2024-05-21T03:11:00+00:00https://www.chalkbeat.org/arc/outboundfeeds/rss/category/chicago/chicago-public-schools/2023-10-27T19:24:21+00:002024-05-20T19:56:32+00:00<p>An hour before dismissal on a recent Friday afternoon, eight Brighton Park Elementary School students huddled in a classroom with Jennifer Moorhouse, a teacher who works with English language learners.</p><p>They were there for a voluntary, biweekly support group run by Moorhouse and Stephanie Carrillo, a school counselor, for students grappling with the upheaval of immigration and the adjustment to a new country, new city, and new school.</p><p>She asked the children — a mix of sixth through eighth graders who had recently arrived in Chicago as part of an influx of migrant families — to share the best and worst part of their week.</p><p>One boy said the best thing was that his family had moved to a new house. Another child looked up, her hair slightly covering her face. She shrugged her shoulders and struggled to come up with a worst moment.</p><p>That’s OK, Moorhouse said in Spanish, she doesn’t have to have a low point.</p><p>The girl then added, “No mejor,” meaning there was no high point either. After a moment of silence, the whole group burst into laughter.</p><p>These students, who arrived in Chicago between last year and this year, are among the more than 20,000 newly arrived migrants in Chicago since last August, with many fleeing from Central, South American and African countries experiencing political and economic turmoil, <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/texas-new-arrivals/home/faqs.html">according to city officials.</a></p><p>Chicago Public Schools does not track immigration status and has not shared how many migrant students have enrolled in schools. But the district has pointed to clues of an increase, including <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/28/23895264/chicago-schools-repairs-buildings-facilities-plan-career-technical-education-classrooms">7,800 more English learners enrolled</a> this school year, compared to an annual average increase of 3,000 such students.</p><p>As of mid-September, 2,250 migrant children were housed in the city’s shelters, according to records from the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications that were obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Educators have raised concerns that many Chicago schools don’t have the resources, such as staff, to provide new migrants with the right language instruction, recently <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/18/23923354/illinois-state-board-chicago-educators-migrants">pleading with the state</a> to send more help.</p><p>But there are also questions about whether newcomers have the social-emotional support they need at school. These students have potentially endured dangerous journeys to the United States, on top of the stress of leaving their homes behind for shelters or other temporary living arrangements in a foreign place.</p><p>That latter concern led Moorhouse to launch the support group at Brighton Park last year after she met a migrant student who was showing signs of trauma. The student, whom Moorhouse met in January, didn’t want to be in school and sometimes, the student’s body would shake uncontrollably, she said.</p><p>At one of the sessions Moorhouse held, the student shared a personal story about his journey to the United States. Afterward, Moorhouse recalled, the student said: “My chest isn’t hurting. I can breathe.” Moorhouse felt it was a sign of healing.</p><p>In some ways, Brighton Park is well-positioned to host this support group. As <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union">a community school,</a> it partners with a nonprofit organization to provide wraparound services for its students. Carrillo, the school counselor who helps Moorhouse with the support group, works with the school on behalf of its partner nonprofit, Brighton Park Neighborhood Council. Brighton Park Elementary’s community schools funding also helped to pay for the training on the model that the support group is based on, according to Cecilia Mendoza, the school’s assistant principal.</p><p>The model is known as STRONG, or Supporting Transition Resilience of Newcomer Groups, which focuses on teaching children how to understand and cope with their stress before they’re invited to share more personal details about their journey to the United States, if they choose.</p><p>It’s unclear how many schools have specific support groups for migrant students like the one at Brighton Park. About $35 million of the district’s budget this year was allocated for social-emotional curriculum, behavioral health supports for students, and additional social workers and counselors, according to a district spokesperson.</p><p>This year, Moorhouse and Carrillo are starting with the basics.</p><p>On that recent Friday afternoon, in the classroom where Moorhouse gathered with eight of her students, bright orange and blue strips of paper on the dry erase board described concepts of melting and freezing in English and Spanish: “Que le pasa al chocolate que se deja al sol?” (What happens to chocolate left in the sun?).