|
met established standards; |
(3) ensure graduates meet the educational and legal |
requirements for the level of licensure that the graduates |
are seeking; |
(4) facilitate graduates' endorsement to other states, |
territories, and countries as appropriate; and |
(5) provide the public and prospective students with a |
published list of approved nursing programs that meet the |
standards established by law and the Board's rules. |
(b) To establish a new registered professional nursing |
education program, the proposed program's administrator must |
notify the Department of the intention to establish a new |
program. The Department may approve the proposed program after |
a recommendation from the Board, upon the successful |
completion of the following process and a site visit: |
(1) The proposed program must provide a feasibility |
study that includes the following information to the |
Board: |
(A) governing institution approval and ongoing |
support; |
(B) evidence of adequate institutional financial |
support that can be provided to the program on an |
ongoing basis; |
(C) availability of educational resources, such as |
human resources, physical resources (including access |
to a library), clinical resources, and technical |
|
learning resources; |
(D) evidence of the institution meeting the Board |
of Higher Education's requirements and the |
accreditation requirements by a national accrediting |
body recognized by the United States Department of |
Education; |
(E) evidence of the nursing program actively |
seeking pre-accreditation or candidate accreditation |
from a national accrediting body for nursing education |
recognized by the United States Department of |
Education; |
(F) evidence of adequate numbers of clinical |
partnerships; |
(G) availability of qualified faculty members and |
employment of a program director whose qualifications |
must meet the requirements set forth by the |
Department; and |
(H) a proposed timeline for initiating the |
program. |
(2) After the feasibility study has been submitted to |
the Department, the proposed program must complete the |
following program components and processes and submit |
verification of completion to the Department: |
(A) development of a comprehensive program |
curriculum; |
(B) submission of the program's ongoing systematic |
|
evaluation plan; |
(C) establishment of policies for student |
admission, progression, retention, and graduation; and |
(D) establishment of policies and strategies to |
address students' needs, including those with |
documented disabilities. |
(c) Nursing education rules must be based on |
evidence-based criteria and used to monitor the quality of a |
registered professional nursing education program. All |
registered professional nursing education programs must meet |
the following requirements: |
(1) The program must have written and published |
criteria for student admission, progression, and |
performance. |
(2) The written policies and procedures of the program |
must be reviewed and approved by the program's identified |
governing body and be readily accessible according to |
accreditation standards. |
(3) The program must have policies in place that hold |
students responsible for professional behavior, including |
honesty and integrity, as outlined in the program's |
policies or student handbook. Such handbook or policies |
should be made available to the Department upon request. |
(4) The administrator of the program must (i) hold a |
graduate degree in nursing, (ii) have a minimum of 2 years |
of clinical nursing and nursing education experience, |
|
(iii) hold a current, active, and unencumbered license as |
a registered nurse in this State, (iv) have institutional |
authority and administrative responsibility over the |
program, and (v) be responsible for submitting the |
Department's annual report, consisting of aggregate |
program data as determined by the Board, by the provided |
deadline. |
(d) Faculty members of a registered professional nursing |
education program must meet the following criteria: |
(1) possess the requisite academic and experiential |
qualifications; and |
(2) hold either: |
(A) a graduate degree in nursing with at least 2 |
years of practical experience, if the faculty member |
teaches didactic nursing courses; or |
(B) a current, active, and unencumbered license as |
a registered nurse in this State and a graduate degree |
in nursing, if the faculty member teaches clinical, |
lab, or simulation experience courses. |
A faculty member who does not hold a graduate degree in |
nursing, but who holds a bachelor's degree in nursing, may |
teach didactic nursing, clinical, lab, or simulation |
experience courses if the faculty member obtains a waiver from |
the Division of Professional Regulation. A faculty member who |
does not meet the requirements of paragraph (2) of this |
subsection but who obtains a waiver to teach shall be |
|
supervised by a faculty member with a graduate degree in |
nursing. No more than 20% of a program's faculty may have a |
waiver at one time. |
(e) A registered professional nursing program must meet |
the following training and development requirements: |
(1) Faculty members must be oriented in accordance |
with institutional policies and procedures. Orientation |
may include basic instruction in teaching, adult learning |
principles, learning assessment, curriculum development, |
and other subjects included as appropriate to meet the |
diverse needs of students and promote student learning and |
success. |
(2) Newly hired faculty members must be mentored by |
experientially prepared colleagues. |
(3) Faculty members must participate in ongoing |
professional development. |
(4) The program must provide access to faculty |
development activities. |
(f) To maintain enrollment in a registered professional |
