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		GOP members hope to block new teacher standards
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		[February 02, 2021] 
		By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Republican Illinois state 
		lawmakers are pushing back on proposed new standards for teachers and 
		administrators that are scheduled for a hearing before a legislative 
		rulemaking committee later this month. 
 Supporters of the proposed “Culturally Responsive Teaching and Leading 
		Standards” say they’re merely an attempt to make sure that all educators 
		are trained in ways to reach students across all racial, ethnic and 
		cultural backgrounds. But critics are calling them a form of political 
		indoctrination that seeks to inject partisan, liberal ideology into the 
		classroom.
 
 The new standards would apply to teacher training programs at Illinois 
		colleges and universities rather than K-12 school curricula. They are 
		scheduled to come up for legislative review on Tuesday, Feb. 16, before 
		the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, or JCAR, a legislative body 
		that has oversight authority over state regulatory agencies.
 
 
		
		 
		If approved, the standards would take effect in October 2025 in order to 
		give state-approved educator preparation programs ample time to 
		incorporate them, according to a statement from the Illinois State Board 
		of Education.
 
 ISBE also noted it will “offer optional professional development on the 
		standards to current educators,” but school districts “maintain local 
		control over what professional development they choose.”
 
 During a virtual news conference Monday, three Republican House members 
		said they hope JCAR will block the adoption of the proposed rules.
 
 “You know, across the country and around the world, we've seen politics 
		be injected in more and more parts of our lives. And the litmus test of 
		‘is someone progressive enough or not’ has come up time and time again,” 
		said Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon. “Unfortunately, the rule that's being 
		offered by the state board of education today, around culturally 
		responsive teaching standards, is really just an attempt to impose 
		further progressive politics into our education system, instead of 
		focusing on the things that we know teachers, administrators, students 
		and families across Illinois need.”
 
 Demmer was joined in the news conference by GOP Reps. Steven Reick, of 
		Woodstock, and Adam Niemerg, of Dieterich. Demmer and Reick both serve 
		on JCAR.
 
 Reick pointed specifically to a portion of the new standards that call 
		on teachers to “understand and value the notion that multiple lived 
		experiences exist, that there is not one ‘correct’ way of doing or 
		understanding something, and that what is seen as ‘correct’ is most 
		often based on our lived experiences.”
 
 He also pointed to another provision calling on teachers to “(a)ssess 
		how their biases and perceptions affect their teaching practice and how 
		they access tools to mitigate their own behavior (racism, sexism, 
		homophobia, unearned privilege, Eurocentrism, etc.)”
 
		
		 
		Another provision calls on educators to “(b)e aware of the effects of 
		power and privilege and the need for social advocacy and social action 
		to better empower diverse students and communities.”
 “Let's be clear. This rule is not an improvement to education,” Reick 
		said. “It's an attempt to interject politics into the classroom. The 
		standards that ISBE wants to impose are beyond misguided. Requiring 
		certain political viewpoints in our school systems is simply 
		unacceptable.”
 
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			Republican Reps. Tom Demmer, Steve Reick and Adam 
			Niemerg speak during a virtual news conference to criticize new 
			standards for Illinois teachers and administrators being proposed by 
			the Illinois State Board of Education. (Credit: Zoom.us) 
            
			 
            JCAR is a 12-member group that is evenly divided between House and 
			Senate members and between Democrats and Republicans. Its main 
			function is to review proposed agency rules to make sure they do not 
			conflict with state law and to make sure administrative rules 
			reflect the General Assembly’s intent when it passed a law 
			authorizing such rules. 
            In most cases, the panel makes a finding of “no objection,” meaning 
			the agency is free to adopt the final rule. Occasionally, when JCAR 
			members have some concerns about a proposed rule, they will vote to 
			make a “recommendation” that the agency go back and clarify a point 
			or tighten up its language.
 But JCAR also has authority to issue an “objection” to a proposed 
			rule if enough members believe it is inconsistent with state law, 
			that it would have an adverse economic impact on small businesses, 
			municipalities or nonprofit organizations, or that it fails to meet 
			some standard or requirement of the Illinois Administrative 
			Procedures Act.
 
 An objection may also be accompanied by a “prohibition” against 
			adopting a proposed rule if JCAR believes it constitutes a threat to 
			the public interest, safety or welfare.
 
 An objection or prohibition, however, requires a vote of at least 
			eight of the 12 members. That means even if all six Republicans 
			voted to object, they would still need at least two Democrats to go 
			along.
 
 Carmen Ayala, the state superintendent of education, defended the 
			proposed rules, arguing that they are intended to help address the 
			wide achievement gaps between different racial and ethnic student 
			groups.
 
            
			 
            
 “Culturally responsive teaching and leading helped me improve the 
			reading and math skills of every one of our student groups when I 
			was a district superintendent and to achieve double digit growth 
			among my students of color,” Ayala said in a statement. “Cultural 
			responsiveness is inclusive of all of the experiences our educators, 
			students, and families bring to the classroom.”
 
 The state of Illinois administers standardized tests each year in 
			English language arts and math to students in grades 3 through 8 and 
			once in high school.
 
 According to scores from the 2019 tests, the most recent scores 
			available, only 37.4 percent of all students met or exceeded the 
			state’s standards for English language arts. That included 47.7 
			percent of all white students but only 25.6 percent of Hispanic 
			students and 17.7 percent of Black students.
 
 In math, only 32 percent of all students met or exceeded the state’s 
			standards, including 41.7 percent of white students, 20.4 percent of 
			Hispanic students and 11.8 percent of Black students.
 
 Republicans at Monday’s news conference said that’s an indication 
			that schools need to focus more on teaching basic reading, writing 
			and math skills, not on cultural sensitivity lessons. But Ayala 
			argued that the two go hand-in-hand.
 
 “As we help students recover from learning loss due to the pandemic, 
			giving our teachers opportunities to learn about effective, 
			equitable, and research-based strategies like cultural 
			responsiveness could not be more important,” she said. “Every 
			student deserves to feel welcomed, included, and accepted at school. 
			Students are more engaged when they see their cultures represented 
			in what they learn at school.”
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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