VII. Teaching Certificates That Do Not Require Completion
of an Approved Program
Substitute Certificate
A substitute certificate, valid for four fiscal years,
may be issued for teaching in all grades of the common
schools when no appropriate fully certified teacher is
available to teach in a substitute capacity. A person
holding a substitute certificate may teach only in
place of a certified teacher under contract for a maximum
of 90 school days in any single district in any single
year; the City of Chicago is excluded from this limitation.
Applicants may obtain a Temporary Employment Authorization
from their regional superintendent who will determine
if the applicant qualifies for certification. Requirements
for this certificate are as follows:
- The applicant holds a regular certificate; or
- The applicant holds a bachelor's degree either from
an institution accredited by the North Central Association
of Schools or other comparable regional accrediting
agency, or from a recognized teacher education institution;
or
- The applicant can provide proof of two years of teaching
experience in an elementary or secondary school and
60 semester hours of credit, including six semester
hours in professional education from a recognized institution
of higher learning.
A substitute certificate is valid for four years and
may not be renewed. Upon its expiration the holder must
apply for a new certificate.
An individual who holds an elementary, secondary, early
childhood or special certificate may serve as a substitute
teacher for 120 days per district per year in all
grades (K-12).
Provisional Vocational and Temporary Provisional Vocational
Certificates
A provisional vocational certificate or a temporary provisional
vocational certificate may be issued to individuals who
have work experience in specific skill areas for which
school districts have state-approved reimbursable vocational
programs. These certificate types are valid in grades
K-12 when issued prior to July 1, 2004; when issued on
or after July 1, 2004 the provisional vocational certificates
are valid in grades 7-12, while the temporary provisional
vocational is valid only at grade 11-12 in the skill endorsement.
Applicants who seek either of these certificates must
complete the ISBE Form 73-03C,
"Application for Certificate," indicating
the program title for which they are being employed, and
the employing school district must sign the application
form indicating their interest in employing the applicant.
In addition, the applicant must attach ISBE Form
73-23, "Application for Provisional Vocational Certificate,"
and forward original letters of experience from employers,
or notarized statements if the applicant has been self-employed,
outlining the work experience relating to the skill area.
The following are the specific requirements for each certificate
type:
Requirements for the Provisional Vocational Certificate
- Official transcripts showing 60 semester hours of
credit from a recognized teacher education institution
and
- Documented evidence of 2,000 hours of work experience
in the skill area.
This certificate has a five year period of registration
and may be renewed upon payment of registration fees.
Requirements for the Temporary Provisional Vocational
Certificate
- This certificate may be issued only when the employing
board certifies to the satisfaction and approval of
the regional superintendent of schools that no qualified
teacher holding a regular certificate or a provisional
vocational certificate is available and that actual
circumstances and need require such issuance.
- Applicants must have documented evidence of 8,000
hours of work experience in the specific skill area
to be taught.
This certificate is valid for one year and may be renewed.
Renewal requires proof that the holder has completed three
semester hours of credit during the previous year.
Part-Time Provisional Certificate
Individuals may qualify for a renewable part-time provisional
certificate valid for two years for teaching no more than
two courses of study at the 6-12 level. The certificate
may be issued to professionals and crafts persons who
meet one of the following requirements:
- 60 semester hours of credit from a recognized institution
of higher learning, 9 semester hours of which are to
be in the skill to be certified for teaching, or
- 4,000 hours of work experience in the skill to be
certified for teaching.
To be issued in a skill area, the skill area must be
part of a school district's curriculum, and the skill
area for which the applicant has coursework or experience
must be taught in grades 6-12. This certificate will not
be issued in subjects for which there are existing secondary
subject area requirements listed under "Staff Qualifications".
Visiting International Teacher Certificate
School districts participating in teacher exchange programs
and in other programs that recruit foreign teachers to
teach in their districts may choose to require a Visiting
International Teacher Certificate, valid for three years
and non-renewable, if the district wants to ensure the
employee meets NCLB requirements for highly qualified
teachers. This certificate will be issued for early childhood,
elementary, secondary and special grade levels. To qualify
for this certificate, the district must be certain the
teacher
- holds the equivalent of a bachelor's degree issued
in the U.S.;
- has been prepared as a teacher at the grade level
for which he or she will be employed;
- has adequate content knowledge in the subject matter
to be taught, through possession of a major in the content
area to be taught or by passing one or more examinations
in the content area;
- has an adequate command of the English language;
and.
