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| | HB4536 Engrossed | | LRB104 17759 LNS 31191 b |
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| 1 | | AN ACT concerning education. |
| 2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
| 3 | | represented in the General Assembly: |
| 4 | | Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section |
| 5 | | 3-11 as follows: |
| 6 | | (105 ILCS 5/3-11) |
| 7 | | Sec. 3-11. Institutes or inservice training workshops. |
| 8 | | (a) In counties of less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the |
| 9 | | regional superintendent may arrange for or conduct district, |
| 10 | | regional, or county institutes, or equivalent professional |
| 11 | | educational experiences, not more than 4 days annually. Of |
| 12 | | those 4 days, 2 days may be used as a teachers, administrators, |
| 13 | | and school support personnel workshop, when approved by the |
| 14 | | regional superintendent, up to 2 days may be used for |
| 15 | | conducting parent-teacher conferences, or up to 2 days may be |
| 16 | | utilized as parental institute days as provided in Section |
| 17 | | 10-22.18d. School support personnel may be exempt from a |
| 18 | | workshop if the workshop is not relevant to the work they do. A |
| 19 | | school district may use one of its 4 institute days on the last |
| 20 | | day of the school term. "Institute" or "Professional |
| 21 | | educational experiences" means any educational gathering, |
| 22 | | demonstration of methods of instruction, visitation of schools |
| 23 | | or other institutions or facilities, sexual abuse and sexual |
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| 1 | | assault awareness seminar, or training in First Aid (which may |
| 2 | | include cardiopulmonary resuscitation or defibrillator |
| 3 | | training) held or approved by the regional superintendent and |
| 4 | | declared by the regional superintendent to be an institute |
| 5 | | day, or parent-teacher conferences. With the concurrence of |
| 6 | | the State Superintendent of Education, the regional |
| 7 | | superintendent may employ such assistance as is necessary to |
| 8 | | conduct the institute. Two or more adjoining counties may |
| 9 | | jointly hold an institute. Institute instruction shall be free |
| 10 | | to holders of licenses good in the county or counties holding |
| 11 | | the institute and to those who have paid an examination fee and |
| 12 | | failed to receive a license. |
| 13 | | In counties of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants, the regional |
| 14 | | superintendent may arrange for or conduct district, regional, |
| 15 | | or county inservice training workshops, or equivalent |
| 16 | | professional educational experiences, not more than 4 days |
| 17 | | annually. Of those 4 days, 2 days may be used as a teachers, |
| 18 | | administrators, and school support personnel workshop, when |
| 19 | | approved by the regional superintendent, up to 2 days may be |
| 20 | | used for conducting parent-teacher conferences, or up to 2 |
| 21 | | days may be utilized as parental institute days as provided in |
| 22 | | Section 10-22.18d. School support personnel may be exempt from |
| 23 | | a workshop if the workshop is not relevant to the work they do. |
| 24 | | A school district may use one of those 4 days on the last day |
| 25 | | of the school term. "Inservice Training Workshops" or |
| 26 | | "Professional educational experiences" means any educational |
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| 1 | | gathering, demonstration of methods of instruction, visitation |
| 2 | | of schools or other institutions or facilities, sexual abuse |
| 3 | | and sexual assault awareness seminar, or training in First Aid |
| 4 | | (which may include cardiopulmonary resuscitation or |
| 5 | | defibrillator training) held or approved by the regional |
| 6 | | superintendent and declared by the regional superintendent to |
| 7 | | be an inservice training workshop, or parent-teacher |
| 8 | | conferences. With the concurrence of the State Superintendent |
| 9 | | of Education, the regional superintendent may employ such |
| 10 | | assistance as is necessary to conduct the inservice training |
| 11 | | workshop. With the approval of the regional superintendent, 2 |
| 12 | | or more adjoining districts may jointly hold an inservice |
| 13 | | training workshop. In addition, with the approval of the |
| 14 | | regional superintendent, one district may conduct its own |
| 15 | | inservice training workshop with subject matter consultants |
| 16 | | requested from the county, State or any State institution of |
| 17 | | higher learning. |
| 18 | | Such institutes as referred to in this Section may be held |
| 19 | | on consecutive or separate days at the option of the regional |
| 20 | | superintendent having jurisdiction thereof. |
| 21 | | Whenever reference is made in this Act to "institute", it |
| 22 | | shall be construed to include the inservice training workshops |
| 23 | | or equivalent professional educational experiences provided |
| 24 | | for in this Section. |
| 25 | | Any institute advisory committee existing on April 1, |
| 26 | | 1995, is dissolved and the duties and responsibilities of the |
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| 1 | | institute advisory committee are assumed by the regional |
| 2 | | office of education advisory board. |
| 3 | | Districts providing inservice training programs shall |
| 4 | | constitute inservice committees, 1/2 of which shall be |
| 5 | | teachers, 1/4 school service personnel and 1/4 administrators |
| 6 | | to establish program content and schedules. |
| 7 | | In addition to other topics not listed in this Section, |
| 8 | | the teachers institutes may include training committed to |
| 9 | | health conditions of students; social-emotional learning; |
| 10 | | developing cultural competency; identifying warning signs of |
