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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Literacy is not only critical for individuals' | ||||||
3 | ability to earn income, secure housing, participate in their | ||||||
4 | healthcare, support their children's education, pursue | ||||||
5 | happiness, and navigate the world but also collectively | ||||||
6 | foundational to our community and democracy; and
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7 | WHEREAS, The World Literacy Foundation found that low | ||||||
8 | literacy is a major contributor to inequality and increases | ||||||
9 | the likelihood of poor physical and mental health, workplace | ||||||
10 | accidents, misuse of medication, participation in crime, and | ||||||
11 | welfare dependency, all of which have substantial additional | ||||||
12 | social and economic costs; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Fifty percent of Illinois' third graders met, | ||||||
14 | exceeded, or approached learning standards in English language | ||||||
15 | arts according to the Illinois Assessment of Readiness with | ||||||
16 | the other half of students not meeting or partially meeting | ||||||
17 | standards; this represents a ten percentage point swing from | ||||||
18 | the 2019 pre-pandemic rates when 60 percent of students met, | ||||||
19 | exceeded, or approached learning standards; and
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20 | WHEREAS, Thirty-three percent of Illinois' fourth graders | ||||||
21 | achieved proficient or advanced reading scores on the 2022 | ||||||
22 | National Assessment of Educational Progress with another 29 |
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1 | percent meeting basic reading proficiency and the remaining 38 | ||||||
2 | percent scoring below basic reading proficiency; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Research from the Annie E. Casey Institute found | ||||||
4 | that students who are not proficient readers in third grade | ||||||
5 | are four times more likely not to finish high school; if those | ||||||
6 | students are from low-income families, they are more than six | ||||||
7 | times more likely not to finish high school; and
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8 | WHEREAS, Research consistently finds that a diverse, | ||||||
9 | well-trained, and expanding pool of teachers, in conjunction | ||||||
10 | with curricula responsive to the strengths and needs of | ||||||
11 | diverse student populations, improves educational outcomes for | ||||||
12 | all students; and
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13 | WHEREAS, An appropriate curriculum blends the learning | ||||||
14 | needs of students with their developmental needs and increases | ||||||
15 | in complexity with every new stage of childhood; and
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16 | WHEREAS, Oral language development is a prerequisite for | ||||||
17 | reading and writing that is nurtured from birth through | ||||||
18 | talking, reading, story-telling, singing, nursery rhymes, and | ||||||
19 | other language exposure and, as younger children develop, | ||||||
20 | through intentional dialogue with rich vocabulary; home | ||||||
21 | visiting programs, access to books, high-quality childcare and | ||||||
22 | preschool, and lived experiences strengthen students' |
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1 | opportunity to build oracy skills, vocabulary, and background | ||||||
2 | knowledge, leading to higher-level cognitive thinking; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Reading builds new neural pathways in the brain | ||||||
4 | as people, usually children, learn to connect the sounds in | ||||||
5 | language to letters on a page to the meaning of the text; | ||||||
6 | however, there is no one-size-fits-all approach to literacy, | ||||||
7 | as learners will require different dosages within different | ||||||
8 | areas of literacy instruction to meet their individual needs; | ||||||
9 | and
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10 | WHEREAS, Reading and writing have a reciprocal | ||||||
11 | relationship as each strengthens the other, and students | ||||||
12 | benefit when their instruction is closely intertwined; and
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13 | WHEREAS, English learners benefit from a comprehensive | ||||||
14 | literacy approach that recognizes the value of multilingualism | ||||||
15 | by enveloping all areas of literacy instruction with a deep | ||||||
16 | focus on oral language development and encouraging students to | ||||||
17 | make connections between English and their home language; and
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18 | WHEREAS, Teachers deserve the tools to be knowledgeable | ||||||
19 | about the cultural practices and language system of the | ||||||
20 | children they serve, including those children who speak | ||||||
21 | language variations of English, such as African-American | ||||||
22 | English (AAE); AAE has a linguistic structure that is a |
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1 | systematic and rule-governed variation of General American | ||||||
2 | English (GAE); and
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3 | WHEREAS, Research shows that direct, systematic, | ||||||
4 | cumulative, and explicit reading instruction that is focused | ||||||
5 | on the foundational reading skills of phonemic awareness, | ||||||
6 | phonics or decoding, spelling or encoding, vocabulary | ||||||
7 | development that includes morphology, oral language | ||||||
8 | development, reading fluency, and reading comprehension that | ||||||
9 | includes syntax and building background or content knowledge, | ||||||
10 | is highly effective in teaching young children to read; and
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11 | WHEREAS, High literacy achievement across all demographic | ||||||
12 | groups is an essential indicator of educational equity within | ||||||
13 | the State of Illinois; strengthening early literacy | ||||||
14 | instruction and supports for students in Illinois will pay | ||||||
15 | dividends in the future by empowering students, providing the | ||||||
16 | skills they will need to graduate, find fulfilling careers, | ||||||
17 | and be productive members of their communities and of our | ||||||
18 | democracy; and
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19 | WHEREAS, Ensuring that every child has access to | ||||||
20 | high-quality, research-aligned, developmentally-appropriate | ||||||
21 | reading instruction implemented using a comprehensive approach | ||||||
22 | is a foundational component of Illinois' public education | ||||||
23 | system and a responsibility shared among federal, state, and |
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1 | local education agencies; and
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2 | WHEREAS, The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) held | ||||||
3 | a literacy summit on October 25, 2022 to bring education | ||||||
4 | professionals and advocates across Illinois together to share | ||||||
5 | ideas and best practices to support literacy development for | ||||||
6 | Illinois' children while also recognizing the complexity of | ||||||
7 | literacy development and potential pitfalls of adopting | ||||||
8 | incomplete or simplistic policy solutions; therefore, be it
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9 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
10 | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
11 | we urge the Illinois State Board of Education to share | ||||||
12 | findings from the literacy summit held on October 25, 2022 as | ||||||
13 | progress towards promoting research-aligned, | ||||||
14 | developmentally-appropriate literacy practices across grades | ||||||
15 | and subject areas, developing a comprehensive literacy plan | ||||||
16 | through continued collaboration with other relevant agencies | ||||||
17 | and stakeholders, supporting alignment of early childhood | ||||||
18 | programs, curriculum, educator training, professional | ||||||
19 | development, and student supports to Illinois' standards, and | ||||||
20 | ensuring that closing literacy opportunity gaps among | ||||||
21 | demographic groups be prioritized; and be it further
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22 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
23 | presented to ISBE with our appreciation for the agency's |
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1 | efforts to advance literacy and with our support for the | ||||||
2 | continuation of such efforts.
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