- does not have a criminal history that would bar the
individual from employment as specified in Section 10-21.9(c)
of the School Code.
To ascertain the degree equivalence, grade-level equivalence
and knowledge of the subject matter, the district may
initially utilize published analyses of foreign education
systems from the National Association of Foreign Student
Affairs and from the American Association of Collegiate
Registrars and Admissions Officers. An initial determination
of English language competence may be made through administration
of the Nelson-Denny reading examination requiring a passing
score in English equivalent to grade level 10.7 and an
oral proficiency interview in the English language described
by the American Council on Teachers of Foreign Languages
(ACTFL) with an oral proficiency rating of 2+. The recruiting
district will also provide a description of the background
check done for each teacher and assure that each teacher
had such a review performed with results indicating that
the applicant has no disqualifying criminal violation
described in the statutes.
The applicant will apply for the Visiting International
Teacher Certificate appropriate to the grade level or
subject matter to be taught. To provide substantiation
of the conclusions reached by the district in its initial
review, the application and fee must be forwarded with
the district's own determination of the applicant's qualifications
and the evaluation of the applicant's foreign credentials.
The foreign credentials evaluation must be completed by
one of the acceptable sources listed on the ISBE web site.
We also require diplomas, degrees, professional titles
and examination results from the terminal or periodic
examinations required by the applicant's degree-granting
institution, and English language translations of those
documents.
Applicants for this certificate will not be required
to pass the examinations of the Illinois Certification
Testing System. Those persons who wish to teach their
native language will be considered qualified if the language
of instruction used by the degree-granting institution
is the teacher's native language.
Individuals wishing to apply for this certificate must
file form ISBE 73-03F, "Application for Visiting
International Teacher Certificate," with the appropriate
regional superintendent of schools.
Transitional Bilingual Certificate
The transitional bilingual certificate is valid for a
period of six years for teaching subject matter using
the languages of endorsement in approved bilingual education
programs in grades K-12 of the common schools. The certificate
must be registered with the regional superintendent of
the county wherein the holder is teaching. Upon the expiration
of a transitional bilingual certificate, a regional superintendent
may grant a single two-year renewal of that certificate,
provided that the individual furnishes evidence of enrollment
in an approved teacher education program or of enrollment
in coursework designed to qualify the holder for a standard
certificate.
General Requirements.
The applicants must be legally present in the United States
and possess legal authorization for employment.
Requirements of Prior Education or Certification.
Applicants must:
- Possess a current and valid certificate issued by
the State of Illinois, or
- Have possessed within five years prior to the date
of application a valid teaching certificate or comparable
legal authorization issued by a foreign country or by
a state or possession or territory of the United States,
or
- Hold a degree from an institution of higher learning
in a foreign country which the Certification Board determines
to be the equivalent of a bachelor's degree from a recognized
institution of higher learning in the United States.
Applicants must submit a certified transcript from the
foreign institution. The Certification Board will determine
equivalency by comparing the applicants' courses of
study to that required for a bachelor's degree from
a recognized institution of higher learning in the United
States on factors including:
- the applicants' length of study at the foreign
institution (which shall be equivalent to four years
of postsecondary study after the age of eighteen);
- the number of credit hours or similar units of
instruction which the applicants have successfully
completed (which shall be the equivalent of 120
semester hours);
- the content of the applicants' courses and the
distribution of courses among the various disciplines
constituting a bachelor's degree program in the
United States (which shall include the equivalent
of a 32-semester-hour major field of study);
- the applicants' grades or similar evidence of
successful academic performance;
- the foreign institution's accreditation status,
if any.
Language Requirements
- Applicants must demonstrate adequate speaking, reading,
writing, and grammar skills in a non-English language
in which transitional bilingual education is offered
in Illinois. This requirement may be fulfilled in one
of the following ways:
- The applicants present evidence of having graduated
from a teacher preparation institution or an institution
of higher education in which the medium of instruction
was a non-English language in which transitional
bilingual education is offered in Illinois and for
which certification is sought.
- The applicants successfully complete the required
examination in the non-English language in which
transitional bilingual education is offered in Illinois
and for which certification is sought. If no examination
for transitional bilingual education in the target
language is provided in the list of available bilingual
proficiency examinations, the required examination
shall be another examination administered by the
State Board of Education. The selection, development,
and administration of each such examination shall
conform to the requirements of the Illinois Administrative
Rules to the extent feasible in light of the rate
of incidence of the target language in Illinois.
