9,512 results on '"Illinois"'
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2. A MASTER PLAN FOR HIGHER EDUCATION IN ILLINOIS AND THE ILLINOIS PUBLIC JUNIOR COLLEGE ACT. (TITLE SUPPLIED).
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Illinois State Board of Higher Education, Springfield. and GLENNY, LYMAN A.
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THIS MASTER PLAN FOR HIGHER EDUCATION IN ILLINOIS IS IN FOUR DOCUMENT--(1) THE ORIGINAL MASTER PLAN OF JULY 1964, (2) THE MASTER PLAN, PHASE II, PUBLISHED DECEMBER 1966, (3) THE TEXT OF THE ACT, APPROVED AUGUST 22, 1961, CREATING A BOARD OF HIGHER EDUCATION, AND (4) THE ILLINOIS PUBLIC JUNIOR COLLEGE ACT, REPRINTED FROM ILLINOIS REVISED STATUTES, 1967. THESE PUBLICATIONS COULD SERVE AS GUIDES TO THOSE DEVISING MASTER PLANS IN OTHER REGIONS. (HH)
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- 2024
3. COMMUNICATION BARRIERS TO THE CULTURALLY DEPRIVED.
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Chicago Univ., IL., Illinois Inst. of Tech., Chicago., AUSTIN, WILLIAM M., and MCDAVID, RAVEN I.
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THIS REPORT WAS DESIGNED (1) TO PROVIDE A MORE DETAILED AND SOPHISTICATED KNOWLEDGE ABOUT SOCIAL DIFFERENCES IN ORAL COMMUNICATION AND (2) TO ASCERTAIN THE ACCURACY WITH WHICH SUBJECTS COULD IDENTIFY THE RACE AND EDUCATION OF SPEAKERS WHOM THEY COULD NOT SEE. TO DETERMINE REACTIONS TO PRONUNCIATIONS, THE INVESTIGATORS DEVISED AN INSTRUMENT COMPOSED OF PRONUNCIATIONS BY SPEAKERS OF SPECIFIC REGIONAL AND ETHNIC BACKGROUNDS. THIS INSTRUMENT WAS ADMINISTERED TO SOME THREE HUNDRED RESPONDENTS, WHITES AND NEGROES IN ALMOST EQUAL NUMBERS, OF VARIOUS EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUNDS. IT WAS FOUND THAT DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LOWER-CLASS WHITE SPEECH AND MIDDLE-CLASS TO LOWER-CLASS NEGRO SPEECH ARE MUCH MORE DIFFICULT TO DETECT THAN DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE SPEECH OF WHITE CHICAGOANS AND SOUTHERN NEGROES. IT IS AN INTUITIVE REACTION THAT SUPRASEGMENTALS AND PARALANGUAGE ARE MORE EFFECTIVE INDICATORS OF ETHNIC BACKGROUND THAN VOCABULARY, GRAMMAR, OR PRONUNCIATION. (JL)
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- 2024
4. PRACTICAL NURSING IN ILLINOIS--A PROFILE.
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Illinois State Board of Vocational Education and Rehabilitation, Springfield., Illinois Univ., Urbana. Coll. of Education., and TOMLINSON, ROBERT M.
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THIS DOCUMENT, THE FIRST OF FIVE PLANNED REPORTS, PRESENTS THE HISTORY AND BACKGROUND OF PRACTICAL NURSING, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO ILLINOIS. IT DESCRIBES THE BETTER LICENSING PROCEDURES AND STANDARDS THAT HAVE COME WITH THE INCREASED RECOGNITION OF THE VALUE OF THE OCCUPATION TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. THE REPORT ALSO DESCRIBES A 1600-HOUR CURRICULUM, INCLUDING THEORY AND PRACTICE, SUGGESTED BY THE ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF REGISTRATION AND EDUCATION IN 1965. TABLES GIVE DATA ON THE PRESENT BACKGROUND OF THE NURSES (BY EDUCATION AND EXPERIENCE), ON THEIR CHARACTERISTICS (MOST NOTABLY, DEVOTION TO THEIR CAREERS AND STABILITY IN THE LABOR MARKET), ON PRESENT EMPLOYMENT IN ILLINOIS AND ADJACENT AREAS, AND ON THE NEED FOR ADDITIONAL RECRUITMENT AND TRAINING TO FILL CURRENT AND FUTURE NEEDS. (HH)
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- 2024
5. Code-Switching Queer Controversy: Pre-K-8 Educators' Perceptions of LGBT-Inclusive Policy Framing
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Jon M. Wargo and Alex Katz
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This paper uses sensemaking theory and frame analysis to examine how a non-system actor's framing for advancing LGBT inclusion, what they called "code-switching," was taken up. Drawing on qualitative interview data generated as part of a larger mixed-methods study, this article examines the material and ideological affordances and constraints of elementary educators implementing the Inclusive Curriculum Law in Illinois (House Bill 246), a law promoting LGBT representation in history textbooks and curriculum. Findings highlight how the impetus to code-switch created a disconnect between policy and perceived practice, which in turn complicated organizational efforts to transform inclusive instruction. As our analyses illustrate, problem framing--refracted here through a non-system agent--not only shaped the direction of proposed solutions but also played a critical role in coordinating individual action and sensemaking.
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- 2024
6. Empowering Bilingual Arabic Learners: A Qualitative Study of the Impact of Educational Leadership on Arabic Language Proficiency in US Immersion Programs
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Rihan Abuhamdan
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The academic success and language proficiency in Arabic of bilingual Arabic learners (BAL) in immersion programs have been limited by a lack of effective policies and practices that address the Arabic population's inclusive and equitable educational environment. This qualitative case study aims to provide insight into how academic leaders can develop policies and practices that better support BALs and teachers in the immersion program and whether these policies and practices could create an inclusive and equitable educational environment that values linguistic and cultural diversity. Research in the immersion program field is crucial to ensuring the program's effectiveness. Transformational leadership (TL) theory is related to school leaders' roles in supporting bilingual Arabic learners (BALs). Research questions addressed the best practices and policies educational leaders can implement to support the language development of BALs in their bilingual/immersion programs and what is the perception of bilingual Arabic educators and learners toward the bilingual programs. The study's population comprises bilingual Arabic learners, educators, and academic leaders in multicultural education. The sample, selected using purposive sampling, includes 20 bilingual Arabic learners, two educators, and three academic leaders from an Illinois urban school district, all with at least 3 years in bilingual programs, and with parental consent for learners. Qualitative methods in the form of questionnaires and interviews were employed. Findings revealed significant patterns, highlighting several challenges within the bilingual program that need attention from educational leaders and policymakers.