| 11 | | mental illness and suicidal behavior in youth; domestic and |
| 12 | | sexual violence and the needs of expectant and parenting |
| 13 | | youth; protections and accommodations for students; educator |
| 14 | | ethics; responding to child sexual abuse and grooming |
| 15 | | behavior; and effective instruction in violence prevention and |
| 16 | | conflict resolution. Institute programs in these topics shall |
| 17 | | be credited toward hours of professional development required |
| 18 | | for license renewal as outlined in subsection (e) of Section |
| 19 | | 21B-45. |
| 20 | | (b) In this subsection (b): |
| 21 | | "Trauma" is defined according to an event, an experience, |
| 22 | | and effects. Individual trauma results from an event, series |
| 23 | | of events, or set of circumstances, including early relational |
| 24 | | trauma, caregiver separation, disrupted attachment, or |
| 25 | | prolonged instability during early development, that is |
| 26 | | experienced by an individual as physically or emotionally |
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| 1 | | harmful or life threatening and that has lasting adverse |
| 2 | | effects on the individual's functioning and mental, physical, |
| 3 | | social, or emotional well-being. Collective trauma is a |
| 4 | | psychological reaction to a traumatic event shared by any |
| 5 | | group of people. This may include, but is not limited to, |
| 6 | | community violence, experiencing racism and discrimination, |
| 7 | | and the lack of the essential supports for well-being, such as |
| 8 | | educational or economic opportunities, food, health care, |
| 9 | | housing, and community cohesion. Trauma can be experienced by |
| 10 | | anyone, though it is disproportionately experienced by members |
| 11 | | of marginalized groups. Systemic and historical oppression, |
| 12 | | such as racism, is often at the root of this inequity. Symptoms |
| 13 | | may vary at different developmental stages and across |
| 14 | | different cultural groups and different communities and may |
| 15 | | emerge or intensify during adolescence as identity |
| 16 | | development, autonomy, and neurological changes intersect with |
| 17 | | earlier trauma. |
| 18 | | "Trauma-informed practices" include awareness of |
| 19 | | populations for whom trauma may be ongoing, relational, and |
| 20 | | developmentally expressed over time, including, but not |
| 21 | | limited to, students in adoptive, foster, kinship, or |
| 22 | | guardianship families. |
| 23 | | "Trauma-responsive learning environments" means learning |
| 24 | | environments developed during an ongoing, multiyear-long |
| 25 | | process that typically progresses across the following 3 |
| 26 | | stages: |
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| 1 | | (1) A school or district is "trauma aware" when it: |
| 2 | | (A) has personnel that demonstrate a foundational |
| 3 | | understanding of a broad definition of trauma that is |
| 4 | | developmentally and culturally based; includes |
| 5 | | students, personnel, and communities; and recognizes |
| 6 | | the potential effect on biological, cognitive, |
| 7 | | academic, and social-emotional functioning; and |
| 8 | | (B) recognizes that traumatic exposure can impact |
| 9 | | behavior and learning and should be acknowledged in |
| 10 | | policies, strategies, and systems of support for |
| 11 | | students, families, and personnel. |
| 12 | | (2) A school or district is "trauma responsive" when |
| 13 | | it progresses from awareness to action in the areas of |
| 14 | | policy, practice, and structural changes within a |
| 15 | | multi-tiered system of support to promote safety, positive |
| 16 | | relationships, and self-regulation, including practices |
| 17 | | that promote an effective partnership with caregivers and |
| 18 | | family systems supporting students impacted by trauma, |
| 19 | | while underscoring the importance of personal well-being |
| 20 | | and cultural responsiveness. Such progress may: |
| 21 | | (A) be aligned with the Illinois Quality Framework |
| 22 | | and integrated into a school or district's continuous |
| 23 | | improvement process as evidence to support allocation |
| 24 | | of financial resources; |
| 25 | | (B) be assessed and monitored by a |
| 26 | | multidisciplinary leadership team on an ongoing basis; |
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| 1 | | and |
| 2 | | (C) involve the engagement and capacity building |
| 3 | | of personnel at all levels to ensure that adults in the |
| 4 | | learning environment are prepared to recognize and |
| 5 | | respond to those impacted by trauma. |
| 6 | | (3) A school or district is healing centered when it |
| 7 | | acknowledges its role and responsibility to the community, |
| 8 | | fully responds to trauma, and promotes resilience and |
| 9 | | healing through genuine, trusting, and creative |
| 10 | | relationships. Such school or district may: |
| 11 | | (A) promote holistic and collaborative approaches |
| 12 | | that are grounded in culture, spirituality, civic |
| 13 | | engagement, and equity; and |
| 14 | | (B) support agency within individuals, families, |
| 15 | | and communities while engaging people in collective |
| 16 | | action that moves from transactional to |
| 17 | | transformational. |
| 18 | | "Whole child" means using a child-centered, holistic, |
| 19 | | equitable lens across all systems that prioritizes physical, |
| 20 | | mental, and social-emotional health to ensure that every child |
| 21 | | is healthy, safe, supported, challenged, engaged, and |
| 22 | | protected. |
| 23 | | Starting with the 2024-2025 school year, institutes shall |
| 24 | | provide instruction on trauma-informed practices and include |
| 25 | | the definitions of trauma, trauma-responsive learning |
| 26 | | environments, and whole child set forth in this subsection (b) |