HB2451 - 104th General Assembly


 


 
104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB2451

 

Introduced 2/4/2025, by Rep. Amy Elik

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
105 ILCS 5/27-22  from Ch. 122, par. 27-22
110 ILCS 305/8  from Ch. 144, par. 29
110 ILCS 520/8e  from Ch. 144, par. 658e
110 ILCS 660/5-85
110 ILCS 665/10-85
110 ILCS 670/15-85
110 ILCS 675/20-85
110 ILCS 680/25-85
110 ILCS 685/30-85
110 ILCS 690/35-85

    Amends the Course of Study Article of the School Code. Provides that, as a prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil entering the 9th grade beginning with the 2028-2029 school year must successfully complete either 2 years of foreign language courses or at least 2 years of career-focused coursework that has been authorized by the State Board of Education as meeting the requirements for a College and Career Pathway Endorsement under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act (rather than requiring the successful completion of 2 years of foreign language courses). Amends the University of Illinois Act, the Southern Illinois University Management Act, the Chicago State University Law, the Eastern Illinois University Law, the Governors State University Law, the Illinois State University Law, the Northeastern Illinois University Law, the Northern Illinois University Law, and the Western Illinois University Law. Provides that a university may not require State public high school graduates, as a condition of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign language courses unless the university permits, as an alternative to completion of a foreign language course, attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act. Effective immediately.


LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2451LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    AN ACT concerning education.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section
527-22 as follows:
 
6    (105 ILCS 5/27-22)  (from Ch. 122, par. 27-22)
7    Sec. 27-22. Required high school courses.
8    (a) (Blank).
9    (b) (Blank).
10    (c) (Blank).
11    (d) (Blank).
12    (e) Through the 2023-2024 school year, as a prerequisite
13to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil entering the
149th grade must, in addition to other course requirements,
15successfully complete all of the following courses:
16        (1) Four years of language arts.
17        (2) Two years of writing intensive courses, one of
18    which must be English and the other of which may be English
19    or any other subject. When applicable, writing-intensive
20    courses may be counted towards the fulfillment of other
21    graduation requirements.
22        (3) Three years of mathematics, one of which must be
23    Algebra I, one of which must include geometry content, and

 

 

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1    one of which may be an Advanced Placement computer science
2    course. A mathematics course that includes geometry
3    content may be offered as an integrated, applied,
4    interdisciplinary, or career and technical education
5    course that prepares a student for a career readiness
6    path.
7        (3.5) For pupils entering the 9th grade in the
8    2022-2023 school year and 2023-2024 school year, one year
9    of a course that includes intensive instruction in
10    computer literacy, which may be English, social studies,
11    or any other subject and which may be counted toward the
12    fulfillment of other graduation requirements.
13        (4) Two years of science.
14        (5) Two years of social studies, of which at least one
15    year must be history of the United States or a combination
16    of history of the United States and American government
17    and, beginning with pupils entering the 9th grade in the
18    2016-2017 school year and each school year thereafter, at
19    least one semester must be civics, which shall help young
20    people acquire and learn to use the skills, knowledge, and
21    attitudes that will prepare them to be competent and
22    responsible citizens throughout their lives. Civics course
23    content shall focus on government institutions, the
24    discussion of current and controversial issues, service
25    learning, and simulations of the democratic process.
26    School districts may utilize private funding available for

 

 

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1    the purposes of offering civics education. Beginning with
2    pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2021-2022 school
3    year, one semester, or part of one semester, may include a
4    financial literacy course.
5        (6) One year chosen from (A) music, (B) art, (C)
6    foreign language, which shall be deemed to include
7    American Sign Language, (D) vocational education, or (E)
8    forensic speech (speech and debate). A forensic speech
9    course used to satisfy the course requirement under
10    subdivision (1) may not be used to satisfy the course
11    requirement under this subdivision (6).
12    (e-5) Beginning with the 2024-2025 school year, as a
13prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil
14entering the 9th grade must, in addition to other course
15requirements, successfully complete all of the following
16courses:
17        (1) Four years of language arts.
18        (2) Two years of writing intensive courses, one of
19    which must be English and the other of which may be English
20    or any other subject. If applicable, writing-intensive
21    courses may be counted toward the fulfillment of other
22    graduation requirements.
23        (3) Three years of mathematics, one of which must be
24    Algebra I, one of which must include geometry content, and
25    one of which may be an Advanced Placement computer science
26    course. A mathematics course that includes geometry

