Chicago Sun-Times

CPS to promote all elementary students to next level this year

District also nixing standardiz­ed test long used for competitiv­e high school admissions

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa THE SELECTIVE-ENROLLMENT TEST WILL BE ADMINISTER­ED NEXT FALL AND USED FOR THE UPCOMING ROUND OF APPLICATIO­NS.

All elementary students at Chicago Public Schools will advance to their next grade level regardless of any failing marks this year, and a standardiz­ed test long used as an evaluation tool for selective-enrollment high school admissions will be dropped, officials announced Thursday.

Both measures were significan­t attempts to curb the pandemic’s impact on students, both in the immediate and long-term future and will be welcomed by education advocates and educators.

The school district’s failure policy matches its stance last year, when no elementary students were failed after schools closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. A student’s reading or math grades again won’t matter for grade promotion this year, but children with low scores will be recommende­d to attend summer school, CPS said.

The district said it planned to use federal funds from the past year’s relief bills to help schools provide support to students who need it. CPS has received nearly $2 billion from the federal government in three waves of funding to help the school system and students recover from the pandemic’s unpreceden­ted impact on education, and ensure schools are safe for the resumption of in-person learning.

Officials have said they’ll release their plan to address students’ mental health and educationa­l needs in the coming weeks, which could include additional tutoring.

Eighth graders applying to competitiv­e high schools, meanwhile, will no longer take the NWEA assessment, which has been used along with grades and a separate selectivee­nrollment test to determine school admissions. The change will take effect with next year’s eighth graders, so students entering high schools this fall won’t be affected.

CPS said it “has carefully considered the benefits of administer­ing these assessment­s in light of the many disruption­s our students, families, and teachers have experience­d this year” and canceled the NWEA exam.

Until now, students were not even able to apply to about 100 Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate, STEM and arts programs and the district’s 11 selective-enrollment high schools unless they met certain academic criteria.

Moving forward, every eighth grader will take the selective-enrollment high school exam and have an opportunit­y for placement at one of those prestigiou­s schools based on their test result and their grades.

In effect, the change opens a process that has been criticized as exclusiona­ry and inequitabl­e to thousands more students.

“Eliminatin­g NWEA and offering all students the Selective Enrollment High School Exam will reduce testing for students who are interested in choice and selective programs, remove the minimum eligibilit­y requiremen­t for programs, and promote equity by providing all students access to the test during school hours,” CPS wrote in an email to families.

The selective-enrollment test will be administer­ed next fall and used for the upcoming round of applicatio­ns. CPS also decided against calculatin­g school ratings this year and will carry over the marks from two years ago, the last full year of attendance and testing.

The NWEA test was the subject of controvers­y last year when ex-CPS Inspector General Nicholas Schuler released a report that found “irregulari­ties” in test results, stopping short of making cheating allegation­s but criticizin­g the district’s proctoring of the exam. Schuler publicly sparred with CPS officials and the Board of Education over his findings around the same time he resigned after accusation­s he created a toxic work environmen­t in his office.

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