Principal Addresses “High” Ability Grouping Label and Placement Concerns
Beecher Board of Education Curriculum Committee Meeting | Dec. 2025
Article Summary: Beecher elementary administrators addressed parental concerns regarding a “5H” label appearing in PowerSchool, clarifying that it indicated a pilot math ability grouping rather than a permanent academic track. The committee also discussed how standardized test scores are used for junior high placement.
Grouping & Testing Key Points:
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“5H” Label: Administrators clarified that “5H” in PowerSchool referred to a high-ability math pilot group and was not intended to permanently label students.
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Pilot Program: The ability grouping is a pilot effort to assist students ready to move at a faster pace; its continuation will be reviewed at the end of the year.
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Junior High Placement: Placement in accelerated junior high courses relies on a matrix of data, including teacher recommendations and grades, not just the 4th-grade IAR standardized test.
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STAR Testing: The district explained that it uses specific portions of the STAR testing suite (adaptive tests and oral fluency) rather than the entire suite to save instructional time.
Concerns regarding student labeling and placement protocols were addressed by elementary and junior high administrators during the Curriculum Committee meeting on Thursday.
A primary issue was the appearance of a “5H” label on student schedules in PowerSchool. Administrators explained this designated a “High” ability grouping for a pilot math program. They stressed that this was not intended to be a public-facing label or a permanent track for students.
“We do not have a medium or a low class. There’s one high group and then the other two groups are heterogeneous groups,” an administrator explained. The official apologized for the visibility of the label in the software, stating, “I did not know that it was going to say that… that was not intentional in any way.”
The committee also discussed how students are placed into accelerated courses at the junior high level. Parents had expressed concern that 4th-grade Illinois Assessment of Readiness (IAR) scores were being weighed too heavily for 6th-grade placement.
Administrators clarified that the IAR score is just “one piece of the puzzle.” Placement decisions are based on a spreadsheet that includes IAR scores, STAR test results, grades, and—most significantly—teacher recommendations.
Regarding internal assessments, the administration defended the use of curriculum-based tests (like Envisions or Super Kids) alongside STAR testing. They noted that utilizing the full suite of STAR assessments would require excessive individual testing time, taking teachers away from instruction.
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