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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Over the past several months, the Illinois State | ||||||
3 | Board of Education has heard from superintendents, building | ||||||
4 | principals, classroom teachers, parents, and students | ||||||
5 | regarding their thoughts and concerns on federally required | ||||||
6 | assessments for the 2020-2021 school year; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Because so many of our students have been | ||||||
8 | separated from their school since March 2020, bringing | ||||||
9 | students back in-person only to immediately begin state | ||||||
10 | testing will have a detrimental effect on the goals of | ||||||
11 | supporting their social and emotional well-being, mental | ||||||
12 | health, and reconnection with the school community; while 77 | ||||||
13 | percent of our 852 school districts are offering some | ||||||
14 | in-person instruction, data show that more than a million | ||||||
15 | students are still learning in fully remote environments; | ||||||
16 | fewer than 200 Illinois school districts serving less than | ||||||
17 | 200,000 students are currently able to provide fully in-person | ||||||
18 | instruction to all students; Illinois students need their | ||||||
19 | school and district administrators focused on resuming | ||||||
20 | in-person instruction for the purposes of providing | ||||||
21 | trauma-informed supports, increasing the quality of | ||||||
22 | instruction, and rebuilding relationships between students and | ||||||
23 | teachers; the administration of state assessments would take | ||||||
24 | away from these critical endeavors that are foundational to |
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1 | the recovery of our educational systems; and
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2 | WHEREAS, After hearing the concerns of district and school | ||||||
3 | leaders, teachers, families, and students, ISBE delayed its | ||||||
4 | testing windows in order to provide as much flexibility for | ||||||
5 | administration under socially distanced conditions; currently, | ||||||
6 | and in addition to supporting the academic, social, and | ||||||
7 | emotional needs of students, districts are utilizing time and | ||||||
8 | resources to ensure transportation and safe logistics for | ||||||
9 | testing; this time could be better spent coordinating | ||||||
10 | vaccination administration for educators and the larger | ||||||
11 | community and providing necessary supports for students; and
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12 | WHEREAS, Without a clear signal that the Department of | ||||||
13 | Education will permit an assessment waiver, districts will | ||||||
14 | continue to plan for the administration of assessments; this | ||||||
15 | is not the optimal use of their time or resources; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Illinois educators understand and believe in the | ||||||
17 | importance of assessment results, but the likely variability | ||||||
18 | in participation across the State will limit the comparability | ||||||
19 | and usefulness of the data at both the individual student and | ||||||
20 | student group levels; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, The potential yet diminished benefits of using | ||||||
22 | incomplete state assessment data as a means of understanding |
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1 | the scope of learning loss that may have occurred as a result | ||||||
2 | of the pandemic do not outweigh the significant burden that | ||||||
3 | the administration of state assessments would incur on our | ||||||
4 | students, families, teachers, and administrators; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Assessment, the practice of collecting evidence | ||||||
6 | about student learning to provide students with feedback and | ||||||
7 | to inform supports and instructional design, is still | ||||||
8 | critically important to helping students recover from the | ||||||
9 | pandemic; schools, districts, and teachers can and should | ||||||
10 | continue to conduct formative assessments at the local levels | ||||||
11 | to understand the impact of the pandemic on student learning | ||||||
12 | and provide holistic and individualized supports; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Accountability is an effective means of | ||||||
14 | identifying schools and students in the greatest need of | ||||||
15 | assistance; a second year without state assessments will | ||||||
16 | impact longitudinal data and accountability systems; however, | ||||||
17 | ISBE has the ability to continue to provide support to the | ||||||
18 | highest need schools and students and to leverage local data | ||||||
19 | sources to evaluate its progress; therefore, be it
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20 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL | ||||||
21 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we urge the U.S. | ||||||
22 | Department of Education, pursuant to section 8401(b) of the | ||||||
23 | Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended, to |
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1 | offer states the option to waive the following assessment and | ||||||
2 | concomitant accountability and reporting requirements; | ||||||
3 | specifically the U.S. Department of Education should release | ||||||
4 | an expedited waiver application for: | ||||||
5 | (1) Assessment requirements in section 1111(b)(2) | ||||||
6 | covering all required assessments in school year | ||||||
7 | 2020-2021; | ||||||
8 | (2) The requirement that a state annually meaningfully | ||||||
9 | differentiate all public school and to identify schools | ||||||
10 | for comprehensive and targeted support and improvement, as | ||||||
11 | required in sections 1111(c)(4) and 1111(d)(2)(C)-(D); and | ||||||
12 | (3) Those report card provisions related to | ||||||
13 | assessments and accountability in section 1111(h) that | ||||||
14 | would be based on data from the 2020-2021 school year; and | ||||||
15 | be it further
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16 | RESOLVED, That we believe that it is in the best interest | ||||||
17 | of students and educators for the U.S. Department of Education | ||||||
18 | to release an expedited waiver of assessment and | ||||||
19 | accountability requirements for the 2020-2021 school year.
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