 

 

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1    content may be offered as an integrated, applied,
2    interdisciplinary, or career and technical education
3    course that prepares a student for a career readiness
4    path.
5        (3.5) One year of a course that includes intensive
6    instruction in computer literacy, which may be English,
7    social studies, or any other subject and which may be
8    counted toward the fulfillment of other graduation
9    requirements.
10        (4) Two years of laboratory science.
11        (5) Two years of social studies, of which at least one
12    year must be history of the United States or a combination
13    of history of the United States and American government
14    and at least one semester must be civics, which shall help
15    young people acquire and learn to use the skills,
16    knowledge, and attitudes that will prepare them to be
17    competent and responsible citizens throughout their lives.
18    Civics course content shall focus on government
19    institutions, the discussion of current and controversial
20    issues, service learning, and simulations of the
21    democratic process. School districts may utilize private
22    funding available for the purposes of offering civics
23    education. One semester, or part of one semester, may
24    include a financial literacy course.
25        (6) One year chosen from (A) music, (B) art, (C)
26    foreign language, which shall be deemed to include

 

 

HB2451- 5 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    American Sign Language, (D) vocational education, or (E)
2    forensic speech (speech and debate). A forensic speech
3    course used to satisfy the course requirement under
4    subdivision (1) may not be used to satisfy the course
5    requirement under this subdivision (6).
6    (e-10) Beginning with the 2028-2029 school year, as a
7prerequisite to receiving a high school diploma, each pupil
8entering the 9th grade must, in addition to other course
9requirements, successfully complete either (i) 2 years of
10foreign language courses, which may include American Sign
11Language, or (ii) at least 2 years of career-focused
12coursework that has been authorized by the State Board of
13Education as meeting the requirements for a College and Career
14Pathway Endorsement under the Postsecondary and Workforce
15Readiness Act. A pupil may choose a third year of foreign
16language to satisfy the requirement under subdivision (6) of
17subsection (e-5).
18    (f) The State Board of Education shall develop and inform
19school districts of standards for writing-intensive
20coursework.
21    (f-5) If a school district offers an Advanced Placement
22computer science course to high school students, then the
23school board must designate that course as equivalent to a
24high school mathematics course and must denote on the
25student's transcript that the Advanced Placement computer
26science course qualifies as a mathematics-based, quantitative

 

 

HB2451- 6 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1course for students in accordance with subdivision (3) of
2subsection (e) of this Section.
3    (g) Public Act 83-1082 does not apply to pupils entering
4the 9th grade in 1983-1984 school year and prior school years
5or to students with disabilities whose course of study is
6determined by an individualized education program.
7    Public Act 94-676 does not apply to pupils entering the
89th grade in the 2004-2005 school year or a prior school year
9or to students with disabilities whose course of study is
10determined by an individualized education program.
11    Subdivision (3.5) of subsection (e) does not apply to
12pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2021-2022 school year or a
13prior school year or to students with disabilities whose
14course of study is determined by an individualized education
15program.
16    Subsection (e-5) does not apply to pupils entering the 9th
17grade in the 2023-2024 school year or a prior school year or to
18students with disabilities whose course of study is determined
19by an individualized education program. Subsection (e-10) does
20not apply to pupils entering the 9th grade in the 2027-2028
21school year or a prior school year or to students with
22disabilities whose course of study is determined by an
23individualized education program.
24    (h) The provisions of this Section are subject to the
25provisions of Sections 14A-32 and 27-22.05 of this Code and
26the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.

