Illinois
Illinois school Superintendent Tony Sanders discusses strategy to boost math scores | Capitol News Illinois
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois State Board of Education recently released the 2024 School Report Card, showing a record-high proficiency rate for students in grades 3-8 in English language arts while math scores still have not fully recovered from the low point they hit during the pandemic.
In response, ISBE has announced plans to develop a comprehensive, statewide strategy for boosting math skills across the board.
In a podcast interview recorded Wednesday, Nov. 6, State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders spoke with Capitol News Illinois about the report card and the need to address the sagging math scores.
Following is an edited transcript of that interview. Listen to the full interview on this week’s edition of Capitol Cast. Listen below or subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
CNI: Before we get to this math plan, what is this state report card that comes out every year. Why do we do this?
Sanders: So the state report card really is a result of federal requirements. All the way back to the early 2000s, school districts had to start under – then the law was called No Child Left Behind – had to start reporting annually, school-by-school, on the progress being made by students. Individual states developed their own accountability systems, so they all look different. But it was a way to inform parents, taxpayers and others on how students were doing across the state and within your local community.
CNI: You use the words “accountability report.” In what way do these reports hold schools and districts and state departments like yours accountable?
Sanders: The accountability system focuses on schools and districts that are underperforming. So the school districts that really are struggling the most in student growth and student attainment are the ones that typically are identified for supports. And with that comes additional monetary support. So they get more money to do additional strategies to improve student outcomes at those schools.
Within Illinois, parents can expect to see their schools currently labeled in one of four areas. They’re either going to be labeled as “exemplary,” meaning they’re in the top 10% of the state; “commendable,” which is about 72% of our schools; or they’re going to be “comprehensive” or “targeted status.” Those are the schools that are the lowest performing schools in the state academically.
CNI: And roughly how many of those do we have, and are they located in particular areas?
Sanders: So it is limited to the to 5% of the schools. There’s about 400 schools that are currently on that list, and they’re all over the place. They’re in large urban systems. They’re in small, rural communities. So you’ll find schools being labeled as “targeted” or “comprehensive” everywhere in the state.
CNI: Getting back to the math scores, a lot of people will just say in casual conversation, “You know, math was never really my subject. I was never good at math. I can’t balance my own checkbook.” And the test scores have always borne that out. The achievement scores are rarely as high in math as in other subjects. Why is that? Is that a cultural thing for Americans? Are we just not a math-prone society?
Sanders: No. If you look back over the history of standardized tests, all the way the NAEP assessment (the National Assessment of Educational Progress), which is given across the nation, the scores have not changed significantly all the way back to the 1950s.
I try to think back to the time when Sputnik went up, and suddenly there was this urgency to improve math and science across the nation. And despite all those efforts back in the 50s and 60s, we still haven’t seen a lot of significant gains in math over decades of time.
CNI: What goes into developing a plan like this? The Literacy Plan took a long time.
Sanders: Yeah, it took a couple of years. That one was spurred on, really, by the General Assembly. They saw our English language arts results and prompted us. Nationwide, there’s been a conversation about the “science of reading” and shifting practice of literacy instruction. But we’ve not yet had that national conversation about math. So we intend to follow, again, the same type of process we did before: pulling together experts from across the state and the nation to look at what are best practices currently in terms of math instruction, pulling in curriculum experts, pulling in experts in English language learning.
CNI: You did a media briefing about the report card itself, and kind of walking us through step by step. And one of the things you said when it came to math was that Illinois adopted new learning standards for math back in 2010. It’s been almost 15 years. And you also added that there’s never been a concerted statewide effort to provide teachers and educators with training in how to implement these standards. And it struck me that a child who started kindergarten in 2010 has now already graduated high school, but we still haven’t implemented a training program for teachers to deal with these new standards. Was that a failure on the state’s part?
Sanders: Every state adopted new standards for math and English language arts around the same time, around 2010.
CNI: Those were the Common Core Standards.
Sanders: The Common Core Standards were implemented. And then they became the Illinois Learning Standards. When that shift happened, teachers, principals and local school districts all began taking a harder look at their curriculum and their practices in both English language arts and math.
