement as
|
described in Section 21-1b of this Code.
|
(b) A teacher holding a substitute teacher's certificate |
may teach only in
the
place of a certified teacher who is under |
contract with the employing board and
may teach only when no |
appropriate fully certified teacher is available to
teach in a
|
substitute capacity . If, however, there is no certified teacher |
under contract because of an emergency situation, then a school |
district may employ a substitute teacher for no longer than 30 |
calendar days per each vacant position in the district if the |
district notifies the appropriate regional office of education |
within 5 business days after the employment of the substitute |
teacher in the emergency situation. An emergency situation is |
|
one in which an unforeseen vacancy has occurred and (i) a |
teacher is unable to fulfill his or her contractual duties or |
(ii) teacher capacity needs of the district exceed previous |
indications, and the district is actively engaged in |
advertising to hire a fully certified teacher for the vacant |
position. |
There is no limit on the number of days that a substitute |
teacher may teach in a single school district, provided that no |
substitute teacher may teach for longer than 90 school days for |
any one certified teacher under contract in the same school |
year. |
A teacher holding an early childhood certificate, an
|
elementary certificate, a high school certificate, or a special
|
certificate may also substitute teach in grades K-12 , but only |
in the place of a
certified teacher who is under contract with |
the employing board , and may not teach for longer than 120 days |
for any one certified teacher under contract in the same school |
year . A
substitute teacher may teach only for a period not to |
exceed
90 paid school days or 450 paid school hours in any one |
school district in any
one
school term.
However,
a teacher |
holding an early childhood, elementary, high school, or special
|
certificate may substitute teach for a period not to exceed 120 |
paid
school days or 600 paid school hours in any one school |
district in any
one school term.
Where such teaching is partly |
on a daily and partly on an hourly
basis,
a school day shall be |
considered as 5 hours.
The teaching limitations imposed by this |
|
subsection
upon teachers holding substitute certificates shall
|
not apply in any school district operating under Article 34.
|
(c) (Blank). In order to substitute teach in the public |
schools, a person holding a valid substitute teacher's |
certificate or a person holding a valid early childhood |
certificate, a valid elementary certificate, a valid high |
school certificate, or a valid special certificate shall |
register as a substitute teacher with the regional |
superintendent of schools in each educational service region |
where the person will be employed. A person who registers as a |
substitute teacher with the regional superintendent of schools |
is responsible for (1) the payment of fees to register the |
certificate for its period of validity, (2) authorization of a |
criminal history records check and checks of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database and Statewide Child Murderer and Violent |
Offender Against Youth Database, as provided in Section 10-21.9 |
of this Code, (3) payment of the cost of the criminal history |
records check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender Database |
and Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth |
Database, and (4) providing evidence of physical fitness and |
freedom from communicable disease, including tuberculosis, |
which may consist of a physical examination and a tuberculin |
skin test as required by Section 24-5 of this Code. |
The regional superintendent of schools shall maintain a |
file for each registered substitute teacher in the educational |
service region that includes a copy of the person's |
|
certificate, the results from the criminal history records |
check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender Database and |
Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth |
Database, a copy of the physical examination, and a copy of the |
tuberculin skin test. The regional superintendent of schools |
shall issue a signed and sealed certificate of authorization to |
the substitute teacher that verifies that the substitute |
teacher has completed the registration process and criminal |
history records check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender |
Database and Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender |
Against Youth Database and has a physical examination and |
negative tuberculin test on file with the regional |
superintendent of schools and is thereby approved to substitute |
teach in the public schools of the educational service region. |
This certificate must be presented to all prospective employing |
school districts in the educational service region, who shall |
photocopy the certificate and keep a copy of the certificate |
with employment records for the substitute teacher. |
Persons wishing to substitute teach in more than one |
educational service region shall register as a substitute |
teacher with the appropriate regional superintendent of |
schools. The registration process shall include all items |
listed in the first paragraph of this subsection (b), with the |
exception of the authorization of a criminal history records |
check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender Database and |
Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth |
|
Database and the accompanying payment of associated fees. If |
the substitute teacher has been issued a signed and sealed |
certificate of authorization from another regional |
superintendent of schools, the registering entity may |
photocopy the certificate for its files and verify the |
substitute teacher's registration status. |
(d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1489, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-10) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-10)
|
Sec. 21-10. Provisional certificate.
|
(A) (Blank). Until July 1, 1972, the
State Teacher |
Certification Board may issue a provisional certificate
valid |
for teaching in elementary, high school or special subject |
fields
subject to the following conditions:
|
A provisional certificate may be issued to a person who |
presents
certified evidence of having earned a bachelor's |
degree from a
recognized institution of higher learning. The |
academic and
professional courses offered as a basis of the |
provisional certificate
shall be courses approved by the State |
Board of Education in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board.
|
A certificate earned under this plan may be renewed at the |
end of
each two-year period upon evidence filed with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board that the holder has earned 8 |
semester hours of
credit within the period; provided the |
|
requirements for the certificate
of the same type issued for |
the teaching position for which the teacher
is employed shall |
be met by the end of the second renewal period. A
second |
provisional certificate shall not be issued. The credits so
|
earned must be approved by the State Board of Education in
|
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board and |
must meet
the general pattern for a similar type of certificate |
issued on the
basis of credit. No more than 4 semester hours |
shall be chosen from
elective subjects.
|
(B) After July 1, 1972, the State Teacher Certification |
Board may
issue a provisional certificate valid for teaching in |
early childhood,
elementary, high school or special subject |
fields, or for providing service as
school service personnel or |
for administering schools subject to the following
conditions: |
A provisional certificate may be issued to a person who meets |
the
requirements for a regular teaching, school service |
personnel or administrative
certificate in another State and |
who
presents certified evidence of having earned a bachelor's |
degree from a
recognized institution of higher learning. The |
academic and
professional courses offered as a basis of the |
provisional certificate
shall be courses approved by the State |
Board of Education in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board. A certificate
earned under this plan is |
valid for a period of 2 years and
shall not be renewed.
|
(C) The State Teacher Certification Board may also issue a
|
provisional vocational certificate and a temporary provisional
|
|
vocational certificate.
|
(1) The requirements for a provisional vocational |
certificate shall
be determined by the State Board of |
Education in
consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board; provided, the
following
minimum |
requirements are met: (a) after July 1, 1972, at least 30
|
semester hours of credit from a recognized institution of |
higher
learning; and (b) after July 1, 1974, at least 60 |
semester hours of
credit from a recognized institution of |
higher learning.
|
(2) The requirements for a temporary provisional |
vocational
certificate shall be determined by the State |
Board of Education in consultation
with the State Teacher |
Certification Board;
provided, the following minimum |
requirements are met: (a) after July 1,
1973, at least |
4,000 hours of work experience in the skill to be
certified |
for teaching; and (b) after July 1, 1975, at least 8,000 |
hours
of work experience in the skill to be certified for |
teaching. Any
certificate issued under the provisions of |
this paragraph shall expire
on June 30 following the date |
of issue. Renewals may be granted on a
yearly basis, but |
shall not be granted to any person who does not file
with |
the State Teacher Certification Board a transcript showing |
at least
3 semester hours of credit earned during the |
previous year in a
recognized institution of learning. No |
such certificate shall be issued
except upon certification |
|
by the employing board, subject to the
approval of the |
regional superintendent of schools, that no qualified
|
teacher holding a regular certificate or a provisional |
vocational
certificate is available and that actual |
circumstances and need require
such issuance.
|
The courses or work experience offered as a basis for the |
issuance of
the provisional vocational certificate or the |
temporary provisional
vocational certificate shall be approved |
by the State Board of Education
in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board.
|
(D) (Blank). Until July 1, 1972, the State Teacher |
Certification Board may
also issue a provisional foreign |
language certificate valid for 4 years
for teaching the foreign |
language named therein in all grades of the
common schools and |
shall be issued to persons who have graduated from a
recognized |
institution of higher learning with not fewer than 120
semester |
hours of credit and who have met other requirements as
|
determined by the State Board of Education in consultation
with |
the State Teacher Certification Board. If the holder of a
|
provisional foreign language certificate is not a citizen of |
the United
States within 6 years of the date of issuance of the |
original
certificate, such certificate shall be suspended by |
the regional
superintendent of schools of the region in which |
the holder is engaged
to teach and shall not be reinstated |
until the holder is a citizen of
the United States.
|
(E) Notwithstanding anything in this Act to the contrary, |
|
the State
Teacher Certification Board shall issue part-time |
provisional certificates to
eligible individuals who are |
professionals and craftsmen.
|
The requirements for a part-time provisional teachers |
certificate shall be
determined by the State Board of Education |
in consultation with the State
Teacher Certification Board, |
provided the following minimum
requirements are met: 60 |
semester hours of credit from a recognized
institution of |
higher learning or 4000
hours of work experience in the skill |
to be certified for teaching.
|
A part-time provisional certificate may be issued for |
teaching no more than 2
courses of study for grades 6 through |
12.
|
A part-time provisional teachers certificate shall be |
valid for 2 years and
may be renewed at the end of each 2 year |
period.
|
(F) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 96-689, eff. 8-25-09.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-11.1) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-11.1)
|
Sec. 21-11.1. Certificates for equivalent qualifications. |
An applicant who holds or is eligible to hold a teacher's |
certificate
or license under the laws of another state or |
territory of the United
States may be granted a corresponding |
teacher's certificate in Illinois
on the written authorization |
of the State Board of Education
and the State Teacher |
|
Certification Board upon the following conditions:
|
(1) That the applicant is at least 19 years of age, is |
of good
character, of good health, and a citizen of the |
United States or
legally present and authorized for |
employment;
and
|
(2) That the requirements for a similar teacher's |
certificate in the
particular state or territory were, at |
the date of issuance of the
certificate, substantially |
equal to the requirements in force at the time
the |
application is made for the certificate in this State.
|
After January 1, 1988, in addition to satisfying the |
foregoing
conditions and requirements, an applicant for a |
corresponding teaching
certificate in Illinois also shall be |
required to pass the examinations
required under the provisions |
of
Section 21-1a as directed by the State Board of Education.
|
In determining good character under this Section, any |
felony
conviction of the applicant may be taken into |
consideration, but the
conviction shall not operate as a bar to |
registration.
|
The State Board of Education in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board shall prescribe rules and |
regulations establishing the
similarity of certificates in |
other states and the standards for
determining the equivalence |
of requirements.
|
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 93-572, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-11.2) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-11.2)
|
Sec. 21-11.2. Additional certificates - Experienced |
Employed Teachers.
Experienced certified teachers employed in |
Illinois public or private
elementary and secondary schools |
seeking additional teaching certificates
as provided in |
Sections 21-2.1, 21-3, 21-4 and 21-5 may submit an application
|
for evaluation of credentials to the State Teacher |
Certification Board.
Individuals obtaining a certificate by |
transcript
evaluation shall meet
the minimum requirements for |
the certificate as approved by the State Superintendent
of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher Certification |
Board.
|
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 82-911.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-11.3) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-11.3)
|
Sec. 21-11.3. Resident teacher certificate. A resident |
teacher
certificate shall be valid for 4 years for employment |
as a resident
teacher
in a public school. It shall be issued |
only to persons who have graduated
from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher education
with a bachelor's degree,
who |
are enrolled in a program of preparation approved by the State
|
Superintendent of Education in consultation with the State |
Teacher
Certification Board, and who have passed the |
appropriate tests as required
in Section 21-1a and as |
|
determined by the State Board of
Education. A resident teacher |
certificate may be issued for
teaching children through grade 3 |
or for grades K-9, 6-12, or K-12 in a
special subject area and |
may not be renewed. A resident teacher may teach
only under the |
direction of a certified teacher
as the resident
teacher's |
mentor and shall not teach in place of a certified teacher.
The
|
holder of a resident teacher certificate shall be deemed to |
have satisfied
the requirements for the issuance of a Standard |
Teaching Certificate if he
or she has completed 4 years of |
successful teaching, has passed all
appropriate tests, and has |
earned a master's degree in education.
|
No one may be admitted to a resident teacher program after |
July 1, 2012. |
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 91-102, eff. 7-12-99; 92-560, eff. 6-24-02.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-11.4)
|
Sec. 21-11.4. Illinois Teacher Corps.
|
(a) The General Assembly finds and determines that (i) it |
is important to
encourage the entry of qualified professionals |
into elementary and secondary
teaching as a second career; and |
(ii) there are a number of individuals who
have bachelors' |
degrees, experience in the work force, and an interest in
|
serving youth that creates a special talent pool with great |
potential for
enriching the lives of Illinois children as |
teachers. To provide this talent
pool with the opportunity to |
|
serve children as teachers, school districts,
colleges, and |
universities are encouraged, as part of the public policy of |
this
State, to enter into collaborative programs to educate and |
induct these
non-traditional candidates into the teaching |
profession. To facilitate the
certification of such |
candidates, the State Board of Education, in consultation
with |
the State Teacher Certification Board, shall assist |
institutions of higher
education and school districts with the |
implementation of the Illinois Teacher
Corps.
|
(b) Individuals who wish to become candidates for the |
Illinois Teacher Corps
program must earn a resident teacher |
certificate as defined in Section 21-11.3,
including:
|
(1) graduation from a regionally accredited |
institution
of higher education with a
bachelor's degree |
and at least a 3.00 out of a 4.00 grade point average;
|
(2) a minimum of 5 years of professional experience in |
the area the
candidate wishes to teach;
|
(3) passing the examinations required by the State |
Board
of Education;
|
(4) enrollment in a Masters of Education Degree program |
approved by the
State Superintendent of Education in |
consultation with the State Teacher
Certification Board; |
and
|
(5) completion of a 6 week summer intensive teacher |
preparation course
which is the first component of the |
Masters Degree program.
|
|
(c) School districts may hire an Illinois Teacher Corps |
candidate after the
candidate has received his or her resident |
teacher certificate. The school
district has the |
responsibility of ensuring that the candidates receive the
|
supports necessary to become qualified, competent and |
productive teachers. To
be eligible to participate in the |
Illinois Teacher Corps program, school
districts must provide a |
minimum of the following supports to the candidates:
|
(1) a salary and benefits package as negotiated through |
the teacher
contracts;
|
(2) a mentor certified teacher who will provide |
guidance to one or more
candidates under a program |
developed collaboratively by the school district and
|
university;
|
(3) at least quarterly evaluations performed of each |
candidate jointly by
the mentor teacher and the principal |
of the school or the principal's designee;
and
|
(4) a written and signed document from the school |
district outlining the
support the district intends to |
provide to the candidates, for approval by the
State |
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(d) Illinois institutions of higher education shall work |
collaboratively
with school districts and the State Teacher |
Certification Board to academically
prepare the candidates for |
the teaching profession. To be eligible to
participate, the |
College or School of Education of a participating Illinois
|
|
institution of higher education must develop a curriculum that |
provides, upon
completion, a Masters Degree in Education for |
the candidates. The Masters
Degree program must:
|
(1) receive approval from the State Teacher |
Certification Board; and
|
(2) take no longer than 3 summers and 2 academic years |
to complete, and
balance the needs and time constraints of |
the candidates.
|
(e) Upon successful completion of the Masters Degree |
program, the candidate
receives an Initial Teaching |
Certificate in the State of Illinois.
|
(f) If an individual wishes to become a candidate in the |
Illinois Teacher
Corps program, but does not possess 5 years of |
professional experience, the
individual may qualify for the |
program by participating in a one year
internship teacher |
preparation program with a school district. The one year
|
internship shall be developed collaboratively by the school |
district and the
Illinois institution of higher education, and |
shall be approved by the State
Teacher Certification Board.
|
(g) The State Board of Education is authorized to award |
grants to school
districts that seek to prepare candidates for |
the teaching profession who have
bachelors' degrees and |
professional work experience in subjects relevant to
teaching |
fields, but who do not have formal preparation for teaching. |
Grants
may be made to school districts for up to $3,000 per |
candidate when the school
district, in cooperation with a |
|
public or private university and the school
district's teacher |
bargaining unit, develop a program designed to prepare
teachers |
pursuant to the Illinois Teacher Corps program under this |
Section.
|
(h) Beginning September 1, 2011, individuals may no longer |
be admitted to Illinois Teacher Corps programs. |
(i) This Section is repealed on September 1, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-12)
|
Sec. 21-12. Printing; Seal; Signature; Credentials. |
(a) All certificates shall be printed by and bear the |
signatures of the chairman
and of the secretary of the State |
Teacher Certification Board. Each
certificate shall show the |
integrally printed seal of the State Teacher
Certification |
Board. All college credentials offered as the basis
of a |
certificate shall be presented to the secretary of the State
|
Teacher Certification Board for inspection and approval. The |
regional superintendent of schools, however, has the duty, |
after appropriate training, to accept and review all |
transcripts for new initial certificate applications and |
ensure that each applicant has met all of the criteria |
established by the State Board of Education in consultation |
with the State Teacher Certification Board.
|
(b) Until December 31, 2011 Commencing July 1, 1999 , each |
application for a certificate or evaluation
of credentials |
|
shall be accompanied by an evaluation fee of $30 payable to the
|
State Superintendent of Education, which is not
refundable, |
except that no application or evaluation fee shall be required
|
for a Master Certificate issued pursuant to subsection (d) of |
Section 21-2 of
this Code. |
(c) Beginning on January 1, 2012, each application for a |
certificate or evaluation of credentials must be accompanied by |
an evaluation fee of $75 payable to the State Superintendent of |
Education, which is non-refundable. |
(d) The proceeds of each $30 fee shall be paid into the |
Teacher
Certificate Fee Revolving Fund, created under Section |
21-1b of this Code;
and the moneys in that Fund shall be |
appropriated and used to provide the
technology and other |
resources necessary for the timely and efficient
processing of |
certification requests.
|
(e) The State Board of Education and each regional office |
of education are authorized to charge a service or convenience |
fee for the use of credit cards for the payment of |
certification fees. This service or convenience fee may not |
exceed the amount required by the credit card processing |
company or vendor that has entered into a contract with the |
State Board or regional office of education for this purpose, |
and the fee must be paid to that company or vendor.
|
When evaluation verifies the requirements for a valid |
certificate,
the applicant shall be issued an entitlement card |
that may be presented
to a regional superintendent of schools |
|
for issuance of a certificate.