 

 

HB2451- 7 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    (i) The State Board of Education may adopt rules to modify
2the requirements of this Section for any students enrolled in
3grades 9 through 12 if the Governor has declared a disaster due
4to a public health emergency pursuant to Section 7 of the
5Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act.
6(Source: P.A. 102-366, eff. 8-13-21; 102-551, eff. 1-1-22;
7102-864, eff. 5-13-22; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-743, eff.
88-2-24.)
 
9    Section 10. The University of Illinois Act is amended by
10changing Section 8 as follows:
 
11    (110 ILCS 305/8)  (from Ch. 144, par. 29)
12    Sec. 8. Admissions.
13    (a) (Blank).
14    (b) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
15of the departments or colleges of the University unless such
16student also has satisfactorily completed:
17        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
18    the following 5 categories:
19            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
20        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
21        years may be collegiate level instruction;
22            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
23        and government);
24            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through

 

 

HB2451- 8 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
2        fundamentals of computer programming);
3            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
4        agricultural sciences); and
5            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
6        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
7        Language), music, career and technical education,
8        agricultural education, or art;
9        (2) except that institutions may admit individual
10    applicants if the institution determines through
11    assessment or through evaluation based on learning
12    outcomes of the coursework taken, including career and
13    technical education courses and courses taken in a charter
14    school established under Article 27A of the School Code,
15    that the applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills
16    substantially equivalent to the knowledge and skills
17    expected to be acquired in the high school courses
18    required for admission. The Board of Trustees of the
19    University of Illinois shall not discriminate in the
20    University's admissions process against an applicant for
21    admission because of the applicant's enrollment in a
22    charter school established under Article 27A of the School
23    Code. Institutions may also admit 1) applicants who did
24    not have an opportunity to complete the minimum college
25    preparatory curriculum in high school, and 2)
26    educationally disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to

 

 

HB2451- 9 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    the formal organized special assistance programs that are
2    tailored to the needs of such students, providing that in
3    either case, the institution incorporates in the
4    applicant's baccalaureate curriculum courses or other
5    academic activities that compensate for course
6    deficiencies; and
7        (3) except that up to 3 of the 15 units of coursework
8    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
9    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
10    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
11    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
12    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
13        (4) except that the University may not require State
14    public high school graduates, as a condition of
15    acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
16    language courses unless the University permits, as an
17    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
18    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
19    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
20    (c) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
21recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
22coursework required by subsection (b).
23    (d) A student who has graduated from high school and has
24scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
25SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
26test as a prerequisite to admission.

 

 

HB2451- 10 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    (e) The Board of Trustees shall establish an admissions
2process in which honorably discharged veterans are permitted
3to submit an application for admission to the University as a
4freshman student enrolling in the spring semester if the
5veteran was on active duty during the fall semester. The
6University may request that the Department of Veterans'
7Affairs confirm the status of an applicant as an honorably
8discharged veteran who was on active duty during the fall
9semester.
10    (f) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
11University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
12from a public community college in this State with the
13University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
14waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
15forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
16University's transfer admissions process. The University is
17encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
18undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
19low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
20community college in this State. The University shall post
21this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
22Internet website.
23(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
24103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
25    Section 15. The Southern Illinois University Management

 

 

HB2451- 11 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1Act is amended by changing Section 8e as follows:
 
2    (110 ILCS 520/8e)  (from Ch. 144, par. 658e)
3    Sec. 8e. Admissions.
4    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
5of the departments or colleges of the University unless such
6student also has satisfactorily completed:
7        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
8    the following 5 categories:
9            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
10        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
11        years may be collegiate level instruction;
12            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
13        and government);
14            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
15        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
16        fundamentals of computer programming);
17            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
18        agricultural sciences); and
19            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
20        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
21        Language), music, career and technical education,
22        agricultural education, or art;
23        (2) except that institutions may admit individual
24    applicants if the institution determines through
25    assessment or through evaluation based on learning

 

 