nursing program, students must meet health standards, criminal |
background requirements, and other compliance standards as |
required by the program's clinical affiliation agreements. |
(g) The curriculum of a registered professional nursing |
program must meet the following requirements: |
(1) be built on a foundation of biological, physical, |
social, and behavioral sciences; |
|
(2) have a written systematic evaluation plan in |
place; |
(3) have didactic and clinical content that prepares |
graduates to practice safely, utilize the nursing process |
in a variety of clinical settings, and meet the holistic |
needs of diverse individuals, families, communities, and |
populations across the life span; |
(4) combined with clinical experiences, prepare the |
graduate to take the NCLEX-RN exam for licensure; |
(5) have strategies that are in place to remediate |
errors and near-misses in the clinical setting; |
(6) meet the standards of the program's accrediting |
body; |
(7) have clinical affiliation agreements in place for |
clinical experiences; |
(8) have distance education methods that are |
consistent with the accreditation and regulatory |
standards; and |
(9) provide direct care clinical experiences with |
patients, as defined by accrediting and regulatory bodies. |
(h) A professional nursing education program shall not use |
simulation as a substitute for traditional clinical |
experiences for more than 25% of a course's total clinical |
hours. Programs may seek an exception to this subsection from |
the Board and must follow the requirements set forth in the |
"Guidelines for the Use of Simulation by Prelicensure Nursing |
|
Programs" as published on the Department's website. |
(h-5) The program must develop criteria to evaluate the |
simulation activities and allow students to evaluate the |
simulation experience on an ongoing basis. |
(i) The program's resources must be sufficient to support |
the program's needs to meet its mission, goals, and outcomes. |
The program must provide accessibility resources to all |
students, including those enrolled in distance education, and |
institutional resources that assist students with academic and |
financial challenges. |
(j) A registered professional nursing program must be |
accredited by a national accrediting body recognized by the |
United States Department of Education. If the program has its |
accreditation revoked, the program must submit a copy of the |
notice of revocation from the accrediting body to the Board |
within 30 days after receipt. |
(k) If the Department obtains evidence at any time that a |
registered professional nursing program does not comply with |
this Act, the Department may perform an unannounced site |
visit. The Department shall have the discretion to determine |
if a complaint is unwarranted and not have to conduct a site |
visit. Such evidence may include, but is not limited to, the |
following: |
(1) complaints from students, faculty, or clinical |
agencies; |
(2) program administrator turnover of more than 3 |
|
administrators in 5 years, excluding interim appointments; |
(3) unexplained nursing faculty turnover or cuts in |
the number of nursing faculty; |
(4) a pattern of NCLEX pass rates less than 75%, as |
defined by rule; and |
(5) loss of national programmatic accreditation. |
The Department has the discretion to determine if a |
complaint is unwarranted and if a site visit must be |
conducted. |
(l) No program shall be placed on probation until calendar |
year 2026 NCLEX results can be measured. Any program with |
NCLEX pass rates for calendar year 2026 less than 75% shall |
receive a written warning of noncompliance from the Division |
of Professional Regulation of the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation pursuant to Title 68, Part 1300, |
Section 340 of the Illinois Administrative Code, except the |
Division may defer the written warning for an additional year |
if the program is within a public university and 55% or more of |
the university's total student population received Pell |
Grants. |
(a) All registered professional nurse education programs |
must be reviewed by the Board and approved by the Department |
before the successful completion of such a program may be |
applied toward meeting the requirements for registered |
professional nurse licensure under this Act. Any program |
changing the level of educational preparation or the |
|
relationship with or to the parent institution or establishing |
an extension of an existing program must request a review by |
the Board and approval by the Department. The Board shall |
review and make a recommendation for the approval or |
disapproval of a program by the Department based on the |
following criteria: |
(1) a feasibility study that describes the need for |
the program and the facilities used, the potential of the |
program to recruit faculty and students, financial support |
for the program, and other criteria, as established by |
rule; |
(2) program curriculum that meets all State |
requirements; |
(2.5) measurement of program effectiveness based on a |
passage rate of all graduates over the 3 most recent |
calendar years without reference to first-time test |
takers; |
(3) the administration of the program by a Nurse |
Administrator and the involvement of a Nurse Administrator |
in the development of the program; |
(4) the occurrence of a site visit prior to approval; |
and |
(5) beginning December 31, 2022, obtaining and |
maintaining programmatic accreditation by a national |
accrediting body for nursing education recognized by the |
United States Department of Education and approved by the |
|
Department. |
The Department and Board of Nursing shall be notified |
within 30 days if the program loses its accreditation. The |
Department may adopt rules regarding a warning process and |