|
(f) The applicant shall be notified of any deficiencies.
|
(g) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-14) |
Sec. 21-14. Registration and renewal of certificates. |
(a) A limited
four-year certificate or a certificate issued |
after July 1, 1955, shall
be renewable at its expiration or |
within 60 days thereafter by the
county superintendent of |
schools having supervision and control over the
school where |
the teacher is teaching upon certified evidence of meeting
the |
requirements for renewal as required by this Act and prescribed |
by
the State Board of Education in consultation with the State
|
Teacher Certification Board. An elementary supervisory |
certificate
shall not be renewed at the end of the first |
four-year period covered by
the certificate unless the holder |
thereof has filed certified evidence
with the State Teacher |
Certification Board that he has a master's degree
or that he |
has earned 8 semester hours of credit in the field of
|
educational administration and supervision in a recognized |
institution
of higher learning. The holder shall continue to |
earn 8 semester hours
of credit each four-year period until |
such time as he has earned a
master's degree. |
All certificates not renewed as provided in this Section or |
registered in accordance with this Code shall lapse after a |
|
period of 6 months from the expiration of the last year of |
registration. The certificate may be reinstated once the |
applicant has demonstrated proficiency by completing 9 |
semester hours of coursework from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher education in the content area that most |
aligns with the educator's endorsement area or areas. Before |
the certificate may be reinstated, the applicant shall pay all |
back fees owed from the time of expiration of the certificate |
until the date of reinstatement. Any certificate may be |
voluntarily surrendered by the certificate holder. A |
voluntarily surrendered certificate shall be treated as a |
revoked certificate. All certificates not renewed or |
registered as herein provided shall
lapse after a period of 5 |
years from the expiration of the last year
of
registration. |
Such certificates may be reinstated for a one year period
upon |
payment of all accumulated registration fees. Such reinstated
|
certificates shall only be renewed: (1) by earning 5 semester |
hours of
credit in a recognized institution of higher learning |
in the field of
professional education or in courses related to |
the holder's contractual
teaching duties; or (2) by presenting |
evidence of holding a valid
regular certificate of some other |
type. Any certificate may be
voluntarily surrendered by the |
certificate holder. A voluntarily
surrendered certificate |
shall be treated as a revoked certificate. |
(b) When those teaching certificates issued before |
February 15, 2000 are
renewed for the first time after February |
|
15, 2000, all
such
teaching
certificates
shall be exchanged for |
Standard Teaching Certificates as provided in subsection
(c) of |
Section 21-2. All Initial and Standard Teaching Certificates, |
including
those issued to persons who previously held teaching |
certificates issued before
February 15, 2000, shall be |
renewable under the conditions
set forth
in this
subsection |
(b). |
Initial Teaching Certificates are valid for 4 years of |
teaching, as provided in subsection (b) of Section 21-2 of this |
Code, and are renewable every 4 years until the person |
completes 4 years of teaching. If the holder of an Initial |
Certificate has completed 4 years of teaching but has not |
completed the requirements set forth in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code, then the Initial |
Certificate may be reinstated for one year, during which the |
requirements must be met. A holder of an Initial Certificate |
who has not completed 4 years of teaching may continuously |
register the certificate for additional 4-year periods without |
penalty. Initial Certificates that are not registered shall |
lapse consistent with subsection (a) of this Section and may be |
reinstated only in accordance with subsection (a).
Standard |
Teaching Certificates are renewable every 5 years as provided
|
in
subsection (c) of Section 21-2
and subsection (c) of this |
Section.
For purposes of this Section, "teaching" is defined as |
employment and
performance of
services in an Illinois public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary
school, or
|
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or board |
of control, in a
certificated teaching position, or a charter |
school operating in compliance
with the
Charter Schools Law. |
(c) In compliance with subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of |
this Code, which
provides that a
Standard
Teaching Certificate |
may be renewed by the State Teacher Certification Board
based
|
upon proof of continuing professional development, the State |
Board of Education
and
the State Teacher Certification Board |
shall jointly: |
(1) establish a procedure for renewing Standard |
Teaching Certificates,
which shall include but not be |
limited to annual timelines for the renewal
process and the |
components set forth in subsections (d) through (k) of this
|
Section; |
(2) establish the standards for certificate renewal; |
(3) approve or disapprove the providers of continuing |
professional development
activities; |
(4) determine the maximum credit for each category of |
continuing
professional development activities, based upon |
recommendations submitted by
a continuing professional
|
development
activity task force, which shall consist of 6 |
staff members from the State
Board of
Education, appointed |
by the State Superintendent of Education, and 6 teacher
|
representatives, 3 of whom are selected by the Illinois |
Education Association
and 3 of
whom are selected by the |
Illinois Federation of Teachers; |
|
(5) designate the type and amount of documentation |
required to show that
continuing professional development |
activities have been completed; and |
(6) provide, on a timely basis to all Illinois |
teachers, certificate
holders, regional superintendents of |
schools,
school districts, and others with an interest in |
continuing professional
development, information about the |
standards and requirements established
pursuant to this |
subsection (c). |
(d) Any Standard Teaching Certificate held by an individual |
employed and
performing services in an
Illinois public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary school, or
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or board |
of control in a
certificated teaching
position or a
charter |
school in compliance with the Charter Schools Law must be |
maintained
Valid
and
Active through certificate renewal |
activities specified in the certificate
renewal procedure
|
established pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section, |
provided that
a holder of a Valid
and Active
certificate who is |
only employed on either a part-time basis or day-to-day
basis |
as a
substitute
teacher shall pay only the required |
registration fee to renew his or her
certificate
and maintain |
it as Valid and Active. All other Standard Teaching |
Certificates
held may be
maintained as
Valid and Exempt through |
the registration process provided for in the
certificate |
renewal
procedure established pursuant to subsection (c) of |
|
this Section. A Valid and
Exempt
certificate must
be |
immediately activated, through procedures developed jointly by |
the State
Board of
Education and the State Teacher |
Certification Board, upon the certificate
holder
becoming |
employed and performing services in an Illinois public or
|
State-operated elementary school,
secondary school, or |
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
board |
of control in a
certificated
teaching position or a charter |
school operating in compliance with the Charter
Schools
Law. A |
holder of a Valid and Exempt certificate may activate his or |
her
certificate
through procedures provided for in the |
certificate renewal procedure
established pursuant to
|
subsection (c) of this Section. |
(e)(1) A Standard Teaching Certificate that has been |
maintained as Valid
and
Active for the 5 years of the |
certificate's validity shall be renewed as Valid
and Active
|
upon the certificate holder: (i)
completing an advanced degree |
from an approved institution in an
education-related field; |
(ii)
completing at least
8 semester hours of
coursework as |
described in
subdivision (B) of paragraph (3) of this |
subsection (e);
(iii)
(blank); (iv) completing the National |
Board for
Professional
Teaching Standards process as described |
in subdivision (D) of
paragraph (3) of
this subsection (e); or |
(v) earning 120 continuing professional
development
units |
("CPDU") as described in subdivision (E) of paragraph (3) of
|
this
subsection (e). The maximum continuing professional |
|
development units for each
continuing professional development |
activity identified in subdivisions
(F)
through (J) of |
paragraph (3) of this subsection (e) shall be
jointly |
determined
by the State Board of Education and the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
If, however, the certificate |
holder has maintained the certificate
as Valid and
Exempt for a |
portion of the 5-year period of validity, the number of
|
continuing
professional development units needed to renew the |
certificate as Valid and
Active shall
be proportionately |
reduced by the amount of time the certificate was Valid and
|
Exempt.
Furthermore, if a certificate holder is employed and |
performs teaching services
on a
part-time basis for all or a |
portion of the certificate's 5-year period of
validity, the |
number
of continuing professional development units needed to |
renew the certificate as
Valid
and Active shall be reduced by |
50% for the amount of time the certificate
holder has
been |
employed and performed teaching services on a part-time basis. |
Part-time
shall
be defined as less than 50% of the school day |
or school term. |
Notwithstanding any other requirements to the contrary, if |
a Standard
Teaching
Certificate has been maintained as Valid |
and Active for the 5 years of the
certificate's validity and |
the certificate holder has completed his or her
certificate |
renewal plan before July 1, 2002, the certificate shall
be |
renewed as Valid and Active. |
(2) Beginning July 1, 2004, in order to satisfy the |
|
requirements for continuing professional development provided |
for in subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code, each
Valid |
and Active Standard Teaching Certificate holder shall
complete |
professional development activities that address the |
certificate or those certificates that are required of his or |
her
certificated
teaching position, if the certificate holder |
is employed and performing
services in an Illinois public
or |
State-operated elementary school,
secondary school, or |
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
board |
of control, or that certificate or those certificates most |
closely
related to his or
her teaching position, if the |
certificate holder is employed in a charter
school. Except as |
otherwise provided in this subsection (e), the certificate |
holder's activities must address purposes (A), (B),
(C), or (D) |
and must reflect purpose (E) of the following continuing |
professional
development purposes: |
(A) Advance both the certificate holder's knowledge |
and skills as a
teacher consistent with the Illinois |
Professional Teaching Standards and the
Illinois Content |
Area Standards in the certificate holder's areas of
|
certification,
endorsement, or teaching assignment in |
order to keep the certificate holder
current
in those |
areas. |
(B) Develop the certificate holder's knowledge and |
skills in areas
determined
to be critical for all Illinois |
teachers, as defined by the State Board of
Education, known |
|
as "State priorities". |
(C) Address the knowledge, skills, and goals of the |
certificate holder's
local
school improvement plan, if the |
teacher is employed in an Illinois public
or State-operated |
elementary school, secondary school, or cooperative or |
joint
agreement with a governing body or board of control. |
(D) Expand the certificate holder's knowledge and |
skills in an
additional teaching field or toward
the
|
acquisition of another teaching certificate, endorsement, |
or relevant
education degree. |
(E) Address the needs of serving students with |
disabilities, including adapting and modifying the general |
curriculum related to the Illinois Learning Standards to |
meet the needs of students with disabilities and serving |
such students in the least restrictive environment. |
Teachers who hold certificates endorsed for special |
education must devote at least 50% of their continuing |
professional development activities to this purpose. |
Teachers holding other certificates must devote at least |
20% of their activities to this purpose.
|
A speech-language pathologist or audiologist who is
|
licensed under the Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and
|
Audiology Practice Act and who has met the continuing
education |
requirements of that Act and the rules promulgated
under that |
Act shall be deemed to have satisfied the continuing
|
professional development requirements established by the State
|
|
Board of Education and the Teacher Certification Board to renew
|
a Standard Certificate. |
(3) Continuing professional development activities may |
include, but are not limited to, the following activities: |
(A) completion of an advanced degree from an approved |
institution
in an education-related field; |
(B) at
least 8 semester hours of coursework
in an |
approved education-related program, of which at least 2 |
semester
hours relate
to the continuing professional |
development purpose set forth in purpose (A) of
paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (e), completion of which means no
|
other continuing professional development activities are |
required; |
(C) (blank); |
(D) completion of the National Board for
Professional |
Teaching
Standards
("NBPTS") process for certification or |
recertification, completion of which means no other |
continuing professional development activities are |
required; |
(E) completion of 120 continuing professional |
development
units that
satisfy the continuing professional |
development purposes set forth in
paragraph (2) of this |
subsection (e) and may include without limitation
the |
activities identified in subdivisions (F) through
(J) of |
this paragraph
(3); |
(F) collaboration and partnership activities related |
|
to
improving the
teacher's knowledge and skills as a |
teacher, including the following: |
(i) participating on collaborative planning and |
professional
improvement
teams and committees; |
(ii) peer review and coaching; |
(iii) mentoring in a formal mentoring program, |
including service as a
consulting teacher |
participating in a remediation
process formulated |
under Section 24A-5 of this Code; |
(iv) participating in site-based management or |
decision making teams,
relevant committees, boards, or |
task forces directly related to school
improvement |
plans; |
(v) coordinating community resources in schools, |
if the project is a
specific goal of the school |
improvement plan; |
(vi) facilitating parent education programs for a |
school, school
district, or
regional office of |
education directly related to student achievement or
|
school improvement plans; |
(vii) participating in business, school, or |
community partnerships
directly
related to student |
achievement or school improvement plans; or |
(viii) supervising a student teacher or teacher |
education candidate in
clinical supervision, provided |
that the supervision may only be counted
once during |
|
the course of 5 years; |
(G) college or university coursework related to |
improving the
teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher |
as follows: |
(i) completing undergraduate or graduate credit |
earned from a
regionally
accredited institution in |
coursework relevant to the certificate area being
|
renewed,
including coursework that incorporates |
induction activities and
development of a portfolio of |
both student and teacher work that
provides experience |
in reflective practices,
provided the coursework meets |
Illinois Professional Teaching Standards
or Illinois |
Content Area Standards and
supports the essential |
characteristics of quality professional development; |
or |
(ii) teaching college or university courses in |
areas relevant to the
certificate area being renewed, |
provided that the teaching may only be
counted once |
during the course of 5 years; |
(H) conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, and
|
symposiums related
to improving the teacher's knowledge |
and skills as a teacher, subject to disapproval of the |
activity or event by the State Teacher Certification Board |
acting jointly with the State Board of Education,
including
|
the following: |
(i) completing non-university credit directly |
|
related to student
achievement, school improvement |
plans, or State priorities; |
(ii) participating in or presenting at workshops, |
seminars,
conferences,
institutes, and symposiums; |
(iii) training as external reviewers for Quality |
Assurance; |
(iv) training as reviewers of university teacher |
preparation programs; or |
(v) participating in or presenting at in-service |
training programs on suicide prevention. |
A teacher, however, may not receive credit for conferences, |
workshops, institutes, seminars, or symposiums that are |
designed for entertainment, promotional, or commercial |
purposes or that are solely inspirational or motivational. |
The State Superintendent of Education and regional |
superintendents of schools are authorized to review the |
activities and events provided or to be provided under this |
subdivision (H) and to investigate complaints regarding |
those activities and events, and either the State |
Superintendent of Education or a regional superintendent |
of schools may recommend that the State Teacher |
Certification Board and the State Board of Education |
jointly disapprove those activities and events considered |
to be inconsistent with this subdivision (H);
|
(I) other educational experiences related to improving |
the
teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, including |
|
the following: |
(i) participating in action research and inquiry |
projects; |
(ii) observing programs or teaching in schools, |
related businesses, or
industry that is systematic, |
purposeful, and relevant to certificate renewal; |
(iii) traveling related to one's teaching |
assignment, directly related to
student achievement or |
school improvement plans and approved by the regional |
superintendent of schools or his or her designee at |
least
30 days prior to the travel experience,
provided |
that the traveling shall not include time spent |
commuting to
destinations where the learning |
experience will occur; |
(iv) participating in study groups related to |
student achievement or
school
improvement plans; |
(v) serving on a statewide education-related |
committee, including but
not
limited to the State |
Teacher Certification Board, State Board of Education
|
strategic agenda teams, or the State Advisory Council |
on Education of
Children with Disabilities; |
(vi) participating in work/learn programs or |
internships; or |
(vii) developing a portfolio of student and |
teacher work; |
(J) professional leadership experiences related to |
|
improving
the teacher's
knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including the following: |
(i) participating in curriculum development or |
assessment activities
at the
school, school district, |
regional office of education, State, or national
|
level; |
(ii) participating in team or department |
leadership in a school or
school
district; |
(iii) participating on external or internal school |
or school district
review
teams; |
(iv) publishing educational articles, columns, or |
books relevant to
the
certificate area being renewed; |
or |
(v) participating in non-strike related |
professional association or
labor organization
service |
or
activities related to professional development; |
(K) receipt of a subsequent Illinois certificate or |
endorsement pursuant to this Article;
|
(L) completion of requirements for meeting the |
Illinois criteria for becoming "highly qualified" (for |
purposes of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Public |
Law 107-110) in an additional teaching area;
|
(M) successful completion of 4 semester hours of |
graduate-level coursework on the assessment of one's own |
performance in relation to the Illinois Teaching |
Standards, as described in clause (B) of paragraph (2) of |
|
subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code; or |
(N) successful completion of a minimum of 4 semester |
hours of graduate-level coursework addressing preparation |
to meet the requirements for certification by the National |
Board for Professional Teaching Standards, as described in |
clause (C) of paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of Section |
21-2 of this Code.