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- 2024
7. COVID-19 Global Pandemic Upheaval: CTE Teachers Response in the United States
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John Cannon, Mary Self, Allen Kitchel, Sally Arnett-Hartwick, Carol Billing, Kevin Elliott, Michelle Bartlett, Mari Borr, and Jeremy Jeffery
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The United States along with the rest of the world has experienced an unprecedented disruption in daily life due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Almost everyone has experienced some sort of stay at home order resulting in an economic catastrophe greater than the Great Recession of 2008 and on par with the Great Depression almost a century ago. Educational institutions at both the K-12 and post-secondary levels have not been immune from the shutdown, with many schools closed from mid-March through the end of the 2020 school year. Many schools moved classes to remote, distance delivery platforms. Career and Technical Education (CTE) teachers were tasked with creative engaging learning activities online for curricula which is taught in a hands-on contextual learning environment. This paper will present preliminary results from research conducted by a collaborative group of nine researchers from across the United States with collectively over 200 years of career and technical education experience. The conceptual framework used for this study was Danielson's Framework for Teaching and Enhancing Professional Practice and Foundations of Career and Technical Education including Constructivism. 3,267 participants representing all 50 states responded to the 37-item survey. The research objectives included description of participants and identified challenges to planning and delivery of CTE content when schools were closed, and instruction was moved to remote/distance/online platforms. Participants ranked their challenges as instructors and their perceptions of challenges that were experienced by their students. CTE teachers ranked replicating classroom or lab environments online and lack of experience teaching online as their biggest challenges. The perceptions of the participants concerning challenges for their students included motivation to guide and manage their own learning and students' access to reliable internet connection. The emergence and prevalence of the COVID-19 pandemic added a layer of complexity to educational practice that was not foreseen and for which no intentional preparation had occurred. Understanding how CTE teachers and instructors responded to this call, and the challenges they and their students encountered, is important to efforts to improve practice in the future and to be in a better position should another crisis occur that forces learning to be delivered in alternative formats from that of the traditional face-to-face classroom. [Note: The page range (177-194) shown on the PDF is incorrect. The correct page range is 177-193.]
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- 2024
8. Implementing Equity Policies in Illinois Higher Education Institutions: The Illinois Equity in Attainment Initiative
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NORC at the University of Chicago, Fordham University, Rachel Carly Feldman, Johanna S. Quinn, Alannah S. Caisey, and Carol Chen
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The Partnership for College Completion (PCC) was founded to "advance equity in higher education" by supporting colleges and universities to improve college completion for Black, Latinx, and Pell-eligible students--those groups that experience persistent disparities in completion. Simultaneously, PCC engages in state policy reform to bring about systems-wide change. Begun in 2018, the Illinois Equity in Attainment Initiative (ILEA) is its flagship initiative, designed to partner with Illinois colleges and universities to assist them in narrowing their college completion gaps. Promising new research suggests improving equity in college completion requires an explicit focus on race, attention to organizational change, commitment to equity-focused policies and plans, and cross-institutional partnerships to help manifest change. Drawing from this research, ILEA and its partner institutions developed and implemented public-facing equity plans to improve graduation rates for their Black, Latinx, and Pell-eligible students. This study examines how the ILEA collaborative institutions confronted and negotiated structural barriers inhibiting graduation for these historically marginalized groups. The report aims to: (1) Provide study partners, including the Partnership for College Completion, with program feedback; (2) Inform readers about equity plan development and implementation, policy, and practice collaboratives; (3) Identify strengths and growth opportunities about PCC's efforts to bring colleges and universities together to jointly improve college completion for Black, Latinx, and Pell-eligible students; and (4) Reflect on implementation successes and challenges.
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- 2024
9. System Rules Manual of the Illinois Community College Board
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Illinois Community College Board (ICCB)
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These administrative rules of the Illinois Community College Board are divided into eight sections. Under Title 23: Education and Cultural Resources, Subtitle A: Education, Chapter VII: Illinois Community College Board, the following parts are included: (1) Part 1501 Administration of the Illinois Public Community College Act; (2) Part 1502 Joint Rules of the Board of Higher Education and Illinois Community College Board: Rules on Reverse Transfer of Credit; and (3) Part 1506 High School Diploma for Adult Learners. Under Title 2: Governmental Organization, Subtitle F: Educational Agencies, Chapter VIII: Illinois Community College Board, two parts are included: (4) Part 5175 Public Information, Rulemaking and Organization; and (5) Part 5176 Access to Records of the Illinois Community College Board. The remaining sections include: (6) Title 4: Discrimination Procedures, Chapter XXXIX: Illinois Community College Board, Part 1050 Americans with Disabilities Act Grievance Procedure; (7) Title 23: Education and Cultural Resources, Subtitle A: Education, Chapter II: Board of Higher Education, Part 1050 Approval of New Units of Instruction, Research and Public Service at Public Institutions; and (8) Title 29: Emergency Services, Disasters, and Civil Defense, Chapter I: Illinois Emergency Management Agency, Subchapter C: Administration and Organization of Local Political Subdivision Emergency Services and Disaster Agencies, Part 305 All Hazards Campus Emergency Plan and Violence Prevention Plan.
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- 2024
10. The Decline in Teacher Working Conditions during and after the COVID Pandemic. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-1000
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Sofia Baker, and Cory Koedel
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We study changes to teacher working conditions from 2016-17 to 2022-23, covering school years before, during, and after the COVID pandemic. We show working conditions were improving leading into the pandemic but declined when the pandemic arrived. Perhaps more surprisingly, the pandemic was not a low point: teacher working conditions have continued to decline during the post-pandemic period. Teachers report worsening working conditions along many dimensions including the level of classroom disruptions, student responsibility, and safety, among others. They also report declines in trust between themselves and principals, parents, and other teachers. Trends in working conditions since the pandemic are similar in schools serving more and less socioeconomically advantaged students. However, schools in districts where online learning was the predominant mode of instruction during the 2020-21 school year have experienced larger declines than other schools.
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- 2024
11. Empty Desks: The Policy Response to Declining Public School Enrollment
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Manhattan Institute (MI), Daniel DiSalvo, and Reade Ben
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In many parts of the country, enrollment in traditional public schools has fallen to its lowest point in decades. However, states, cities, and school districts have been slow to respond to the reality of empty desks. This report examines trends in school enrollment, focusing on several of America's most populous cities, as well as the budgetary and staffing responses to those trends. It also examines the states where these large cities are located. Key findings include: (1) New York, Illinois, and California experienced the largest declines in enrollment between 2013 and 2022, while Texas and Arizona had the largest increase in enrollment; (2) Texas will soon surpass California with the most public school students; (3) In California's two biggest cities, Los Angeles and San Diego, enrollments fell between 2013 and 2022; (4) Philadelphia experienced a decline in enrollment that mirrored overall statewide trends; (5) Although Texas experienced a strong uptick in student enrollment statewide, its four biggest cities--Dallas, San Antonio, Houston, and Austin--all experienced slight declines over the last decade; (6) Costs per student rose between 2013 and 2022 in New York City, Houston, San Diego, Dallas, Austin, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Antonio, and Los Angeles; and (7) Total staff increased in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Dallas over the 2013-22 period.