HB2451- 12 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    outcomes of the coursework taken, including career and
2    technical education courses and courses taken in a charter
3    school established under Article 27A of the School Code,
4    that the applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills
5    substantially equivalent to the knowledge and skills
6    expected to be acquired in the high school courses
7    required for admission. The Board of Trustees of Southern
8    Illinois University shall not discriminate in the
9    University's admissions process against an applicant for
10    admission because of the applicant's enrollment in a
11    charter school established under Article 27A of the School
12    Code. Institutions may also admit 1) applicants who did
13    not have an opportunity to complete the minimum college
14    preparatory curriculum in high school, and 2)
15    educationally disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to
16    the formal organized special assistance programs that are
17    tailored to the needs of such students, providing that in
18    either case, the institution incorporates in the
19    applicant's baccalaureate curriculum courses or other
20    academic activities that compensate for course
21    deficiencies; and
22        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
23    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
24    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
25    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
26    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5

 

 

HB2451- 13 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
2        (4) except that the University may not require State
3    public high school graduates, as a condition of
4    acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
5    language courses unless the University permits, as an
6    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
7    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
8    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
9    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
10recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
11coursework required by subsection (a).
12    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
13scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
14SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
15test as a prerequisite to admission.
16    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
17which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
18application for admission to the University as a freshman
19student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
20active duty during the fall semester. The University may
21request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
22status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
23was on active duty during the fall semester.
24    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
25University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
26from a public community college in this State with the

 

 

HB2451- 14 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
2waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
3forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
4University's transfer admissions process. The University is
5encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
6undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
7low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
8community college in this State. The University shall post
9this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
10Internet website.
11(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
12103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
13    Section 20. The Chicago State University Law is amended by
14changing Section 5-85 as follows:
 
15    (110 ILCS 660/5-85)
16    Sec. 5-85. Admissions.
17    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
18of the departments or colleges of the Chicago State University
19unless such student also has satisfactorily completed:
20        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
21    the following 5 categories:
22            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
23        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
24        years may be collegiate level instruction;

 

 

HB2451- 15 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
2        and government);
3            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
4        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
5        fundamentals of computer programming);
6            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
7        agricultural sciences); and
8            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
9        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
10        Language), music, career and technical education,
11        agricultural education, or art;
12        (2) except that Chicago State University may admit
13    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
14    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
15    coursework taken, including career and technical education
16    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
17    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
18    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
19    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
20    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
21    Trustees of Chicago State University shall not
22    discriminate in the University's admissions process
23    against an applicant for admission because of the
24    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
25    under Article 27A of the School Code. Chicago State
26    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have

 

 

HB2451- 16 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
2    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
3    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
4    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
5    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
6    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
7    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
8    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
9        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
10    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
11    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
12    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
13    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
14    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
15        (4) except that Chicago State University may not
16    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
17    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
18    language courses unless the University permits, as an
19    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
20    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
21    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
22    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
23recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
24coursework required by subsection (a).
25    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
26scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or

 

 

HB2451- 17 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
2test as a prerequisite to admission.
3    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
4which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
5application for admission to the University as a freshman
6student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
7active duty during the fall semester. The University may
8request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
9status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
10was on active duty during the fall semester.
11    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
12University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
13from a public community college in this State with the
14University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
15waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
16forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
17University's transfer admissions process. The University is
18encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
19undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
20low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
21community college in this State. The University shall post
22this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
23Internet website.
24(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
25103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 

 

 

HB2451- 18 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    Section 25. The Eastern Illinois University Law is amended
2by changing Section 10-85 as follows:
 
3    (110 ILCS 665/10-85)
4    Sec. 10-85. Admissions.
5    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
6of the departments or colleges of the Eastern Illinois
7University unless such student also has satisfactorily
8completed:
9        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
10    the following 5 categories:
11            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
12        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
13        years may be collegiate level instruction;
14            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
15        and government);
16            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
17        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
18        fundamentals of computer programming);
19            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
20        agricultural sciences); and
21            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
22        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
23        Language), music, career and technical education,
24        agricultural education, or art;
25        (2) except that Eastern Illinois University may admit

 

 