|
(4) A person must complete the requirements of this |
subsection (e) before the expiration of his or her Standard |
Teaching Certificate and must submit assurance to the regional |
superintendent of schools or, if applicable, a local |
professional development committee authorized by the regional |
superintendent to submit recommendations to him or her for this |
purpose. The statement of assurance shall contain a list of the |
activities completed, the provider offering each activity, the |
number of credits earned for each activity, and the purposes to |
which each activity is attributed. The certificate holder shall |
maintain the evidence of completion of each activity for at |
least one certificate renewal cycle. The certificate holder |
shall affirm under penalty of perjury that he or she has |
completed the activities listed and will maintain the required |
evidence of completion. The State Board of Education or the |
regional superintendent of schools for each region shall |
conduct random audits of assurance statements and supporting |
documentation. |
(5) (Blank). |
|
(6) (Blank). |
(f) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Code, a |
school district is authorized to enter into an agreement with |
the exclusive bargaining representative, if any, to form a |
local professional development committee (LPDC). The |
membership and terms of members of the LPDC may be determined |
by the agreement. Provisions regarding LPDCs contained in a |
collective bargaining agreement in existence on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly |
between a school district and the exclusive bargaining |
representative shall remain in full force and effect for the |
term of the agreement, unless terminated by mutual agreement. |
The LPDC shall make recommendations to the regional |
superintendent of schools on renewal of teaching certificates. |
The regional superintendent of schools for each region shall
|
perform
the following functions: |
(1)
review recommendations for certificate renewal, if |
any, received from LPDCs; |
(2) (blank); |
(3) (blank); |
(4) (blank); |
(5) determine whether certificate holders have met the
|
requirements for certificate renewal and notify |
certificate holders
if the decision is not to renew the |
certificate; |
(6) provide a certificate holder with the opportunity |
|
to appeal a recommendation made by a LPDC, if any, not to |
renew the certificate to the regional professional |
development review committee; |
(7) issue and forward recommendations for renewal or |
nonrenewal
of certificate holders' Standard Teaching |
Certificates to the State Teacher Certification Board; and |
(8) (blank). |
(g)(1) Each regional superintendent of schools shall |
review and concur or
nonconcur
with each recommendation for |
renewal or nonrenewal of a Standard Teaching
Certificate he or |
she receives from a local professional development committee, |
if any,
or, if
a certificate
holder appeals the recommendation |
to the regional professional development
review committee, the
|
recommendation for renewal or nonrenewal he or she receives |
from a regional
professional
development review committee and, |
within 14 days of receipt of the
recommendation,
shall
provide |
the State Teacher Certification Board with verification of the
|
following, if applicable: |
(A) the certificate holder has satisfactorily |
completed professional development and continuing |
education activities set forth in paragraph (3) of |
subsection (e) of this Section; |
(B) the certificate holder has submitted the statement |
of assurance required under paragraph (4) of subsection (e) |
of this Section, and this statement has been attached to |
the application for renewal; |
|
(C) the local professional development committee, if |
any, has recommended the
renewal of the certificate |
holder's Standard Teaching Certificate and
forwarded the |
recommendation to the regional superintendent of schools; |
(D) the certificate holder has appealed his or her |
local professional
development committee's recommendation |
of nonrenewal, if any, to the regional
professional |
development review committee and the result of that appeal; |
(E) the regional superintendent of schools has |
concurred or nonconcurred
with
the
local professional |
development committee's or regional professional
|
development review committee's recommendation, if any, to |
renew or nonrenew the
certificate holder's Standard |
Teaching Certificate and made a
recommendation to that |
effect; and |
(F) the established registration fee for the Standard |
Teaching
Certificate has
been paid. |
If
the notice required by this subsection
(g) includes a |
recommendation of certificate nonrenewal, then, at the same |
time the regional superintendent of schools provides the State |
Teacher Certification Board with the notice, he or she
shall
|
also notify the
certificate holder in writing, by certified |
mail, return receipt requested, that
this notice has been |
provided to the
State
Teacher
Certification Board. |
(2) Each certificate holder shall have the right to appeal
|
his or her
local
professional development committee's |
|
recommendation of nonrenewal, if any, to the
regional
|
professional development review committee, within 14 days of |
receipt of notice
that the
recommendation has
been sent to the |
regional superintendent of schools. Each regional
|
superintendent of schools shall
establish a regional |
professional development review committee or committees
for |
the
purpose of
advising the regional superintendent of schools, |
upon request, and handling
certificate
holder appeals. This |
committee shall
consist of at least 4 classroom teachers, one |
non-administrative
certificated
educational
employee, 2 |
administrators, and one at-large member who shall be either (i) |
a
parent, (ii)
a member of the business community, (iii) a |
community member, or (iv) an
administrator, with preference |
given to an individual chosen from among those
persons
listed |
in items (i), (ii), and (iii) in order to secure representation |
of an
interest not already
represented on the committee. The |
teacher and non-administrative certificated
educational |
employee members of the review committee shall be selected by |
their
exclusive representative, if any, and the administrators |
and at-large member
shall be
selected by the regional |
superintendent of schools. A regional superintendent
of |
schools
may add additional members to the committee, provided |
that the same proportion
of
teachers to administrators and |
at-large members on the committee is maintained. Any
additional |
teacher and non-administrative certificated educational |
employee members
shall be selected by their exclusive |
|
representative, if any. Vacancies in positions on a
regional |
professional development review committee shall be filled in |
the same manner
as the original selections. Committee members |
shall serve staggered 3-year terms. All
individuals selected to |
serve on regional professional development review committees
|
must be known to demonstrate the best practices in teaching or |
their respective
field of
practice. |
(h)(1) The State Teacher Certification Board shall review |
the regional
superintendent of schools' recommendations to |
renew or nonrenew Standard
Teaching Certificates
and notify |
certificate holders in writing whether their certificates have
|
been renewed or
nonrenewed within 90 days of receipt of the |
recommendations,
unless a certificate holder has appealed a |
regional
superintendent of schools'
recommendation of |
nonrenewal, as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection
|
(h). The State Teacher Certification Board shall verify that |
the
certificate holder
has met the renewal criteria set forth |
in paragraph (1) of subsection (g) of
this Section. |
(2) Each certificate holder shall have the right to appeal |
a regional
superintendent of school's recommendation to |
nonrenew his or her Standard
Teaching Certificate
to
the State |
Teacher Certification Board, within 14 days of receipt of |
notice that
the
decision has been sent to the State Teacher |
Certification Board, which shall
hold an
appeal hearing within |
60 days of receipt of the appeal. When such an appeal is
taken,
|
the certificate holder's Standard Teaching Certificate shall |
|
continue to be
valid until the
appeal is finally determined. |
The State Teacher Certification Board shall
review the
regional |
superintendent of school's recommendation, the regional |
professional
development review committee's recommendation, if |
any, and the local
professional
development committee's |
recommendation, if any, and all relevant documentation to |
verify
whether the certificate holder has met the renewal |
criteria set forth in
paragraph (1) of
subsection (g) of this |
Section. The State Teacher Certification Board may
request that
|
the certificate holder appear before it. All actions taken by |
the State
Teacher
Certification Board shall require a quorum |
and be by a simple majority of those
present and voting.
A |
record of
all votes
shall be maintained. The State Teacher |
Certification Board shall notify the
certificate
holder in |
writing, within 7 days of completing the review, whether his or |
her
Standard
Teaching Certificate has been renewed or |
nonrenewed, provided that if the State
Teacher
Certification |
Board determines to nonrenew a certificate, the written notice
|
provided to
the certificate holder shall be by certified mail, |
return receipt requested.
All certificate
renewal or |
nonrenewal decisions of the State Teacher Certification Board |
are
final and
subject to administrative review , as set forth in |
Section 21-24 of this Code . |
(i) Holders of Master Teaching Certificates shall meet the |
same
requirements
and follow the same procedures as holders of |
Standard Teaching Certificates,
except
that their renewal |
|
cycle shall be as set forth in subsection (d) of Section
21-2 |
of this
Code and their renewal requirements shall be subject to |
paragraph (8) of subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of this Code. |
A holder of a
teaching certificate endorsed as a |
speech-language pathologist who
has been granted the |
Certificate of Clinical Competence by the
American |
Speech-Language Hearing Association may renew his or her
|
Standard Teaching Certificate pursuant to the 10-year renewal |
cycle set
forth in subsection (d) of Section 21-2 of this Code. |
(j) Holders of Valid and Exempt Standard and Master |
Teaching Certificates
who are not employed and performing |
services in an Illinois public or
State-operated
elementary |
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement |
with a
governing body or board of control, in a certificated |
teaching position,
may
voluntarily activate their certificates |
through the regional superintendent of schools of the regional |
office of
education for the geographic area where their |
teaching is done. These certificate holders shall follow the |
same renewal
criteria
and procedures as all other Standard and |
Master Teaching Certificate holders,
except
that their |
continuing professional development activities need not
|
reflect or
address the knowledge, skills, and goals of a local |
school improvement plan. |
(k) (Blank). |
(l) (Blank). |
(m) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
|
of the 93rd General Assembly that affect renewal of Standard |
and Master Certificates shall apply to those persons who hold |
Standard or Master Certificates on or after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly and shall |
be given effect upon renewal of those certificates.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-793, eff. 1-1-09; |
96-951, eff. 6-28-10.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-16) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-16)
|
Sec. 21-16. Fees - Requirement for registration.
|
(a) (Blank). Until February 15, 2000, every applicant when
|
issued a certificate shall pay to the regional superintendent |
of schools a
fee of $1, which shall be paid into the institute |
fund. Every certificate
issued under the provisions of this Act |
shall be registered annually or, at
the option of the holder of |
the certificate, once every 3 years. The
regional |
superintendent of schools having supervision and control over |
the
school where the teaching is done shall register the |
certificate before the
holder begins to teach, otherwise it |
shall be registered in any county in
the State of Illinois; and |
one fee of $4 per year for registration or
renewal of one or |
more certificates which have been issued to the same
holder |
shall be paid into the institute fund.
|
Until February 15, 2000, requirements for registration of |
any certificate
limited in time
shall include evidence of |
professional growth defined as successful
teaching experience |
|
since last registration of certificate, attendance
at |
professional meetings, membership in professional |
organizations,
additional credits earned in recognized |
teacher-training institutions,
travel specifically for |
educational experience, reading of professional
books and |
periodicals, filing all reports as required by the regional
|
superintendent of schools and the State Superintendent of |
Education
or such other professional experience or combination |
of experiences as
are presented by the teacher and are approved |
by the State Superintendent
of Education in consultation with |
the State Teacher Certification Board. A
duplicate certificate |
may be issued to the holder of a valid life
certificate or |
valid certificate limited in time by the State
Superintendent |
of Education; however, it shall only be issued upon request
of |
a regional superintendent of schools and upon payment to the |
regional
superintendent of schools who requests such duplicate |
a fee of $4.
|
(b) Until December 31, 2011 Beginning February 15, 2000 , |
all persons who are issued Standard
Teaching
Certificates |
pursuant to clause (ii) of paragraph (1) of
subsection
(c) of |
Section 21-2 and all
persons who
renew Standard Teaching |
Certificates shall pay a $25 fee for registration of
all
|
certificates held. All persons who are issued Standard Teaching |
Certificates
under
clause (i) of paragraph (1) of subsection |
(c) of Section 21-2 and all other
applicants for
Standard
|
Teaching Certificates shall pay an original application fee, |
|
pursuant to
Section 21-12,
and a $25 fee for registration of |
all certificates held. These certificates
shall be
registered |
and the registration fee paid once every 5 years. Standard |
Teaching
Certificate applicants and holders shall not be |
required to pay any other
registration fees
for issuance or |
renewal of their certificates, except as provided in Section
|
21-17 of this
Code. Beginning February 15, 2000, Master |
Teaching Certificates shall be
issued
and
renewed upon payment |
by the applicant or certificate holder of a $50 fee for
|
registration
of all certificates held. These certificates |
shall be registered and the fee
paid once
every 10 years. |
Master Teaching Certificate applicants and holders shall not
be
|
required to pay any other application or registration fees for |
issuance or
renewal of their
certificates, except as provided |
in Section 21-17 of this Code. All other
certificates
issued |
under the provisions of this Code shall be registered for the |
validity
period of the
certificate at the rate of $5 per year |
for the total number of years for which
the certificate
is |
valid for registration of all certificates held, or for a |
maximum of 5 years
for life
certificates. The regional |
superintendent of schools having supervision and
control over
|
the school where the teaching is done shall register the |
certificate before the
holder
begins to teach, otherwise it |
shall be registered in any county in the State of
Illinois.
|
Each holder shall pay the appropriate registration fee to the |
regional
superintendent of
schools. The regional |
|
superintendent of schools shall deposit the registration
fees |
into
the institute fund. Any certificate holder who teaches in |
more than one
educational
service region shall register the |
certificate or certificates in all regions
where the
teaching |
is done, but shall be required to pay one registration fee for |
all
certificates held ,
provided holders of certificates issued |
pursuant to Section 21-9 of this Code
shall be required to pay |
one registration fee, in each educational service
region in |
which his or her certificate or certificates are registered, |
for all
certificates held .
|
A duplicate certificate may be issued to the holder of a |
valid life
certificate or valid
certificate limited in time by |
the State Superintendent of Education; however,
it shall
only |
be issued upon request of a regional superintendent of schools |
and upon
payment
to the regional superintendent of schools who |
requests the duplicate a fee of
$4, which
shall be deposited |
into the institute fund.
|
(c) Beginning on January 1, 2012, all certificate holders |
are required to pay a $10 per year registration fee for the |
course of the validity cycle to register the certificate, which |
must be paid to the regional office of education having |
supervision and control over the school in which the individual |
holding the certificate is to be employed. If the individual |
holding the certificate is not yet employed, then the |
certificate may be registered in any county in this State. The |
registration fee must be paid in its entirety the first time |
|
the individual registers the certificate for a particular |
validity period in a single region. No additional fee may be |
charged for that validity period should the individual |
subsequently register the certificate in additional regions. |
Individuals must register the certificate (i) immediately |
after initial issuance of the license and (ii) at the beginning |
of each renewal cycle if the individual has satisfied the |
renewal requirements required under this Code. |
The regional superintendent of schools shall deposit the |
registration fees paid pursuant to this subsection (c) into the |
institute fund established pursuant to Section 3-11 of this |
Code. |
(d) The State Board of Education and each regional office |
of education are authorized to charge a service or convenience |
fee for the use of credit cards for the payment of |
certification fees. This service or convenience fee may not |
exceed the amount required by the credit card processing |
company or vendor that has entered into a contract with the |
State Board or regional office of education for this purpose, |
and the fee must be paid to that company or vendor.
|
(e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 92-796, eff. 8-10-02; 93-679, eff. 6-30-04.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-22) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-22)
|
Sec. 21-22. Expiration of first year. The first year of all |
certificates ends on June 30 following one full year of the |
|
certificate being issued shall expire on June 30 following the
|
date of issue .
|
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 31.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-25) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-25)
|
Sec. 21-25. School service personnel certificate.
|
(a) For purposes of this Section, "school service |
personnel" means persons employed and performing appropriate |
services in an Illinois public or State-operated elementary |
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement |
with a governing body or board of control or a charter school |
operating in compliance with the Charter Schools Law in a |
position requiring a school service personnel certificate. |
Subject to the provisions of Section 21-1a, a school |
service
personnel certificate shall be issued to those |
applicants of good
character, good health, a citizen of the |
United States and at least 19
years of age who have a |
Bachelor's degree with not fewer than 120
semester hours from a |
regionally accredited institution of higher learning and
who |
meets the requirements established by the State Superintendent |
of
Education in consultation with the State Teacher |
Certification Board. A
school service personnel certificate |
with a school nurse endorsement may be
issued to a person who |
holds a bachelor of science degree from an institution
of |
higher learning accredited by the North Central Association or |
|
other
comparable regional accrediting association.
Persons |
seeking any other endorsement on the school service personnel
|
certificate shall be recommended for the endorsement by a |
recognized teacher
education institution as having completed a |
program of preparation approved by
the State Superintendent of |
Education in consultation with the State Teacher
Certification |
Board.
|
(b) Until August 30, 2002, a school service personnel |
certificate endorsed
for school social work may be issued to a |
student who has completed a school
social work program that has |
not been approved by the State Superintendent of
Education, |
provided that each of the following conditions is met:
|
(1) The program was offered by a recognized, public |
teacher education
institution that first enrolled students |
in its master's degree program in
social work in 1998;
|
(2) The student applying for the school service |
personnel certificate was
enrolled in the institution's |
master's degree program in social work on or
after May 11, |
1998;
|
(3) The State Superintendent verifies that the student |
has completed
coursework that is substantially similar to |
that required in approved school
social work programs, |
including (i) not fewer than 600 clock hours of a
|
supervised internship in a school setting or (ii) if the |
student has completed
part of a supervised internship in a |
school setting prior to the effective date
of this |
|
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly and receives |
the prior
approval of the State Superintendent, not fewer |
than 300 additional clock hours
of supervised work in a |
public school setting under the supervision of a
certified |
school social worker who certifies that the supervised work |
was
completed in a satisfactory manner; and
|
(4) The student has passed a test of basic skills and |
the test of subject
matter knowledge required by Section |
21-1a.
|
This subsection (b) does not apply after August 29, 2002.
|
(c) A school service personnel certificate shall be |
endorsed
with the area of Service as
determined by the State |
Superintendent of Education in consultation with
the State |
Teacher Certification Board.
|
The holder of such certificate shall be entitled to all of |
the rights
and privileges granted holders of a valid teaching |
certificate, including
teacher benefits, compensation and |
working conditions.
|
When the holder of such certificate has earned a master's |
degree,
including 8 semester hours of graduate professional |
education from a
recognized institution of higher learning, and |
has at least 2 years of
successful school experience while |
holding such certificate, the
certificate may be endorsed for |
supervision.
|
(d) Persons who have successfully achieved National Board |
certification through the National Board for Professional |
|
Teaching Standards shall be issued a Master School Service |
Personnel Certificate, valid for 10 years and renewable |
thereafter every 10 years through compliance with requirements |
set forth by the State Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Teacher Certification Board. However, each holder of |
a Master School Service Personnel Certificate shall be eligible |
for a corresponding position in this State in the areas for |
which he or she holds a Master Certificate without satisfying |
any other requirements of this Code, except for those |
requirements pertaining to criminal background checks.
