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District underfunded, short of AYP, but an award winner

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Two of the district’s seven schools, however, didn’t meet the state standards. Minooka Elementary students in the Free and Reduced Meal program didn’t make the grade and students at Minooka Intermediate, in both Free and Reduced and in Special Education, also missed the mark, Palaniuk said.

When Palaniuk started with the district in the early 1990s, there were 1,000 students and 75 percent made AYP, he said. Now, with 4,000 students, 91.2 have made AYP. Typically a school district would see lower scores with more students.

“We are an anomaly,” Palaniuk said. “I still say we are going in the right direction.”

The biggest hurdle in meeting AYP for District 201, according to Gegenheimer, is when students are able to test out of a program such as English Language Learners and certain Special Education areas and the schools don’t receive credit for those successes.

“We are always going to have lower numbers there (in those programs),” Gegenheimer said.

On the subject of special education, Gegenheimer said now that the district teaches special needs students in-house, the district gets much less in state reimbursement for the program.

When students were bused to private programs, the district received reimbursement at a rate of four times its per capita cost. With the program in-house, the district is reimbursed at just two times the per capita cost.

It’s in the best interest of students to have a shorter route to school and be educated locally, and in the best interest of taxpayers not to spend $50,000 when it can be done for $35,000 in-house, Gegenheimer said.

“The laws are upside down,” he said. “We are doing right by our students and community, the problem is it’s costing a tremendous amount of money. I need everyone to understand that.”

Bright Star Award

Despite the financial woes and AYP shortfalls, the district was a recipient of the Bright Star Award.

District 201 was one of 85 Illinois school districts, out of 868, to be honored with the award.

The criteria is based on districts whose students’ academic performance ranks in the upper third in the state while the per-pupil expenditures rank in the lower fourth.

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