Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
Each applicant that is proposing a program that has not
received funding in the year previous to the current application or is seeking
additional funds to expand its currently funded program shall submit to the
State Board of Education a proposal that includes the components specified in
this Section. For purposes of this Section, an "expanded" program includes one
in which the applicant is proposing to serve additional children and their
families or to offer initiatives not provided under its currently funded
program.
b) When sufficient funding is available, the
State Superintendent of Education shall issue one or more Requests for
Proposals (RFP) specifying the information that applicants shall include in
their proposals, informing applicants of any bidders' conferences and requiring
that proposals be submitted no later than the date specified in the RFP. The
RFP shall provide at least 45 calendar days in which to submit proposals.
1) Proposals for preschool education programs
shall be submitted electronically through the State Board of Education's grant
management system (see http://www.isbe.net/egms/ [File Link Not
Available]).
2) Proposals for
prevention initiative programs shall be submitted in a format specified by the
State Board of Education.
c) All proposals submitted in response to an
RFP shall include the following components:
1) A cover page signed by the school district
superintendent or official authorized to submit the proposal or, in the case of
a joint application, by the superintendent from each of the school districts
and each authorized official of other eligible entities participating in the
joint proposal.
2) For applicants
other than public school districts, a description that includes the following:
A) the applicant's mission statement,
organizational structure, and goals or policies regarding early childhood
programs;
B) the applicant's
existing competencies to provide early childhood education programs, to include
a list of any early childhood accreditations that have been achieved, which may
include, as applicable, the most current designation the applicant has received
through the ExceleRate Illinois: Quality Rating and Improvement System (
http://www.excelerateillinoisproviders.com/);
and
C) in the case of a joint
application, the goals and objectives of the collaboration and a brief
description of each partner's experience in providing services similar to those
to be provided under the Early Childhood Block Grant program.
3) A description of how the
comprehensive services to be provided are aligned with:
A) as applicable to the program being
proposed, the Illinois Early Learning and Development Standards, as set forth
in Appendix A or, beginning July 1, 2015, the Illinois Early Learning
Guidelines, as set forth in Appendix C;
B) the Illinois Birth to Five Program
Standards as set forth in Appendix B; and
C) for proposed preschool education programs
that will serve English learners, the "Early English Language Development
Standards Ages 2.5 -5.5 2013 Edition" (2013), published by the Board of Regents
of the University of Wisconsin System on behalf of the WIDA Consortium,
Wisconsin Center for Education Research (WCER), University of
Wisconsin-Madison, 1025 West Johnson Street, MD#23, Madison WI 53706 and posted
at
http://www.wida.us/standards/eeld.aspx.
No later amendments to or editions of these standards are
incorporated.
4) A
description of the need for the program, which shall include:
A) current demographic or descriptive
information regarding the community in which the families and children reside
(including information on the prevalence of homelessness); and
B) the process that was used to determine the
need for the program in the community in relation to other similar services
that may be operating in the same geographic area; this description must list,
to the extent known, the other services offered and an estimate of the number
of children being served.
5) A description of the population to be
served, as defined in Section
235.10(a),
for each program to be funded under the Early Childhood Block Grant. This
description shall include:
A) how the
eligible population will be recruited;
B) the geographic area to be served;
and
C) the estimated number of
children and/or families to be enrolled.
6) A description of the procedures to be used
to screen children and their families to determine their need for services.
Results of the screening shall be made available to the program staff and
parents of the children screened. All screening procedures shall include:
A) research-based criteria to determine at
what point performance on the screening instrument indicates that children are
at risk of academic failure as well as to assess other environmental, economic
and demographic information that indicates a likelihood that the children would
be at risk;
B) screening
instruments/activities that are:
i) related
to and able to measure the child's development in at least the following areas
(as appropriate for the age of the child): vocabulary, visual-motor
integration, language and speech development, English proficiency, fine and
gross motor skills, social skills, and emotional and cognitive development;
and
ii) formally validated with
evidence that the instruments/activities reliably and accurately detect
children who are at risk for developmental delays and do not incorrectly
identify children disproportionately as being at risk of academic
failure;
C) written
parental permission for the screening;
D) parent interview (to be conducted in the
parents' home language, if necessary), including at least the following:
i) a summary of the child's health history
and status, including whether the child has an existing disability, and social
development; and
ii) information
about the parents, such as age, educational achievement and employment
history;
E) vision and
hearing screening, in accordance with 77 Ill. Adm. Code 685 (Vision Screening)
and 675 (Hearing Screening); and
F)
where practicable, provision for the inclusion of program teaching staff in the
screening process.
7) A
description of the parent education and involvement component that will be
provided, which shall include activities in each of the following areas:
A) communication between the home and the
preschool education program that is regular, two-way and meaningful;
B) parenting skills are promoted and
supported;
C) recognition that
parents play an integral role in assisting student learning;
D) parents are welcome in the program, and
their support and involvement are sought; and
E) parents are full partners in the decisions
that affect children and families.
8) A description of how the program will
coordinate with other programs, as specified in the RFP, that are in operation
in the same area and that are concerned with the education, welfare, health and
safety needs of young children. A copy of the written agreement between the
program and any Head Start program (see
http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ohs)
operating in the same area shall be executed by the date and contain the
information specified in Section 2-3.71(a)(4.5) of the School Code. If a Head
Start program is either unable or unwilling to enter into a written agreement,
the program shall notify the State Board of Education of this fact no later
than December 31 of each fiscal year.