</p><p>A plastic cupboard sat against the wall, filled with shoes, socks, and clothing donations Moorhouse had collected through her Amazon Wishlist. Sheets of paper taped to the wall have words of affirmation in both languages: “Tus emociones son validas.” (Your feelings are valid.)</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/kf9anzgH59TC0qpmnNmFjm_wciY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/Z7YSWIRBAFESZOGMWSG3CJPWAE.jpg" alt="A classroom for English learners at Brighton Park Elementary School has brightly colored phrases translated in English and Spanish on the dry erase board. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>A classroom for English learners at Brighton Park Elementary School has brightly colored phrases translated in English and Spanish on the dry erase board. </figcaption></figure><p>After their icebreaker, Moorhouse passed around crayons and a worksheet with the outline of a human body. She explained that stress can cause physical pain and asked her students to color in the part of their bodies that hurt when they are stressed.</p><p>“Entonces para mi, cuando yo estoy estresado, mi estómago me duele,” she told the students, explaining that her stomach hurts when she’s stressed.</p><p>One girl, wearing a pair of sneakers donated through the Amazon wishlist, used a green crayon to fill in the top of the head. She colored the shoulders with a green-yellow.</p><p>When Moorhouse asked students to share, one boy said stress gives him a headache, and then he feels like throwing up. A low “hmm” spread through the group, as if others recognized the boy’s feeling.</p><p>At 2:35 p.m., about halfway through the session, the students received a new worksheet. This one had a large triangle on it, and each point represented something different: pensamientos, sentimientos, y acciones. Thoughts, emotions, and actions. Moorhouse wanted the students to reflect on how a thought may lead to a feeling, which ultimately leads to an action.</p><p>After a couple minutes jotting down their thoughts, the students shared their responses. One boy smiled as he described an example: When he’s talking to other students and they suddenly begin speaking in English, he feels as if he’s been removed from the conversation.</p><p>“How does that make you feel?” Moorhouse asked him in Spanish.</p><p>“Bad,” he replied.</p><p>“What’s your action?” Moorhouse responded.</p><p>“I walk away,” he said.</p><p>That day, Mendoza, the assistant principal, was peeking in.</p><p>“I don’t think students or people in general sometimes realize the effect that has on others who only speak one language,” Mendoza said later. “So that really stuck with me, and I thought about how we could have that conversation, perhaps, with the students … because they might not be aware that they’re doing that.”</p><p>Moorhouse then presented a challenge for the students: How can they change their thinking about a situation, in order to elicit better action? One boy gave the example of taking a hard math test that he doesn’t know the answers to, so instead, he asks to go to the bathroom.</p><p>He was stumped when Moorhouse asked him to think of a better action. She opened the floor to the group, but no one came up with an answer good enough for Moorhouse. When she pressed them to think harder, they hit on a solution: He could ask the teacher for help — for understanding the exam, or perhaps even asking to take it another day.</p><p>With about 15 minutes left, Moorhouse and Carillo passed around stress balls shaped like bee hives. They asked the students to squeeze hard and pretend that they were squeezing out the juice.</p><p>A couple of kids laughed as they squeezed their fists and then released pressure.</p><p>Around 2:55 p.m. Moorhouse handed out a blank calendar worksheet. For the following week, students would be expected to log how they’ve practiced relaxation strategies, such as grabbing an ice pack from the nurse or using a stress ball, when feeling stressed. One student shared that drawing helps.</p><p>It was time for dismissal. The students didn’t run out the door. They stayed back to chat with each other. A few grabbed extra bags of Skinny Pop.</p><p>As the weeks go on, Moorhouse and Carrillo will meet individually with each student to assess whether they want to talk more about their personal experiences of coming to the U.S. and what would be appropriate to share with the other students.</p><p>In those conversations, students may show signs of needing more individual counseling provided by the school, such as bursting into tears while recounting a story, Carrillo said.</p><p>Some students take a while to open up, so it’s unclear how much they’ll participate going forward, Moorhouse said. One of those quieter students is the child who had shared that there was no highlight or lowlight of her week. During the hourlong session, this student gradually opened up a little more.</p><p>And when most of the other children left at the end of the day, that student stayed behind. She wanted to talk some more one-on-one with Moorhouse.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/27/23935304/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-trauma-support-group-social-emotional-brighton-park/Reema AminReema Amin2023-11-27T12:00:00+00:002024-05-20T19:56:17+00:00<p>Chicago educators and advocates are concerned about how Mayor Brandon Johnson’s new 60-day limit for shelter stays for migrant families will impact attendance and stability for migrant students.