Rep Margaret Croke's HB 303 is an attempt to prevent CPS from shifting to equity-driven budgeting by protecting schools with selective admissions policies. Here's the set of SEHS & HS w/ Academic Centers' Opportunity Index measures:
As you can see there's a big range in indicator score and Opp Index score. A high Opp Index means school is less resourced & has higher need student body (among other things). See p. 4 here cpsboe.org/content/action…
Lane, Payton, Jones, Northside have the lowest OI of high schools in CPS, w/ Whitney Young close behind--but these are similar to Amundsen, Lincoln Park, Von Steuben & Lake View, 3 n'hood high schools and a magnet docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d…
Brooks, Hancock and Lindblom are close to Roosevelt and Alcott; Westinghouse is similar to Wells HS and Mather HS; King's is close to Dyett, Spry, Juarez. South Shore's is like Chicago Vocational and Hubbard - the SE schools are very disparate, as are neighborhood high schools!
And this is the case for elementary schools too. The most advantaged elem schools in the district are mostly not those that are test-in for K-8 (= only Edison, Keller, Skinner North, Decatur)
Unfortunately, no one has districtwide public numbers on budgets from @ChiPubSchools this year yet, but likely these low OI schools may be facing budget cuts. But HB 303 won't protect most of them anyway! See our HB 303 fact sheet here assets.nationbuilder.com/ilfps/pages/14…
@ChiPubSchools Here's a (somewhat random subset) of elem schools that use test scores for at least part of their admissions. Also a big range in OI
It's not good policy to write laws to further opportunity hoarding, so the intent behind HB 303 is problematic in any case, but it's also clearly not even doing what those who drafted it think it's supposed to do! 🤦
In short: Call and ask your State Rep to oppose this confusing and harmful legislation!
Reminder that US News rankings of high schools primarily based on *test scores* will inevitably rank schools whose admissions policies primarily use *test scores* highly
There are in fact more meaningful & thoughtful ways to evaluate (and not rank!) students and schools
Good place to start: Massachusetts has done some school quality evaluation work via the Massachusetts Consortium for Innovative Education Assessment: mciea.org/school-quality…
Sidenote: hearing notice was posted yesterday: Apr 15, 2024 12:30PM - And HB 5766 content was moved to HB 303 HFA1 with Rep Croke as sponsor sometime yesterday as well.
(We learned about the amendment & hearing late last night...)
You can file slips in the House until the end of the committee hearing, so there's still time to file one for today's hearing (and also tomorrow's.) Details here: ilfps.org/action_alert_o…
Content of HB 5766, bill to put moratorium on selective admissions schools in CPS, has been modified (slightly) & introduced as amendment to HB 303. Can file witness slip to OPPOSE for hearing today (& one tomorrow?) Instructions & more info in thread below 🧵
Real talk on the transition to a fully elected board: the desirability of a fully elected board in January 2025 vs January 2027 has varied over the course of the past several years!
In Jan. 2021, when a fully elected school board was (possibly!) in reach, and the proposal on the table was six years hence, supporters of an elected board thought that was ridiculous.
An orderly transition from mayoral appointed to fully elected needs time, but not six years. That proposal passed in May 2021, meaning a five and 1/2 year transition. Which lots of pro-elected board groups (us included) were unimpressed with.
Trib story this week on vouchers and Catholic school closings also featured Christian school on Chicago's West Side which was in top 5 recipients of voucher $ last year, Chicago Hope Academy. Here's a closer look at Chicago Hope Academy... 🧵 chicagotribune.com/2024/02/08/wit…
"At Chicago Hope Academy...more than 1/2 of the students attend through tax credit scholarships. Hope Principal & Pres Ike Muzikowski said the school has committed to keeping each student enrolled, taking it upon themselves to raise the $$ for roughly 130 students on scholarship”
Both voucher use & enrollment has increased at Chicago Hope Academy since Invest in Kids started in 2018-2019 school year, but voucher use is up 400% (20 to 116), enrollment is only up by about 25% (246 to 302) during the first five years of the program:
Illinois state Sen Villivalam, Rep Kelly & Olickal support extending Invest in Kids vouchers. We need all hands on deck to hold them to their obligation to fully fund public schools (under the Evidence-Based Funding Formula) & not extend the discriminatory, anti-equity IIK Act.🧵
Around 1,300 voucher students attend private schools in these districts. About 22,000 students attend PUBLIC schools & >13,700 are in UNDERFUNDED schools.
So, alongside representing the voucher families in their district, these legislators also represent a much larger number of families with students that attend public schools.