9) A description of the full-time and
part-time professional and nonprofessional staff to be paid by the program,
indicating that program administrators, early childhood teachers, counselors,
psychologists, psychiatrists and social workers are appropriately qualified.
A) Teachers of children ages 3 to 5 years
must hold a professional educator license endorsed in early childhood education
or an educator license with stipulations endorsed in early childhood and one of
the following endorsements: provisional educator, alternative provisional
educator, resident teacher or visiting international educator. (See Section
2-3.71(a)(3) of the School Code and 23 Ill. Adm. Code 1.Appendix A.)
B) Paraprofessional staff employed to assist
in instruction provided to children ages 3 to 5 years shall meet the
requirements set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code
25.510(b)
(Endorsement for Paraprofessional Educator)
or hold an approval for paraprofessional educator received in accordance with
Section
25.15(a)(2)(J)
(Types of Licenses; Exchange).
C) Teachers of children ages 3 to 5 years who
are assigned to a transitional bilingual program or a transitional program of
instruction that is administered by a school district, either in an attendance
center or a non-school-based facility, shall meet the requirements set forth in
23 Ill. Adm. Code
228.35
(Transitional Bilingual Education), as applicable.
D) By July 1, 2017, directors of child care
centers offering preschool programs funded under Section 2-3.71 of the School
Code and this Part shall have either:
i) a
minimum of a baccalaureate degree in child development or early childhood
education or the equivalent (i.e., baccalaureate in any discipline with a
minimum of 24 semester hours of credit in child development, early childhood
education, or early childhood special education, including relevant field
experience) and a Gateways to Opportunity Level II or III Illinois Director
Credential issued pursuant to Section 10-70 of the Department of Human Services
Act [20
ILCS 1305/10-70] (see
http://www.ilgateways.com/en/credentials);
or
ii) meet the requirements of
subsection (c)(9)(E).
E)
By July 1, 2017, directors of preschool programs funded under Section 2-3.71 of
the School Code and this Part and administered by school districts shall hold a
professional educator license endorsed for principal or general administrative
issued under 23 Ill. Adm. Code
25.337
(Principal (2013)) or
25.335
(General Administrative (Through August 31, 2014)), respectively.
F) Beginning September 1, 2015, an applicant
must submit an assurance that each staff member who will provide services to
children enrolled in an early childhood classroom funded under this Part and
who does not hold a professional educator license issued by the State Board of
Education pursuant to Article 21B of the School Code [105 ILCS 5 /Art. 21B] and
23 Ill. Adm. Code 25 (Educator Licensure) has registered in the Illinois
Department of Human Services' "Gateways to Opportunity" registry (see
http://registry.ilgateways.com).
10) A description of staff
development assessment procedures and ongoing professional development
activities to be conducted, to include a description of how the results of the
assessment will be used to inform the program's staff development and, for
proposals for expanded programs, the continuous quality improvement plan
required under Section
235.67.
11) A description of how developmental and/or
educational progress will be assessed and documented to ensure that the program
meets the needs of the child and provides a system whereby that child's parents
are routinely advised of their child's progress.
A) The procedures to assess progress shall be
formally validated with evidence that the procedures reliably and accurately
assess a child's progress relative to his or her individual needs and the
standards set forth in Appendix A or Appendix C, as applicable.
B) The procedures shall address each of the
domains of development specified in Section
235.20(c)(6).
12) A description of the required
program components, as set forth in either Section
235.30
or
235.40.
13) Other information, as specified in the
RFP, such as daily schedules (including the number of hours per day and days
per week the program will operate, which must provide for at least 12.5 hours a
week), an annual calendar of at least 165 days, classroom locations, facility
information (e.g., owner's name, terms of lease arrangement, size of classrooms
and other areas to be used by the program), if applicable.
14) The plan for ensuring that the program
provides either a snack, in the case of a half-day program, or a meal, in the
case of a full-day program, for participating children.
A) Food and beverages provided in programs
located in a school district attendance center shall meet the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's competitive food standards set forth at
7
CFR 210.11(2013).
B) Food and beverages provided in programs
located in a licensed child care center or other community setting shall meet
DCFS' standards set forth at 89 Ill. Adm. Code
407.330
(Nutrition and Meal Service).
15) A budget summary and payment schedule, as
well as a budget breakdown, i.e., a detailed explanation of each line item of
expenditure. The budget shall specify that no more than 5 percent of the total
grant award shall be used for administrative and general expenses not directly
attributed to program activities, except that a higher limit not to exceed 10
percent may be negotiated with an applicant that has provided evidence that the
excess administrative expenses are beyond its control and that it has exhausted
all available and reasonable remedies to comply with the limitation.
16) A description of how the applicant will
ensure that no fees will be charged of parents or guardians and their children
who are enrolled and participate in Early Childhood Block Grant
programs.
17) A plan for evaluating
the proposed programs and activities to be included in the Early Childhood
Block Grant, which shall correspond to the applicable specifications set forth
in the RFP.
18) Such
certifications, assurances and program-specific terms of the grant as the State
Superintendent of Education may require, to be signed by each applicant that is
a party to the application and submitted with the proposal. (Also see Section
235.70.)
d) Applicants may be requested to
clarify various aspects of their proposals. The contents of the approved
proposal shall be incorporated into a grant agreement to be signed by the State
Superintendent of Education or designee and the school district superintendent
or, in the case of an entity that is not the school district, the person
legally authorized to submit the proposal and bind the applicant to its
contents.