Chicago Sun-Times

CPS, STATE AT ODDS OVER SCHOOLS’ GRADES

Conflictin­g ratings muddle picture for possible sanctions or closings — and students’ parents

- BY LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K, EDUCATION REPORTER lfitzpatri­ck@suntimes.com | @bylaurenfi­tz

The state’s new report cards for public schools around Illinois, released Tuesday, pose a conundrum for parents of kids at Chicago Public Schools, which unveiled its own ratings last week: Which metric should they believe?

CPS, for example, gave its highest rating — Level 1+ — to 185 schools — but 30 of those, the Illinois State Board of Education says, are actually “underperfo­rming.” Three others, including Moos Elementary in Logan Square, the board says, are in a group of the “lowest performing” schools in the state.

Meanwhile, two Chicago charter schools the state praised as “commendabl­e” earned CPS’ lowest rating, including the Montessori School of Englewood, which was added last week to a charter warning list for a poor academic track record. The school has a year to improve on its Level 3 rating or risk closure.

Other schools in Chicago that the state placed in a single group rated “commendabl­e” — which were hailed as having no underperfo­rming student groups — received a range of ratings under the CPS grading system, from lowest to second best.

The contradict­ions come as the state board tries to make informatio­n about Illinois’ 866 public school districts easier to read and understand on its annual report cards. But an analysis by the Chicago Sun-Times finds the state’s new designatio­ns could actually cause more confusion for Chicago families.

This year, the state revealed new labels for schools — required under the new federal Every Student Succeeds Act — that take into account a wide range of factors to inform parents and taxpayers of a school’s quality. Following the lead of CPS, the state is considerin­g how well student scores on standardiz­ed tests improve over time instead of just looking at them during a single year. Both systems also look at attendance and school culture.

Such labels matter because not only can CPS and the state take action against a school based on them, but parents often use them to help decide where to send their kids to school or even what neighborho­od or city to live in.

Based on 2017-18 data, the state announced that of Illinois’ 3,988 public schools, 376 are in the top 10 percent statewide and are now considered exemplary; 2,636 are commendabl­e; 561 are underperfo­rming and 205 are lowest performing, in the state’s bottom 5 percent. The rest weren’t rated.

State schools superinten­dent Tony Smith called the designatio­ns “in fact, evidence-based factual statements.”

But in Chicago, the confusion comes because the state report cards don’t line up with CPS’ five-level ratings from 1+ to 3.

As LaTanya McDade, CPS chief education officer, pointed out, “There’s a huge difference here, and we’re prepared to call those difference­s out.”

Different standardiz­ed tests account for one of the difference­s. Montessori principal Rita Nolan said her students improved on the PARCC test the state uses, but not on the NWEA test used by CPS.

Each agency also puts different weights on the result, and the state’s system makes comparison­s between schools.

“For the state, we have to also consider the way they’re coming up with their designatio­n, forcing a curve,” McDade said. “So no matter how high performing your school is, there’s always going to be the lowest five percent.” CPS ratings are based on set metrics so there’s no limit on how many schools can earn top ratings.

That comparison is the point, ISBE’s Smith said, because among similar population­s it can reveal “you either are or are not getting the very best opportunit­y for your child.”

He added that the state won’t punish schools with lower designatio­ns, but will instead send extra help to them.

The focus on equity is something to celebrate, McDade said: “Additional finances to support those subgroups is a positive. We’ll take full advantage of that.”

Still, both sets of ratings have similar drawbacks in that they don’t give a complete picture of a school, critics say.

“All performanc­e metrics are reductive, trying to be one-size-fits-all, and schools pose different shapes,” said Alexios Rosario-Moore of Generation All, a group that advocates for neighborho­od high schools.

Of four CPS elementary schools rated Level 1+ that secured the state’s top designatio­n, two are neighborho­od elementary schools, Columbus Elementary School in the Ukrainian Village, and Haines Elementary School in Chinatown. Notably missing from the state’s top schools are all but one Level 1+ selective elementary school that many parents in the city clamor to test their kids into.

Columbus likely made the cut because its Hispanic students, one of the state’s priority student groups, did well on PARCC, improving scores from the year before, veteran principal Wendy Oleksy said.

“We take social emotional learning very seriously,” with daily meditation three times a day and kids explicitly taught how to deal with feelings, she said. “Kids take ownership of what are the expectatio­ns are for school whether for behavior or academics. It can’t just be about academics.”

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 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? The Montessori School of Englewood received praise from the state but received CPS’ lowest rating.
SUN-TIMES FILES The Montessori School of Englewood received praise from the state but received CPS’ lowest rating.
 ?? GOOGLE STREETVIEW ?? Moos Elementary in Logan Square was given CPS’ highest rating, but the state says it is in a group of the “lowest performing” schools in the state.
GOOGLE STREETVIEW Moos Elementary in Logan Square was given CPS’ highest rating, but the state says it is in a group of the “lowest performing” schools in the state.

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