HB2451- 19 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
2    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
3    coursework taken, including career and technical education
4    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
5    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
6    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
7    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
8    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
9    Trustees of Eastern Illinois University shall not
10    discriminate in the University's admissions process
11    against an applicant for admission because of the
12    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
13    under Article 27A of the School Code. Eastern Illinois
14    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
15    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
16    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
17    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
18    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
19    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
20    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
21    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
22    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
23        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
24    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
25    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
26    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences

 

 

HB2451- 20 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
2    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
3        (4) except that Eastern Illinois University may not
4    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
5    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
6    language courses unless the University permits, as an
7    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
8    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
9    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
10    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
11recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
12coursework required by subsection (a).
13    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
14scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
15SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
16test as a prerequisite to admission.
17    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
18which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
19application for admission to the University as a freshman
20student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
21active duty during the fall semester. The University may
22request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
23status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
24was on active duty during the fall semester.
25    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
26University shall provide all Illinois students transferring

 

 

HB2451- 21 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1from a public community college in this State with the
2University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
3waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
4forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
5University's transfer admissions process. The University is
6encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
7undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
8low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
9community college in this State. The University shall post
10this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
11Internet website.
12(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
13103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
14    Section 30. The Governors State University Law is amended
15by changing Section 15-85 as follows:
 
16    (110 ILCS 670/15-85)
17    Sec. 15-85. Admissions.
18    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
19of the departments or colleges of the Governors State
20University unless such student also has satisfactorily
21completed:
22        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
23    the following 5 categories:
24            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and

 

 

HB2451- 22 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
2        years may be collegiate level instruction;
3            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
4        and government);
5            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
6        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
7        fundamentals of computer programming);
8            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
9        agricultural sciences); and
10            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
11        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
12        Language), music, career and technical education,
13        agricultural education, or art;
14        (2) except that Governors State University may admit
15    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
16    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
17    coursework taken, including career and technical education
18    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
19    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
20    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
21    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
22    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
23    Trustees of Governors State University shall not
24    discriminate in the University's admissions process
25    against an applicant for admission because of the
26    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established

 

 

HB2451- 23 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    under Article 27A of the School Code. Governors State
2    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
3    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
4    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
5    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
6    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
7    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
8    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
9    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
10    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
11        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
12    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
13    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
14    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
15    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
16    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
17        (4) except that Governors State University may not
18    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
19    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
20    language courses unless the University permits, as an
21    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
22    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
23    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
24    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
25recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
26coursework required by subsection (a).

 

 

HB2451- 24 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
2scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
3SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
4test as a prerequisite to admission.
5    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
6which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
7application for admission to the University as a freshman
8student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
9active duty during the fall semester. The University may
10request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
11status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
12was on active duty during the fall semester.
13    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
14University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
15from a public community college in this State with the
16University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
17waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
18forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
19University's transfer admissions process. The University is
20encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
21undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
22low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
23community college in this State. The University shall post
24this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
25Internet website.
26(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;

 

 

HB2451- 25 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
2    Section 35. The Illinois State University Law is amended
3by changing Section 20-85 as follows:
 
4    (110 ILCS 675/20-85)
5    Sec. 20-85. Admissions.
6    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
7of the departments or colleges of the Illinois State
8University unless such student also has satisfactorily
9completed:
10        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
11    the following 5 categories:
12            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
13        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
14        years may be collegiate level instruction;
15            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
16        and government);
17            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
18        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
19        fundamentals of computer programming);
20            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
21        agricultural sciences); and
22            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
23        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
24        Language), music, career and technical education,

 

 

HB2451- 26 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1        agricultural education, or art;
2        (2) except that Illinois State University may admit
3    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
4    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
5    coursework taken, including career and technical education
6    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
7    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
8    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
9    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
10    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
11    Trustees of Illinois State University shall not
12    discriminate in the University's admissions process
13    against an applicant for admission because of the
14    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
15    under Article 27A of the School Code. Illinois State
16    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
17    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
18    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
19    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
20    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
21    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
22    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
23    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
24    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
25        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
26    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be

 

 

HB2451- 27 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
2    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
3    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
4    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
5        (4) except that Illinois State University may not
6    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
7    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
8    language courses unless the University permits, as an
9    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
10    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
11    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
12    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
13recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
14coursework required by subsection (a).
15    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
16scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
17SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
18test as a prerequisite to admission.
19    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
20which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
21application for admission to the University as a freshman
22student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
23active duty during the fall semester. The University may
24request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
25status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
26was on active duty during the fall semester.