- The applicants must demonstrate adequate speaking,
reading, writing, and grammar skills in English. This
requirement may be fulfilled in one of the following
ways:
- Applicants present evidence of having graduated
from an institution of higher education in which
the medium of instruction was English.
- Applicants successfully complete the English
Language Proficiency Examination.
- Individuals enrolled in an approved bilingual certification
program who passed the Spanish language proficiency
examination required by the program prior to July 1,
2001, shall be exempt from retaking a Spanish language
proficiency test after that date, provided that:
- the university that operates the program forwards
to the State Board of Education no later than November
1, 2001, a list of the names and Social Security
Numbers of those persons in its program who have
passed the examination;
- the individuals' names appear on the list submitted
by the university in whose program they are enrolled;
and
- the individuals submit an application for bilingual
certification based upon the institution's recommendation
for certification no later than June 30, 2006.
Appeals - Re-scoring
A limited appeal shall be available to applicants found
ineligible for certification because of failure to meet
the language requirements on the basis of an examination
in a language not listed in the schedule of language proficiency
assessments. An affected individual wishing to initiate
such an appeal shall notify the State Board of Education
in writing within six weeks after release of the test
results to candidates. The appeal shall be limited to
a request for re-scoring. The State Board of Education
shall honor each such request unless no individual who
has the necessary language competency and who was not
involved in the original scoring is available.
Bilingual and ESL Teacher Approval
Teachers in approved bilingual education programs may
possess either a Transitional Bilingual Certificate or
a valid Illinois teaching certificate and a statement
of approval authorizing employment as a bilingual education
teacher issued by the State Board of Education or an endorsement
on their full certificates for a bilingual program. A
statement of approval is a letter indicating the teacher
has met the minimum requirements to serve in a bilingual
or ESL position at the grade level of the certificate
the teacher holds; the approval is also recorded on the
Teacher Certification Information System.
Since the bilingual certificate is valid for only six
years and may only be renewed for a single two-year period,
it is anticipated that current holders will seek to obtain
an Initial or Standard certificate and qualify for approval
or endorsement as a bilingual teacher or teacher of English
as a Second Language. Approvals will only be issued to
applicants who already possess a regular teaching certificate
and will be limited to the grade levels or subjects for
which the teaching certificate is valid.
A. Approval to teach Bilingual Education
Approval as a bilingual teacher may be obtained by first
making application through a Regional Office of Education
on ISBE Form 73-49,
"Request for Approval as a Bilingual or ESL Teacher."
A statement of approval will be issued to individuals
meeting the following requirements:
- A valid Illinois teacher certificate;
- Bilingual clinical experience totaling 100 clock
hours or three months teaching experience in bilingual
programs;
- Successful completion of a language examination in
the non-English language to be taught;
- Credits totaling 18 semester hours distributed among
the following course areas:
- Foundations of Bilingual Education,
- Assessment of Bilingual Students,
- Methods and Materials for Teaching Limited-English-Proficient
Students in Bilingual Programs,
- Cross-Cultural Studies for Teaching Limited-English-Proficient
Students,
- Methods and Materials for Teaching English as
a Second Language.
B. Approval to teach English as a Second Language
Approval to teach ESL in the context of a state-approved
bilingual education program may be obtained by making
application through a Regional Office of Education on
ISBE Form 73-49,
"Request for Approval as a Bilingual or ESL Teacher."
The same requirements apply to the ESL endorsement
on a full certificate. The requirements for obtaining
this approval are as follows:
- A valid Illinois teaching certificate;
- ESL clinical experience equal to 100 clock hours
or three months teaching experience with ESL students;
- Credits totaling 18 semester hours distributed among
the following course areas.
- Linguistics,
- Theoretical Foundations of Teaching ESL,
- Assessment of the Bilingual Student,
- Methods and Materials for Teaching ESL,
- Cross-Cultural Studies for Teaching Limited-English-Proficient
Students.
Individuals who obtain an ESL approval may teach in this
capacity only at the grade level for which their regular
certificate is valid. Individuals who hold an elementary
certificate and who qualify for bilingual approval, however,
may teach ESL in grades K-6, as well as all other subject
areas of a bilingual education program in the language
for which they have approval.