|
(e) School service personnel certificates are renewable |
every 5 years and may be renewed as provided in this Section. |
Requests for renewals must be submitted, in a format prescribed |
by the State Board of Education, to the regional office of |
education responsible for the school where the holder is |
employed. |
Upon completion of at least 80 hours of continuing |
professional development as provided in this subsection (e), a |
person who holds a valid school service personnel certificate |
shall have his or her certificate renewed for a period of 5 |
years. A person who (i) holds an active license issued by the |
State as a clinical professional counselor, a professional |
counselor, a clinical social worker, a social worker, or a |
speech-language pathologist; (ii) holds national certification |
as a Nationally Certified School Psychologist from the National |
School Psychology Certification Board; (iii) is nationally |
|
certified as a National Certified School Nurse from the |
National Board for Certification of School Nurses; (iv) is |
nationally certified as a National Certified Counselor or |
National Certified School Counselor from the National Board for |
Certified Counselors; or (v) holds a Certificate of Clinical |
Competence from the American Speech-Language-Hearing |
Association
shall be deemed to have satisfied the continuing |
professional development requirements established by the State |
Board of Education and the State Teacher Certification Board to |
renew a school service personnel certificate. |
School service personnel certificates may be renewed by the |
State Teacher Certification Board based upon proof of |
continuing professional development. The State Board of |
Education shall (i) establish a procedure for renewing school |
service personnel certificates, which shall include without |
limitation annual timelines for the renewal process and the |
components set forth in this Section; (ii) approve or |
disapprove the providers of continuing professional |
development activities; and (iii) provide, on a timely basis to |
all school service personnel certificate holders, regional |
superintendents of schools, school districts, and others with |
an interest in continuing professional development, |
information about the standards and requirements established |
pursuant to this subsection (e). |
Any school service personnel certificate held by an |
individual employed and performing services in an Illinois |
|
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school, |
or cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or |
board of control in a certificated school service personnel |
position or in a charter school in compliance with the Charter |
Schools Law must be maintained Valid and Active through |
certificate renewal activities specified in the certificate |
renewal procedure established pursuant to this Section, |
provided that a holder of a Valid and Active certificate who is |
only employed on either a part-time basis or day-to-day basis |
as a substitute shall pay only the required registration fee to |
renew his or her certificate and maintain it as Valid and |
Active. All other school service personnel certificates held |
may be maintained as Valid and Exempt through the registration |
process provided for in the certificate renewal procedure |
established pursuant to Section 21-14 of this Code. A Valid and |
Exempt certificate must be immediately activated, through |
procedures developed by the State Board of Education upon the |
certificate holder becoming employed and performing services |
in an Illinois public or State-operated elementary school, |
secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement with a |
governing body or board of control in a certificated school |
service personnel position or in a charter school operating in |
compliance with the Charter Schools Law. A holder of a Valid |
and Exempt certificate may activate his or her certificate |
through procedures provided for in the certificate renewal |
procedure established pursuant to this Section. |
|
A school service personnel certificate that has been |
maintained as Valid and Active for the 5 years of the |
certificate's validity shall be renewed as Valid and Active |
upon the certificate holder (i) completing the National Board |
for Professional Teaching Standards process in an area of |
concentration comparable to the holder's school service |
personnel certificate of endorsement or (ii) earning 80 |
continuing professional development units as described in this |
Section. If, however, the certificate holder has maintained the |
certificate as Valid and Exempt for a portion of the 5-year |
period of validity, the number of continuing professional |
development units needed to renew the certificate as Valid and |
Active must be proportionately reduced by the amount of time |
the certificate was Valid and Exempt. If a certificate holder |
is employed and performs services requiring the holder's school |
service personnel certificate on a part-time basis for all or a |
portion of the certificate's 5-year period of validity, the |
number of continuing professional development units needed to |
renew the certificate as Valid and Active shall be reduced by |
50% for the amount of time the certificate holder has been |
employed and performing such services on a part-time basis. |
"Part-time" means less than 50% of the school day or school |
term. |
Beginning July 1, 2008, in order to satisfy the |
requirements for continuing professional development provided |
for in this Section, each Valid and Active school service |
|
personnel certificate holder shall complete professional |
development activities that address the certificate or those |
certificates that are required of his or her certificated |
position, if the certificate holder is employed and performing |
services in an Illinois public or State operated elementary |
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement |
with a governing body or board of control, or that certificate |
or those certificates most closely related to his or her |
teaching position, if the certificate holder is employed in a |
charter school. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection |
(e), the certificate holder's activities must address and must |
reflect the following continuing professional development |
purposes: |
(1) Advance both the certificate holder's knowledge
|
and skills consistent with the Illinois Standards for the |
service area in which the certificate is endorsed in order |
to keep the certificate holder current in that area. |
(2) Develop the certificate holder's knowledge and |
skills in areas determined by the State Board of Education |
to be critical for all school service personnel. |
(3) Address the knowledge, skills, and goals of the |
certificate holder's local school improvement plan, if the |
certificate holder is employed in an Illinois public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary school, or |
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or |
board of control. |
|
(4) Address the needs of serving students with |
disabilities, including adapting and modifying clinical or |
professional practices to meet the needs of students with |
disabilities and serving such students in the least |
restrictive environment. |
The coursework or continuing professional development |
units ("CPDU") required under this subsection (e) must total 80 |
CPDUs or the equivalent and must address 3 of the 4 purposes |
described in items (1) through (4) of this subsection (e). |
Holders of school service personnel certificates may fulfill |
this obligation with any combination of semester hours or CPDUs |
as follows: |
(A) Collaboration and partnership activities related |
to improving the school service personnel certificate |
holder's knowledge and skills, including (i) participating |
on collaborative planning and professional improvement |
teams and committees; (ii) peer review and coaching; (iii) |
mentoring in a formal mentoring program, including service |
as a consulting teacher participating in a remediation |
process formulated under Section 24A-5 of this Code; (iv) |
participating in site-based management or decision-making |
teams, relevant committees, boards, or task forces |
directly related to school improvement plans; (v) |
coordinating community resources in schools, if the |
project is a specific goal of the school improvement plan; |
(vi) facilitating parent education programs for a school, |
|
school district, or regional office of education directly |
related to student achievement or school improvement |
plans; (vii) participating in business, school, or |
community partnerships directly related to student |
achievement or school improvement plans; or (viii) |
supervising a student teacher (student services personnel) |
or teacher education candidate in clinical supervision, |
provided that the supervision may be counted only once |
during the course of 5 years. |
(B) Coursework from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher learning related to one of the |
purposes listed in items (1) through (4) of this subsection |
(e), which shall apply at the rate of 15 continuing |
professional development units per semester hour of credit |
earned during the previous 5-year period when the status of |
the holder's school service personnel certificate was |
Valid and Active. Proportionate reductions shall apply |
when the holder's status was Valid and Active for less than |
the 5-year period preceding the renewal. |
(C) Teaching college or university courses in areas |
relevant to the certificate area being renewed, provided |
that the teaching may be counted only once during the |
course of 5 years. |
(D) Conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, or |
symposiums designed to improve the certificate holder's |
knowledge and skills in the service area and applicable to |
|
the purposes listed in items (1) through (4) of this |
subsection (e). One CPDU shall be awarded for each hour of |
attendance. No one shall receive credit for conferences, |
workshops, institutes, seminars, or symposiums that are |
designed for entertainment, promotional, or commercial |
purposes or that are solely inspirational or motivational. |
The State Superintendent of Education and regional |
superintendents of schools are authorized to review the |
activities and events provided or to be provided under this |
subdivision (D) and to investigate complaints regarding |
those activities and events. Either the State |
Superintendent of Education or a regional superintendent |
of schools may recommend that the State Board of Education |
disapprove those activities and events considered to be |
inconsistent with this subdivision (D). |
(E) Completing non-university credit directly related |
to student achievement, school improvement plans, or State |
priorities. |
(F) Participating in or presenting at workshops, |
seminars, conferences, institutes, or symposiums. |
(G) Training as external reviewers for quality |
assurance. |
(H) Training as reviewers of university teacher |
preparation programs. |
(I) Other educational experiences related to improving |
the school service personnel's knowledge and skills as a |
|
teacher, including (i) participating in action research |
and inquiry projects; (ii) traveling related to one's |
assignment and directly related to school service |
personnel achievement or school improvement plans and |
approved by the regional superintendent of schools or his |
or her designee at least 30 days prior to the travel |
experience, provided that the traveling shall not include |
time spent commuting to destinations where the learning |
experience will occur; (iii) participating in study groups |
related to student achievement or school improvement |
plans; (iv) serving on a statewide education-related |
committee, including without limitation the State Teacher |
Certification Board, State Board of Education strategic |
agenda teams, or the State Advisory Council on Education of |
Children with Disabilities; (v) participating in |
work/learn programs or internships; or (vi) developing a |
portfolio of student and teacher work. |
(J) Professional leadership experiences related to |
improving the teacher's knowledge and skills as a teacher, |
including (i) participating in curriculum development or |
assessment activities at the school, school district, |
regional office of education, State, or national level; |
(ii) participating in team or department leadership in a |
school or school district; (iii) participating on external |
or internal school or school district review teams; (iv) |
publishing educational articles, columns, or books |
|
relevant to the certificate area being renewed; or (v) |
participating in non-strike-related professional |
association or labor organization service or activities |
related to professional development.
|
(f) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. |
(Source: P.A. 94-105, eff. 7-1-05; 95-592, eff. 7-1-08 .)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-27)
|
Sec. 21-27. The Illinois Teaching Excellence Program. |
(a) The Illinois
Teaching
Excellence Program is hereby |
established . As used in this Section: |
"Poverty or low-performing school" means a school in
|
academic early warning status or academic watch status or a
|
school in which 50% or more of its students are eligible for
|
free or reduced-price school lunches. |
"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 Master Certificate or a retired |
teacher or school counselor who holds a Master Certificate. |
(b) Beginning on July 1, 2011, 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 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 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 for each qualified educator to |
be distributed to the respective school district. 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 based on the
|
priorities outlined in subsection (c) of this Section. |
(c) When there are adequate funds available, priorities
|
(1), (2), (3), (4), and (5), as outlined in this subsection
|
(c), must be funded. If full funding to meet all priorities as |
outlined in this subsection (c) is not available, funding must
|
be distributed in the order of the priorities listed in this
|
subsection (c). If funding is insufficient to fund a priority |
in full, then funding for that priority must be prorated and no
|
further priorities shall be funded. |
Priorities for monetary assistance and incentives shall be
|
|
as follows: |
(1) Priority 1: A maximum of $2,000 towards the
|
application fee for up to 750 teachers or school counselors
|
in a poverty or low-performing school who apply on a
|
first-come, first-serve basis for National Board
|
certification. |
(2) Priority 2: A maximum of $2,000 towards the
|
application fee for up to 250 teachers or school counselors
|
in a school other than a poverty or low-performing school |
who apply on a first-come, first-serve basis for National
|
Board certification. However, if there were fewer than 750 |
individuals supported in priority (1), then the number |
supported in priority (2) may be increased as such that the |
combination of priority (1) and priority (2) shall equal |
1,000 applicants. |
(3) Priority 3: The fee for the National Board for
|
Professional Teaching Standards' Take One! (the test for
|
National Board certification) for up to 500 qualified
|
educators who apply on a first-come, first-serve basis. |
(4) Priority 4: An annual incentive equal to $1,500,
|
which shall be paid to each qualified educator who holds
|
both a Master Certificate and a current corresponding |
certificate issued by the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards,
who is employed in a school district, |
and who agrees, in
writing, to provide 30 hours of |
mentoring or National Board
for Professional Teaching |
|
Standards professional development or both during the |
school year to teachers or
school counselors in a poverty |
or low-performing school, as
applicable. |
(5) Priority 5: An annual incentive equal to $1,500,
|
which shall be paid to each qualified educator currently
|
employed in a school district who holds both a Master |
Certificate and a current corresponding certificate issued |
by the National
Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
and who agrees,
in writing, to provide 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. |
Mentoring for all priorities shall include, either singly
|
or in combination, mentoring of 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) National Board for Professional Teaching Standards
|
Take One! participants. |
(d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2013. to provide |
categorical funding for
monetary
incentives and bonuses for |
teachers and school counselors who are employed by school |
|
districts and
who hold a
Master Certificate. The State Board of |
Education shall allocate and distribute
to each
school district |
an amount as annually appropriated by the General Assembly
from |
federal funds for the
Illinois Teaching Excellence Program. 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, each
school district's |
annual allocation shall be the sum of the amounts earned for
|
the
following incentives and bonuses:
|
(1) An annual payment of $3,000 to be paid to (A) each
|
teacher
who
holds both a Master Certificate and a |
corresponding certificate issued by the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards and is employed as a |
teacher by a school district and (B) each school counselor |
who holds both a Master Certificate and a corresponding |
certificate issued by the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards and is employed as a school counselor by |
a school district. The school
district shall
distribute |
this payment to each eligible teacher or school counselor
|
as a single payment or in not more than 3 payments.
|
(2) An annual incentive equal to $1,000 shall be paid |
to (A) each teacher or school counselor who holds a Master |
Certificate, who is employed as a teacher or school |
counselor by a school district, and who agrees, in writing, |
to provide at least 30 hours of mentoring during that year |
to classroom teachers or school counselors, as applicable, |
|
and (B) each retired teacher or school counselor who holds |
both a Master Certificate and a current corresponding |
certificate issued by the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards and who agrees, in writing, to provide |
at least 30 hours of mentoring during that year to |
classroom teachers or school counselors, as applicable. An |
additional annual incentive equal to $1,000 shall be paid |
to (I)
each teacher or school counselor
who
holds a Master |
Certificate, who is employed as a teacher or school |
counselor by a school
district, and who
agrees,
in writing, |
to provide an additional 30 hours of mentoring during that |
year to classroom
teachers or school counselors, as |
applicable, and (II) each retired teacher or school |
counselor who holds both a Master Certificate and a current |
corresponding certificate issued by the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards and who agrees, in |
writing, to provide an additional 30 hours of mentoring |
during that year to classroom teachers or school |
counselors, as applicable, for a total of 60 hours of |
mentoring and $2,000 in incentives under this paragraph |
(2). Mentoring under this paragraph (2) may include, either |
singly or in combination, (i)
providing high quality |
professional development for new and experienced
teachers |
or school counselors, as applicable, and/or (ii) assisting |
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS)
|
candidates through the NBPTS certification process. The |
|
school district shall
distribute each annual incentive |
payment upon completion of the 30 hours or 60 hours of
|
required mentoring, whichever is applicable.
|
(3) An annual incentive equal to $2,000 shall be paid |
to (A) each teacher or school counselor who holds a Master |
Certificate, who is employed as a teacher or school |
counselor by a school district, and who agrees, in writing, |
to provide at least 30 hours of mentoring during that year |
to classroom teachers or school counselors, as applicable, |
in schools on academic early warning status or in schools |
in which 50% or more of the students receive free or |
reduced price lunches, or both, and (B) each retired |
teacher or school counselor who holds both a Master |
Certificate and a current corresponding certificate issued |
by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
and who agrees, in writing, to provide at least 30 hours of |
mentoring during that year to classroom teachers or school |
counselors, as applicable, in schools on academic early |
warning status or in schools in which 50% or more of the |
students receive free or reduced price lunches, or both. An |
additional annual incentive equal to $2,000 shall be paid |
to (I)
each teacher or school counselor who
holds a Master |
Certificate, who is employed as a teacher or school |
counselor by a school
district, and who
agrees,
in writing, |
to provide an additional 30 hours of mentoring during that |
year to classroom
teachers or school counselors, as |
|
applicable, in schools on academic early warning status or |
in schools in which 50% or more of the students receive |
free or reduced price lunches, or both, and (II) each |
retired teacher or school counselor who holds both a Master |
Certificate and a current corresponding certificate issued |
by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
and who agrees, in writing, to provide an additional 30 |
hours of mentoring during that year to classroom teachers |
or school counselors, as applicable, in schools on academic |
early warning status or in schools in which 50% or more of |
the students receive free or reduced price lunches, or |
both, for a total of 60 hours of mentoring and $4,000 in |
incentives under this paragraph (3). Mentoring under this |
paragraph (3) may include, either singly or in combination, |
(i) providing high quality professional development for |
new and experienced teachers or school counselors, as |
applicable, in schools on academic early warning status or |
in schools in which 50% or more of the students receive |
free or reduced price lunches, or both, and/or (ii) |
assisting National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards (NBPTS) candidates through the NBPTS |
certification process in schools on academic early warning |
status or in
schools
in which 50% or more of the students |
receive free or reduced price lunches, or
both.
The school |
district shall distribute each annual incentive
payment |
upon completion of the 30 hours or 60 hours of required |
|
mentoring, whichever is applicable.
|
(4) If funds are available under the Illinois Teaching |
Excellence Program in a given fiscal year, the following |
Master Certificate incentives shall be provided: |
(A) As a first priority, monetary support of up to |
$2,000 per person shall be provided for first-time |
application fees. |
(B) As a second priority, monetary support for |
NBPTS's Take One! process of up to $395 per person |
shall be provided for cohorts of teachers in schools on |
academic early warning status or schools deemed to be a |
priority by the State Board of Education. |
(C) As a third priority, monetary support of up to |
$350 per retake shall be provided for up to 3 retakes. |
(D) As a fourth priority, monetary support of up to |
$850 per person shall be provided for renewals for |
those persons who have not received prior State or |
federal fee support. |
(b) Each regional superintendent of schools shall provide |
information
about National Board certification administered by |
the National Board for Professional
Teaching Standards (NBPTS) |
and this Section
to each individual
seeking
to register or |
renew a certificate under Section 21-14 of this Code.
|
(c) After the incentives and bonuses under subsection (a) |
of this Section have been expended in a given fiscal year, if |
there are additional funds available under the Illinois |
|
Teaching Excellence Program, up to $250,000 must be used for |
the continuation of an appropriate electronic system to process |
Master Certificates and various payments. |
(d) After funds have been expended under priorities (A) |
through (D) of paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of this Section |
in a given fiscal year and if there are any additional funds |
available under the Illinois Teaching Excellence Program, |
remaining funds must be spent on candidate support and |
recruitment. |
(Source: P.A. 94-105, eff. 7-1-05; 94-901, eff. 6-22-06; |
95-996, eff. 10-3-08.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/Art. 21B heading new) |
ARTICLE 21B. EDUCATOR LICENSURE |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-5 new) |
Sec. 21B-5. Licensure powers of the State Board of |
Education. |
(a) Recognizing that the education of our citizens is the |
single most important influence on the prosperity and success |
of this State and recognizing that new developments in |
education require a flexible approach to our educational |
system, the State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, shall have the |
power and authority to do all of the following: |
(1) Set standards for teaching, supervising, or |
|
otherwise holding licensed employment in the public |
schools of this State and administer the licensure process |
as provided in this Article. |
(2) Approve, evaluate, and sanction educator |
preparation programs. |
(3) Enter into agreements with other states relative to |
reciprocal approval of educator preparation programs. |
(4) Establish standards for the issuance of new types |
of educator licenses. |
(5) Establish a code of ethics for all educators. |
(6) Maintain a system of licensure examination aligned |
with standards determined by the State Board of Education. |
(7) Take such other action relating to the improvement |
of instruction in the public schools as is appropriate and |
consistent with applicable laws. |
(b) Only the State Superintendent of Education, acting in |
accordance with the applicable provisions of this Article and |
rules, shall have the authority to issue or endorse any license |
required for teaching, supervising, or otherwise holding |
licensed employment in the public schools; and no other State |
agency shall have any power or authority (i) to establish or |
prescribe any qualifications or other requirements applicable |
to the issuance or endorsement of any such license or (ii) to |
establish or prescribe any licensure or equivalent requirement |
that must be satisfied in order to teach, supervise, or hold |
licensed employment in the public schools. |
|
(105 ILCS 5/21B-10 new) |
Sec. 21B-10. State Educator Preparation and Licensure |
Board. |
(a) The State Teacher Certification Board, which had been |
established under Section 21-13 of the School Code prior to |
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, shall be |
renamed the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
References in law to the State Teacher Certification Board |
shall mean the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board.
