How ‘Essential’ is it?

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What do students, teachers and parents think about their school districts?

That’s the topic of a survey underway at schools throughout Illinois.

Beginning Feb. 1, students and teachers were given the first statewide opportunity to weigh in on learning conditions and school climate.

The Illinois State Board of Education joined UChicago Impact at the University of Chicago Urban Education Institute to provide the online survey, called the Illinois 5Essentials Survey.

“As educators, we have long understood that test scores alone do not represent the full scope of school life and learning,” said State Superintendent of Education Christopher A. Koch. “The Illinois 5Essentials Survey will finally help us paint that fuller picture of learning conditions and guide local and state improvement initiatives, so that every student has access to a world-class education.”

The survey will be administered between Feb. 1 and the end of March to all certified kindergarten through 12th-grade teachers and students in Grades 6-12 across the state.

Local schools are completing the surveys on different timetables, and superintendents have varying opinions on the survey’s value.

At Princeton Elementary, Superintendent Tim Smith said about half of the teachers had completed the survey with the rest scheduled to complete it by Friday.

Smith said the junior high students will complete the survey during ISATs, which are scheduled for March 4-15.

Smith said parents were informed about the survey through a letter that was sent home the first week of February. A reminder note will be sent during the first week of March. Smith said the survey is another example of the state thinking there is a “one size fits all formula.”

“This University of Chicago survey was initially created for Chicago Public Schools and is now being applied statewide,” he said. “Last I knew, CPS was hardly a model district.”

Smith said some of the questioning is not relevant to downstate schools.

Smith also had concerns about the cost.

“Our state funding has diminished greatly, yet they implement programs that continue to draw on money we do not have,” he said.

At Hall High School, Superintendent Mike Struna said more than 90 percent of staff has participated. He said students will be given time to go to the computer lab during homeroom to take the survey. 

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