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Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Summit School District 104 reports 42 incidents of students being suspended in 2023-24 school year

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William Green, Board President | Summit School District 104

William Green, Board President | Summit School District 104

Summit School District 104 reported 42 suspensions during the 2023-24 school year, according to the Illinois Report Card.

In total, there were 42 disciplinary actions recorded during the school year, representing a rate of approximately 3 incidents per 100 of the district’s enrolled students.

Among in-school suspensions where a reason was specified, the most common cause was incidents involving violence that caused physical injury, with four recorded cases. There was also one incident involving tobacco. Additionally, 14 cases were classified under "other reason" or left unspecified.

There were 29 disciplinary incidents involving male students. Another 13 incidents involved female students.

All 42 suspensions issued in the district involved elementary or middle school students.

Out-of-school suspensions most commonly were for incidents involving violence that caused physical injury, with six cases reported. Additionally, eight cases were classified under the "other reason" category.

In terms of ethnicity, Hispanic students, who made up 87.1% of the Summit School District 104 student body, were suspended the most in the district, with 35 suspensions reported during the 2023-24 school year. They were followed by white students, who made up 5.8% of the student body, and received four suspensions.

Illinois has approved a 2025 budget that allocates $8.6 billion to K-12 education, a $350 million increase from the previous fiscal year—the minimum required under the state funding formula.

In 2024, Illinois registered a teacher retention rate of almost 90%. Yet, around 91% of superintendents reported having a 'serious' problem teacher shortage problem. In total, almost 4,100 teaching positions remained vacant by the end of the year.

“They’re putting a substitute in there, that’s somebody with a four-year degree that’s not in teaching. They’re using a retired teacher…or worse than that, they’re canceling the class, putting the kids in other classrooms, putting them in study hall, but those are strategies we have to use if there’s no qualified teacher,” said Beth Crider, regional superintendent of Peoria County Regional Office of Education #48.

Summit School District 104 Student Discipline Report
Type of IncidentIn-School SuspensionOut-of-School Suspension
Alcohol--
Violence with injury46
Violence without injury-4
Drug offenses-5
Firearm--
Other dangerous weapons--
Tobacco1-
Other reason148
Total1923
Length of Suspensions
DurationIn-School SuspensionOut-of-School Suspension
One day or less32
1-2 days127
2-3 days42
3-4 days-5
4-10 days--
More than 10 days-7

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