We got some humdingers! Residency, transfers...removing multiplier...preseason football scrimmage...DISTRICTS
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Yep - and does absolutely nothing from the privates still dominating at the 7A and 8A levels. Penalize Aurora Christian severely but leave Mount Carmel and Loyola untouched. Got it.Removes the 1.65 multiplier and the multiplier waiver for all schools. Replaced with enrollments of non-boundary schools to be the average enrollment of all public/boundary high schools that are above that school’s enrollment and within a 30- mile radius of the school. Takes effect 2025-2026 school year.
So, small private schools in Chicagoland would be 7a/8a. Sounds fair.
Althoff too. Bellevilles East/West, O'Fallon, East Side, Edwardsville,Removes the 1.65 multiplier and the multiplier waiver for all schools. Replaced with enrollments of non-boundary schools to be the average enrollment of all public/boundary high schools that are above that school’s enrollment and within a 30- mile radius of the school. Takes effect 2025-2026 school year.
So, small private schools in Chicagoland would be 7a/8a. Sounds fair.
There are so many small public schools in a 30 mile radius of Belleville. Not the Case for Chicagoland publics. Would move them up but not as much as chicagoland schools.Althoff too. Bellevilles East/West, O'Fallon, East Side, Edwardsville,
All it would do is replace private schools with larger public schools who would be multiplied down.Yep - and does absolutely nothing from the privates still dominating at the 7A and 8A levels. Penalize Aurora Christian severely but leave Mount Carmel and Loyola untouched. Got it.
“Replaced with enrollments of non-boundary schools to be the average enrollment of all public/boundary high schools that are ABOVE that school’s enrollment and within a 30- mile radius of the school.”There are so many small public schools in a 30 mile radius of Belleville. Not the Case for Chicagoland publics. Would move them up but not as much as chicagoland schools.
The proposal is a very small minded one coming from a very small school conference made up of small town Illinois schools. It impacts small and mid-sized non-boundaried schools the most. Once again, we are seeing IHSA policy being proposed by small town public schools that treats a perceived problem with a sledge hammer when tweezers would do the trick.Yep - and does absolutely nothing from the privates still dominating at the 7A and 8A levels. Penalize Aurora Christian severely but leave Mount Carmel and Loyola untouched. Got it.
Is there projected district’s anywhere to look at?Districts as a way to provide group consistency is dumb reasoning. There won't be any consistency with non-boundried schools jumping in and out of districts after being multiplied or success-factored.
Not to my knowledge. Since this is just a proposal, no real work on determining makeup of the Districts would have been started by the IHSA. Hopefully it doesn't pass!Is there projected district’s anywhere to look at?
This is what they made last time https://edgytim.rivals.com/news/ihsa-proposed-districtsIs there projected district’s anywhere to look at?
The co-ops would only be eligible for the postseason in single class sports.The Co-op private schools is interesting
Think this forces privates to do their own thing. Why would mt Carmel want to play in that conference? Would ruin their programThis is what they made last time https://edgytim.rivals.com/news/ihsa-proposed-districts
Those didn’t come out until the summer after they were approved, so don’t count on seeing any new projections prior to the vote.
Think this forces privates to do their own thing. Why would mt Carmel want to play in that conference? Would ruin their program
I wish, but it probably won't happen. It won't happen because the private schools are too decentralized. They have successfully divided themselves which make them easy to conquer as a group.Think this forces privates to do their own thing.
And some are just trying to survive.I wish, but it probably won't happen. It won't happen because the private schools are too decentralized. They have successfully divided themselves which make them easy to conquer as a group.
The problem is going to be getting the private schools together and agreeing on anything. Unlike public schools where almost every principal and superintendent belongs to statewide professional associations of principals and superintendents, the same cannot be said for private schools. First of all, there are no private school superintendents per se. Secondly, most private school principals probably don't belong to the Illinois Principals Association.
There just aren't any statewide associations where private schools get together and communicate amongst themselves. Catholic schools do it by diocese, Even within Catholic schools, schools do it by their sponsoring religious orders (if they have one), but that happens on a national or regional level. Christian schools do it, Lutheran schools do it. Non-sectarian private schools do it through the National Association of Independent Schools or the Independent Schools of the Central States.
There is no single org in Illinois where private schools can discuss things like this, and it would take no small effort to organize one.