Lawmakers approve kindergarten reform, plan to address childhood
literacy
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[March 25, 2023]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – Lawmakers are looking at several ways to improve learning
outcomes and access for young students in Illinois.
On Thursday, members of the House of Representatives approved a proposal
that would require school boards in Illinois to provide full-day
kindergarten starting with the 2027-2028 school year.
The measure, House Bill 2396, was met with bipartisan, though not
universal, support, passing out of the House on Thursday on an 87-23
vote.
“I think we can all recognize that our children are our most important
resource in the state of Illinois,” Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington
Heights, said on the House floor Thursday. “As we look to move forward
with our pre-K program and the governor’s smart start program, I hope we
can recognize that kindergarten is a pivotal piece of a child’s learning
journey.”
Some lawmakers were uneasy with the potential cost implications for
local school districts, particularly stemming from potential increases
in staffing needs and facility space requirements.
“When this goes into effect in 2027, are we going to be ramped up enough
to be able to provide additional teachers throughout kindergartens
across Illinois?” Rep. Dan Swanson, R-Alpha, said during debate over the
bill.
The worry about funding is echoed by some in the education field,
including the Illinois Association of School Administrators, or IASA.
The association recorded its opposition to an earlier form of the bill
when it went through committee earlier this month alongside the Illinois
Association of School Boards and the Illinois Principals Association.
IASA chief of staff Emily Warnecke said in an interview that her
organization supports the movement toward full-day kindergarten around
the state. But she said they are still concerned about a requirement
that would force districts to raise their own capital funding to expand
school facilities to accommodate full-day programs.
“The vast majority of districts who don’t offer (full-day kindergarten),
don’t offer it because they don’t have the space,” Warnecke said.
Currently, about 80 percent of districts in Illinois offer full-day
kindergarten, according to Canty.
The bill sets up a “Full-Day Kindergarten Task Force” to study the best
way to implement the expansion of full-day kindergarten. The task force
will also be responsible for determining the criteria for districts’
eligibility for a two-year extension to the deadline for rolling out
full-day kindergarten.
Canty said in an interview that she is working on securing funding for
the expansion.
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State Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington
Heights, is pictured on the floor of the Illinois House this week.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
“I have had some really great conversations with the budgeteers here in
the House and with the governor’s team,” she said.
The bill now goes to the Senate for consideration.
Literacy improvements
On Friday, the Senate unanimously approved Senate Bill 2243 from Sen.
Kimberly Lightford, D-Westchester, that would require the Illinois State
Board of Education to develop a “comprehensive literacy plan.”
In 2022, nearly 38 percent of Illinois’ 4th grade students did not meet
grade level reading standards, according to the National Assessment of
Educational Progress. This is roughly average and is not significantly
lower than the nation’s overall reading scores.
“Today’s students who struggle to read are tomorrow’s adults — adults
who desperately need literacy to sign a lease agreement, fill out a job
application, manage their own health care, support their children’s
education and participate in democracy,” Lightford said on the Senate
floor Friday.
Deborah MacPhee, a researcher and professor at Illinois State
University, said early literacy education has become politicized with
debates between competing systems of reading instruction.
MacPhee said she liked that the bill requires the plan to involve
“education stakeholders.” She said this will contribute to the ongoing
conversation around what sorts of educational programs teachers should
use.
In a 2022 study published in the journal Reading Horizons, MacPhee and
her team found that 97 percent of Illinois teachers use phonics in their
classrooms to teach reading. Despite the near universal adoption of this
method, there is diversity across the state as to what programs are
being used. Of the 80 percent of teachers using published curriculum for
their phonics instruction, at least 41 different programs are used.
“We have to be educating teachers to be using programs effectively,” she
said.
Lightford’s plan is not the only bill at the Statehouse in recent weeks
aimed at improving childhood literacy. Rep. Mary Flowers, D-Chicago,
introduced a bill that would require schools to use phonics to teach
reading, though it was met with pushback from teachers’ unions.
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