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- 2024
12. FAFSA Simplification Successes: A Four-State Case Study of Best Practices and Completion Strategies
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State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO), Rachel Burns, and Dustin Weeden
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Simplification of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) entails significant changes to the FAFSA and the methodology for determining eligibility for federal financial aid for the 2024-25 academic year. The changes to the FAFSA form that were mandated by the Simplification Act delayed implementation and shifted the timeline for release of the 2024-25 FAFSA from October to December 2023. This shift has also led to delays in processing the FAFSA. Through a partnership with the National Association of State Student Grant and Aid Programs (NASSGAP), SHEEO initially convened 12 states from across the country (now expanded to 17 states) in 2022 to participate in a learning community. The learning community provided states with opportunities to examine the impact of FAFSA simplification on state financial aid programs and to take advantage of the open policy window to reconsider state financial aid policies and processes. Feedback from state members has confirmed that, despite the challenges and uncertainties around the rollout of the new FAFSA, states were as prepared as possible to implement the new FAFSA due in part to their participation in the learning community. As the first phase of the learning community concludes, SHEEO staff have conducted case-study interviews with state members of the learning community and the larger SHEEO membership. While all states have worked diligently to help students complete the new FAFSA, the four states selected -- Alabama, Illinois, Louisiana, and Minnesota -- were chosen to represent states that implemented successful strategies for taking advantage of the policy window (Minnesota), employing FAFSA completion initiatives (Alabama, Illinois, and Louisiana), and preparing for the new FAFSA (all states).
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- 2024
13. Leveling the Landscape: An Analysis of K-12 Funding Inequities within Metro Areas
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Bellwether, Alex Spurrier, Bonnie O’Keefe, and Biko McMillan
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At their best, K-12 public school systems can be engines of social and economic mobility. Unfortunately, schools in lower-income districts -- whose students have the greatest academic needs -- often receive less funding than their counterparts in more affluent districts. Discussions about closing these funding gaps usually zoom all the way out to the state level or all the way down to the district level. But a big part of the problem lies in how funding is distributed across districts in the same metro area -- and in state policies that allow wealthy communities to raise and keep large amounts of local revenue exclusively for their own schools. "Leveling the Landscape: An Analysis of K-12 Funding Inequities Within Metro Areas" takes a closer look at the scale and sources of education funding within 123 large metro areas in 38 states, focusing on funding disparities among districts serving the same region. Key takeaways include: (1) a majority of public school students (62%) live in large metro areas with more than five districts -- a level of fragmentation that makes funding disparities more likely; (2) within fragmented metro areas, wealthy districts often generate much more local funding per student than less affluent districts; (3) state policies, despite their progressive tilt, rarely bridge this gap -- and often don't even come close; (4) in 49 of the 123 large metro areas we examined, school districts in affluent areas receive the most funding per pupil; (5) closing the state and local funding gap between districts within the metro areas we examined would cost $26 billion in additional state funding per year; and (6) more ambitious policies can greatly reduce or even eliminate funding disparities. The report also explores policy tools state leaders can use to ensure all districts within the same metro area at the very least receive similar funding per student and ideally, set the stage for even greater levels of per-pupil funding to flow to higher-needs districts.
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- 2024
14. The Impact of Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (MTSS) on Student Attendance and Behavior
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WestEd, Nicholas Gage, Kim Salomonson, Tori Ballew, Beth Clavenna-Deane, and Nicolette Grasley-Boy
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The success of all students in schools, including students with learning differences, is contingent on how schools operationalize universally designed instruction, positive behavior support, and data-based decision-making for individualized and group-level interventions. When schools have fully functional multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS) that center equity and focus necessary attention on academic conditions, student behavior, and social-emotional learning conditions, students are more likely to receive the instruction and interventions they need. Further, there is evidence of improvements in student outcomes, particularly those related to behavior, when MTSS is implemented effectively. To address the need for effective MTSS implementation, WestEd engaged in a research and technical assistance partnership in which WestEd subject matter experts provided guidance on designing and implementing effective MTSS. WestEd researchers simultaneously studied the short-, mid-, and long-term effects of these efforts on student outcomes. This interim report provides initial analyses of student-level impacts in one of the two school districts involved in this project.
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- 2024
15. Who Deserves State Financial Aid? Eligibility Criteria for Students Entering College
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Education Trust and Brittani Williams
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For decades, college tuition costs have been skyrocketing, yet state financial aid has failed to meet the increasing economic needs of college students -- leaving many young people with the choice of bridging the financial gap by taking out student loans or not attending college at all. This pressing issue of rising college tuition is not just a matter of economic inconvenience; it is a harbinger of deepening racial and socioeconomic inequalities. The lack of financial aid disproportionately deters Black and Latino students and students from low-income backgrounds from pursuing higher education and earning a college degree. In this report, we explore state financial aid funding and associated program requirements in 10 distinct states: California, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington. In it, we shed light on the 12 key eligibility requirements that often serve as barriers for students of color, students from low-income backgrounds, undocumented students, and justice-impacted students to afford college: (1) Program type (Need, Merit, or Need and Merit); (2) FAFSA completion required; (3) Alternative to FAFSA; (4) Low-income requirement; (5) Available without standardized test score; (6) Available without mandated GPA; (7) Marginalized student populations included; (8) FAFSA as a state high-school graduation requirement; (9) Institution types eligible; (10) Average undergraduate cost of attendance (COA) for in-state students (2022-23 academic year); (11) Annual award amount description; and (12) Enrollment intensity. This analysis is designed to help educators, policymakers, and advocates better understand the barriers, strengths, limitations, and influences that state financial aid programs can have on the ability of students of color and students from low-income backgrounds to access and afford college.
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- 2024
16. 2023 Career Technical Education: Governor's Report
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Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)
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The 2023 Illinois Career and Technical Education Report is submitted in compliance with Illinois School Code 105 ILCS 435/2e, which requires a written career and technical education (CTE) report to be issued to the governor annually. This report describes the establishment of and delivery of CTE in Illinois, the existing condition of Illinois CTE based on school year 2022-23 data (FY 2023), and the future developments and recommendations for CTE in our state as required by Illinois School Code 105 ILCS 435/2e. Further, this report provides an update on the police academy program in Illinois as required 105 ILCS/5/22-83. The work of the Gender Equity Advisory Committee and other ISBE initiatives also are referenced within the report.
