Illinois lawmakers scrutinize private school scholarships without test-result data
By JOHN O’CONNOR
AP Political Reporter
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The Invest in Kids private school scholarship program in Illinois expires Dec. 31 and supporters want the General Assembly to reauthorize it when it meets for its final three days this week. Critics want the program to sunset, saying there’s no evidence it improved student achievement. But the state education agency hasn’t had a chance to collect data to measure achievement. COVID-19 interrupted statewide testing during the first two years of Invest in Kids. So the contractor that the Illinois State Board of Education hired couldn’t start its analysis until it had 2022 test scores. It’s still preparing its first report on whether the program affected student achievement. Unions representing public school teachers say the program siphons money from public schools.