Latest school report card shows impact of COVID-19 on learning
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[November 05, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The COVID-19 pandemic
resulted in significant drops in enrollment, academic performance and
the likelihood of graduating high school on time, according to the
latest school report card released recently by the Illinois State Board
of Education.
The report card is an annual report that tracks how the state, and each
school and district, are progressing on a wide range of educational
goals.
But the report also showed that more Illinois students than ever are
preparing for college and careers by taking dual credit, Advanced
Placement and career and technical education, or CTE courses, while
schools themselves are doing a better job of retaining veteran teachers.
“We have witnessed both tragedy and heroism in our schools over the past
year,” State Superintendent of Education Dr. Carmen I. Ayala said in a
statement. “Students and educators have lost so much and lived and
learned through unthinkable obstacles, but loss is not the whole story.
Illinois’ schools also stepped up the rigor of high school course work,
ensured students still graduated and earned early college credit along
the way.”
According to the report, which covers the 2020-2021 academic year, total
enrollment in Pre-K-12 schools fell 3.6 percent from the prior year, or
by about 70,000 students, to just under 1.89 million. State officials
said recent trends would have predicted a 1.1 percent decline, meaning
the additional 2.5 percent can be attributed to the pandemic.
The biggest enrollment declines were in Pre-K and kindergarten, with
pre-K enrollment dropping 17 percent and kindergarten enrollment
dropping 8 percent.
The report also shows a disturbing increase in chronic absenteeism since
the pandemic began. More than one in five students, or 22.8 percent,
missed 10 percent or more of all school days in the year. That’s up from
13.4 percent in 2019, the most recent full pre-pandemic year.
The increase in absenteeism was especially notable among English
learners, Black and Hispanic students.
Officials cautioned, however, that the 2021 figures might not be
reliable because of the number of students who were engaged in remote
learning, where taking accurate attendance counts can be more
challenging.
“We know from national studies from the (U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention) that school districts serving primarily Black
and Hispanic students provided the least access to in-person learning
last year,” Brenda Dixon, ISBE’s research and evaluation officer, said
during a briefing on the report. “We suspect that less access to
in-person learning contributed to lower engagement among Black and
Hispanic students.”
The report card also showed declines in student performance on
standardized tests, although those numbers are still preliminary because
schools were given the option of administering those tests this fall due
to the number of buildings that were still not fully open in the spring.
Full results will be published next spring.
All students in grades 3-8 take what’s called the Illinois Assessment of
Readiness, or IAR, which covers English language arts and math
proficiency. High school students are tested in 11th grade by taking the
SAT exam.
The preliminary results showed fewer students meeting grade-level
standards compared to 2019, especially among younger students who may
have struggled more to engage in remote learning, Dixon said.
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Student enrollment in Illinois fell by roughly 70,000
students, or 3.6 percent, in the 2020-2021 school year, largely due
to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Credit: Illinois State Board of
Education.)
The number of students meeting grade-level standards
dropped 17.8 percent in math and 16.6 percent in English language
arts, with the biggest declines seen among English language learners
and low-income students.
The rate of ninth-grade students who were on track to
graduate dropped 5.1 percent from 2019, reflecting an increase in
students receiving failing grades, ISBE said. Students are
identified as on track if they have earned at least five full-year
course credits and have received no more than one semester of an “F”
grade in a core subject.
Agency officials said ninth-grade students who are on track are
almost four times more likely to graduate than those who are not on
track, and one of the most effective ways to increase graduation
rates is through active, early intervention by identifying
ninth-graders who are at risk and providing them with tutoring,
additional instruction and other individualized services.
“The Illinois State Board of Education is encouraging schools to
watch this cohort closely and to utilize federal pandemic relief
funds for research-based interventions, especially for current
ninth- and 10th-graders who are not on track for graduation,” Ayala
said during the briefing. “We are also launching a $25 million
high-impact tutoring program early this coming year to provide these
types of individualized services to students across the education
continuum.”
Ayala also noted that Illinois has received nearly $8 billion in
federal pandemic relief funding to address the gaps that resulted
from remote learning. Ninety percent of that money was paid directly
to school districts that will decide locally how to spend it, but
ISBE has earmarked the remaining 10 percent for things like
bolstering special education services, closing the digital divide,
and mental health services for students and educators.
One area of academic performance that did improve was in college and
career preparation. The report card showed the number of students
taking courses for both high school and college credit grew 12
percent from the prior year, to 72,490. Advanced Placement
enrollment grew 1.6 percent, to 129,574, and CTE enrollment inched
up a fraction of a percentage point to 287,191.
Officials attributed that to increased funding in recent years for
programs that cover the cost of taking AP exams for low-income
students as well as for CTE education overall.
The state’s overall teacher retention rate – the three-year average
of the percentage of full-time teachers returning to the same school
from the previous year – also rose more than a percentage point, to
87.1 percent, although retention rate was lower among Black
teachers.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |