Illinois Students Are Struggling. Lowering Standards Masks the Crisis. – RealClear Education

Hannah Schmid, of the Illinois Policy Institute: "With improved reading policies and a back-to-basics approach to reading instruction, Illinois can improve. But not if it follows the example of neighboring Wisconsin where lawmakers lowered the state standards to hide struggling students behind inflated proficiency rates. ... Eight Illinois education organizations recommended the same for Illinois."
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Mark F
1 year ago

And Chicago teachers want how BIG a pay raise for their dismal performance?

Bill also
1 year ago

Any parent who’s child can’t read at grade level or above is guilty of child abuse. They should be treated as such. You can’t bring a child into this world and expect to take no responsibility for them.

James
1 year ago
Reply to  Bill also

Right you are, guvna.

ProzacPlease
1 year ago
Reply to  Bill also

That’s really deep and profound. Keep showing us exactly why kids in schools staffed by the professionals who are paid to teach can’t read at grade level. We are understanding more with each comment.

Daskoterzar
1 year ago
Reply to  Bill also

I agree kids need both home and school to thrive. No doubt. But changing the scoring to make the results “appear better” does nothing but enhance the ability of school districts to continually increase the costs of education with less and less results. Rather than trying to solve the parent participation problem first…let’s stop the bleeding and reduce the number of school districts in the state, reduce the number of administrators and overhead staff, close under populated school buildings and right size district staffing to address the actual population of the district. The business of education would score big points… Read more »

debtsor
1 year ago

It’s a tough problem to fix, for sure. We’ve imported tens of thousands of illegal immigrants who can’t read in either Spanish or English dragging down our average and median scores. We’ve doubled-down on common core – which everyone knows is awful – but we still do it anyways. And our smartest residents are not having children or having too few children to bring the averages back up. My son’s school, according to IllinoisReportCard dot com, the state’s school reporting website, has 26% of the students have “…been identified as gifted in accordance with the district’s gifted assessment and academic… Read more »

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