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West Central Reporter

Friday, November 22, 2024

Chicago schools spend 42 percent more than Morgan's Jacksonville High

Test

Of students at Jacksonville High School, 25.9 percent earned a passing score on the 2015 Illinois standardized K-12 test, or "PARCC" exam. | File photo

Of students at Jacksonville High School, 25.9 percent earned a passing score on the 2015 Illinois standardized K-12 test, or "PARCC" exam. | File photo

Operational spending at Jacksonville High School in Morgan is 42 percent less than the average Chicago public school.

Jacksonville High School is in the Jacksonville No. 117 school district, where operational spending is $8,840 per year, per student. In the Chicago Public School District (CPS), the average school spends $15,120 per year, per student.

The number of students per classroom at Jacksonville High School is actually fewer than at CPS. At Jacksonville High School, there are 17 students per classroom, while at CPS there are 24.

However, at CPS, while schools are staffed for full enrollment, 27 percent of students are "chronically truant." That means adjusted for actual student attendance, CPS has 17.5 students per classroom.

At Jacksonville High School, the truancy rate is 2.3.

The Chicago Teachers Union has called upon state taxpayers to increase state funding to CPS by 25 percent, or to $20,000 per student. City officials are considering filing a federal lawsuit to require the rest of Illinois to provide this funding.

Of students at Jacksonville High School, 25.9 percent earned a passing score on the 2015 Illinois standardized K-12 test, or "PARCC" exam. On the same exam, 25 percent of CPS students earned a passing score.

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