The current policy for skipping a grade or moving ahead in reading and mathcalls for schools or parents to refer students and says they are only eligible if they exceed standards on the state standardized test. But only 4 percent of elementary school students exceed standards, and no students in either math or readinghit that mark in more than 100 schools.
Education money should follow the student. It should be paid in cash one year at a time to the parents. Let them find school that best fits their child and his needs. If the child isn’t meeting the goals or is absent too often or is disruptive reduce or eliminate the money. Make the parents responsible for their own child. The State cannot do it!
Last edited 10 months ago by Eugene from a payphone
Old Joe
10 months ago
All the kids are above average……
mqyl
10 months ago
Yep, the sooner you get the poor performers out into the adult working world, the better for society. Pretzel logic.
Hello, Indiana!
10 months ago
Skip two grades. Hell, skip them all. One doesn’t need much of an education to be a lookout for drug dealers or bag fries at MacDonald’s. Follow the third world example the Dems want us to be and put ‘em all to work at age nine.
Your comment may not be as outlandish as you think. If a 5th-grade public school student is at a 3rd-grade level, is it a good use of taxpayer money for that student to go through three more grades to graduate at a 4th or 5th-grade level?
Sad thing I heard today from a relative who teaches high school freshmen English. On quite a few days, he reads passages out loud, he told me. Why? I asked. “Because they can’t read.” That’s in what I will only say is in a formerly top notch suburban public high school.
Deb
10 months ago
Forget about skipping grades when students can’t perform at grade level.
Fed Up Taxpayer
10 months ago
When CPS lowers the testing standards, they will be able to advance more kids as that hurdle of “exceeding” standards becomes easier. It doesn’t seem like a policy change when CPS continues to advance students that can barely read and do math now. If the families had real school choice like 33 other states, their kids wouldn’t be tied down to failing schools and teachers.
Ataraxis
10 months ago
DEI lives!
What an insane policy.
It just sets these kids up for failure.
You can be sure that after this program is implemented, there will be no success metrics available.
A largely unasked question is becoming glaring: Is Illinois doing all it should to use artificial intelligence to make government cost less and work better? So far, the evidence says no.
Education money should follow the student. It should be paid in cash one year at a time to the parents. Let them find school that best fits their child and his needs. If the child isn’t meeting the goals or is absent too often or is disruptive reduce or eliminate the money. Make the parents responsible for their own child. The State cannot do it!
All the kids are above average……
Yep, the sooner you get the poor performers out into the adult working world, the better for society. Pretzel logic.
Skip two grades. Hell, skip them all. One doesn’t need much of an education to be a lookout for drug dealers or bag fries at MacDonald’s. Follow the third world example the Dems want us to be and put ‘em all to work at age nine.
Your comment may not be as outlandish as you think. If a 5th-grade public school student is at a 3rd-grade level, is it a good use of taxpayer money for that student to go through three more grades to graduate at a 4th or 5th-grade level?
Sad thing I heard today from a relative who teaches high school freshmen English. On quite a few days, he reads passages out loud, he told me. Why? I asked. “Because they can’t read.” That’s in what I will only say is in a formerly top notch suburban public high school.
Forget about skipping grades when students can’t perform at grade level.
When CPS lowers the testing standards, they will be able to advance more kids as that hurdle of “exceeding” standards becomes easier. It doesn’t seem like a policy change when CPS continues to advance students that can barely read and do math now. If the families had real school choice like 33 other states, their kids wouldn’t be tied down to failing schools and teachers.
DEI lives!
What an insane policy.
It just sets these kids up for failure.
You can be sure that after this program is implemented, there will be no success metrics available.