|
The State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board shall |
consist of the State Superintendent of Education or a |
representative appointed by him or her, who shall be ex-officio |
chairperson, 5 administrative or faculty members of public or |
private colleges or universities located in this State, 3 |
administrators and 10 classroom teachers employed in the public |
schools (5 of whom must be members of and nominated by a |
statewide professional teachers' organization and 5 of whom |
must be members of and nominated by a different statewide |
professional teachers' organization), and one regional |
superintendent of schools, all of whom shall be appointed by |
the State Board of Education; provided that at least one of the |
administrators and at least 3 of the classroom teachers so |
appointed must be employees of a school district that is |
subject to the provisions of Article 34 of this Code. A |
statewide professional teachers' organization and a different |
|
statewide professional teachers' organization shall submit to |
the State Board of Education for consideration at least 3 names |
of accomplished teachers for every one vacancy or expiring term |
in a classroom teacher position. The nominations submitted to |
the State Board of Education under this Section to fill a |
vacancy or an expiring term shall be advisory. Nomination for |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board members must be |
submitted to the State Board of Education within 30 days after |
the vacancy or vacancies occur. Nominations to fill an expiring |
term must be submitted to the State Board of Education at least |
30 days before the expiration of that term. Notwithstanding any |
other provisions of this Section, if a sufficient number of |
nominations are not received by the State Board of Education |
for a vacancy or expiring term within the 30-day period, then |
the State Board of Education may appoint any qualified person, |
in the same manner as the original appointment, to fill the |
vacancy or expiring term. The regular term of each member is 3 |
years, and an individual may be appointed for no more than 2 |
consecutive terms. The term of an appointed member of the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board shall expire on June |
30 of his or her final year. |
(b) The State Board of Education shall appoint a secretary |
of the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
(c) The State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board |
shall hold regular meetings at least quarterly and such other |
special meetings as may be necessary. |
|
(d) The necessary expenses of the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board shall be provided through the |
State Board of Education. The State Board of Education, in |
consultation with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure |
Board, may adopt such rules as may be necessary for the |
administration of this Article. |
(e) Individuals serving on the State Teacher Certification |
Board on June 30, 2011 under Section 21-13 of this Code shall |
continue to serve on the State Educator Preparation and |
Licensure Board until the scheduled expiration of their |
respective terms. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-15 new) |
Sec. 21B-15. Qualifications of educators. |
(a) No one may be licensed to teach or supervise or be |
otherwise employed in the public schools of this State who is |
not of good character and at least 20 years of age. |
In determining good character under this Section, the State |
Superintendent of Education shall take into consideration the |
disciplinary actions of other states or national entities |
against certificates or licenses issued by those states and |
held by individuals from those states. In addition, any felony |
conviction of the applicant may be taken into consideration; |
however, no one may be licensed to teach or supervise in the |
public schools of this State who has been convicted of an |
offense set forth in Section 21B-80 of this Code. Unless the |
|
conviction is for an offense set forth in Section 21B-80 of |
this Code, an applicant must be permitted to submit character |
references or other written material before such a conviction |
or other information regarding the applicant's character may be |
used by the State Superintendent of Education as a basis for |
denying the application. |
(b) No person otherwise qualified shall be denied the right |
to be licensed or to receive training for the purpose of |
becoming an educator because of a physical disability, |
including, but not limited to, visual and hearing disabilities; |
nor shall any school district refuse to employ a teacher on |
such grounds, provided that the person is able to carry out the |
duties of the position for which he or she applies. |
(c) No person may be granted or continue to hold an |
educator license who has knowingly altered or misrepresented |
his or her qualifications, in this State or any other state, in |
order to acquire or renew the license. Any other license issued |
under this Article held by the person may be suspended or |
revoked by the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, |
depending upon the severity of the alteration or |
misrepresentation. |
(d) No one may teach or supervise in the public schools nor |
receive for teaching or supervising any part of any public |
school fund who does not hold an educator license granted by |
the State Superintendent of Education as provided in this |
Article. However, the provisions of this Article do not apply |
|
to a member of the armed forces who is employed as a teacher of |
subjects in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps of any school, |
nor to an individual teaching a dual credit course as provided |
for in the Dual Credit Quality Act. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
school board of a school district may grant to a teacher of the |
district a leave of absence with full pay for a period of not |
more than one year to permit the teacher to teach in a foreign |
state under the provisions of the Exchange Teacher Program |
established under Public Law 584, 79th Congress, and Public Law |
402, 80th Congress, as amended. The school board granting the |
leave of absence may employ, with or without pay, a national of |
the foreign state wherein the teacher on the leave of absence |
is to teach if the national is qualified to teach in that |
foreign state and if that national is to teach in a grade level |
similar to the one that was taught in the foreign state. The |
State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may adopt rules as |
may be necessary to implement this subsection (e). |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-20 new) |
Sec. 21B-20. Types of licenses. Before July 1, 2013, the |
State Board of Education shall implement a system of educator |
licensure, whereby individuals employed in school districts |
who are required to be licensed must have one of the following |
licenses: (i) a professional educator license; (ii) a |
|
professional educator license with stipulations; or (iii) a |
substitute teaching license. References in law regarding |
individuals certified or certificated or required to be |
certified or certificated under Article 21 of this Code shall |
also include individuals licensed or required to be licensed |
under this Article. The first year of all licenses ends on June |
30 following one full year of the license being issued. |
The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may adopt such |
rules as may be necessary to govern the requirements for |
licenses and endorsements under this Section. |
(1) Professional Educator License. Persons who (i) |
have successfully completed an approved educator |
preparation program and are recommended for licensure by |
the Illinois institution offering the educator preparation |
program, (ii) have successfully completed the required |
testing under Section 21B-30 of this Code, (iii) have |
successfully completed coursework on the psychology of, |
the identification of, and the methods of instruction for |
the exceptional child, including without limitation the |
learning disabled, (iv) have successfully completed |
coursework in methods of reading and reading in the content |
area, and (v) have met all other criteria established by |
rule of the State Board of Education shall be issued a |
Professional Educator License. All Professional Educator |
Licenses are valid until June 30 immediately following 5 |
|
years of the license being issued. The Professional |
Educator License shall be endorsed with specific areas and |
grade levels in which the individual is eligible to |
practice. |
Individuals can receive subsequent endorsements on the |
Professional Educator License. Subsequent endorsements |
shall require a minimum of 24 semester hours of coursework |
in the endorsement area, unless otherwise specified by |
rule, and passage of the applicable content area test. |
(2) Educator License with Stipulations. An Educator |
License with Stipulations shall be issued an endorsement |
that (i) is non-renewable, (ii) limits the license holder |
to one particular position, or (iii) does not require |
completion of an approved educator program or any |
combination of items (i) through (iii) of this paragraph |
(2). |
An individual with an Educator License with |
Stipulations must not be employed by a school district or |
any other entity to replace any presently employed teacher |
who otherwise would not be replaced for any reason. |
An Educator License with Stipulations may be issued |
with the following endorsements: |
(A) Provisional educator. A provisional educator |
endorsement in a specific content area or areas on an |
Educator License with Stipulations may be issued to an |
applicant who holds an educator license with a minimum |
|
of 15 semester hours in content coursework from another |
state, U.S. territory, or foreign country and who, at |
the time of applying for an Illinois license, does not |
meet the minimum requirements under Section 21B-35 of |
this Code, but does, at a minimum, meet both of the |
following requirements: |
(i) Holds the equivalent of a minimum of a |
bachelor's degree, unless a master's degree is |
required for the endorsement, from a regionally |
accredited college or university or, for |
individuals educated in a country other than the |
United States, the equivalent of a minimum of a |
bachelor's degree issued in the United States, |
unless a master's degree is required for the |
endorsement. |
(ii) Has passed a test of basic skills and |
content area test, as required by Section 21B-30 of |
this Code. |
However, a provisional educator endorsement for principals |
may not be issued, nor may any person with a provisional |
educator endorsement serve as a principal in a public |
school in this State. In addition, out-of-state applicants |
shall not receive a provisional educator endorsement if the |
person completed an alternative licensure program in |
another state, unless the program has been determined to be |
equivalent to Illinois program requirements. |
|
A provisional educator endorsement is valid until June |
30 immediately following 2 years of the license being |
issued, during which time any remaining testing and |
coursework deficiencies must be met. Failure to satisfy all |
stated deficiencies shall mean the individual is |
ineligible to receive a Professional Educator License at |
that time. A provisional educator endorsement on an |
Educator License with Stipulations shall not be renewed. |
(B) Alternative provisional educator. An |
alternative provisional educator endorsement on an |
Educator License with Stipulations may be issued to an |
applicant who, at the time of applying for the |
endorsement, has done all of the following: |
(i) Graduated from a regionally accredited |
college or university with a minimum of a |
bachelor's degree. |
(ii) Successfully completed the first phase of |
the Alternative Educator Licensure Program for |
Teachers, as described in Section 21B-50 of this |
Code. |
(iii) Passed a test of basic skills and content |
area test, as required under Section 21B-30 of this |
Code. |
The alternative provisional educator endorsement |
is valid for 2 years of teaching and may be renewed for |
a third year by an individual meeting the requirements |
|
set forth in Section 21B-50 of this Code. |
(C) Alternative provisional superintendent. An |
alternative provisional superintendent endorsement on |
an Educator License with Stipulations entitles the |
holder to serve only as a superintendent or assistant |
superintendent in a school district's central office. |
This endorsement may only be issued to an applicant |
who, at the time of applying for the endorsement, has |
done all of the following: |
(i) Graduated from a regionally accredited |
college or university with a minimum of a master's |
degree in a management field other than education. |
(ii) Been employed for a period of at least 5 |
years in a management level position in a field |
other than education. |
(iii) Successfully completed the first phase |
of an alternative route to superintendent |
endorsement program, as provided in Section 21B-55 |
of this Code. |
(iv) Passed a test of basic skills and content |
area tests required under Section 21B-30 of this |
Code. |
The endorsement may be registered for 2 fiscal |
years in order to complete one full year of serving as |
a superintendent or assistant superintendent. |
(D) Resident teacher endorsement. A resident |
|
teacher endorsement on an Educator License with |
Stipulations may be issued to an applicant who, at the |
time of applying for the endorsement, has done all of |
the following: |
(i) Graduated from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher education with a minimum of a |
bachelor's degree. |
(ii) Enrolled in an approved Illinois educator |
preparation program. |
(iii) Passed a test of basic skills and content |
area test, as required under Section 21B-30 of this |
Code. |
The resident teacher endorsement on an Educator |
License with Stipulations is valid for 4 years of |
teaching and shall not be renewed. |
A resident teacher may teach only under the |
direction of a licensed teacher, who shall act as the |
resident mentor teacher, and may not teach in place of |
a licensed teacher.
A resident teacher endorsement on |
an Educator License with Stipulations shall no longer |
be valid after June 30, 2017. |
(E) Career and technical educator. A career and |
technical educator endorsement on an Educator License |
with Stipulations may be issued to an applicant who has |
a minimum of 60 semester hours of coursework from a |
regionally accredited institution of higher education, |
|
has passed a test of basic skills required under |
Section 21B-30 of this Code, and has a minimum of 2,000 |
hours of experience in the last 10 years outside of |
education in each area to be taught. |
The career and technical educator endorsement on |
an Educator License with Stipulations is valid until |
June 30 immediately following 5 years of the |
endorsement being issued. |
(F) Provisional career and technical educator. A |
Provisional career and technical educator endorsement |
on an Educator License with Stipulations may be issued |
to an applicant who has a minimum of 8,000 hours of |
work experience in the skill for which the applicant is |
seeking the endorsement. It is the responsibility of |
each employing school board and regional office of |
education to provide verification, in writing, to the |
State Superintendent of Education at the time the |
application is submitted that no qualified teacher |
holding a Professional Educator License or an Educator |
License with Stipulations with a career and technical |
educator endorsement is available and that actual |
circumstances require such issuance. |
The provisional career and technical educator |
endorsement on an Educator License with Stipulations |
is valid until June 30 immediately following 5 years of |
the endorsement being issued and may be renewed only |
|
one time for 5 years if the individual passes a test of |
basic skills, as required under Section 21B-30 of this |
Code, and has completed a minimum of 20 semester hours |
from a regionally accredited institution. |
(G) Transitional bilingual educator. A |
transitional bilingual educator endorsement on an |
Educator License with Stipulations may be issued for |
the purpose of providing instruction in accordance |
with Article 14C of this Code to an applicant who |
provides satisfactory evidence that he or she meets all |
of the following requirements: |
(i) Possesses adequate speaking, reading, and |
writing ability in the language other than English |
in which transitional bilingual education is |
offered. |
(ii) Has the ability to successfully |
communicate in English. |
(iii) Either possessed, within 5 years |
previous to his or her applying for a transitional |
bilingual educator endorsement, a valid and |
comparable teaching certificate or comparable |
authorization issued by a foreign country or holds |
a degree from an institution of higher learning in |
a foreign country that the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board determines to be |
the equivalent of a bachelor's degree from a |
|
regionally accredited institution of higher |
learning in the United States. |
A transitional bilingual educator endorsement |
shall be valid for prekindergarten through grade 12, is |
valid until June 30 immediately following 5 years of |
the endorsement being issued, and shall not be renewed. |
Persons holding a transitional bilingual educator |
endorsement shall not be employed to replace any |
presently employed teacher who otherwise would not be |
replaced for any reason. |
(H) Language endorsement. In an effort to |
alleviate the shortage of teachers speaking a language |
other than English in the public schools, an individual |
who holds an Educator License with Stipulations may |
also apply for a language endorsement, provided that |
the applicant provides satisfactory evidence that he |
or she meets all of the following requirements: |
(i) Holds a transitional bilingual |
endorsement. |
(ii) Has demonstrated proficiency in the |
language for which the endorsement is to be issued |
by passing the applicable language content test |
required by the State Board of Education. |
(iii) Holds a bachelor's degree or higher from |
a regionally accredited institution of higher |
education or, for individuals educated in a |
|
country other than the United States, holds a |
degree from an institution of higher learning in a |
foreign country that the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board determines to be |
the equivalent of a bachelor's degree from a |
regionally accredited institution of higher |
learning in the United States. |
(iv) Has passed a test of basic skills, as |
required under Section 21B-30 of this Code. |
A language endorsement on an Educator License with |
Stipulations is valid for prekindergarten through |
grade 12 for the same validity period as the |
individual's transitional bilingual educator |
endorsement on the Educator License with Stipulations |
and shall not be renewed. |
(I) Visiting international educator. A visiting |
international educator endorsement on an Educator |
License with Stipulations may be issued to an |
individual who is being recruited by a particular |
school district that conducts formal recruitment |
programs outside of the United States to secure the |
services of qualified teachers and who meets all of the |
following requirements: |
(i) Holds the equivalent of a minimum of a |
bachelor's degree issued in the United States. |
(ii) Has been prepared as a teacher at the |
|
grade level for which he or she will be employed. |
(iii) Has adequate content knowledge in the |
subject to be taught. |
(iv) Has an adequate command of the English |
language. |
A holder of a visiting international educator |
endorsement on an Educator License with Stipulations |
shall be permitted to teach in bilingual education |
programs in the language that was the medium of |
instruction in his or her teacher preparation program, |
provided that he or she passes the English Language |
Proficiency Examination or another test of writing |
skills in English identified by the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board. |
A visiting international educator endorsement on |
an Educator License with Stipulations is valid for 3 |
years and shall not be renewed. |
(J) Paraprofessional educator. A paraprofessional |
educator endorsement on an Educator License with |
Stipulations may be issued to an applicant who holds a |
high school diploma or its recognized equivalent and |
either holds an associate's degree or a minimum of 60 |
semester hours of credit from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher education or has passed a test of |
basic skills required under Section 21B-30 of this |
|
Code. The paraprofessional educator endorsement is |
valid until June 30 immediately following 5 years of |
the endorsement being issued and may be renewed through |
application and payment of the appropriate fee, as |
required under Section 21B-40 of this Code. An |
individual who holds only a paraprofessional educator |
endorsement is not subject to additional requirements |
in order to renew the endorsement. |
(3) Substitute Teaching License. A Substitute Teaching |
License may be issued to qualified applicants for |
substitute teaching in all grades of the public schools, |
prekindergarten through grade 12. Substitute Teaching |
Licenses are not eligible for endorsements. Applicants for |
a Substitute Teaching License must hold a bachelor's degree |
or higher from a regionally accredited institution of |
higher education. |
Substitute Teaching Licenses are valid for 5 years and |
may be renewed if the individual has passed a test of basic |
skills, as authorized under Section 21B-30 of this Code. An |
individual who has passed a test of basic skills for the |
first licensure renewal is not required to retake the test |
again for further renewals. |
Substitute Teaching Licenses are valid for substitute |
teaching in every county of this State. If an individual |
has had his or her Professional Educator License or |
Educator License with Stipulations suspended or revoked or |
|
has not met the renewal requirements for licensure, then |
that individual is not eligible to obtain a Substitute |
Teaching License. |
A substitute teacher may only teach in the place of a |
licensed teacher who is under contract with the employing |
board. If, however, there is no licensed teacher under |
contract because of an emergency situation, then a district |
may employ a substitute teacher for no longer than 30 |
calendar days per each vacant position in the district if |
the district notifies the appropriate regional office of |
education within 5 business days after the employment of |
the substitute teacher in the emergency situation. An |
emergency situation is one in which an unforeseen vacancy |
has occurred and (i) a teacher is unable to fulfill his or |
her contractual duties or (ii) teacher capacity needs of |
the district exceed previous indications, and the district |
is actively engaged in advertising to hire a fully licensed |
teacher for the vacant position. |
There is no limit on the number of days that a |
substitute teacher may teach in a single school district, |
provided that no substitute teacher may teach for longer |
than 90 school days for any one licensed teacher under |
contract in the same school year. A substitute teacher who |
holds a Professional Educator License or Educator License |
with Stipulations shall not teach for more than 120 school |
days for any one licensed teacher under contract in the |
|
same school year. The limitations in this paragraph (3) on |
the number of days a substitute teacher may be employed do |
not apply to any school district operating under Article 34 |
of this Code. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-25 new) |
Sec. 21B-25. Endorsement on licenses. All licenses issued |
under paragraph (1) of Section 21B-20 of this Code shall be |
specifically endorsed by the State Board of Education for each |
content area, school support area, and administrative area for |
which the holder of the license is qualified. Recognized |
institutions approved to offer educator preparation programs |
shall be trained to add endorsements to licenses issued to |
applicants who meet all of the requirements for the endorsement |
or endorsements, including passing any required tests. The |
State Superintendent of Education shall randomly audit |
institutions to ensure that all rules and standards are being |
followed for entitlement or when endorsements are being |
recommended. |
(1) The State Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, shall |
establish, by rule, the grade level and subject area |
endorsements to be added to the Professional Educator |
License. These rules shall outline the requirements for |
obtaining each endorsement. |
(2) In addition to any and all grade level and content |
|
area endorsements developed by rule, the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board, shall develop the |
requirements for the following endorsements: |
(A) General administrative endorsement. A general |
administrative endorsement shall be added to a |
Professional Educator License, provided that an |
approved program has been completed. An individual |
holding a general administrative endorsement may work |
only as a principal or assistant principal or in a |
related or similar position, as determined by the State |
Superintendent of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
Beginning on September 1, 2014, the general |
administrative endorsement shall no longer be issued. |
Individuals who hold a valid and registered |
administrative certificate with a general |
administrative endorsement issued under Section 21-7.1 |
of this Code or a Professional Educator License with a |
general administrative endorsement issued prior to |
September 1, 2014 and who have served for at least one |
full year during the 5 years prior in a position |
requiring a general administrative endorsement shall, |
upon request to the State Board of Education and |
through July 1, 2015, have their respective general |
administrative endorsement converted to a principal |
|
endorsement on the Professional Educator License. |
Candidates shall not be admitted to an approved general |
administrative preparation program after September 1, |
2012. |
All other individuals holding a valid and |
registered administrative certificate with a general |
administrative endorsement issued pursuant to Section |
21-7.1 of this Code or a general administrative |
endorsement on a Professional Educator License issued |
prior to September 1, 2014 shall have the general |
