113 six-figure school district administrators oppose Classrooms First Act
113 six-figure school district administrators oppose Classrooms First Act
Of the 113 school district administrators earning six-figure salaries who oppose a bill to reduce bureaucracy, 21 are above the $200,000 mark. The bill intends to put more money into classrooms or back in taxpayers’ pockets.
By Patrick Andriesen
Illinois students safe at 3-foot distance, unless they are in Chicago
Illinois students safe at 3-foot distance, unless they are in Chicago
New COVID-19 guidance from Illinois health and education departments allows schools to reduce social distancing to three feet. But the Chicago Teachers Union intends to ‘vigorously’ keep a six-foot distance.
By Patrick Andriesen
Bourbonnais union strikes; claims to fight for students ‘out on the picket line’
Bourbonnais union strikes; claims to fight for students ‘out on the picket line’
A disagreement over final contract details caused the teachers union to strike in Bourbonnais, putting 2,452 elementary students out of class.
By Brad Weisenstein
Flat education spending is a cut when pensions, administration take more
Flat education spending is a cut when pensions, administration take more
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker plans another year of flat education spending. The reality is the cash reaching classrooms is dwindling as pensions and administration eat more.
Illinois lawmakers approve controversial ‘culturally responsive’ teaching rule
Illinois lawmakers approve controversial ‘culturally responsive’ teaching rule
Illinois state lawmakers recently approved a rule requiring Illinois teacher training programs to adopt ‘culturally responsive teaching and leading’ standards. Critics say a political litmus test is the wrong focus when students are underachieving on the basics.
By Amy Korte
Illinois education spending belongs in classrooms, not in administrative offices
Illinois education spending belongs in classrooms, not in administrative offices
A bill in the Illinois House would work to consolidate administration of Illinois’ schools without closing schools. The move would put more money in classrooms and take less from property taxpayers.
Sarah Sachen
Sarah Sachen
“This is the first time in the history of teachers’ strikes that parents across the city are uniting to speak against the union. There were ‘return to school’ rallies in both the Englewood neighborhood, and on the North Side.”
Al Molina
Al Molina
“E-learning does not work for everybody, and one size does not fit all. My children are not doing well in school.”
Illinois lawmakers to vote on controversial ‘culturally responsive’ education rule
Illinois lawmakers to vote on controversial ‘culturally responsive’ education rule
The Illinois General Assembly’s Joint Committee on Administrative Rules will vote Feb. 16 on whether to suspend a rule that would require Illinois teacher training programs to adopt ‘culturally responsive teaching and leading’ standards.
By Amy Korte
Returning to school: What Illinois parents, teachers, school boards need to know
Returning to school: What Illinois parents, teachers, school boards need to know
Illinois students are returning to school, but some unions are scaring teachers about their safety in the classroom. The science doesn’t support those fears, and the law may put teachers at odds with union demands.
By Mailee Smith
Illinois school standards proposal pushes ‘progressive values’ over diverse views, critics say
Illinois school standards proposal pushes ‘progressive values’ over diverse views, critics say
Illinois educators may face controversial rules encouraging teachers to review their biases and privilege, accept multiple views as correct and encourage student activism.
Illinois students should return to classrooms this fall
Illinois students should return to classrooms this fall
Gov. J.B. Pritzker should set the expectation that Illinois schools will welcome students back to campus full-time for the 2020-2021 school year.
By Amy Korte
Pritzker budget spends more on everything, but education is left behind
Pritzker budget spends more on everything, but education is left behind
Illinois’ fiscal year 2021 budget is larger than 2020’s, yet spending on education lost ground without an adjustment for inflation.