 

 

HB2451- 28 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
2University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
3from a public community college in this State with the
4University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
5waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
6forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
7University's transfer admissions process. The University is
8encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
9undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
10low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
11community college in this State. The University shall post
12this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
13Internet website.
14(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
15103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
16    Section 40. The Northeastern Illinois University Law is
17amended by changing Section 25-85 as follows:
 
18    (110 ILCS 680/25-85)
19    Sec. 25-85. Admissions.
20    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
21of the departments or colleges of the Northeastern Illinois
22University unless such student also has satisfactorily
23completed:
24        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from

 

 

HB2451- 29 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    the following 5 categories:
2            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
3        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
4        years may be collegiate level instruction;
5            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
6        and government);
7            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
8        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
9        fundamentals of computer programming);
10            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
11        agricultural sciences); and
12            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
13        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
14        Language), music, career and technical education,
15        agricultural education, or art;
16        (2) except that Northeastern Illinois University may
17    admit individual applicants if it determines through
18    assessment or through evaluation based on learning
19    outcomes of the coursework taken, including career and
20    technical education courses and courses taken in a charter
21    school established under Article 27A of the School Code,
22    that the applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills
23    substantially equivalent to the knowledge and skills
24    expected to be acquired in the high school courses
25    required for admission. The Board of Trustees of
26    Northeastern Illinois University shall not discriminate in

 

 

HB2451- 30 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    the University's admissions process against an applicant
2    for admission because of the applicant's enrollment in a
3    charter school established under Article 27A of the School
4    Code. Northeastern Illinois University may also admit (i)
5    applicants who did not have an opportunity to complete the
6    minimum college preparatory curriculum in high school, and
7    (ii) educationally disadvantaged applicants who are
8    admitted to the formal organized special assistance
9    programs that are tailored to the needs of such students,
10    providing that in either case, the institution
11    incorporates in the applicant's baccalaureate curriculum
12    courses or other academic activities that compensate for
13    course deficiencies; and
14        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
15    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
16    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
17    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
18    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
19    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
20        (4) except that Northeastern Illinois University may
21    not require State public high school graduates, as a
22    condition of acceptance, to have completed any years of
23    foreign language courses unless the University permits, as
24    an alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
25    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
26    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.

 

 

HB2451- 31 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
2recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
3coursework required by subsection (a).
4    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
5scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
6SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
7test as a prerequisite to admission.
8    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
9which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
10application for admission to the University as a freshman
11student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
12active duty during the fall semester. The University may
13request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
14status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
15was on active duty during the fall semester.
16    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
17University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
18from a public community college in this State with the
19University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
20waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
21forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
22University's transfer admissions process. The University is
23encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
24undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
25low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
26community college in this State. The University shall post

 

 

HB2451- 32 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
2Internet website.
3(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
4103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
5    Section 45. The Northern Illinois University Law is
6amended by changing Section 30-85 as follows:
 
7    (110 ILCS 685/30-85)
8    Sec. 30-85. Admissions.
9    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
10of the departments or colleges of the Northern Illinois
11University unless such student also has satisfactorily
12completed:
13        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
14    the following 5 categories:
15            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
16        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
17        years may be collegiate level instruction;
18            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
19        and government);
20            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
21        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
22        fundamentals of computer programming);
23            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
24        agricultural sciences); and

 

 