administrative endorsement converted to a principal |
endorsement on a Professional Educator License upon |
request to the State Board of Education and by |
completing one of the following pathways: |
(i) Passage of the State principal assessment |
developed by the State Board of Education. |
(ii) Through July 1, 2019, completion of an |
Illinois Educators' Academy course designated by |
the State Superintendent of Education. |
(iii) Completion of a principal preparation |
program established and approved pursuant to |
Section 21B-60 of this Code and applicable rules. |
Individuals who do not choose to convert the |
general administrative endorsement on the |
administrative certificate issued pursuant to Section |
21-7.1 of this Code or on the Professional Educator |
|
License shall continue to be able to serve in any |
position previously allowed under paragraph (2) of |
subsection (e) of Section 21-7.1 of this Code. |
The general administrative endorsement on the |
Professional Educator License is available only to |
individuals who, prior to September 1, 2014, had such |
an endorsement on the administrative certificate |
issued pursuant to Section 21-7.1 of this Code or who |
already have a Professional Educator License and have |
completed a general administrative program and who do |
not choose to convert the general administrative |
endorsement to a principal endorsement pursuant to the |
options in this Section. |
(B) Principal endorsement. A principal endorsement |
shall be affixed to a Professional Educator License of |
any holder who qualifies by having all of the |
following: |
(i) Successful completion of a principal |
preparation program approved in accordance with |
Section 21B-60 of this Code and any applicable |
rules. |
(ii) Four years of teaching in a public school |
or nonpublic school recognized by the State Board |
of Education; however, the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board, shall allow, by |
|
rules, for fewer than 4 years of experience based |
on meeting standards set forth in such rules, |
including without limitation a review of |
performance evaluations or other evidence of |
demonstrated qualifications. |
(iii) A master's degree or higher from a |
regionally accredited college or university. |
(C) Chief school business official endorsement. A |
chief school business official endorsement shall be |
affixed to the Professional Educator License of any |
holder who qualifies by having a master's degree or |
higher, 2 years of full-time administrative experience |
in school business management or 2 years of |
university-approved practical experience, and a |
minimum of 24 semester hours of graduate credit in a |
program approved by the State Board of Education for |
the preparation of school business administrators and |
by passage of the applicable State tests. The chief |
school business official endorsement may also be |
affixed to the Professional Educator License of any |
holder who qualifies by having a master's degree in |
business administration, finance, or accounting and |
who completes an additional 6 semester hours of |
internship in school business management from a |
regionally accredited institution of higher education |
and passes the applicable State tests. This |
|
endorsement shall be required for any individual |
employed as a chief school business official. |
(D) Superintendent endorsement. A superintendent |
endorsement shall be affixed to the Professional |
Educator License of any holder who has completed a |
program approved by the State Board of Education for |
the preparation of superintendents of schools, has had |
at least 2 years of experience employed as a full-time |
principal, director of special education, or chief |
school business official in the public schools 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 where a majority of the teachers are required |
to have the licensure necessary to be instructors in a |
public school in this State, and has passed the |
required State tests; or of any holder who has |
completed a program from out-of-state that has a |
program with recognition standards comparable to those |
approved by the State Superintendent of Education and |
holds the general administrative, principal, or chief |
school business official endorsement and who has had 2 |
years of experience as a principal, director of special |
education, or chief school business official while |
holding a valid educator license or certificate |
comparable in validity and educational and experience |
|
requirements and has passed the appropriate State |
tests, as provided in Section 21B-30 of this Code. The |
superintendent endorsement shall allow individuals to |
serve only as a superintendent or assistant |
superintendent. |
(E) Teacher leader endorsement. It shall be the |
policy of this State to improve the quality of |
instructional leaders by providing a career pathway |
for teachers interested in serving in leadership |
roles, but not as principals. The State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board, may issue a teacher |
leader endorsement under this subdivision (E). Persons |
who meet and successfully complete the requirements of |
the endorsement shall be issued a teacher leader |
endorsement on the Professional Educator License for |
serving in schools in this State. Teacher leaders may |
qualify to serve in such positions as department |
chairs, coaches, mentors, curriculum and instruction |
leaders, or other leadership positions as defined by |
the district. The endorsement shall be available to |
those teachers who (i) hold a Professional Educator |
License, (ii) hold a master's degree or higher from a |
regionally accredited institution, (iii) have |
completed a program of study that has been approved by |
the State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
|
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, and |
(iv) have taken coursework in all of the following |
areas: |
(I) Leadership. |
(II) Designing professional development to |
meet teaching and learning needs. |
(III) Building school culture that focuses on |
student learning. |
(IV) Using assessments to improve student |
learning and foster school improvement. |
(V) Building collaboration with teachers and |
stakeholders. |
A teacher who meets the requirements set forth in |
this Section and holds a teacher leader endorsement may |
evaluate teachers pursuant to Section 24A-5 of this |
Code, provided that the individual has completed the |
evaluation component required by Section 24A-3 of this |
Code and a teacher leader is allowed to evaluate |
personnel under the respective school district's |
collective bargaining agreement. |
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 teacher leader endorsement program |
and to specify the positions for which this endorsement |
shall be required. |
|
(F) Special education endorsement. A special |
education endorsement in one or more areas shall be |
affixed to a Professional Educator License for any |
individual that meets those requirements established |
by the State Board of Education in rules. Special |
education endorsement areas shall include without |
limitation the following: |
(i) Learning Behavior Specialist I; |
(ii) Learning Behavior Specialist II; |
(iii) Speech Language Pathologist; |
(iv) Blind or Visually Impaired; |
(v) Deaf-Hard of Hearing; and |
(vi) Early Childhood Special Education. |
Notwithstanding anything in this Code to the contrary, |
the State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may |
add additional areas of special education by rule. |
(G) School support personnel endorsement. School |
support personnel endorsement areas shall include, but |
are not limited to, school counselor, school |
psychologist, school speech and language pathologist, |
school nurse, and school social worker. This |
endorsement is for individuals who are not teachers or |
administrators, but still require licensure to work in |
an instructional support position in a public or |
State-operated elementary school, secondary school, or |
|
cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or |
board of control or a charter school operating in |
compliance with the Charter Schools Law. The school |
support personnel endorsement shall be affixed to the |
Professional Educator License and shall meet all of the |
requirements established in any rules adopted to |
implement this subdivision (G). The holder of such an |
endorsement is entitled to all of the rights and |
privileges granted holders of any other Professional |
Educator License, including teacher benefits, |
compensation, and working conditions. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-30 new) |
Sec. 21B-30. Educator testing. |
(a) This Section applies beginning on July 1, 2012. |
(b) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, shall design |
and implement a system of examinations, which shall be required |
prior to the issuance of educator licenses. These examinations |
and indicators must be based on national and State professional |
teaching standards, as determined by the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board. The State Board of Education may adopt |
such rules as may be necessary to implement and administer this |
Section. No score on a test required under this Section, other |
than a test of basic skills, shall be more than 5 years old at |
|
the time that an individual makes application for an educator |
license or endorsement. |
(c) Applicants seeking a Professional Educator License or |
an Educator License with Stipulations shall be required to pass |
a test of basic skills, unless the endorsement the individual |
is seeking does not require passage of the test. |
No candidate may be fully admitted into an educator |
preparation program at a recognized Illinois institution until |
he or she has passed a test of basic skills. An individual who |
passes a test of basic skills does not need to do so again for |
subsequent endorsements or other educator licenses. |
(d) All applicants seeking a State license shall be |
required to pass a test of content area knowledge for each area |
of endorsement for which there is an applicable test. There |
shall be no exception to this requirement. No candidate shall |
be allowed to student teach, serve as the teacher of record, or |
begin an internship or residency required for licensure until |
he or she has passed the applicable content area test. |
(e) All applicants seeking a State license endorsed in a |
teaching field shall pass the assessment of professional |
teaching (APT). Passage of the APT is required for completion |
of an approved Illinois educator preparation program. |
(f) Beginning on September 1, 2015, all candidates |
completing teacher preparation programs in this State are |
required to pass an evidence-based assessment of teacher |
effectiveness approved by the State Board of Education, in |
|
consultation with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure |
Board. All recognized institutions offering approved teacher |
preparation programs must begin phasing in the approved teacher |
performance assessment no later than July 1, 2013. |
(g) Tests of basic skills and content area knowledge and |
the assessment of professional teaching shall be the tests that |
from time to time are designated by the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board, and may be tests prepared by an |
educational testing organization or tests designed by the State |
Board of Education, in consultation with the State Educator |
Preparation and Licensure Board. The areas to be covered by a |
test of basic skills shall include reading, language arts, and |
mathematics. The test of content area knowledge shall assess |
content knowledge in a specific subject field. The tests must |
be designed to be racially neutral to ensure that no person |
taking the tests is discriminated against on the basis of race, |
color, national origin, or other factors unrelated to the |
person's ability to perform as a licensed employee. The score |
required to pass the tests shall be fixed by the State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board. The tests shall be administered not fewer |
than 3 times a year at such time and place as may be designated |
by the State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
The State Board shall implement a test or tests to assess |
|
the speaking, reading, writing, and grammar skills of |
applicants for an endorsement or a license issued under |
subdivision (G) of paragraph (2) of Section 21B-20 of this Code |
in the English language and in the language of the transitional |
bilingual education program requested by the applicant. |
(h) Except as provided in Section 34-6 of this Code, the |
provisions of this Section shall apply equally in any school |
district subject to Article 34 of this Code. |
(i) The rules developed to implement and enforce the |
testing requirements under this Section shall include |
provisions governing test selection, test validation and |
determination of a passing score, administration of the tests, |
frequency of administration, applicant fees, frequency of |
applicants taking the tests, the years for which a score is |
valid, and appropriate special accommodations. The State Board |
of Education shall develop such rules as may be needed to |
ensure uniformity from year to year in the level of difficulty |
for each form of an assessment. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-35 new) |
Sec. 21B-35. Minimum requirements for educators trained in |
other states or countries. |
(a) All out-of-state applicants applying for a |
Professional Educator License must meet all of the following |
requirements: |
(1) Have completed a comparable state-approved |
|
education program, as defined by the State Superintendent |
of Education. |
(2) Have a degree from a regionally accredited |
institution of higher education and the degreed major or a |
constructed major must directly correspond to the license |
or endorsement sought. |
(3) Have completed a minimum of one course in the |
methods of instruction of the exceptional child. |
(4) Have completed a minimum of 6 semester hours of |
coursework in methods of reading and reading in the content |
area. |
(5) Have completed a minimum of one course in |
instructional strategies for English language learners. |
(6) Have successfully met all Illinois examination |
requirements. |
(7) Have completed student teaching or an equivalent |
experience. |
If one or more of the criteria in subsection (a) of this |
Section are not met, then out-of-state applicants who hold a |
valid, comparable certificate from another state and have |
passed a test of basic skills and content area test, as |
required by Section 21B-20 of this Code, may qualify for a |
provisional educator endorsement on an Educator License with |
Stipulations, in accordance with Section 21B-20 of this Code, |
with the exception that an individual shall not serve as a |
principal or assistant principal while holding the provisional |
|
educator endorsement. |
(b) In order to receive a Professional Educator License, |
applicants trained in another country must meet all of the |
following requirements: |
(1) Have completed a comparable education program in |
another country. |
(2) Have had transcripts evaluated by an evaluation |
service approved by the State Superintendent of Education. |
(3) Hold a degreed major that must directly correspond |
to the license or endorsement sought. |
(4) Have completed a minimum of one course in the |
methods of instruction of the exceptional child. |
(5) Have completed a minimum of 6 semester hours of |
coursework in methods of reading and reading in the content |
area. |
(6) Have completed a minimum of one course in |
instructional strategies for English language learners. |
(7) Have successfully met all State licensure |
examination requirements. |
(8) Have completed student teaching or an equivalent |
experience. |
If one or more of these criteria are not met, then an |
applicant trained in another country who has passed a test of |
basic skills and content area test, as required by Section |
21B-20 of this Code, may qualify for a provisional educator |
endorsement on an Educator License with Stipulations, with the |
|
exception that an individual shall not serve as a principal or |
assistant principal while holding the provisional educator |
endorsement. |
(c) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may adopt such |
rules as may be necessary to implement this Section. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-40 new) |
Sec. 21B-40. Fees. |
(a) Beginning with the start of the new licensure system |
established pursuant to this Article, the following fees shall |
be charged to applicants: |
(1) A $75 application fee for a Professional Educator |
License or an Educator License with Stipulations and for |
individuals seeking a Substitute Teaching License. |
However, beginning on January 1, 2015, the application fee |
for a Professional Educator License, Educator License with |
Stipulations, or Substitute Teaching License shall be |
$100. |
(2) A $150 application fee for individuals who have |
completed an approved educator preparation program outside |
of this State or who hold a valid, comparable credential |
from another state or country and are seeking any of the |
licenses set forth in subdivision (1) of this subsection |
(a). |
(3) A $50 application fee for each endorsement or |
|
approval an individual holding a license wishes to add to |
that license. |
(4) A $10 per year registration fee for the course of |
the validity cycle to register the license, which shall be |
paid to the regional office of education having supervision |
and control over the school in which the individual holding |
the license is to be employed. If the individual holding |
the license is not yet employed, then the license may be |
registered in any county in this State. The registration |
fee must be paid in its entirety the first time the |
individual registers the license for a particular validity |
period in a single region. No additional fee may be charged |
for that validity period should the individual |
subsequently register the license in additional regions. |
An individual must register the license (i) immediately |
after initial issuance of the license and (ii) at the |
beginning of each renewal cycle if the individual has |
satisfied the renewal requirements required under this |
Code. |
(b) All application fees paid pursuant to subdivisions (1) |
through (3) of subsection (a) of this Section shall be |
deposited into the Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund and |
shall be used, subject to appropriation, by the State Board of |
Education to provide the technology and human resources |
necessary for the timely and efficient processing of |
applications. The Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund is not |
|
subject to administrative charge transfers, authorized under |
Section 8h of the State Finance Act, from the Teacher |
Certificate Fee Revolving Fund into any other fund of this |
State, and moneys in the Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund |
shall not revert back to the General Revenue Fund at any time. |
The regional superintendent of schools shall deposit the |
registration fees paid pursuant to subdivision (4) of |
subsection (a) of this Section into the institute fund |
established pursuant to Section 3-11 of this Code. |
(c) The State Board of Education and each regional office |
of education are authorized to charge a service or convenience |
fee for the use of credit cards for the payment of license |
fees. This service or convenience fee shall not exceed the |
amount required by the credit card processing company or vendor |
that has entered into a contract with the State Board or |
regional office of education for this purpose, and the fee must |
be paid to that company or vendor. |
(d) If, at the time a certificate issued under Article 21 |
of this Code is exchanged for a license issued under this |
Article, a person has paid registration fees for any years of |
the validity period of the certificate and these years have not |
expired when the certificate is exchanged, then those fees must |
be applied to the registration of the new license. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-45 new) |
Sec. 21B-45. Licensure renewal. All licenses with |
|
endorsements are required to complete the licensure renewal |
requirements as specified in this Section, unless otherwise |
provided in this Code. |
Individuals holding a Professional Educator License |
endorsed in a teaching field shall meet the renewal |
requirements set forth in subsection (e) of Section 21-14 of |
this Code. An individual holding a Professional Educator |
License with a general administrative, principal, chief school |
business official, or superintendent endorsement issued under |
this Article who is also working in a position using or |
requiring that endorsement is subject to the renewal |
requirements in subsection (c-10) of Section 21-7.1 of this |
Code. An individual holding a Professional Educator License |
with a school personnel support endorsement and working in a |
position for which that endorsement is required must complete |
the licensure renewal requirements under Section 21-25 of this |
Code. If an individual holds licensure in more than one area |
that has different renewal requirements, that individual shall |
follow the renewal requirements for the position for which he |
or she spends the majority of his or her time working. |
All licenses not renewed as provided in this Section or |
registered in accordance with Section 21B-40 of this Code shall |
lapse after a period of 6 months from the expiration of the |
last year of registration. The license may be reinstated once |
the applicant has demonstrated proficiency by completing 9 |
semester hours of coursework from a regionally accredited |
|
institution of higher education in the content area that most |
aligns with the educator's endorsement area or areas. Before |
the license may be reinstated, the applicant shall pay all back |
fees owed from the time of expiration of the license until the |
date of reinstatement. Any license may be voluntarily |
surrendered by the license holder. A voluntarily surrendered |
license shall be treated as a revoked license. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-50 new) |
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) Beginning on January 1, 2013, 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. Any program offered |
by a not-for-profit entity also must be approved by the Board |
of Higher Education. |
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 assessment of professional teaching |
before entering the second residency year, as required |
under phase (3) of this subsection (b), and be recommended |
by the principal and 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 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 and 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 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 a |
Educator License with Stipulations is valid for 2 years of |
teaching in the public schools 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) 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 Superintendent of |
Education to be reviewed for equivalency. |
(4) Has successfully completed phase (1) of subsection |
(b) of this Section. |
(5) Has passed a test of basic skills and 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 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. 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. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-55 new) |
Sec. 21B-55. Alternative route to superintendent |
endorsement. |
(a) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may approve |
programs designed to provide an alternative route to |
superintendent endorsement on a Professional Educator License. |
(b) Entities offering an alternative route to |
superintendent endorsement program must have the program |
|
approved by the State Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
(c) All programs approved under this Section shall be |
comprised of the following 3 phases: |
(1) A course of study offered on an intensive basis in |
education management, governance, organization, and |
instructional and district planning. |
(2) The person's assignment to a full-time position for |
one school year as a superintendent. |
(3) A comprehensive assessment of the person's |
performance by school officials and a recommendation to the |
State Superintendent of Education that the person be issued |
a superintendent endorsement on a Professional Educator |
License. |
(d) In order to be admitted to an alternative route to |
superintendent endorsement program, a candidate shall pass a |
test of basic skills, as required under Section 21B-30 of this |
Code. In order to serve as a superintendent under phase (2) of |
subsection (c) of this Section, an individual must be issued an |
alternative provisional superintendent endorsement on an |
Educator License with Stipulations, to be valid for only one |
year of serving as a superintendent. In order to receive the |
provisional alternative superintendent endorsement under this |
Section, an individual must meet all of the following |
requirements: |
(1) Have graduated from a regionally accredited |
|
college or university with a minimum of a master's degree |
in a management field other than education. |
(2) Have been employed for a period of at least 5 years |
in a management level position other than education. |
(3) Have successfully completed phase (1) of |
subsection (c) of this Section. |
(4) Have passed examinations required by Section |
21B-30 of this Code. |
(e) Successful completion of an alternative route to |
superintendent endorsement program shall be deemed to satisfy |
any other supervisory, administrative, or management |
experience requirements established by law, and, once |
completed, an individual shall be eligible for a superintendent |
endorsement on 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 needed to establish and implement these |
alternative route to superintendent endorsement programs. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-60 new) |
Sec. 21B-60. Principal preparation programs. |
(a) It is the policy of this State that an essential |
element of improving student learning is supporting and |
employing highly effective school principals in leadership |
roles who improve teaching and learning and increase academic |
achievement and the development of all students. |
|
(b) No later than September 1, 2014, recognized |
institutions approved by the State Board of Education, in |
consultation with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure |
Board, to offer principal preparation programs must do all of |
