That's according to a West Central Reporter analysis of 2022 test score data compiled by the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE).
ISBE reports that last year, 73.8 percent of Hancock County's 168 public high school students failed the English language arts portion of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) and have "minimal (or) incomplete… understanding of the knowledge and skills relative to Illinois Learning Standards."
Students can achieve four proficiencies in their subjects (partially met, approaching, meets, and exceeds standards). This report concludes students who partially met or approached the standards have failed in the subject.
Hamilton High School (80.7 percent) had the highest failure rates in Hancock County. Warsaw Senior High School (68.3 percent) had the lowest.
No Hancock County high schools had a passing rate of more than 50 percent of students.
County-wide, English test failure rates rose from 68.1 percent in 2019 to 73.8 percent in 2022.
The failure rate increased at three Hancock County high schools in 2022, with the most significant increase happening at Hamilton High School (80.7 percent).
Failure rates rose the most at Cook County (100 percent), Marion County (100 percent), Peoria County (100 percent), Scott County (100 percent), Tazewell County (100 percent).
Statewide, 69.1 percent of Illinois students failed the 2022 state English exam, up from 64 percent in 2019.
The SAT test is administered to Illinois high school sophomores "to fulfill the requirement that students take an assessment for college and career readiness in order to receive a regular high school diploma."
High School | # of Students | Failing % in 2019 | Failing % in 2021 | Failing % in 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hamilton High School | 31 | 71.5% | 60% | 80.7% |
Illini West High School | 69 | 71.2% | 73.1% | 75.3% |
Southeastern Junior/Senior High School | 27 | 66.7% | 89.6% | 70.3% |
Warsaw Senior High School | 41 | 60.5% | 64.5% | 68.3% |