Peoria County home to 20 gangs

That’s the happy news of the day, delivered in a news conference attended by Mayor Jim Ardis, Peoria Police Chief Steve Settingsgaard, Peoria County Sheriff Mike McCoy, and U.S. Representatives Aaron Schock and Mark Kirk.

Meanwhile, Kirk said, the city of Peoria is able to dedicate just 20 officers to anti-gang units. “We need to make sure a local city or town is not overwhelmed by the resources of a gang,” Kirk said.

I’d just like to take this opportunity to remind everyone that the City is still contemplating laying off police officers while concurrently planning to fork over $39.5 million to a private developer for a new downtown hotel. You see, Peoria’s Mayor and City Council don’t mind raising taxes for risky private ventures, but balk at tax increases for public safety.

Kirk pointed out that the average age for a gang member involved in a shooting is the equivalent of an eighth-grade student; that the combined size of U.S. gangs would create the fifth-largest army in the world, with at least 1 million members; and that state sentencing in court is not significant enough to use for leverage.

I wonder if any of these teenage gang members attend Peoria Public Schools, and if combining a couple of urban high schools will lead to any violence among said gang members. It’s a good thing we’ll have extra officers on hand when this happ– oh, wait…..

The improvised school district

Anyone else get the idea that District 150 is just making things up as they go along?

Grading Policy

I didn’t get a chance to see last night’s school board meeting, but according to the Journal Star, the district’s administration defended their new grading scale:

“For students who have made an effort . . . the lowest grade we’re asking teachers to give students is 50, however, there are students who are not making an effort, they are not turning in complete assignments or not turning in assignments at all – certainly zeros or other grades below 50 are appropriate and can be entered into the grading system,” Chumbley said, adding the administration looked at ways students were “not always put in that hole of not being able to climb out.”

So, say you have two students, and each of them gets two questions out of ten correct on an assignment. According to Mr. Chumbley, the teacher could give one of those students a 20% and the other a 50%, depending on whether the teacher thought the student was putting forth sufficient effort. Thus, even though both students did the same work, one of them will get a higher score than he earned. At this point, grades cease to reflect what the student has actually learned, which was, I thought, the whole point of grading. And pity the poor student who tries real hard and gets only five out of ten questions correct; he doesn’t get any extra credit for effort. He gets a 50 just like the kid who tried real hard and only got two questions correct. The less you achieve, the more benefit you receive.

Hinton chimed in, too:

While backing the new grading procedures, Superintendent Ken Hinton also described it as “a work in progress.”

“Once you give many children a zero in regards to their work, it shuts them down. In other words, they know there’s no way to recover,” Hinton said. “And so what we’re doing, we’re trying to do, is reach a happy medium, keep expectations as such that you have the responsibility of doing your work to the best of your ability while at same time recognizing that if you don’t do your work, the zero is still there.”

Administrative procedures are not voted on by the School Board, but Hinton said alterations can be made to incorporate board concerns.

There’s no way to recover? Have extra-credit assignments been banned from District 150? How are expectations kept high when you’re giving extra credit to those doing substandard work for no other reason than “we don’t want to discourage them”? But best of all, this grading system which has already been implemented is a “work in progress,” and “alterations can be made.” So maybe halfway through the year, they’ll change the grading scale again.

Year-Round School?

Meanwhile, the district is now suggesting Lincoln Middle School switch to a year-round schedule. And this is a bit confusing: the Journal Star says it was presented that this would be “a pilot program for year-round schooling.” However, WMBD-TV reported: “Hinton says the school day will mimic the new Glen Oak and Harrison Schools when they open: 45 days of school, 15 days off and so on…” A “pilot” is “something that serves as a model or a basis for making copies.” But if the proposed Lincoln schedule is supposed to be mimicking the schedule at two other schools, it’s not a “pilot.”

Of course, “no costs of the pilot program were presented Monday night.” That’s just as well, since you can’t trust any cost estimates coming from the administration. Although no costs were presented for changing Lincoln, there were other costs presented:

One stumbling block administrators foresee in making more schools in the district year-round is air conditioning. Many buildings don’t have air. It could cost about $6 million to put air in each high school, for example.

So we have a plan to pilot year-round school, but we know that if we actually go to year-round school district-wide, it’s going to cost millions of dollars to put A/C in existing buildings. And the district is so financially-strapped, they’re closing schools. But they’re going to consider changing the schedule in such a way that they’ll have to spend millions of dollars to accommodate it.

Speaking of closing schools…

The district still doesn’t have a plan for closing Woodruff. They just know they’re going to close it. Who knows where the kids will go next year? Who knows how much it will actually save? What will happen to the Woodruff building?

One group is tired of the District’s “shoot first, ask questions later” policy. They’re going to file an injunction against closing the school unless D150 comes up with a plan by the next school board meeting.

Ah, the travails of the improvised school district.