the following: |
(1) Meet the standards and requirements for such |
programs in accordance with this Section and any rules |
adopted by the State Board of Education, in consultation |
with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
(2) Prepare candidates to meet required standards for |
principal skills, knowledge, and responsibilities, which |
shall include a focus on instruction and student learning |
and which must be used for principal professional |
development, mentoring, and evaluation. |
(3) Include specific requirements for (i) the |
selection and assessment of candidates, (ii) training in |
the evaluation of staff, (iii) an internship, and (iv) a |
partnership with one or more school districts or |
State-recognized, nonpublic schools 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. |
Any principal preparation program offered in whole or in |
part by a not-for-profit entity must also be approved by the |
|
Board of Higher Education. |
(c) Candidates successfully completing a principal |
preparation program established pursuant to this Section shall |
obtain a principal endorsement on a Professional Educator |
License and are eligible to work as a principal or an assistant |
principal or in related or similar positions, as determined by |
the State Superintendent of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. |
(d) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, may adopt such |
rules as may be necessary to implement and administer principal |
preparation programs under this Section. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-65 new) |
Sec. 21B-65. National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards. Individuals holding certification issued by the |
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards shall be |
issued a National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
designation on an existing Professional Educator License. The |
designation shall be issued automatically and added to an |
individual's Professional Educator License, and individuals |
need not submit an application. |
The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
designation must be issued only for the same validity period as |
the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
certification, and the designation must be removed from the |
|
Professional Educator License when the educator no longer holds |
the certification from the National Board for Professional |
Teaching Standards. |
Beginning on July 1, 2013, individuals holding an Illinois |
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards endorsement |
issued pursuant to the requirements of Section 21-2 of this |
Code must have a current certificate issued by the National |
Board for Professional Teaching Standards in order to maintain |
the Illinois National Board for Professional Teaching |
Standards endorsement. |
Any individual who, on or after July 1, 2012, has been |
issued a Master Certificate pursuant to Section 21-2 of this |
Code or a National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
designation on a Professional Educator License pursuant to this |
Section may work as a teacher only in an area for which he or |
she holds the required Illinois endorsement. Any individual |
who, prior to June 30, 2012, has been issued an endorsement for |
a particular area on a Master Certificate may work as a teacher |
in that area even without having been issued the required |
Illinois endorsement. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-70 new) |
Sec. 21B-70. Illinois Teaching Excellence Program. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Poverty or low-performing school" means a school in |
academic early warning status or academic watch status or a |
|
school in which 50% or more of its students are eligible for |
free or reduced-price school lunches. |
"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. |
(b) Beginning on July 1, 2011, 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 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 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 for each qualified educator to |
be distributed to the respective school district. 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 based on the |
priorities outlined in subsection (c) of this Section. |
(c) When there are adequate funds available, priorities |
(1), (2), (3), (4), and (5), as outlined in this subsection |
(c), must be funded. If full funding to meet all priorities as |
outlined in this subsection (c) is not available, funding must |
be distributed in the order of the priorities listed in this |
subsection (c). If funding is insufficient to fund a priority |
in full, then funding for that priority must be prorated and no |
further priorities shall be funded. |
Priorities for monetary assistance and incentives shall be |
as follows: |
(1) Priority 1: A maximum of $2,000 towards the |
application fee for up to 750 teachers or school counselors |
in a poverty or low-performing school who apply on a |
first-come, first-serve basis for National Board |
certification. |
(2) Priority 2: A maximum of $2,000 towards the |
application fee for up to 250 teachers or school counselors |
in a school other than a poverty or low-performing school |
who apply on a first-come, first-serve basis for National |
|
Board certification. However, if there were fewer than 750 |
individuals supported in priority (1), then the number |
supported in priority (2) may be increased as such that the |
combination of priority (1) and priority (2) shall equal |
1,000 applicants. |
(3) Priority 3: The fee for the National Board for |
Professional Teaching Standards' Take One! (the test for |
National Board certification) for up to 500 qualified |
educators who apply on a first-come, first-serve basis. |
(4) Priority 4: An annual incentive equal to $1,500, |
which shall be paid to each qualified educator 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, |
who is employed in a school district, and who agrees, in |
writing, to provide 30 hours of mentoring or National Board |
for Professional Teaching Standards professional |
development or both during the school year to teachers or |
school counselors in a poverty or low-performing school, as |
applicable. |
(5) Priority 5: An annual incentive equal to $1,500, |
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 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. |
Mentoring for all priorities shall include, either singly |
or in combination, mentoring of 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) National Board for Professional Teaching Standards |
Take One! participants. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-75 new) |
Sec. 21B-75. Suspension or revocation of license. |
(a) As used in this Section, "teacher" means any school |
district employee regularly required to be licensed, as |
provided in this Article, in order to teach or supervise in the |
public schools. |
(b) The State Superintendent of Education has the exclusive |
authority, in accordance with this Section and any rules |
adopted by the State Board of Education, in consultation with |
the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, to initiate |
the suspension of up to 5 calendar years or revocation of any |
|
license issued pursuant to this Article for abuse or neglect of |
a child, immorality, a condition of health detrimental to the |
welfare of pupils, incompetency, unprofessional conduct (which |
includes the failure to disclose on an employment application |
any previous conviction for a sex offense, as defined in |
Section 21B-80 of this Code, or any other offense committed in |
any other state or against the laws of the United States that, |
if committed in this State, would be punishable as a sex |
offense, as defined in Section 21B-80 of this Code), the |
neglect of any professional duty, willful failure to report an |
instance of suspected child abuse or neglect as required by the |
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, failure to establish |
satisfactory repayment on an educational loan guaranteed by the |
Illinois Student Assistance Commission, or other just cause. |
Unprofessional conduct shall include the refusal to attend or |
participate in institutes, teachers' meetings, or professional |
readings or to meet other reasonable requirements of the |
regional superintendent of schools or State Superintendent of |
Education. Unprofessional conduct also includes conduct that |
violates the standards, ethics, or rules applicable to the |
security, administration, monitoring, or scoring of or the |
reporting of scores from any assessment test or examination |
administered under Section 2-3.64 of this Code or that is known |
or intended to produce or report manipulated or artificial, |
rather than actual, assessment or achievement results or gains |
from the administration of those tests or examinations. |
|
Unprofessional conduct shall also include neglect or |
unnecessary delay in the making of statistical and other |
reports required by school officers. |
(c) The State Superintendent of Education shall, upon |
receipt of evidence of abuse or neglect of a child, immorality, |
a condition of health detrimental to the welfare of pupils, |
incompetency, unprofessional conduct, the neglect of any |
professional duty, or other just cause, further investigate |
and, if and as appropriate, serve written notice to the |
individual and afford the individual opportunity for a hearing |
prior to suspension or revocation; provided that the State |
Superintendent is under no obligation to initiate such an |
investigation if the Department of Children and Family Services |
is investigating the same or substantially similar allegations |
and its child protective service unit has not made its |
determination, as required under Section 7.12 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act. If the State Superintendent of |
Education does not receive from an individual a request for a |
hearing within 10 days after the individual receives notice, |
the suspension or revocation shall immediately take effect in |
accordance with the notice. If a hearing is requested within 10 |
days after notice of an opportunity for hearing, it shall act |
as a stay of proceedings until the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board issues a decision. Any hearing shall take |
place in the educational service region where the educator is |
or was last employed and in accordance with rules adopted by |
|
the State Board of Education, in consultation with the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, and such rules shall |
include without limitation provisions for discovery and the |
sharing of information between parties prior to the hearing. |
The standard of proof for any administrative hearing held |
pursuant to this Section shall be by the preponderance of the |
evidence. The decision of the State Educator Preparation and |
Licensure Board is a final administrative decision and is |
subject to judicial review by appeal of either party. |
The State Board of Education may refuse to issue or may |
suspend the license of any person who fails to file a return or |
to pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return or |
to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as |
required by any tax Act administered by the Department of |
Revenue, until such time as the requirements of any such tax |
Act are satisfied. |
The exclusive authority of the State Superintendent of |
Education to initiate suspension or revocation of a license |
pursuant to this Section does not preclude a regional |
superintendent of schools from cooperating with the State |
Superintendent or a State's Attorney with respect to an |
investigation of alleged misconduct. |
(d) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her |
designee may initiate and conduct such investigations as may be |
reasonably necessary to establish the existence of any alleged |
misconduct. At any stage of the investigation, the State |
|
Superintendent may issue a subpoena requiring the attendance |
and testimony of a witness, including the license holder, and |
the production of any evidence, including files, records, |
correspondence, or documents, relating to any matter in |
question in the investigation. The subpoena shall require a |
witness to appear at the State Board of Education at a |
specified date and time and shall specify any evidence to be |
produced. The license holder is not entitled to be present, but |
the State Superintendent shall provide the license holder with |
a copy of any recorded testimony prior to a hearing under this |
Section. Such recorded testimony must not be used as evidence |
at a hearing, unless the license holder has adequate notice of |
the testimony and the opportunity to cross-examine the witness. |
Failure of a license holder to comply with a duly issued, |
investigatory subpoena may be grounds for revocation, |
suspension, or denial of a license. |
(e) All correspondence, documentation, and other |
information so received by the regional superintendent of |
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State Board |
of Education, or the State Educator Preparation and Licensure |
Board under this Section is confidential and must not be |
disclosed to third parties, except (i) as necessary for the |
State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee to |
investigate and prosecute pursuant to this Article, (ii) |
pursuant to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the license |
holder or his or her representative, or (iv) as otherwise |
|
required in this Article and provided that any such information |
admitted into evidence in a hearing is exempt from this |
confidentiality and non-disclosure requirement. |
(f) The State Superintendent of Education or a person |
designated by him or her shall have the power to administer |
oaths to witnesses at any hearing conducted before the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board pursuant to this |
Section. The State Superintendent of Education or a person |
designated by him or her is authorized to subpoena and bring |
before the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board any |
person in this State and to take testimony either orally or by |
deposition or by exhibit, with the same fees and mileage and in |
the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings in |
civil cases in circuit courts of this State. |
(g) Any circuit court, upon the application of the State |
Superintendent of Education or the license holder, may, by |
order duly entered, require the attendance of witnesses and the |
production of relevant books and papers as part of any |
investigation or at any hearing the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board is authorized to conduct pursuant to this |
Section, and the court may compel obedience to its orders by |
proceedings for contempt. |
(h) The State Board of Education shall receive an annual |
line item appropriation to cover fees associated with the |
investigation and prosecution of alleged educator misconduct |
and hearings related thereto. |
|
(105 ILCS 5/21B-80 new) |
Sec. 21B-80. Conviction of certain offenses as grounds for |
revocation of license. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Narcotics offense" means any one or more of the following |
offenses: |
(1) Any offense defined in the Cannabis Control Act, |
except those defined in subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section |
4 and subdivision (a) of Section 5 of the Cannabis Control |
Act and any offense for which the holder of a license is |
placed on probation under the provisions of Section 10 of |
the Cannabis Control Act, provided that if the terms and |
conditions of probation required by the court are not |
fulfilled, the offense is not eligible for this exception. |
(2) Any offense defined in the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act, except any offense for which the holder of |
a license is placed on probation under the provisions of |
Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, |
provided that if the terms and conditions of probation |
required by the court are not fulfilled, the offense is not |
eligible for this exception. |
(3) Any offense defined in the Methamphetamine Control |
and Community Protection Act, except any offense for which |
the holder of a license is placed on probation under the |
provision of Section 70 of that Act, provided that if the |
|
terms and conditions of probation required by the court are |
not fulfilled, the offense is not eligible for this |
exception. |
(4) Any attempt to commit any of the offenses listed in |
items (1) through (3) of this definition. |
(5) Any offense committed or attempted in any other |
state or against the laws of the United States that, if |
committed or attempted in this State, would have been |
punishable as one or more of the offenses listed in items |
(1) through (4) of this definition. |
The changes made by Public Act 96-431 to the definition of |
"narcotics offense" are declaratory of existing law. |
"Sex offense" means any one or more of the following |
offenses: |
(A) Any offense defined in Sections 11-6 and 11-9 |
through 11-9.5, inclusive, of the Criminal Code of 1961; |
Sections 11-14 through 11-21, inclusive, of the Criminal |
Code of 1961; Sections 11-23 (if punished as a Class 3 |
felony), 11-24, 11-25, and 11-26 of the Criminal Code of |
1961; and Sections 12-4.9, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, |
12-16, 12-32, and 12-33 of the Criminal Code of 1961. |
(B) Any attempt to commit any of the offenses listed in |
item (A) of this definition. |
(C) Any offense committed or attempted in any other |
state that, if committed or attempted in this State, would |
have been punishable as one or more of the offenses listed |
|
in items (A) and (B) of this definition. |
(b) Whenever the holder of any license issued pursuant to |
this Article has been convicted of any sex offense or narcotics |
offense, the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith |
suspend the license. If the conviction is reversed and the |
holder is acquitted of the offense in a new trial or the |
charges against him or her are dismissed, the State |
Superintendent of Education shall forthwith terminate the |
suspension of the license. When the conviction becomes final, |
the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith revoke |
the license. |
(c) Whenever the holder of a license issued pursuant to |
this Article has been convicted of attempting to commit, |
conspiring to commit, soliciting, or committing first degree |
murder or a Class X felony or any offense committed or |
attempted in any other state or against the laws of the United |
States that, if committed or attempted in this State, would |
have been punishable as one or more of the foregoing offenses, |
the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith suspend |
the license. If the conviction is reversed and the holder is |
acquitted of that offense in a new trial or the charges that he |
or she committed that offense are dismissed, the State |
Superintendent of Education shall forthwith terminate the |
suspension of the license. When the conviction becomes final, |
the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith revoke |
the license. |
|
(105 ILCS 5/21B-85 new) |
Sec. 21B-85. Conviction of felony. |
(a) Whenever the holder of any license issued under this |
Article is employed by the school board of a school district, |
including a special charter district or a school district |
organized under Article 34 of this Code, and is convicted, |
either after a bench trial, trial by jury, or plea of guilty, |
of any offense for which a sentence to death or a term of |
imprisonment in a penitentiary for one year or more is |
provided, the school board shall promptly notify the State |
Superintendent of Education, in writing, of the name of the |
license holder, the fact of the conviction, and the name and |
location of the court in which the conviction occurred. |
(b) Whenever the State Superintendent of Education |
receives notice of a conviction under subsection (a) of this |
Section or otherwise learns that any person who is a teacher, |
as that term is defined in Section 16-106 of the Illinois |
Pension Code, has been convicted, either after a bench trial, |
trial by jury, or plea of guilty, of any offense for which a |
sentence to death or a term of imprisonment in a penitentiary |
for one year or more is provided, the State Superintendent of |
Education shall promptly notify, in writing, the board of |
trustees of the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of |
Illinois and the board of trustees of the Public School |
Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of the City of Chicago of |
|
the name of the license holder, the fact of the conviction, the |
name and location of the court in which the conviction |
occurred, and the number assigned in that court to the case in |
which the conviction occurred. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-90 new) |
Sec. 21B-90. Administrative Review Law. In this Section, |
"administrative decision" has the meaning ascribed to that term |
in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure. |
The provisions of the Administrative Review Law and the |
rules adopted pursuant to the Administrative Review Law shall |
apply to and govern all proceedings instituted for the judicial |
review of final administrative decisions of the State Board of |
Education, the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, |
and the regional superintendent of schools under this Article. |
The commencement of any action for review shall operate as a |
stay of enforcement, and no action based on any decision of the |
State Board of Education, the State Educator Preparation and |
Licensure Board, or the regional superintendent of schools |
shall be taken pending final disposition of the review. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-95 new) |
Sec. 21B-95. Denial of recommendation for licensure. Each |
college or university providing an educator preparation |
program approved and recognized pursuant to the provisions of |
this Article shall establish procedures and standards to ensure |
|
that no student is denied the opportunity to receive an |
institutional recommendation for licensure or entitlement for |
reasons that are not directly related to the candidate's |
anticipated performance as a licensed educator. These |
standards and procedures shall include the specific criteria |
used by the institution for admission, retention, and |
recommendation or entitlement for licensure; periodic |
evaluations of the candidate's progress towards an |
institutional recommendation; counseling and other supportive |
services to correct any deficiencies that are considered |
remedial; and provisions to ensure that no person is |
discriminated against on the basis of race, color, national |
origin, or a disability unrelated to the person's ability to |
perform as a licensed educator. Each institution shall also |
establish a grievance procedure for those candidates who are |
denied the institutional recommendation or entitlement for |
licensure. Within 10 days after notification of such a denial, |
the college or university shall notify the candidate, in |
writing, of the reasons for the denial of recommendation for |
licensure. Within 30 days after notification of the denial, the |
candidate may request the college or university to review the |
denial. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-100 new) |
Sec. 21B-100. Licensure officers at higher education |
institutions. Licensure officers at higher education |
|
institutions shall adhere to this Code and any administrative |
rules adopted to implement this Code when entitling candidates |
for licensure or when adding endorsements. Violations of this |
Code or implementing rules regarding the entitlement of |
candidates by a licensure officer shall place the employing |
institution's educator preparation program in jeopardy, |
specifically regarding the institution's right to offer |
programs and recommend or entitle candidates for licensure. |
Licensure officers are required to attend training |
conducted by the State Superintendent of Education and review |
new legislation and administrative rules as such become |
available. The State Superintendent of Education shall |
communicate any policy changes to licensure officers when such |
changes occur. |
(105 ILCS 5/21B-105 new) |
Sec. 21B-105. Granting of recognition; regional |
accreditation; definitions. |
(a) "Recognized", as used in this Article in connection |
with the word "school" or "institution", means such college, |
university, or not-for-profit entity that meets requirements |
set by the State Board of Education, in consultation with the |
State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. Application |
for recognition of the school or institution as an educator |
preparation institution must be made to the State Board of |
Education. The State Board of Education, in consultation with |
|
the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, shall set |
the criteria by which the school or institution is to be judged |
and, through the secretary of the State Board, arrange for an |
official inspection and shall grant recognition of such school |
or institution as may meet the required standards. If the |
standards include requirements with regard to education in |
acquiring skills in working with culturally distinctive |
students, as defined by the State Board of Education, then the |
rules of the State Board of Education shall include the |
criteria used to evaluate compliance with this requirement. No |
school or institution may make assignments of student teachers |
or teachers for practice teaching so as to promote segregation |
on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, sex, or national |
origin. |
Any not-for-profit entity must also be approved by the |
Board of Higher Education. |
All recommendations or entitlements for educator licensure |
shall be made by a recognized institution operating a program |
of preparation for the license that is approved by the State |
Superintendent of Education, in consultation with the State |
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board. The State Board of |
Education, in consultation with the State Educator Preparation |
and Licensure Board, shall have the power to define a major or |
minor when used as a basis for recognition and licensure |
purposes. |
(b) "Regionally accredited", or "accredited", as used in |
|
this Article in connection with a university or institution, |
means an institution of higher education accredited by the |
North Central Association or other comparable regional |
accrediting association.