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- 2024
17. Illinois Charter School Biennial Report. 2021-2022, 2022-2023
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Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)
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Charter schools are public schools governed by an independent board of directors that come into existence through a contract with an authorized public chartering agency. This report, known as the Illinois Charter School Biennial Report, provides legislators, policymakers, educators, and the general public with information regarding the state of Illinois' charter schools. In compliance with Section 27A-12 of the Charter Schools Law [105 ILCS 5/27A-12], it contains information that: (1) compares the academic performance of charter school students to the performance of their peers in traditional public schools; (2) analyzes whether or not exemption from certain regulations allows charter schools to better meet their stated goals and objectives; and (3) recommends any changes to the Charter Schools Law. This report also includes authorizer-specific information for each school district authorizer in the state, including: (1) the authorizer's strategic vision for chartering and progress toward achieving that vision; (2) the status of each authorizer's charter school portfolio; and (3) the authorizing functions provided by the authorizer to the charter schools under its purview, including its operating costs and expenses. [For the 2019-2020, 2020-2021 report, see ED618454.]
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- 2024
18. Utilizing Autosomal DNA Testing to Identify Common Ancestry to Promote Inclusion Instead of Division on College Campuses
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Yosef A. Gil Karo
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This Notes in Brief contribution explores the use of autosomal DNA to engage college faculty and staff in a different approach to diversity and inclusion discussions, including antisemitism, on campuses. The author provides results from DNA testing and how he has used his results to discuss his common ancestry with students to build bridges as a former chair of the Diversity and Inclusion Council on his campus.
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- 2024
19. Community-Based Home Visiting: Fidelity to Families, Commitment to Outcomes
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First Focus on Children, Start Early, Averi Pakulis, and Nadia Gronkowski
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Home visiting connects expectant parents, new caregivers, and their young children with a support person, called a home visitor. The home visitor meets regularly with the family, develops a relationship with them, and supports them to achieve their goals and meet their needs. To reach the thousands of additional families who could benefit from home visiting, we must increase support for culturally relevant and family-centered models. A new report -- "Community-Based Home Visiting: Fidelity to Families, Commitment to Outcomes" -- delves into the unique strengths and challenges of community-based home visiting models, whose design and measures of success intentionally center the perspectives of the families and communities they serve. These models are often developed by those with experience with the unique cultures, strengths, and solutions of he community they live in and aim to serve. This report summarizes themes from listening sessions with 30+ community-based home visiting models from across the country. It offers policy and funding recommendations that would improve support for these models and therefore families' access to home visiting that best meets their goals. [Additional support was provided by the National Home Visiting Coalition Steering Committee.]
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- 2024
20. School Leadership Capacity and Student Achievement: A Study of High Schools
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Steven T. Isoye and Teresa A. Wasonga
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Organizationally, what does not get measured is not prioritized or improved. Unlike student outcomes, the leadership environment that produces the results is rarely examined for its merit and impact. In this study, a quantitative survey gathered information to investigate the impacts of leadership capacity constructs on academic achievement. Principals from 161 public high schools and their schools provided the data (leadership capacity, demographics, and reading and math scores). Data were analyzed using descriptive, correlational, and regression statistics. Findings indicated significant high correlations among leadership capacity variables, significant relationships between school demographics (total school enrollment, percentage of low-income students, average class size, and attendance) and reading and math scores, and non-significant correlations between leadership capacity and academic achievement. The study delineated specific leadership capacity behaviors within the constructs that predicted student academic achievement in math and reading. The study suggests increased capacity and practice of these leadership behaviors to improve work setting and student achievement.
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- 2024
21. Optimal GED Student Recruitment: Perceptions of Program Directors
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Michael T. Miller
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Much is unknown about those who do not finish high school and there is a need to understand who enters and completes alternative high school completion programs, such as the HiSet (High School Equivalency Test), GED (General Education Development Test), or growing number of state sponsored high school equivalency programs. The purpose for conducting the study was to describe the perceptions of adult education program coordinators about how to best categorize potential high school credential alternative completers. Using a phenomenological framework and semi-structured interviews, 12 adult education program administrators were interviewed about who enrolls in and completes their programs. A thematic analysis of these responses indicated distinct categories of individuals including opportunists (those looking for better opportunities), exceptionals (those with exceptionalities such as a disability that prevented the individual from completing a traditional high school diploma), immigrants (those validating learning in another country or language learners), and those who have been reformed in some way (e.g., those with a history of difficulty with legal situations). By identifying these initial categories of adult learners taking part in high school equivalency programs, recruitment efforts as well as the programs themselves might be better structured to correspond to learner needs.
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- 2024
22. The Next Chapter: A Comparative Review of the Evolving Resident Assistant Role at the University of Oregon
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Amiya Fulton
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The Resident Assistant (RA) role is unlike any other student position in the university setting. It is complicated, nuanced, and increasingly complex as the needs and expectations of residents and RAs rapidly change in a post-pandemic era of residence life. The role itself has been forced to evolve to address these changing needs. This thesis project is a comparative review of the Resident Assistant position at the University of Oregon (UO) and a further investigation into the role, its challenges, and its potential for improvement. This research explores how different institutions across the nation are implementing the RA role and how successfully these various interpretations of the role could be executed at the UO. This project aims to address a gap in the existing literature surrounding the Resident Assistant role in the higher education and student affairs discipline. Specifically, this research will provide an institution-specific examination of the RA experience at the University of Oregon. In a broader context, this research offers insights into how the RA role and its responsibilities are interpreted across different institutions. The literature review will show that most existing literature on the role focuses on the RA's impact on residents. In contrast, less research is dedicated to the role's framework and interpretation. By reviewing the existing literature, identifying current challenges and potential solutions, assessing the UO's current curriculum, reviewing other institutions' curricula, and collecting interview feedback, the research aims to provide evidence-based and institution-specific recommendations to the University Housing Department for improving the RA program. In summary, this research aims to deepen our understanding of the RA role at the University of Oregon. By addressing critical issues such as high turnover rates, the impact of unionization, and the unique challenges posed in the post-pandemic landscape, we hope to provide actionable recommendations to the UO Residence Life Department. Ultimately, our goal is to contribute to a reality where the RA role is thoughtfully optimized to meet the evolving needs of residents and foster a positive residential community.
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- 2024
23. Understanding Perceptions, Barriers, and Opportunities around Restorative Justice in Urban High Schools
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Remy Stewart and Jerel M. Ezell
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A popular alternative disciplinary framework from zero-tolerance school policies is restorative justice, which refers to a set of ideologies and practices that emphasize healing relationships in lieu of community exclusion. This work investigates the differences between ideological support for restorative approaches compared to program implementation. We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with school staff, including teachers, administrators, and security officials, at five urban high schools in the Chicago metropolitan region. Our findings highlight sharp divergences in buy-in for restorative justice and perceptions on the appropriateness of various disciplinary approaches, illuminating both barriers and opportunities towards schoolwide restorative justice program implementation.
