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State survey aims to offer detailed look at schools

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(MCT) — Calling it an "X-ray" of public schools, Illinois is launching an unprecedented attempt to gather candid information on how teachers are teaching, students are learning and principals are leading.

Guaranteed to make for some potent reading — and already causing trepidation among educators — the data will be pulled from a statewide survey that could include more than 1 million students and 100,000 teachers beginning Feb. 1.

Believed to be one of the largest, if not the largest, state surveys of its kind in the nation, the effort is meant to provide crucial information to improve schools while giving parents a peek into thousands of classrooms, officials say.

Students will be asked questions aimed at revealing whether classes are challenging, such as:

•Does the teacher ask difficult questions on tests?

•How often do you debate the meaning of a reading?

•How often do you write a few sentences to explain how you solved a math problem?

Teachers will be asked, essentially, to rate their principal, responding to this statement among others:

"The principal at this school is an effective manager who makes the school run smoothly."

The survey has caused consternation in part because respondents will be anonymous. Cloaked in anonymity, "you might go a little further than otherwise if you knew your comments were attached to you,'' said Jason Leahy, executive director of the Illinois Principals Association.

Educators say the stakes are potentially highest for principals, who may be evaluated, at least in part, on responses from teachers and students.

And if similar surveys that have been conducted previously in Chicago Public Schools are an indication, the results won't always be pretty.

Last year, for example, teachers at some Chicago schools admitted they wouldn't recommend their own school to a parent looking to enroll a child, records show. And that's just one of the provocative questions that can reveal the strengths and shortcomings of principals, teachers, students and schools overall.

Teachers not named

Barbara Peterson, principal of Park View Elementary School in Glen Ellyn, is looking forward to seeing what the data will show.

"You don't want the complaining to go on in the parking lot," she said. "You want the feedback so you know what the issues are. It's necessary for us to ensure we're doing the best we can for our students."

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