Education services extended for special needs students
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[July 29, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Students with special needs
will be able to finish their last year of high school regardless of when
their birthday falls on the calendar, while those who lost a year or
more of in-person schooling due to the pandemic and have since aged out
of special education eligibility will be given another year to complete
their schooling.
Those changes are the result of two bills Gov. JB Pritzker signed into
law Wednesday while also announcing a $200 million investment of federal
funds to expand the state’s early childhood education workforce.
“Here in Illinois, our current special education law aligns with federal
requirements,” Pritzker said at one bill signing ceremony in Chicago.
“But if you believe a student has the right to stay in the classroom and
not be yanked out on an arbitrary day that happens to be their birthday,
our current laws just haven't been good enough.”
Under federal law, students with special needs who have an
individualized educational program, or IEP, are entitled to receive
special education services through age 21. For many, that means their
access to education services ends on the day before their 22nd birthday,
regardless of where that date falls on the school calendar.
“They've been forced to leave their school, a place of growth, a place
of comfort,” said Joshua Long, principal at Southside Occupational
Academy High School in Chicago, a transition school for special needs
students aged 16 to 22. “And they've had to leave on some arbitrary day
before their 22nd birthday, and then transition to their home, where
they wait for up to 10 years for services as an adult with
disabilities.”
House Bill 40, by Chicago Democrats Rep. Fran Hurley and Sen. Bill
Cunningham, changes that law in Illinois so that when those students
turn 22, they can complete the school year and graduate at the same time
as their other classmates. The new law takes effect immediately.
“This bill has a huge impact on our young adults and all families as it
will facilitate a smooth transition as they exit the school system,”
said Anita Barraza, the parent of a special needs student. “Allowing
them to stay will extend their ability to continue developing valuable
life skills.”
Pritzker also signed House Bill 2748, which allows special education
students who turned 22 while in-person instruction was interrupted by
the COVID-19 pandemic to remain eligible for services through the end of
the 2021-2022 school year.
“The intent of this bill is really to regain some of that learning that
was lost because of circumstances created by the pandemic,” said Rep.
Suzanne Ness, D-Crystal Lake, the lead sponsor of the bill in the House.
“Zoom classes were particularly difficult for this cohort of students
and their families, and they were left with less options as a result. So
this bill will extend that and give more opportunities to students to
regain some of that learning loss, just like is going to happen for
every other student in general education.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at the Southside Occupational
Academy in Chicago before signing a bill allowing students with
disabilities to continue their education until the end of the school
year in which they turn 22. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Later in the day, Pritzker signed another
education-related bill while also announcing that the state would
invest $200 million of federal funds to provide additional training,
mentorships and scholarships to bolster the state’s early childhood
education workforce over the next two years.
Of that money, about $120 million will go toward financial support,
including scholarships, to encourage child care workers to pursue
advanced credentials, according to the governor’s office. Part of
the money will also provide coaches, mentors and navigators with
resources to help child care workers pursue their degrees.
“We are improving the lives of children across our state by giving
them a new level of quality care by upskilling our early childhood
workforce,” Pritzker said in a statement Wednesday. “We are
providing educational opportunity for 5,600 people to earn degrees
that will advance their careers. And we are advancing our pandemic
economic recovery. All of these investments will pay dividends for
years to come.”
House Bill 2878, by Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, and Sen.
Cristina Pacione-Zayas, D-Chicago, also seeks to bolster the state’s
early childhood education workforce by establishing a consortium
among higher education institutions to develop ways that make it
easier for child care workers to complete degree programs.
Under the bill, people who earn credentials as an early childhood
educator as part of an associate’s degree program from a community
college will automatically become eligible to transfer as a junior
to a bachelor’s degree program at a public university.
“Ultimately, upskilling the incumbent early childhood workforce
fosters racial, gender, geographic, and economic equity while
enabling families to work, go to school and provide a safe and high
quality environment for children to learn and grow,” Pacione-Zayas
said in a statement. “They are the workforce behind the workforce
who held us together during the pandemic. This new law will
dismantle barriers and streamline pathways for diverse early
childhood professionals to meet educational goals and foster
economic stability.”
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. |