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- 2024
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24. The Use of Role-Play in the Learning of Medical Terminology for Online and Face-to-Face Courses
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Brenda L. M. del Moral, Cinnamon L. VanPutte, and Barbara A. McCracken
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Student engagement while learning a new, unfamiliar vocabulary is challenging in health science courses. A group role-play activity was created to teach students medical terminology and learn why its correct usage is important. This activity brought engagement and relevance to a topic traditionally taught through lecture and rote memorization and led to the development of an undergraduate and a stand-alone introductory course to teach students medical terminology. The undergraduate course was designed to be a fully online medical terminology course for health science students and a face-to-face course for first-year dental students founded in active learning and group work. The course's centerpiece learning activity focused on using published case studies with role-play. In this group activity, students are challenged to interpret a published patient case study as one of the members of a healthcare team. This course models the group work inherent in modern health care to practice building community and practicing professional skills. This approach gives students the capacity to work asynchronously in a team-based approach using our learning management system's wiki tool and requires students to take responsibility for their learning and group dynamics. Students practice identification, writing, analyzing, and speaking medical terms while rotating through the roles. Students in both classes self-reported a 92% to 99% strong or somewhat agreement using a five-point Likert scale that the course pedagogy was valued and helpful in their learning of medical terminology. Overall, this method has proven to be an engaging way for students to learn medical terminology.
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- 2024
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25. Exploring Educational Transformations through the Innovative Flipped Learning Instruction Project Symposium
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Chaya Gopalan, Patricia A. Halpin, Athavan Alias Anand Selvam, and Wei-Chen Hung
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The flipped classroom is an innovative pedagogy that shifts content delivery outside the classroom, utilizing in-class time for interactive learning. The preclass and in-class activities in this framework encourage individualized learning and collaborative problem-solving among students, fostering engagement. The Innovative Flipped Learning Instruction Project (IFLIP) conducted faculty development workshops over 4 years, guiding science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) faculty in integrating flipped teaching (FT) into their courses. The research aimed to assess its impact on pedagogical practices, explore its effectiveness, and provide a framework to implement FT across multiple institutions. It sought to evaluate the experiences of these educators throughout the transitional period of instructional change. In the fourth year of this project, a symposium was organized for IFLIP participants to share their experiences and findings concerning FT. This symposium helped promote collaboration among IFLIP participants and faculty interested in FT to disseminate participants' knowledge and experiences in implementing FT strategies. A survey conducted at the end of the symposium indicated that faculty participants with FT experience continued to embrace this pedagogy, and the new adopters expressed intentions to incorporate it into their courses. The survey revealed positive responses: 93% of respondents plan to integrate FT methods in future classes, 90% gained new information from the symposium and intend to implement it, and 91% are likely to recommend FT to colleagues. Ultimately, the symposium underscored the transformative impact of FT in empowering educators to deepen students' conceptual understanding, emphasizing the significance of this pedagogical approach in advancing the quality of education.
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- 2024
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26. Unpacking Legal Advancements for Asian American Students: A Political Discourse Analysis of Illinois's House Bill 376
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Taylor Masamitsu
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In 2021, Illinois became the first state in the United States to require that K-12 students learn about Asian American history. Illinois achieved this when lawmakers passed House Bill 376 (H.B. 376), colloquially known as the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History (TEAACH) Act. H.B. 376 received praise for being the first legislation of its kind, and its passage inspired similar bills in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. Given the bill's influence, it is imperative to consider its language and utility. This critical policy analysis specifically investigates lawmakers' employment of the term "Asian American." The analysis ultimately argues that H.B. 376 is a necessary first step in breaking centuries of silence and dislocation for Asian Americans; however, the bill advances a social definition--or sociopolitical understanding--of "Asian American" that is potentially harmful.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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27. An Improvement and Learning Journey: Empowering Local Special Education Entities to Address the Special Education Teacher Shortage in Illinois
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National Center for Systemic Improvement at WestEd
- Abstract
The following resource is an impact story of how NCSI built the capacity of Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) to design a state system of support to begin addressing the special education teacher shortage. The resource provides context for the intensive technical assistance focusing on improvement science, provides qualitative and quantitative examples of impact, and concludes with lessons learned from the partnership.
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- 2024
28. Using Unemployment Insurance Wage Data to Better Understand the Experiences of the Child Care and Early Education Workforce over Time: Methods Brief. BASE Secondary Analyses Series. OPRE Report 2023-308
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Administration for Children and Families (DHHS), Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation (OPRE), MDRC, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago, MEF Associates, Emily R. Wiegand, David McQuown, and Robert M. Goerge
- Abstract
Child care and early education (CCEE) educators typically have low levels of compensation; limited opportunities for education, training, and professional development; inconsistent working conditions; and high levels of stress and burnout. There are also high rates of job turnover, which can strain remaining educators and decrease the quality of care they offer. Policymakers at the federal and state levels are taking steps to build and stabilize the CCEE workforce, but effectively addressing these challenges requires a better understanding of the issues. The Building and Sustaining the Child Care and Early Education Workforce (BASE) project aims to increase knowledge and understanding about the CCEE workforce by documenting factors that drive turnover and by building evidence on current initiatives to recruit, advance, and retain a stable and qualified CCEE workforce. Wage data from state Unemployment Insurance (UI) systems can be used to address some of the most pressing policy and research questions about the CCEE workforce because they track individual-level employment and quarterly earnings over time and across employers. This brief describes how these data can support longitudinal analyses that address the following questions: (1) How do educators enter and exit the CCEE workforce over time? (2) Which other industries do educators work in before and after child care employment? (3) When and how often do educators change CCEE employers or leave the industry? (4) How do wages change over time for CCEE work? and (5) How do CCEE wages compare with wages in other industries? A better understanding of how CCEE workers move through the labor market can inform the development of targeted recruitment and retention strategies, as well as evaluations of these strategies. This brief is a technical primer for researchers or agencies interested in using UI wage data to better understand the labor market experiences and, especially, the job trajectories of CCEE workers. Informed by a series of analyses of Illinois UI wage data, this brief describes how child care workers can be identified and characterized in these data, and suggests methods to measure important aspects of their employment, such as job duration, wages, and retention. This brief also includes a short discussion of possibilities for linking UI wage data to other data sources to address these limitations.