reaccreditation. |
(b) In order to obtain initial Department approval and to |
maintain Department approval, a registered professional |
nursing program must meet all of the following requirements: |
(1) The institution responsible for conducting the |
program and the Nurse Administrator must ensure that |
individual faculty members are academically and |
professionally competent. |
(2) The program curriculum must contain all applicable |
requirements established by rule, including both theory |
and clinical components. |
(3) The passage rates of the program's graduating |
classes on the State-approved licensure exam must be |
deemed satisfactory by the Department. |
(c) Program site visits to an institution conducting or |
hosting a professional nursing program may be made at the |
discretion of the Nursing Coordinator or upon recommendation |
of the Board. Full routine site visits may be conducted by the |
Department for periodic evaluation. Such visits shall be used |
to determine compliance with this Act. Full routine site |
visits must be announced and may be waived at the discretion of |
the Department if the program maintains accreditation with an |
|
accrediting body recognized by the United States Department of |
Education and approved by the Department. |
(d) Any institution conducting a registered professional |
nursing program that wishes to discontinue the program must do |
each of the following: |
(1) Notify the Department, in writing, of its intent |
to discontinue the program. |
(2) Continue to meet the requirements of this Act and |
the rules adopted thereunder until the official date of |
termination of the program. |
(3) Notify the Department of the date on which the |
last student shall graduate from the program and the |
program shall terminate. |
(4) Assist remaining students in the continuation of |
their education in the event of program termination prior |
to the graduation of the program's final student. |
(5) Upon the closure of the program, notify the |
Department, in writing, of the location of student and |
graduate records' storage. |
(m) (e) Out-of-State registered professional nursing |
education programs planning to offer clinical practice |
experiences in this State must meet the requirements set forth |
in this Section and must meet the clinical and faculty |
requirements for institutions outside of this State, as |
established by rule. The institution responsible for |
conducting an out-of-State registered professional nursing |
|
education program and the administrator of the program shall |
be responsible for ensuring that the individual faculty and |
preceptors overseeing the clinical experience are academically |
and professionally competent. |
(n) To operate under this Act, a registered professional |
nursing education program must maintain approval by the |
Department in accordance with the following: |
(1) A registered professional nursing education |
program must complete and submit an annual evaluation |
report to the Department and maintain programmatic |
accreditation by a national accrediting body for nursing |
education recognized by the United States Department of |
Education. |
(2) The Board and the Department shall review and |
analyze various sources of information regarding program |
performance before granting annual approval, including, |
but not limited to: |
(A) previous Board survey visits and reports; |
(B) annual report data; |
(C) evidence of accreditation by a national |
accrediting body for nursing education recognized by |
the United States Department of Education; |
(D) Board-recognized national accreditation |
visits, reports, and other pertinent national |
accreditation documents provided by the program; and |
(E) results of ongoing programmatic evaluation. |
|
(o) The Department shall make the policies and procedures |
related to probationary status transparent, and related forms |
shall be readily available to program administrators on the |
Department's website. |
(Source: P.A. 103-533, eff. 1-1-24.) |
(225 ILCS 65/60-10) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028) |
Sec. 60-10. RN licensure by examination. |
(a) Each applicant who successfully meets the requirements |
of this Section is eligible for licensure as a registered |
professional nurse. |
(b) An applicant for licensure by examination to practice |
as a registered professional nurse is eligible for licensure |
when the following requirements are met: |
(1) the applicant has submitted a completed written |
application, on forms provided by the Department, and |
fees, as established by the Department; |
(2) the applicant has graduated from a professional |
nursing education program approved by the Department or |
has been granted a certificate of completion of |
pre-licensure requirements from another United States |
jurisdiction; |
(3) the applicant has successfully completed a |
licensure examination approved by the Department; |
(4) (blank); |
|
(5) the applicant has submitted to the criminal |
history records check required under Section 50-35 of this |
Act; |
(6) the applicant has submitted, either to the |
Department or its designated testing service, a fee |
covering the cost of providing the examination; failure to |
appear for the examination on the scheduled date at the |
time and place specified after the applicant's application |
for examination has been received and acknowledged by the |
Department or the designated testing service shall result |
in the forfeiture of the examination fee; and |
(7) the applicant has met all other requirements |
established by the Department by rule. |
An applicant for licensure by examination may take the |
Department-approved examination in another jurisdiction. |
(b-3) An applicant who graduates from a professional |
nursing program in this State on or after January 1, 2024 (the |
