A new initiative of the Governor’s Rural Affairs
Council (GRAC) that Sanguinetti chairs, the AP pilot program kicks
off today with classes for 75 students at 10 high schools in rural
areas across the state. Sanguinetti held news conferences at
Altamont High School in Altamont and Central A&M High School in
Moweaqua today to announce the program.
“AP classes help prepare students for college and can even make
college more affordable, but unfortunately access to AP classes is
extremely limited in rural areas,” Sanguinetti said. “This pilot
program will test the feasibility of expanding AP classes through
distance education so that students in rural Illinois will get the
same opportunities to learn as their counterparts in the urban areas
of our state.”
Participating schools in the pilot program include: Kankakee High
School, Altamont High School, Knoxville High School, Illini
Central High School, Tri-Point High School, Pope County High
School, Orangeville High School, Quincy High School, Central A&M
High School, and Georgetown-Ridge Farm High School.
“Concern exists that small rural schools have greater
difficulty preparing students with the skills necessary for
successful college careers because of the lack of AP or specialized
coursework,” said Dr. Bobbi Mattingly, Superintendent of Regional
Office of Education #11. “Distance education has the potential to
provide more choices which in turn better prepares rural youth to
attend college.”
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The pilot program was created in partnership with Illinois
Virtual Schools, the Regional Office of Education Association, the College
Board, the Association of Illinois Rural and Small Schools, and the Illinois
State Board of Education. Students in both the experimental groups (students
taking the AP course through IVS) and control groups (students taking the AP
course in a traditional, face-to-face setting at their primary school) were
randomly selected into sample sizes of four students each. They will be pre- and
post-tested and their scores will be measured and compared by virtual vs.
traditional class.
"The Association of Illinois Rural and Small Schools (AIRSS) is excited to
support the new Advanced Placement/Illinois Virtual School Pilot project
unveiled by Lt. Governor Evelyn Sanguinetti,” said AIRSS Executive Director
David Ardrey. “This new initiative will support one of the Association's primary
goals, to provide access to quality educational programming to our Illinois
rural and small schools."
[Office of the Lt. Governor Evelyn
Sanguinetti]
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