Review panel to consider funding ‘implicit bias’ and ‘antiracism’
training in schools
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[November 06, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – Funding proposals for
implicit bias and antiracism training in schools are coming into focus
and some see it as an unnecessary controversy that distracts from
education in the state's 850 districts.
A draft proposal from the Illinois State Board of Education Professional
Review Panel set to be considered next month contemplates how to spend
an additional $350 million from the evidence based funding model that
lawmakers approved several years ago.
There are recommendations for a variety of programs, including teaching
foreign languages.
There are also suggestions for “interventions to have more explicit
focus on racial dynamic, including equity direct approaches that offer
concrete strategies for teachers’ behavioral changes in the classroom
and increased bias awareness.”
The draft proposals “recognize that students of color do not inherently
need additional supports by nature of their race/ethnicity, but that
these students do face inequities because of historical and existing
structures, and there is a cost attendant with working to dismantle
those inequities through training on antiracism and eliminating implicit
bias within schools and districts.”
To address that, the proposal adds “a specific Professional Development
cost … related to implicit bias and antiracism at a fixed per-pupil cost
based on overall enrollment, with additional per-pupil dollar amount for
all students where a district serves over 50% non-white students.”
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State Rep. Avery Bourne, R-Morrisonville, said
constituents are raising concerns.
“We still have students that aren’t meeting standards in reading and
math so I think this is pushing a social agenda in schools that a
majority of Illinois don’t support,” Bourne said.
After the controversy of “culturally responsive teaching standards”
and new sex-ed requirements, Bourne said the trend is clear.
“The education requirements and recommendations coming out of ISBE
have been more and more progressive, more and more pushing a social
agenda,” Bourne said.
She said schools should not be advancing what some see as
politically divisive.
“We should just be focusing on the best outcomes for kids and
funding the schools that need it,” Bourne said.
The proposals from the review panel could be taken up at its next
meeting in Springfield on Dec. 6. |