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-14)
|
Sec. 24-14. Termination of contractual continued service |
by teacher. A teacher who
has entered into contractual |
continued service may resign
at any time by obtaining |
concurrence of the board or by serving at least 30
days' |
written notice upon the secretary of the board. However, no |
teacher
may resign during the school term, without the |
concurrence of the board,
in order to accept another teaching |
assignment. Any teacher
terminating said service not in |
accordance with this Section is guilty of
unprofessional |
conduct and liable to suspension of licensure certificate for a |
period not
to exceed 1 year, as provided in Section 21B-75 of |
this Code 21-23 .
|
(Source: P.A. 85-256.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-6) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-6)
|
Sec. 34-6. Superintendent of schools. After June 30, 1999, |
the board
may, by a vote of a majority of its full membership, |
appoint a
general superintendent of schools to serve pursuant |
to a performance-based
contract for a term ending on June 30th |
of the third calendar year after
his or her appointment. He |
|
shall be the chief administrative officer of
the board and |
shall have charge and
control, subject to the approval of the |
board and to other
provisions of this Article, of all |
departments and the
employees therein of public schools, except |
the law department. He shall
negotiate contracts with all
labor |
organizations which are exclusive representatives of |
educational
employees employed under the
Illinois Educational |
Labor Relations Act. All contracts shall be subject to
approval |
of the Board of Education. The board may conduct a
national
|
search for a general superintendent. An incumbent general |
superintendent
may not be precluded from being included in such |
national search.
Persons appointed pursuant to this Section |
shall be exempt from the
provisions and requirements of |
Sections 21-1, 21-1a , and 21-7.1 , and 21B-15 of this Code .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-15, eff. 5-30-95.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-18.5) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.5) |
Sec. 34-18.5. Criminal history records checks and checks of |
the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Child |
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database. |
(a) Certified and noncertified applicants for
employment |
with the school district are required as a condition of
|
employment to authorize a fingerprint-based criminal history |
records check to determine if such applicants
have been |
convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in
|
subsection (c) of this Section or have been
convicted, within 7 |
|
years of the application for employment with the
school |
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or |
of any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or |
against the laws of
the United States that, if committed or |
attempted in this State, would
have been punishable as a felony |
under the laws of this State. Authorization
for
the
check shall
|
be furnished by the applicant to the school district, except |
that if the
applicant is a substitute teacher seeking |
employment in more than one
school district, or a teacher |
seeking concurrent part-time employment
positions with more |
than one school district (as a reading specialist,
special |
education teacher or otherwise), or an educational support
|
personnel employee seeking employment positions with more than |
one
district, any such district may require the applicant to |
furnish
authorization for
the check to the regional |
superintendent of the
educational service region in which are |
located the school districts in
which the applicant is seeking |
employment as a substitute or concurrent
part-time teacher or |
concurrent educational support personnel employee.
Upon |
receipt of this authorization, the school district or the |
appropriate
regional superintendent, as the case may be, shall |
submit the applicant's
name, sex, race, date of birth, social |
security number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as |
prescribed by the Department
of State Police, to the |
Department. The regional
superintendent submitting the |
requisite information to the Department of
State Police shall |
|
promptly notify the school districts in which the
applicant is |
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
|
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee |
that
the
check of the applicant has been requested. The |
Department of State
Police and the Federal Bureau of |
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check, records of convictions, until |
expunged, to the president of the school board for the school |
district that requested the check, or to the regional |
superintendent who requested the check. The
Department shall |
charge
the school district
or the appropriate regional |
superintendent a fee for
conducting
such check, which fee shall |
be deposited in the State
Police Services Fund and shall not |
exceed the cost of the inquiry; and the
applicant shall not be |
charged a fee for
such check by the school
district or by the |
regional superintendent. Subject to appropriations for these |
purposes, the State Superintendent of Education shall |
reimburse the school district and regional superintendent for |
fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks under this |
Section. |
(a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall |
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database, |
as authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law, |
for each applicant. |
(a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall |
further perform a check of the Statewide Child Murderer and |
|
Violent Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the |
Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Community |
Notification Law, for each applicant. |
(b) Any
information concerning the record of convictions |
obtained by the president
of the board of education or the |
regional superintendent shall be
confidential and may only be |
transmitted to the general superintendent of
the school |
district or his designee, the appropriate regional
|
superintendent if
the check was requested by the board of |
education
for the school district, the presidents of the |
appropriate board of
education or school boards if
the check |
was requested from the
Department of State Police by the |
regional superintendent, the State
Superintendent of |
Education, the State Teacher Certification Board or any
other |
person necessary to the decision of hiring the applicant for
|
employment. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from |
the
Department of State Police shall be provided to the |
applicant for
employment. Upon the check of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database, the school district or regional |
superintendent shall notify an applicant as to whether or not |
the applicant has been identified in the Database as a sex |
offender. If a check of an applicant for employment as a
|
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent |
educational
support personnel employee in more than one school |
district was requested
by the regional superintendent, and the |
Department of State Police upon
a check ascertains that the |
|
applicant has not been convicted of any
of the enumerated |
criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c)
or has not been
|
convicted,
within 7 years of the application for employment |
with the
school district, of any other felony under the laws of |
this State or of any
offense committed or attempted in any |
other state or against the laws of
the United States that, if |
committed or attempted in this State, would
have been |
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State and so
|
notifies the regional superintendent and if the regional |
superintendent upon a check ascertains that the applicant has |
not been identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex |
offender, then the regional superintendent
shall issue to the |
applicant a certificate evidencing that as of the date
|
specified by the Department of State Police the applicant has |
not been
convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug |
offenses in subsection
(c)
or has not been
convicted, within 7 |
years of the application for employment with the
school |
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or |
of any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or |
against the laws of
the United States that, if committed or |
attempted in this State, would
have been punishable as a felony |
under the laws of this State and evidencing that as of the date |
that the regional superintendent conducted a check of the |
Statewide Sex Offender Database, the applicant has not been |
identified in the Database as a sex offender. The school
board |
of any school district may rely on the certificate issued by |
|
any regional
superintendent to that substitute teacher, |
concurrent part-time teacher, or concurrent educational |
support personnel employee
or may initiate its own criminal |
history records check of
the applicant through the Department |
of State Police and its own check of the Statewide Sex Offender |
Database as provided in
subsection (a). Any person who releases |
any confidential information
concerning any criminal |
convictions of an applicant for employment shall be
guilty of a |
Class A misdemeanor, unless the release of such information is
|
authorized by this Section. |
(c) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a |
person who has
been convicted of any offense that would subject |
him or her to license certification suspension or revocation |
pursuant to Section 21B-80 21-23a of this Code.
Further, the |
board of education shall not knowingly employ a person who has
|
been found to be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of |
any minor under
18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under |
Article II of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987. |
(d) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a |
person for whom
a criminal history records check and a |
Statewide Sex Offender Database check has not been initiated. |
(e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a |
finding of child
abuse by a holder of any
certificate issued |
pursuant to Article 21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the
School |
Code, the State Superintendent of
Education may initiate |
certificate suspension and revocation
proceedings as |
|
authorized by law. |
(e-5) The general superintendent of schools shall, in |
writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education of any |
certificate holder whom he or she has reasonable cause to |
believe has committed an intentional act of abuse or neglect |
with the result of making a child an abused child or a |
neglected child, as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the |
certificate holder's dismissal or resignation from the school |
district. This notification must be submitted within 30 days |
after the dismissal or resignation. The certificate holder must |
also be contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice by the |
superintendent. All correspondence, documentation, and other |
information so received by the State Superintendent of |
Education, the State Board of Education, or the State Teacher |
Certification Board under this subsection (e-5) is |
confidential and must not be disclosed to third parties, except |
(i) as necessary for the State Superintendent of Education or |
his or her designee to investigate and prosecute pursuant to |
Article 21 of this Code, (ii) pursuant to a court order, (iii) |
for disclosure to the certificate holder or his or her |
representative, or (iv) as otherwise provided in this Article |
and provided that any such information admitted into evidence |
in a hearing is exempt from this confidentiality and |
non-disclosure requirement. Except for an act of willful or |
wanton misconduct, any superintendent who provides |
|
notification as required in this subsection (e-5) shall have |
immunity from any liability, whether civil or criminal or that |
otherwise might result by reason of such action. |
(f) After March 19, 1990, the provisions of this Section |
shall apply to
all employees of persons or firms holding |
contracts with any school district
including, but not limited |
to, food service workers, school bus drivers and
other |
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with |
the
pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of |
criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide Sex |
Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding |
contracts with more
than one school district and assigned to |
more than one school district, the
regional superintendent of |
the educational service region in which the
contracting school |
districts are located may, at the request of any such
school |
district, be responsible for receiving the authorization for
a |
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee |
and submitting the same to the
Department of State Police and |
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database |
for each employee. Any information concerning the record of
|
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such |
employee obtained by the regional superintendent
shall be |
promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school |
board
or school boards. |
(g) In order to student teach in the public schools, a |
person is required to authorize a fingerprint-based criminal |
|
history records check and checks of the Statewide Sex Offender |
Database and Statewide Child Murderer and Violent Offender |
Against Youth Database prior to participating in any field |
experiences in the public schools. Authorization for and |
payment of the costs of the checks must be furnished by the |
student teacher. Results of the checks must be furnished to the |
higher education institution where the student teacher is |
enrolled and the general superintendent of schools. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-431, eff. 8-13-09; |
96-1452, eff. 8-20-10.) |
Section 20. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act is |
amended by changing Section 65.45 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 947/65.45)
|
Sec. 65.45. Special education grants.
|
(a) Special education grants shall be awarded by the
|
Commission to (i) teachers under contract
who are teaching |
special
education courses in a school district within an area |
designated as a
poverty area by the Office of Economic |
Opportunity, but who are not
certified to teach special |
education programs pursuant to Section
14-9.01 of the School |
Code and (ii) teachers licensed certified pursuant to Section |
21B-15 21-1
of the School Code,
but who are not certified |
pursuant to Section 14-9.01 of that Code. The amount
of any
|
grant awarded a participating teacher under this Section shall |
|
consist
of (i) the tuition and other necessary fees required of |
the teacher by
the institution of higher learning at which he |
or she enrolls under this
Section, but limited to the maximum |
amount to which a student enrolled in
that institution would be |
entitled as a scholarship under Section
35 of this Act, and |
(ii) a stipend of $100 for each semester hour or
equivalent, |
not exceeding 21 semester hours, for continuous enrollment,
|
including summer sessions, in one calendar year. For purposes |
of this
Section "tuition and other necessary fees" has the |
meaning ascribed to
that term in Section 35 of this Act. |
Participating teachers shall enroll in an
institution of higher |
learning providing special education programs.
Such |
institutions shall be approved by the Commission, in |
conjunction with the
State Board of Education
and the Board of
|
Higher Education.
|
(b) Teachers under contract who participate in this program |
shall be
required to contract with the Commission to
teach a |
special education program for 2 years in a school district
|
within an area designated as a poverty area by the Office of |
Economic
Opportunity. Such commitment shall begin at the |
completion of the
training program of the participating teacher |
and shall be completed
within 3 years unless extended by the |
Commission. In addition,
the participating teacher shall be |
required to
sign a note payable to the Commission, for the
full |
amount of benefits awarded to that teacher under this Section, |
with
interest as provided herein, subject to cancellation as |
|
provided in this
Section. Completion of one year of such |
commitment shall operate to
cancel 50% of the amount of |
benefits provided a participating teacher.
The failure of a |
participating teacher to complete all or part of such
|
commitment shall obligate the participant to proportionately |
repay the
amount of benefits provided, plus 5% interest on that |
amount.
Participating teachers who are not under contract shall |
be subject to
those obligations, except that such teachers |
shall be required to teach
in a special education program for |
such 2 year period in a school
district within an area |
designated as a poverty area by the Office of
Economic |
Opportunity.
|
(c) If a participating teacher fails to cancel his or her |
commitment as
provided
in this Section, the Commission shall |
cause an
appropriate action to be commenced on the note signed |
by that teacher,
except where the failure to cancel the |
commitment was occasioned by the
death or total and permanent |
disability of that teacher.
|
(d) This Section is substantially the same as Section |
30-14.3 of the School
Code,
which Section is repealed by this |
amendatory Act of 1993, and shall be
construed as a |
continuation of the special education grant program |
established
by that prior law and not as a new or different |
special education grant
program.
The State Board of Education |
shall transfer to the Commission, as the
successor to the State |
Board of Education for all purposes of administering
and |
|
implementing the provisions of this Section, all books, |
accounts, records,
papers, documents, contracts, agreements, |
and pending business in any way
relating to the special |
education grant program continued under this Section;
and all |
grants at any time made under that program
by, and all |
applications for any such grants at any
time made to, the State |
Board of Education shall be unaffected by the transfer
to the |
Commission of all responsibility for the administration and
|
implementation of the special education grant program |
continued under this
Section. The State Board of Education |
shall furnish to the Commission such
other information as the |
Commission may request to assist it in administering
this |
Section.
|
(e) As used in this Section the term "special education |
program" means a
program provided for children who have such |
disabilities as are set
forth in Sections 14-1.02 through |
14-1.07 of the School Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-228.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-0.01 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-1 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-1c rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-2b rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-5a rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/21-7.10 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-13 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-15 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-17 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-21 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-21.1 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-23 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-23a rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-23b rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-24 rep.)
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(105 ILCS 5/21-29 rep.) |
Section 25. The School Code is amended by repealing |
Sections 21-0.01, 21-1, 21-1c, 21-2b, 21-5a, 21-7.10, 21-13, |
21-15, 21-17, 21-21, 21-21.1, 21-23, 21-23a, 21-23b, 21-24, and |
21-29. |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, |
2011.
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