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- 2023
29. Impact Evaluation of Imagine MyPath in Moline-Coal Valley School District
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Johns Hopkins University, Center for Research and Reform in Education (CRRE), Michael A. Cook, Nathan Storey, Jane Eisinger, Maria Jose Barros, and Steven M. Ross
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the efficacy of Imagine Learning's MyPath program on student mathematics and reading achievement growth. This study examined achievement growth trajectories of kindergarten students in one suburban Midwestern district in the 2022-23 school year. NWEA MAP mathematics and reading scores served as the main outcome variables in quantitative impact analyses. As Imagine MyPath was used by all district kindergarten students, MAP mathematics and reading score growth of district kindergarten students was compared to that of matched comparison students obtained from a Similar Schools Report (SSR) provided to the district by NWEA. Additionally, a questionnaire was administered to district teachers that used Imagine MyPath to examine teacher perceptions of the program. A statistically significant positive impact of Imagine MyPath on mathematics achievement was observed, with treatment students outgaining matched comparison students by more than 2 points. Treatment students also outgained matched comparison students in reading achievement, but this difference was minimal and not statistically significant. Teacher perceptions of Imagine MyPath were largely positive, especially regarding perceived program impacts on student learning. The results of this study provide preliminary evidence regarding the efficacy of Imagine MyPath in relation to mathematics achievement. It is important to note that results from this study are derived from data in one unique district in which all students used the program. Future research may focus on contexts where some students are using Imagine MyPath while other students are participating in business-as-usual instruction.
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- 2023
30. From Retributive to Restorative: An Alternative Approach to Justice. EdWorkingPaper No. 23-854
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Anjali Adukia, Benjamin Feigenberg, and Fatemeh Momeni
- Abstract
School districts historically approached conflict-resolution from a zero-sum perspective: suspend students seen as disruptive and potentially harm them, or avoid suspensions and harm their classmates. Restorative practices (RP) -- focused on reparation and shared ownership of disciplinary justice -- are designed to avoid this trade-off by addressing undesirable behavior without imparting harm. This study examines Chicago Public Schools' adoption of RP. We identify decreased suspensions, improved school climate, and find no evidence of increased classroom disruption. We estimate a 19% decrease in arrests, including for violent offenses, with reduced arrests outside of school, providing evidence that RP substantively changed behavior. [Additional funding provided by the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics at the University of Chicago and the Hymen Milgrom Supporting Organization through the Successful Pathways from School to Work initiative of the University of Chicago.]
- Published
- 2023
31. Examining the Associations among Knowledge, Empowerment, and Advocacy among Parents of Transition-Aged Youth with Autism
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Chak Li, W. Catherine Cheung, Meghan M. Burke, Julie Lounds Taylor, and Leann S. DaWalt
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Parents of individuals with autism face many challenges in accessing appropriate services and supports for their offspring. Parents also play vital roles in advocating for their offspring's rights and needs. Furthermore, despite advocacy programs becoming increasingly common, it remains unclear how to best foster advocacy among parents of individuals with autism. To this end, we examined the associations among knowledge, empowerment, and three types of advocacy activities (i.e. individual, peer, and systemic) among 185 parents of transition-aged youth with autism using structural equation modeling. Results show that empowerment has a greater impact on advocacy than knowledge. Significant direct and indirect effects of individual advocacy activities on peer advocacy activities, and peer advocacy activities on systemic advocacy activities were also confirmed. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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32. The COVID-19 Pandemic Experience for Families of Young Children with Autism
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Ban Haidar and Hedda Meadan
- Abstract
This study examined caregivers' lived experiences during the initial weeks of stay-at-home mandates within the unique socio-cultural and healthcare context of the United States. To learn about the experiences of caregivers during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, we conducted seventeen semi-structured interviews with caregivers of young children with autism (ages 3-8) in Illinois. The inability to meet demands, the abrupt loss of social and therapeutic support, and the loss of opportunities for leisure and self-care took an emotional toll on the caregivers and the families. Although four caregivers attributed positive changes in their lives to the lockdown (e.g., more family time and improved academic standing for their child), the reported negative impacts overshadowed the positives. To foster resilience and reduce the adverse long-term effects of world-changing events on families of young children with autism, the information gleaned from this study can inform educators, service providers, and other concerned parties about unique considerations when creating future proactive and responsive support measures.
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- 2024
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33. Paraprofessionals' Implementation of Constant Time Delay Procedures with Elementary Students with High-Intensity Behavioral Support Needs
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Allison M. Kroesch, Sarah Southall, Nancy Welsh-Young, and Katherine N. Peeples
- Abstract
Paraprofessionals play a significant role in the education system. However, they often need more training on specific instructional strategies to use with the students they work with. In this study, we trained two paraprofessionals working in a self-contained U.S. elementary classroom for students with high-intensity behavioral support needs. Each paraprofessional used constant time delay to support students' learning to read grade-level sight and science words. Paraprofessionals also gathered maintenance and generalization sessions data using individualized social stories created by the classroom teacher. Not only did the four student participants meet mastery of their personalized word sets but paraprofessionals also implemented all phases with high fidelity. We discuss limitations, implications for practice, and recommendations for future research.
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- 2024
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34. Factors That Contributed to Early Intervention Providers' Use of Caregiver Coaching during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Crystal S. Williams and Michaelene M. Ostrosky
- Abstract
Caregiver coaching in early intervention (EI) can lead to positive outcomes for young children with delays and disabilities and their families. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, some EI providers reported coaching caregivers more frequently. However, EI providers' use of caregiver coaching is inconsistent, and there is a need for more effective personnel preparation in this area. In this qualitative study we explored EI providers' beliefs about what factors contributed to their increased use of caregiver coaching during the pandemic. Participants reported two areas that contributed to their use of caregiver coaching: service delivery (e.g., telepractice, role changes, and caregiver expectations for services) and learning opportunities (e.g., personal growth and reflection, educational resources, and collaboration). Implications include the need for policies that allow and promote access to telepractice services and the importance of using a variety of adult learning strategies when delivering in-service and pre-service preparation related to caregiver coaching.
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- 2024
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35. Competency Based Education Pilot in Illinois: Preliminary Findings
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Bob Blankenberger, Rob Kerr, and Ty Dooley
- Abstract
In this study we employed regression analysis and between-group matched pair design to analyze whether participation in a competency-based education pilot was associated with improved high school completion and postsecondary entry. Data were obtained for high schools participating in a CBE pilot program in Illinois. Results of the matched pair design showed that CBE participation was significantly associated with higher rates of high school graduation for seniors across all groups with differences significant overall (97.2% for CBE vs. 93.1% for non-CBE), for White students (97.2% vs. 92.7%), and for students eligible for Free and Reduced Lunch (96.3% vs. 90.3%). Graduation rate for seniors was also higher for African American students and for Hispanic-Latinx students, but the differences were not statistically significant. In the matched pair design, CBE participation was not significantly associated with entry into college within 12 months of high school.