The challenge with math, from a local district perspective and a teacher perspective, is that there’s too many standards within a student’s one-year span of time for a teacher to be able to hit every single standard and ensure every child is competent in that standard.
If you’re taking a look at them grade-by-grade, it’s a lot that we’re asking our teachers to cover. And so I think part of our work – and I would never call it a failure – but I think part of our work is really being very explicit about which are the power standards. Which are the ones that we need to ensure students must master by a particular grade level in order to progress to the next grade level? And I think that’s going to be part of the work that we’ll have to do as we roll out this math plan.
CNI: Is there anything else in the report card that you think should be highlighted?
Sanders: We have so much to be proud of in this year’s report card. Our students need to be very proud of the work they did. Our teachers need to stand up and take a bow for working so hard, not only during the pandemic, but after the pandemic, to fully prepare our kids.
We’ve seen historic rates of proficiency in English language arts, 40.9% of our kids being proficient in English language arts, which is an all-time high for the state of Illinois. That’s something to celebrate. The highest ever known graduation rate on record. That is something to celebrate. Lowering our chronic absenteeism, so more students are showing up on a daily basis to school. That’s a win.
So much of this year’s report card is positive news. Even the math scores are an improvement. They’re just not moving as fast as our English language arts scores. So, by and large, Illinois has a lot to be proud of in this report card. It demonstrates a lot of hard work on the part of our teachers and students over this last academic year.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
Illinois
Affordable Care Act enrollment in Illinois continues to drop, new state data shows
More than 92,000 people are no longer getting Affordable Care Act health insurance in Illinois, including a majority who were dropped because they didn’t pay their monthly premiums, according to new state data.
This lowers the number of people buying health insurance through the state’s marketplace exchange, Get Covered Illinois, than initially thought — driven by people who likely couldn’t afford their plan. Overall, enrollment now stands at 373,065, which includes those who signed up after open enrollment closed for most people. This is a nearly 15% drop from the state’s record high of 437,892 in February 2025, according to data from KFF, which conducts health policy research and polling.
About 64% — or about 59,000 people — were disenrolled from their health insurance plan as of May 31 this year because of nonpayment, according to the state data. This year saw a higher percentage of people disenrolled for nonpayment since at least 2020, according to the state.
Another 28% of enrollees dropped coverage because they gained insurance another way or moved out of state.
In a statement, Get Covered Illinois said the increased costs in insurance led to one of the largest marketplace enrollment declines in nearly a decade because of federal policies.
“Federal policies implemented by the Trump Administration and Congressional Republicans have left Illinoisans facing unprecedented rising health care costs,” the statement read. “… As a state-based marketplace, Get Covered Illinois was able to blunt some of the decline through premium alignment strategies and public outreach and enrollment assistance, but the Trump Administration’s federal actions will continue to impact our residents’ access to affordable health care coverage.”
The enrollment decrease in Illinois for nonpayment mirrors national figures. Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal reported that about one in seven people across the country didn’t pay their premiums through the Affordable Care Act.
Advocates say this is what they feared would happen when Congress last year did not extend enhanced tax credits that dated back to the COVID-19 pandemic. Those enhanced tax credits had made health insurance through the exchange more affordable, according to Kathy Waligora, a leader with the Protect Our Care Illinois. The tax credits were at the center of last fall’s historic government shutdown, though lawmakers never were able to gain enough support to extend them.
“It was really exactly what we expected, and really concerning to see the scale,” Waligora said. “I think probably the most disappointing part is people wanted to be insured or they allowed themselves to be autorenewed and they couldn’t remain insured because of the cost of premiums.”
The state’s data shows that even with the expiration of those tax credits, about 85% of enrollees continue receiving some other form of financial assistance. Still, most of those dropped from their health care plan have annual incomes ranging from $23,475 to $48,225, according to state data.
Obamacare monthly premiums in Illinois rose by 25% this year, but that’s still not as much as expected. State officials had originally predicted enrollees would see an average increase of 78%.
