Pritzker, Ayala point to positive trends in report card, acknowledge
pandemic’s toll
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[October 28, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker and State School Superintendent Carmen
Ayala on Thursday touted some of the more positive findings from the
2022 school report card, insisting that Illinois schools are on the
right track while also acknowledging that the COVID-19 pandemic took a
toll on student learning.
“To say that these last two-and-a-half years have been difficult for our
teachers and our students would be an understatement,” Pritzker said.
“What now seems like lifetimes ago, our educators in Illinois and
throughout the nation had to navigate the sudden transition to online
learning, all while working to give their students the support and
resources they needed to not only thrive, but to survive.”
Pritzker and Ayala spoke at an event at J. Sterling Morton West High
School, a school with a large population of Hispanic students in the
southwest Chicago suburb of Berwyn. That school saw its four-year
graduation rate grow more than 5 percentage points over the 2019 rate,
to 85.6 percent.
“And this trend is happening at high schools across Illinois,” Ayala
said. “As a state in 2022, students reached the highest four-year
graduation rate in 12 years, and it's driven by the gains of our Black
and Hispanic students.”
Overall, the report card showed declines in the percentage of students
in grades 3-8 scoring at or above grade level in English language arts
and math. Those trends were consistent with national trends measured by
the National Assessment of Educational Progress.
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Gov. JB Pritzker answers questions about
the 2022 state report card Thursday during a news conference at J.
Sterling Morton West High School in Berwyn. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
But it also showed the statewide four-year high school graduation rate
reaching a high of 87.3 percent, as well as an increase in the number of
students completing Algebra I in eighth grade.
More than anything, though, Pritzker and Ayala highlighted the student
growth rate, a new metric devised last year to track not just whether
students are proficient, but how much progress they are making from one
year to the next.
The report showed that while students may be scoring lower than their
peers did in 2019, the last pre-pandemic year tests were given, but they
are progressing at a faster rate than the earlier class.
“Every single demographic group in Illinois experienced accelerated
growth in both English language arts and math, outpacing pre-pandemic
levels,” Pritzker said.
When asked by a reporter about the declining proficiency rates, Ayala
said it was largely due to the impact that COVID-19 had on low-income
communities and communities of color, but she insisted that academic
growth is the more important metric to consider.
“And so that can account for those declines that we're seeing
nationwide,” she said. “We really need to focus also on the growth
because that's telling us we're doing some very specific systemic things
in Illinois with our recovery initiatives and interventions that are
having a big impact on the growth. And that will move towards and
translate to higher proficiency levels as we continue to recover.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |