Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Illinois Making Changes To GED

flickr user/ Ramunas Geciauskas "Lonely Pencil" (CC BY 2.0)

Illinois Governor Pat Quinn recently signed legislation that will remove all references to the GED from Illinois law. It’s part of a much broader change in the education program for people who didn’t finish high school. 

Credit flickr user/ Ramunas Geciauskas "Lonely Pencil" (CC BY 2.0)

This year the GED more than doubled in price, going from $50 to $120.

It also got a lot harder, based on the new, more rigorous Common Core education standards.

State GED administrator Jennifer Foster, with the Illinois Community College Board, says that’s led to a significant drop in the number of people taking GED tests.

“Whenever you change over a test, there’s always a diminishment in the number of students who take the test," Foster said. "We’re trying to determine whether it’s because of the cost, or is it just because there is a new test and it is more rigorous."

The move to strike “GED" from state law reflects the fact thatIllinoisansactually earn what’s called a “High School Equivalency Certificate.” GED is a brand name, and Foster says removing it gives Illinois the flexibility to contract with a different company in the future.

Copyright 2014 WNIJ Northern Public Radio

Brian Mackey covers Illinois state government and politics from the WUIS Statehouse bureau. He was previously A&E editor at The State Journal-Register and Statehouse bureau chief for the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin. He can be reached at (217) 206-6020.