HB2451- 33 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
2        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
3        Language), music, career and technical education,
4        agricultural education, or art;
5        (2) except that Northern Illinois University may admit
6    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
7    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
8    coursework taken, including career and technical education
9    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
10    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
11    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
12    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
13    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
14    Trustees of Northern Illinois University shall not
15    discriminate in the University's admissions process
16    against an applicant for admission because of the
17    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
18    under Article 27A of the School Code. Northern Illinois
19    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
20    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
21    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
22    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
23    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
24    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
25    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
26    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic

 

 

HB2451- 34 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
2        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
3    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
4    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
5    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
6    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
7    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
8        (4) except that Northern Illinois University may not
9    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
10    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
11    language courses unless the University permits, as an
12    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,
13    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
14    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
15    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
16recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
17coursework required by subsection (a).
18    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
19scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
20SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
21test as a prerequisite to admission.
22    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
23which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
24application for admission to the University as a freshman
25student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
26active duty during the fall semester. The University may

 

 

HB2451- 35 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
2status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
3was on active duty during the fall semester.
4    (e) Beginning with the 2025-2026 academic year, the
5University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
6from a public community college in this State with the
7University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
8waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
9forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
10University's transfer admissions process. The University is
11encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
12undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for
13low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
14community college in this State. The University shall post
15this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
16Internet website.
17(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
18103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
19    Section 50. The Western Illinois University Law is amended
20by changing Section 35-85 as follows:
 
21    (110 ILCS 690/35-85)
22    Sec. 35-85. Admissions.
23    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
24of the departments or colleges of the Western Illinois

 

 

HB2451- 36 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1University unless such student also has satisfactorily
2completed:
3        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
4    the following 5 categories:
5            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
6        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
7        years may be collegiate level instruction;
8            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
9        and government);
10            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
11        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
12        fundamentals of computer programming);
13            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences or
14        agricultural sciences); and
15            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language
16        (which may be deemed to include American Sign
17        Language), music, career and technical education,
18        agricultural education, or art;
19        (2) except that Western Illinois University may admit
20    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
21    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
22    coursework taken, including career and technical education
23    courses and courses taken in a charter school established
24    under Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
25    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
26    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the

 

 

HB2451- 37 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
2    Trustees of Western Illinois University shall not
3    discriminate in the University's admissions process
4    against an applicant for admission because of the
5    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
6    under Article 27A of the School Code. Western Illinois
7    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
8    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
9    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
10    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
11    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
12    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
13    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
14    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
15    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
16        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
17    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
18    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
19    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
20    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
21    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1); and .
22        (4) except that Western Illinois University may not
23    require State public high school graduates, as a condition
24    of acceptance, to have completed any years of foreign
25    language courses unless the University permits, as an
26    alternative to completion of a foreign language course,

 

 

HB2451- 38 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1    attainment of a College and Career Pathway Endorsement
2    under the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness Act.
3    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
4recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
5coursework required by subsection (a).
6    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
7scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or
8SAT shall not be required to take a high school equivalency
9test as a prerequisite to admission.
10    (d) The Board shall establish an admissions process in
11which honorably discharged veterans are permitted to submit an
12application for admission to the University as a freshman
13student enrolling in the spring semester if the veteran was on
14active duty during the fall semester. The University may
15request that the Department of Veterans' Affairs confirm the
16status of an applicant as an honorably discharged veteran who
17was on active duty during the fall semester.
18    (e) Beginning with the 20245-2026 academic year, the
19University shall provide all Illinois students transferring
20from a public community college in this State with the
21University's undergraduate transfer admissions application fee
22waiver policy and, if such a policy exists, any application or
23forms necessary to apply for a fee waiver as part of the
24University's transfer admissions process. The University is
25encouraged to develop a policy to automatically waive the
26undergraduate transfer admissions application fee for

 

 

HB2451- 39 -LRB104 09310 LNS 19368 b

1low-income Illinois students transferring from a public
2community college in this State. The University shall post
3this policy in an easily accessible place on the University's
4Internet website.
5(Source: P.A. 102-403, eff. 1-1-22; 102-404, eff. 1-1-22;
6103-936, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
7    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
8becoming law.