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The Academy for Local Leadership launched its inaugural class in March ahead of Chicago’s shift to a partially-elected school board.
The plan — which will be finalized this summer — will prioritize improving students’ daily experiences in the classroom, addressing staffing and funding, and collaborating more closely with school communities.
The public meetings are part of the district’s new Black Student Success Working Group, which CPS created to provide recommendations for improving Black children’s outcomes.
The school district has outsourced the management of school janitors and cleaning services since 2014.
Four parents share the challenges and possibilities of these “mini-school boards” that Chicago has had for 35 years.
The first day of school for the 2024-25 academic year would be on Aug. 26, about a week later than recent years.
The district is providing CTA passes to migrant families who are homeless.
Last week, CPS Inspector General Will Fletcher released his annual report which, in part, found that the district had marked more than 77,000 devices lost or stolen in the 2021-22 school year.
In his annual report out Tuesday, CPS Inspector General Will Fletcher estimates lost or stolen laptops and other technology valued at more than $23 million.
A letter sent to parents said the district would continue to prioritize students with disabilities and homeless students. Both groups are entitled to transportation under federal law.
The move puts in motion Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign promise to reinvigorate neighborhood schools.
Chicago is promoting Principal Joshua Long to lead its special education department
The routes with few students don’t necessarily mean there’s room for other kids, advocates say.
The district is still working to shorten bus rides for more than 100 students with disabilities to comply with state law.
The admissions process has built up a reputation for being stressful on families, but many value the ability to choose a school they see as the best fit for their child.
Parents at Inter-American are looking for solutions, as other gifted and magnet programs have also sought their own alternatives to the lack of busing.
The district is seeking a total of $14.4 billion for updates ranging from new roofs and windows to special classrooms.
Message to parents: ‘You don’t have to come back and keep asking.’
The inspector general found they fraudulently got federal loans during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Blaming a driver shortage, the district decided this year to limit bus transportation to students with disabilities and those experiencing homelessness.