effective date of Public Act 103-533) this amendatory Act of |
the 103rd General Assembly and does not take the licensure |
examination within 180 days after his or her degree is |
conferred by the institution of higher education or fails the |
licensure examination for a second time shall be required to |
demonstrate proof of completion of a National Council |
Licensure Examination preparatory class or a comparable test |
preparatory program before taking a subsequent licensure |
examination or the graduate may return to the institution of |
|
higher education from which he or she graduated which shall |
provide remedial educational resources to the graduate at no |
cost to the graduate. Such an applicant must contact the |
institution of higher education from which he or she graduated |
prior to retesting. |
(b-4) (Blank). All professional nursing programs in |
probationary status on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 103rd General Assembly and subject to a program |
revision plan shall be deemed in good standing for a period of |
3 years beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 103rd General Assembly. Prior to September 1, 2026, no |
professional nursing program shall be placed on probationary |
status for failing to reach a passage rate of less than 75%. |
(b-5) If an applicant for licensure by examination |
neglects, fails, or refuses to take an examination or fails to |
pass an examination for a license within 3 years of the date of |
initial application, the application shall be denied. When an |
applicant's application is denied due to the failure to pass |
the examination within the 3-year period, that applicant must |
undertake an additional course of education as defined by rule |
prior to submitting a new application for licensure. Any new |
application must be accompanied by the required fee, evidence |
of meeting the requirements in force at the time of the new |
application, and evidence of completion of the additional |
course of education prescribed by rule. |
(c) An applicant for licensure by examination shall have |
|
one year after the date of notification of the successful |
completion of the examination to apply to the Department for a |
license. If an applicant fails to apply within one year, the |
applicant shall be required to retake and pass the examination |
unless licensed in another jurisdiction of the United States. |
(d) An applicant for licensure by examination who passes |
the Department-approved licensure examination for professional |
nursing may obtain employment as a license-pending registered |
nurse and practice under the direction of a registered |
professional nurse or an advanced practice registered nurse |
until such time as he or she receives his or her license to |
practice or until the license is denied. In no instance shall |
any such applicant practice or be employed in any management |
capacity. An individual may be employed as a license-pending |
registered nurse if all of the following criteria are met: |
(1) He or she has completed and passed the |
Department-approved licensure exam and presents to the |
employer the official written notification indicating |
successful passage of the licensure examination. |
(2) He or she has completed and submitted to the |
Department an application for licensure under this Section |
as a registered professional nurse. |
(3) He or she has submitted the required licensure |
fee. |
(4) He or she has met all other requirements |
established by rule, including having submitted to a |
|
criminal history records check. |
(e) The privilege to practice as a license-pending |
registered nurse shall terminate with the occurrence of any of |
the following: |
(1) Six months have passed since the official date of |
passing the licensure exam as inscribed on the formal |
written notification indicating passage of the exam. The |
6-month license-pending period may be extended if more |
time is needed by the Department to process the licensure |
application. |
(2) Receipt of the registered professional nurse |
license from the Department. |
(3) Notification from the Department that the |
application for licensure has been refused. |
(4) A request by the Department that the individual |
terminate practicing as a license-pending registered nurse |
until an official decision is made by the Department to |
grant or deny a registered professional nurse license. |
(f) (Blank). |
(g) (Blank). |
(h) (Blank). |
(i) (Blank). |
(j) (Blank). |
(k) All applicants for registered professional nurse |
licensure have 3 years after the date of application to |
complete the application process. If the process has not been |
|
completed within 3 years after the date of application, the |
application shall be denied, the fee forfeited, and the |
applicant must reapply and meet the requirements in effect at |
the time of reapplication. |
(l) All applicants for registered nurse licensure by |
examination who are graduates of practical nursing educational |
programs in a country other than the United States and its |
territories shall have their nursing education credentials |
evaluated by a Department-approved nursing credentialing |
evaluation service. No such applicant may be issued a license |
under this Act unless the applicant's program is deemed by the |
nursing credentialing evaluation service to be equivalent to a |
professional nursing education program approved by the |
Department. An applicant who has graduated from a nursing |
educational program outside of the United States or its |
territories and whose first language is not English shall |
submit evidence of English proficiency, as defined by rule. |
(m) (Blank). |
(Source: P.A. 103-533, eff. 1-1-24; 103-686, eff. 1-1-25.) |
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect on |
September 1, 2026. |