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- 2024
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36. Identifying Teacher Salary Spiking and Assessing the Impact of Pensionable Compensation Reforms in Illinois
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Dan Goldhaber, Cyrus Grout, and Kristian L. Holden
- Abstract
Defined benefit (DB) pension plans incentivize "salary spiking," where sharp increases in pay are leveraged into significantly higher levels of retirement compensation. While egregious instances of salary spiking occasionally make headlines, there is little guidance on the definition of salary-spiking behavior or understanding of its prevalence. We develop empirical methods to quantify the prevalence of salary spiking by identifying cases where end-of-career compensation deviates from the expected level of compensation. We apply this method to teacher pension systems in Illinois to assess the prevalence of salary spiking before and after the implementation of a reform designed to dissuade salary spiking.
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- 2024
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37. Moving toward Integration or Segregation? Racial Change in Suburban Public Schools
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Kfir Mordechay and Fabian J. Terbeck
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Suburbs across the US are experiencing demographic shifts with consequences for suburban schools. While scholars have expressed concern about rising segregation among suburban public schools, we extend this work by examining changes in racial/ethnic school segregation across a typology of suburban municipalities in the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin metropolitan area between 2007 and 2018. Our findings are mixed- contingent on the measure of segregation employed. We find that Black-white and Hispanic-white segregation in mature suburbs is rising, but is at least in part driven by shifting demographics. The results suggest intra-suburban variation in segregation, highlighting the connection between race and neighborhood change.
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- 2024
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38. A Longitudinal Study of Loneliness in Autism and Other Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: Coping with Loneliness from Childhood through Adulthood
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Hillary Schiltz, Dena Gohari, Jamie Park, and Catherine Lord
- Abstract
Many autistic people and people with non-spectrum neurodevelopmental disabilities (e.g. intellectual disability) report feeling lonely, which can negatively impact their well-being. There is little longitudinal research, however, tracking changes in how autistic people experience, conceptualize, and cope with loneliness throughout their lives. A longitudinal sample of 114 people, which included autistic participants and participants with neurodevelopmental disabilities, characterized experiences of loneliness, perceptions of other people's loneliness, and strategies used to cope with loneliness from childhood to adulthood. Level of loneliness and coping strategies were coded from Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Modules 3 and 4 protocol forms. Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Loneliness Ratings were correlated across time and increased from adolescence to young adulthood. The most common loneliness coping strategies were Behavioral Distraction (e.g. watching TV) and Instrumental Action (e.g. seeking social contact), which were both used by more people in adulthood than childhood. Those who used Behavioral Distraction and a greater number of coping strategies had higher Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Loneliness-Self Ratings (i.e. were lonelier) during adolescence and adulthood. Findings highlight adulthood as a particularly vulnerable time for loneliness and indicate a need for more support and social opportunities for autistic adults and adults with neurodevelopmental disabilities who wish to make more social connections.
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- 2024
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39. Factors Associated with Proportionality of Representation of Children of Color in Early Childhood Special Education in Illinois
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Kaitlyn Ayala
- Abstract
Globally, early childhood education is seen as a right for children and yet, while several nations have instituted universal early childhood education policies to ensure that all children have access to it, the United States faces several challenges. In addition to lacking a universal federal mandate for early childhood education, the United States' implementation of its current educational policy surrounding early childhood (IDEA) may be inappropriate. Research indicates that children of color are often over-represented or under-represented in special education, including in early childhood settings. Research has yet to focus more specifically on exploring how far removed children of color are from proportionate representation in special education in their schools and which factors are associated with more proportionate representation of children of color in special education. The current study investigated early childhood centers in Illinois and found that the diversity of a school's student body, the diversity of the district's teaching staff, the educational attainment of the district's teaching staff, and the geographical location are all associated with the proportionality of representation of children of color in special education in early childhood. Implications for administrators and future research directions are discussed.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Parent versus Child Influences on Differential Parent Warmth and Discipline within Twin Pairs
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Rachel L. Weisbecker and Lisabeth Fisher DiLalla
- Abstract
Parenting behaviors have long been recognized as crucial to children's healthy development. However, examinations of the etiology of these behaviors are less prevalent. The current study investigated the driving forces behind parental warmth and discipline, particularly whether they are related more to traits within the parent or reactions to characteristics of the child. To explore this question, three robust factors of child temperament--effortful control, negative affectivity, and surgency/extraversion--and five parent personality traits were examined in association with parent behaviors through differential parenting within 185 four-year-old twin pairs (370 children; 56% girls; 90% White; predominantly middle class). Genetic analyses showed that parents tend to treat both children similarly in terms of parental warmth, but they treat children less similarly in terms of discipline, regardless of child zygosity. Multilevel linear regressions showed that within twin pairs, the child with higher effortful control received less discipline from parents than their cotwin. Analyses also showed that parent agreeableness was significantly related to parent warmth above and beyond other personality traits and child temperament. This study clarified the direction of effects and genetic contributions to parenting behaviors, supporting previous literature that discipline acts in reaction to the child, whereas warmth is more driven by parent personality. This research suggests the importance of focusing on child temperament and parent personality as they relate to parenting behaviors, allowing clinicians and parents to more effectively correct maladaptive parenting behaviors and encourage healthy and adaptive parenting behaviors, thus promoting positive outcomes for children.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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41. English Learners in Illinois, SY 2021-22. Statistical Report
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Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)
- Abstract
The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) is committed to the cognitive, linguistic, and socio-emotional development of all children in Illinois. ISBE's Multilingual/Language Development Department is focused on ensuring that students with diverse linguistic repertoires and those who may benefit from additional support have equitable access to academic instruction in English. These students also must be provided with access to all educational opportunities to which they are entitled. Section 105 ILSC 5/14C-3 requires that one of two types of programs be provided for all preK-12 English learners (ELs) to help them become proficient in English. The two options are a Transitional Bilingual Education (TBE) program and a Transitional Program of Instruction (TPI). Pursuant to 105 ILCS 5/2-3.39, this report delineates state data on English learners. Data for this report were extracted by the ISBE Data Strategies and Analytics Department from the SY 2021-22 Student Information System Enrollment, EL Record Data, and I-Star Student Approval Data. The data values were calculated based on the 2022 Report Card Snapshot. [This report was produced by the Illinois State Board of Education's Multilingual Department and the Data Strategies and Analytics Department. For the 2020-21 report, see ED624087.]
- Published
- 2023
42. Fiscal Year 2023 Salary Report for the Illinois Public Community Colleges
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Illinois Community College Board (ICCB)
- Abstract
Data about compensation received by employees in Illinois' 48 public community colleges are gathered by the Illinois Community College Board (ICCB). Data in the Fiscal Year 2023 Salary Report, which derive from the ICCB Faculty, Staff, and Salary (C1) Data and Supplementary Faculty, Staff, and Salary Information, reflect the census date of October 1, 2022. Most tables in this report contain information on full-time employees. The report includes faculty salary data which are based on actual contracts, salaries from salary schedules, overload faculty salary rates, and part-time faculty salary rates. Also included are administrative salaries, other (nonteaching) professional staff salaries; information on average faculty load; salaries for selected administrators; and fiscal year 2022 salaries actually paid to faculty, administrators, other (nonteaching) professionals, and classified staff.