Waligora credited the state with trying to mitigate changes to the Affordable Care Act by, for example, extending the open enrollment period and trying to provide more information about different types of healthcare plans. Still, she described the lower enrollment numbers as a “shocking change” reflecting broader affordability issues in health care.
“We ignore this really loud signal we’ve gotten with the number of people disenrolling, likely going uninsured, because the marketplace coverage is unaffordable, if we don’t act on that, it’s going to have this ripple effect in the system,” Waligora said.
Illinois
Illinois gas tax set to increase every year—without a vote
Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s 2019 “Rebuild Illinois” plan created automatic inflationary adjustments in the state gas tax, which could reach over $1 per gallon by 2056.
Illinois’ state gas tax is slated to go up every year without lawmakers ever voting on the increases.
The state went almost 30 years without raising the tax, which was 19 cents a gallon from 1990 to 2019.
That year, as part of his “Rebuild Illinois” infrastructure program, Pritzker doubled the tax to 38 cents a gallon.
More consequentially, the law created automatic yearly increases linked to inflation. Because of that, Illinois drivers will likely pay more in state gas taxes each year for the foreseeable future unless lawmakers take action, as there’s no expiration date on the annual adjustments.
The gas tax could more than double in the next 30 years. By then, it could be over $1 a gallon, five times more than before Pritzker took office.
The automatic increases allow lawmakers to avoid having to pass an unpopular tax hike and justify it to voters. They also can claim credit when they pause the hikes, saying it’s tax relief for residents.
That’s what the governor has done this year, holding off for six months on a 1.3-cents-a-gallon increase that was slated to kick in July 1.
Pritzker made affordability a central theme of his fiscal 2027 budget, but this temporary reprieve does nothing to change the long-term reality of yearly automatic gas tax increases.
The Illinois Tollway Board might even add automatic inflationary adjustments to passenger tolls, despite the Illinois Tollway reporting its highest collections and net revenue in state history.
Pritzker appoints the tollway board members and is himself an ex-officio member, as is the Pritzker-appointed state secretary of transportation.
Meanwhile, Illinois continues to hoard billions in the state’s Road Fund, money meant for improving transportation infrastructure. The fund held over $3.7 billion at the end of fiscal 2025.
Despite this surplus and drivers paying the nation’s second-highest gas taxes, federal data shows that 80.4% of Illinois roads were considered acceptable in 2024, fewer than in 2015, when the gas tax was still 19 cents.
Lawmakers also divert sales tax revenue on gas that would have gone into the Transportation Fund and Downstate Transportation Fund to fill budget shortfalls. The fiscal 2027 budget redirects $150 million in unexpected gas sales tax revenue from higher fuel costs to help close the state’s broader budget gap.
Gas taxes hit working families the hardest. Middle- and low-income Illinoisans often drive older, less fuel-efficient vehicles and spend a larger share of their income commuting to work, getting to school and handling daily necessities.
Lawmakers should be required to vote on state gas tax increases rather let automatic increases allow them to avoid scrutiny from their constituents.
Illinois
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker opens door to a special legislative session on Bears stadium
The Bears claim they’re focused on building a new stadium in Indiana. And yet they’re still talking to Illinois.
On Tuesday, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker told reporters that there have been “incoming calls” from the Bears to Pritzker and legislative leaders in recent days.
“The Bears would like to see something happen,” Pritzker said, via Brenden Moore of Capitol News Illinois, “and we all do, too. And so the question is, ‘Can they do that?’”
He said the Bears are currently trying to regroup.
Pritzker added that the Bears made some “fumbles” from the outset of the process. Among other things, he mentioned the lack of focus on one location, the absence of a clear plan in the recent legislative session, and the failure to be present on the final day of the session.
The door is open for a special legislative session, if (as Pritzker said) the House and Senate can get together on one piece of legislation. (Pritzker added that legislative leaders can also call a special session.)
And so, while the Bears have a bird in the hand in Hammond, Indiana, they’re still looking for a solution in Illinois. Which makes sense.
Nothing in Hammond is official, and the team’s stated desire to advance the ball in Indiana looks like nothing more than an effort to get the ball rolling in Illinois.
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