“It’s impossible for Peoria to be successful, for Peoria to have a good workforce, for Peoria to thrive, if kids can’t read or do math at grade level.” – Wirepoints on Peoria’s 25News Now

Wirepoints was interviewed by Peoria’s 25News Now to discuss the failure of the Peoria public school system to educate students in the tri-county area.

In Peoria School District 150, just 1% of students at Manual High School, only 3% at Peoria High and 31% of students at Richwoods High, can read at grade level, according to state numbers for the past academic year.

Read the 25News Now article here

The results are just as bad across all grade levels, we said, and results for children are dire: “if a child can’t read in the 3rd grade, he or she won’t have success. He or she will struggle to do English in the 5th grade, Science in the 7th grade. Once they lose their ability to keep up in class, they act up, they don’t focus and it’s really hard for them to get back into the game.”

Peoria’s superintendent had this, among other things, to say: “These challenges are real to our city and follow our children into the classroom…Historical racism/classism has contributed to the marginalization of most of our student population.”

Read more from Wirepoints:

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Longtime Area Resident
2 years ago

Richwoods High School is the only “acceptable” Peoria public HS. And it has a 31% Reading level!! These scores show why so many legal international Peoria families make sure that their kids go to Non District 150 Peoria schools

David Hardy
2 years ago

Beth Crider mentions everything but poor teacher performance and administrative bloat.

Poor Taxpayer
2 years ago

It cannot be competitive in Illinois. Teachers are Unionized and it is all about the money, benefits and overly generous pensions at young ages.
It has been this way for a few decades now. The pension obligations are starting to drown the budgets.

Hello, Indiana!
2 years ago

One doesn’t really need much of an education to ride the welfare gravy train their entire life. Your progressive/ socialist/ Marxist government in Springrad knows this and encourages it.

Rick
2 years ago

You don’t need to read or do math to work boning and parting chickens in a Tyson chicken plant either. Nothing America builds anymore is beautiful, the buildings are all ugly, our cities are ugly and decaying, our morals are ugly, our education system is ugly, our leaders are ugly grifters. And Biden just let 12 million or more illiterate migrants in. Our money is printed from thin air, the world hates us because we’ve been robbing poor countries blind, we give them money we printed yesterday, they give us their valuable commodities. Why do you think Niger just dumped… Read more »

Last edited 2 years ago by Rick
Hello, Indiana!
2 years ago
Reply to  Rick

Yet people still flock here to get an education. Now, why is that? Why do people come from all over the world to get an American education, yet people born in this country seem to feel a life of enabling handouts is a course to follow? Because our system of giving a hand up has become a gravy train. Frankly, I feel that those who have the will to, do and are successful at it. Those that sit about licking wounds while others come to America and go right around them on the ladder have a self defeating attitude that… Read more »

SadStateofAffairs
2 years ago
Reply to  Rick

Absolutely dead on. I started to feel I was on the wrong side many years ago. I won’t go down without a fight but I am afraid this country is done for. They completely sold us out to line their pockets and enrich themselves.

jajujon
2 years ago

Of course Peoria’s superintendent blames racism. It’s the only card she can play. ISBE data isn’t a surprise to her. She knows the dismal failure of her team. Her response is so typical of someone who can’t own up to their responsibilities. But keep the fat paychecks coming . . .

And since when is reading and math considered narrow measures of success? Do you think all that DIE BS are better measures? I’m certain she does.

I hope the Peoria public rises up and demands change, but I’m not confident.

Bobby James
2 years ago
Reply to  jajujon

The results for the white students were unacceptable as well so how does racism explain their results?

Hello, Indiana!
2 years ago
Reply to  Bobby James

Lightfoot loved to cry whitey, even though her city council and city offices were predominantly and disproportionately black. “ It’s the same old song …” The Four Tops.

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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