Paraprofessional Approvals (Teacher Aides)
NCLB Requirements for Paraprofessionals
- All persons newly hired in an instructional capacity
in programs funded by Title I funds after January 8,
2002, must be highly qualified by
- having 60 semester hours of credit or
- having at least an associate's degree or
- passing a state examination covering instruction
in reading, writing and mathematics.
- Persons employed as paraprofessionals before 1/8/02
have until January 8, 2006, to meet this requirement
State Requirements for Paraprofessionals (Excluding
Title I Funded)
All persons serving as paraprofessionals must have a
statement of approval to serve as a paraprofessional (teacher
aide) that is granted when the applicants are
- U.S. citizens or non-citizens who are legally present
and authorized for employment;
- Of good character;
- Free from communicable disease;
- High school graduates or possession of an equivalent
to a high school degree and
- In possession of one of the following credentials:
- 30 semester hours of college credit from a regionally
accredited institution or
- Proof of completing a paraprofessional training
program approved by the Illinois Community College
Board or ISBE in consultation with the State Teacher
Certification Board or
- Passing score on the ETS ParaPro test or
- Passing score on the ACT WorkKeys test and
- A satisfactory rating for observation of classroom
performance or
- A district letter attesting to effective classroom
performance in employment.
Those assigned to students with disabilities in positions
not funded under Title I on or before June 30, 2005, have
until July 1, 2007, to meet the requirements for approval
as a paraprofessional.
State Requirements for Service in Title I Funded Positions
Persons employed in programs supported by Title I funds
must have
- An associate's degree or
- 60 semester hours or
- An acceptable score on the ParaPro or WorkKeys test
or
- 30 semester hours of credit or must have completed
an approved paraprofessional training program and earned
300 professional training points (PTP).
Professional Training Points can be earned by
- Work experience as a paraprofessional 30 PTPs
per year of service, maximum 150 points
- College credits beyond the required 30 semester hours
15 PTPs per credit hour
- Completion of the Paraprofessional Test Preparation
Curriculum developed by the Illinois Community College
Board in partnership with the Illinois State Board of
Education 15 PTPs
- Professional development activity 1 PTP per
hour
This application may be made on a form ISBE
73-95, "Request for Paraprofessional Approval/Approval
for Paraprofessional Employment in Title I Positions".
There is no fee for this approval, but the form must be
filed with a regional superintendent of schools. A paraprofessional
approval statement will be issued and will indicate whether
the holder meets the NCLB requirements.
Approval of Educational Interpreters: Sign Language
Interpreters and Cued Speech Interpreters
Each educational interpreter in the public schools shall
- be of good character and
- be a citizen of the United States or legally present
and authorized for employment and
- be physically fit and freedom from tuberculosis.
- hold a high school diploma or its recognized equivalent.
Beginning July 1, 2006, assignment as an educational
interpreter in the public schools shall require a statement
of approval from the State Superintendent of Education
valid either for sign language interpreting or for cued
speech interpreting. Each individual who is required to
hold a statement of approval shall submit an application
to the State Superintendent, accompanied by the $30 fee
required under Section 21-12 of the School Code and evidence
that he or she meets the requirements applicable to the
type and level of approval sought.
Initial Approval
- Each applicant shall have:
- completed 30 semester hours of college credit
from one or more regionally accredited institutions
of higher education; or
- passed the Educational Interpreter Knowledge
Assessment (EIKA); or
- passed the written examination administered
by the Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf
(RID); or
- achieved the score identified as passing
by the Illinois State Board of Education on
either the ParaPro test or the WorkKeys test.
- Sign Language Interpreters: Each applicant
for initial approval as a sign language interpreter
shall have:
- attained a rating of Level 3.0 or above on
the Educational Interpreter Performance Assessment
(EIPA); or
- received a certificate issued by the RID;
or
- scored at the "passing" level or
above on the examination of the American Consortium
of Certified Interpreters (ACCI).
- Cued Speech Interpreters: Each applicant
for initial approval as a cued speech interpreter
shall have:
- attained a rating of Category 4 or above
on the Basic Cued Speech Proficiency Rating
administered by Testing, Evaluation and Certification
Unit, Inc. (TEC Unit); or
- attained Transliteration Skills Certification
from TEC Unit at level 3 or above.
