The bar keeps on rising for schools: Area districts try to keep up with state goals

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For the third year in a row, Rock Falls High School didn’t make the grade, in the eyes of the state and under the requirements of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

To help it move in the right direction, the school continues to have as many students possible take Algebra I their freshman year, to provide extra instruction time for incoming freshmen who aren’t at grade level in reading, and to provide more tutoring for those struggling.

Rock Falls isn’t alone. Schools strive to attain the mandated continual improvement, but many did not meet the state benchmark because their 2009 Prairie State Achievement Exam scores fell short.

Six of nine public high schools in Lee and Whiteside County – Sterling, Morrison, Rock Falls, Fulton, Erie and Dixon – did not make the adequate yearly progress required by the act.

Sterling, Dixon, Rock Falls and Erie are on academic early warning lists. For Rock Falls and Dixon, this is year two on the list.

Under the No Child rules, if schools have 5 consecutive years of failure, the state will begin creating a restructuring plan for the school.

Tad Everett is Sterling Public Schools superintendent.

“We want to be a part of the accountability component that legislatures and the business world is placing upon us,” Everett said. “Any business doesn’t base its successes on a one-day event ..., but that’s what we do when we’re testing. It doesn’t take into the fact that you’re sick, the fact you’ve had a bad day, that’s there’s been a catastrophic event in your life. Those things matter.”

“Our frustration is it is a snapshot, it is a one-time, one-day event that determines how well your school is doing,” Everett said.

High school juniors in Illinois must take the Prairie State Achievement Exam, which is a combination of the ACT, a test students use on their college applications, and WorkKeys, a test that looks at skills needed in a workplace.

Students must take the PSAE to graduate, but they don’t need to pass it.

A recent investigation of Chicago-area high schools found that some districts have found a way to work around stringent academic yearly progress standards.

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