- Published
- 2023
43. ISBE Strategic Plan: 2022-2023 Annual Status Report
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Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)
- Abstract
As required in 105 ILCS 5/2-3.47a, the Illinois State Board of Education shall develop and maintain a continuing comprehensive strategic plan for elementary and secondary education. The 2020-2023 Strategic Plan consists of goals for equity, student learning, learning conditions, and elevating educators. The Strategic Plan leverages the wide range of talents and interests of ISBE staff, practicing educators, and stakeholders and considers how best to support agency work during and in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. This report provides an update on the status of the 2020-2023 Strategic Plan, including: (1) Highlights of from the work of the strategic plan during 2023; (2) Information on the extension of 2020-2023 Strategic Plan through FY 2024 while the 2025-2030 Strategic Plan is in development; and (3) The process for the creation of the 2025-2030 Strategic Plan. [For "ISBE Strategic Plan: 2021-2022 Annual Status Report," see ED624088. For "Illinois State Board of Education 2020-2023 Strategic Plan," see ED624118.]
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- 2023
44. Indicators and Perceptions of Teacher Leadership in Illinois: Five Teacher Characteristics and Three School Demographics
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Hunzicker, Jana Lynn
- Abstract
An indicator is a gauge or sense that allows a person to draw a conclusion. Because teacher leadership is so vaguely defined in both research and practice, indicators can assist teachers in using their perceptual knowledge to recognize and define teacher leadership. This article reports the findings of a statewide study conducted to better understand which indicators of teacher leadership Illinois teachers consider strong and which indicators they consider weak. The study, which compared teachers' perceptions across five teacher characteristics and three school demographics, was originally published as two separate articles in two different state-level journals. Across all comparisons, the study's findings revealed "expertise" and "credibility" as the two strongest indicators of teacher leadership, with "frequency" running a close third. "Variety" and "connections" fell somewhere in the middle, and "credentials" and "scale" emerged as the two weakest indicators.
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- 2023
45. The Charter Schools Program: 2023 Impact Report
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National Alliance for Public Charter Schools
- Abstract
The Charter Schools Program (CSP) is the nation's only source of dedicated federal funding to support the creation, expansion, and replication of public charter schools. Since FY2019, the CSP has been flat funded at $440 million. The CSP amounts to less than 1% of federal spending on K-12 education, however, it has a substantial impact on the communities where charter schools operate. Our 2023 CSP annual report breaks down how the program works and ways school leaders are using the funds. [For the 2022 report, see ED625565.]
- Published
- 2023
46. Educating Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Learners (CLD) in United States Schools during COVID-19
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Burgin, Ximena D., Daniel, Mayra C., and Riley, Carolyn F.
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has propelled educational communities across the world into emergency remote models of instruction. This study documented the perceptions of 11 teachers from the State of Illinois regarding the quality of online instruction in their schools and their unexpected challenges from March of 2019-2020 academic year. Three points of data collection documented the teachers' perceptions of the transition to online learning and subsequent difficulties. Recurrent themes evident in responses to interview questions (Stake, 2000) were examined using a constant comparison method (Glasser & Strauss, 1967). Three emerging themes were identified: increased job demands, need for educational supports, and educators' concerns about the quality of the delivery of online instruction for Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Learners during the pandemic.
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- 2023
47. The Transformative Ten: Instructional Strategies Learned from High-Growth Schools. White Paper
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NWEA and Nordengren, Chase
- Abstract
This paper describes high quality teaching practices in two schools that produce exceptional growth for all kinds of students. These practices focus on making the most of instructional time and exposing students to high quality content in a variety of contexts. They prove teachers don't need to choose between differentiating to meet students' needs and giving them access to grade-level learning.
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- 2023
48. Partners to Lead Evaluation: Final Summative Report
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American Institutes for Research (AIR), Arellanes, Melissa, Brown-Sims, Melissa, Castro, Marina, Davis, Elisabeth, Garcia-Arena, Patricia, Larsen, Eric, and Salvato, Bradley
- Abstract
Partners to Lead (PtL) is a school leadership professional development (PD) project funded by a 5-year Education Innovation and Research grant and implemented by the DuPage, Illinois, Regional Office of Education (ROE) in 37 public elementary, middle, and high schools in four Illinois ROEs. The American Institutes for Research® (AIR®), the independent evaluator of PtL, has completed an implementation and impact study of the program. This final report summarizes the PtL program and AIR's evaluation methods; the extent to which PtL was implemented as designed; and findings on PtL's impact on student achievement, changes to principal effectiveness as measured by the Illinois 5Essentials Survey, and principal retention. All 37 schools recruited to participate in PtL remained in the program across all 3 years of the intervention, and principals generally expressed satisfaction with the components of PtL. However, analyses indicate that PtL did not have a statistically significant positive impact on principal leadership effectiveness, student achievement, or principal retention. From March 2020 through the end of the intervention, some PtL principals may have become somewhat disengaged from the full PtL PD and coaching due to competing professional and personal priorities resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, which may have attenuated the impact of PtL. Nonetheless, students in intervention schools scored 0.104 standard deviation higher in math in spring of the final year of the intervention, and the p value for the estimated positive impact on student math achievement was 0.06.
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- 2023
49. State Strategies for Investing in Community Schools
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Learning Policy Institute, Maier, Anna, and Rivera-Rodriguez, Adrian
- Abstract
The community schools strategy transforms a school into a place where educators, local community members, families, and students work together to strengthen conditions for student learning and healthy development. As partners, they organize in- and out-of-school resources, supports, and opportunities so that young people thrive. A growing number of states are investing in community schools as a strategy to address long-standing social inequities that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on a review of state American Rescue Plan Act plans, as well as state legislative and state education agency websites and other online resources, this report describes community school initiatives in eight states. The report highlights three potential approaches to state support for community schools: (1) ongoing support through school funding formulas; (2) competitive grant funding; and (3) capacity-building supports (such as certification processes).
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- 2023
50. Bringing Adults Back to Community College Playbook: Strategies and Recommendations to Increase Adult Enrollment
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New America, Center on Education and Labor and Geary, Chris
- Abstract
Community college enrollment has significantly declined since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Between the spring 2020 term and the spring 2022 term, community college enrollment declined by nearly 17 percent nationwide. This alarming trend has posed a threat to the well-being of community colleges and the students they serve, which includes more than half of all undergraduate students from low-income families. Community college enrollment declines threaten to worsen educational inequities. The Center on Education & Labor at New America partnered with six community colleges to reenroll adult students who had stopped out of college since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. This playbook contains findings and recommendations stemming from this project and is designed to help community colleges across the country better engage, recruit, enroll, and serve adult students.
- Published
- 2023
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