Standard Approval
- Each applicant shall:
- have completed 60 semester hours of college
credit from one or more regionally accredited
institutions of higher education; or
- hold an associate's degree issued by a regionally
accredited institution of higher education;
or
- have passed one of the examinations required
for initial approval
- Sign Language Interpreters: Each applicant
for standard approval as a sign language interpreter
shall:
- have attained a rating of Level 3.5 or above
on the EIPA; or
- provide evidence that he or she was employed
as a sign language interpreter in the Illinois
public schools during the 2005-06 school year
and holds certification from the RID.
- Cued Speech Interpreters: Each applicant
for standard approval as a cued speech interpreter
shall have attained Transliteration Skills Certification
at Level 3 or above.
Master Approval
- Each applicant shall have met the requirements
for a Standard Approval
- Sign Language Interpreters: Each applicant
for master approval as a sign language interpreter
shall have attained a rating of Level 4.5 or above
on the EIPA.
- Cued Speech Interpreters: Each applicant
for master approval as a cued speech interpreter
shall have attained Transliteration Skills Certification
at Level 4 or above.
Emergency Approval
- Each applicant shall have completed 10 semester
hours of college credit from one or more regionally
accredited institutions of higher education.
- Sign Language Interpreters: Each applicant
for approval as a sign language interpreter shall
have:
- attained a rating of Level 3.0 or above on
the EIPA; or
- received a certificate issued by the RID;
or
- scored at the "passing" level or
above on the examination of the ACCI.
- Cued Speech Interpreters: Each applicant
for approval as a cued speech interpreter shall
have:
- attained a rating of Category 4 or above
on the Basic Cued Speech Proficiency Rating;
or
- attained Transliteration Skills Certification
at level 3 or above.
Validity; Renewal
- Initial approval shall be valid for four
years of interpreting within the eight-year period
following its issuance, provided that the approval
of an individual who completes four years of interpreting
shall continue to be valid through the immediately
following June 30. Initial approval shall not be
renewable. An individual need not have Initial approval
to qualify for standard or master approval.
- Standard approval shall be valid for five
years, with the first year ending on June 30 following
the issue date, and shall be renewable upon presentation
of evidence that, during the five-year period of
the approval's validity, the individual has:
- completed 40 hours of continuing education;
or
- completed 25 hours of continuing education
and received certification from RID or from
ACCI.
- Master approval shall be valid for ten
years, with the first year ending on June 30 following
the issue date, and shall be renewable upon presentation
of evidence that, during the ten-year period of
the approval's validity, the individual has:
- completed 80 hours of continuing education;
or
- completed 65 hours of continuing education
and received certification from RID or from
ACCI.
- Emergency approval shall be valid for
two years, with the first year ending on June
30 following the issue date, and shall not be renewable.
Continuing Education
- An individual may accrue hours of continuing
education by participating in conferences, workshops,
institutes, seminars, symposia, or other, similar
training events that:
- are designed to improve the skills and knowledge
of interpreters for the deaf; or
- are organized by an entity that is approved
pursuant to Section 25.855 or 25.860 of Part
25 of the 23 Illinois Administrative Code and
address educational concerns.
- An individual may accrue the required credit
for continuing education by completing college coursework
that is part of an interpreter training program
offered by a regionally accredited institution of
higher education or an Illinois community college.
- One course of at least three semester hours
may be used to fulfill 100 percent of the requirement
for renewal of standard approval or
- 50 percent of the requirement for renewal
of master approval.
- Two courses totaling at least six semester
hours may be used to fulfill 100 percent of
the requirement for renewal of master approval.
- Holders of approval at the master level only may
accrue up to 20 hours of continuing education for
mentoring provided to holders of initial or standard
approval.
- Each individual shall be required to accrue at
least 60 percent of the required hours of continuing
education in activities under (1)(A), (2), or, if
applicable, (3) above, in any combination.
- Evidence of Completion
- Along with his or her statement of approval,
each individual who will be required to complete
continuing education as a condition of renewal
shall be furnished with a log format enabling
him or her to record the activities completed.
For any activity completed under (1) above,
the individual shall present the attendance
form provided by the entity organizing the event,
except that the organizer's signature on the
log form shall suffice in cases where participants
receive no other written verification of their
attendance.
- As evidence of completion for college coursework,
the individual shall present a grade report
or official transcript issued by the institution
indicating that he or she has passed the course
or courses.
- As evidence of completion for mentoring,
the individual shall present the signature of
an authorized representative of the
employing entity on the log format provided,
documenting the formal mentoring arrangement
and the time spent.
Revocation
The provisions of revocation of paraprofessional approvals
shall apply to the revocation of approval for educational
interpreters.
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