</p><p>The new rule comes as the city has struggled to house migrants. <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/texas-new-arrivals/home/Dashboard.html">More than 22,000</a> have arrived from the Southern border since August 2022, many fleeing economic and political upheaval in Central and South American countries. City and state officials have promised to boost efforts to help families get resettled and find more permanent housing, a commitment that comes just as a state-operated rental assistance program will no longer apply to newly arrived immigrants who are entering shelters, <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/11/17/what-does-the-citys-new-60-day-shelter-limit-mean-for-migrants-in-chicago/">Block Club Chicago reported.</a></p><p>About 50 families have already received the notices, and another 3,000 will get them on Dec. 4.</p><p>Advocates said losing shelter could mean more absences among migrant students who are homeless — formally known as students living in temporary living situations. That designation includes children in shelter, living doubled up with another family, or living in a public place. As of Oct. 31, average attendance rates this school year for homeless students are 5 percentage points lower than their peers with permanent housing, according to Chicago Public Schools data shared with the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.</p><p>School stability is related to academic success. A <a href="https://nche.ed.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/chron-absent.pdf">2015 study</a> that examined New York City students found that children who transferred schools were more likely to be chronically absent or miss at least 10% of their school days. Chronically absent students who were also homeless were three times more likely to repeat the same grade than homeless students who missed fewer than five days of school, the report found.</p><p>“We’re talking about kids who have been around for two months, who have gotten into a routine, maybe made some friends, have some sense of control finally, where they can get two hot meals a day — we’re talking about sending those families back to the bus landing spot,” said Gabriel Paez, a bilingual teacher on the West Side, of the mayor’s new rule.</p><p>Sixty days is a “very short time” to find housing, especially for newcomers with language barriers who are dealing with asylum cases or have not been authorized to work yet, said Patricia Nix-Hodes, director of the Law Project of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.</p><p>If families don’t have permanent housing lined up, they can return to the “landing zone” — the downtown area where most buses first drop off newcomers — and can request a new shelter placement. Families can stay in their shelter under “extenuating circumstances,” such as a medical issue, if there is extreme cold, or if they’ve obtained a lease with a move-in date that starts later than when they must leave shelter, the mayor’s office said.</p><p>A spokesperson for the mayor declined to comment. In a statement, a district spokesperson said it is working with the city and schools to “ensure new arrival students, who are nearly all considered Students in Temporary Living Situations (STLS), can get access to a Pre-K-12 education within our system that offers the appropriate services, including English Learner services.”</p><p>Homeless children have certain rights enshrined in<a href="https://nche.ed.gov/legislation/mckinney-vento/"> federal law</a> aimed at maintaining stability for them at school, including the ability to stay at the school where they’ve been attending.</p><p>Here are three education rights that families living in temporary housing should know about as the city’s new shelter rule takes effect:</p><h2>Homeless students have the right to stay in the same school</h2><p>Students living in temporary shelters who have enrolled in the local school or a nearby one are entitled to stay at the same school even if they’re forced to leave the shelter after 60 days.</p><p>This is true for any student who becomes homeless. Federal law protects their right to remain in their so-called “origin school.”</p><p>Just as any other Chicago Public Schools student, homeless students can enroll in the local neighborhood school in their new community by simply walking in. Also like any other student, they can apply to selective or magnet schools, but the deadline to apply for these schools for next academic year has passed.</p><p>Migrant students may also be referred by other city agencies, such as the Department of Family and Support Services, to receive enrollment help from the district’s central office, including at the city’s Pilot Welcome Center at Clemente High School on the West Side.</p><p>In that case, the district will enroll students based on where they live, the students’ needs — such as English language services — and “existing capacity and resources at the school.” If there are space issues at a school, the district “can assist with an alternate school assignment,” a spokesperson said.</p><p>Once 20 or more students with the same native language enroll at a school, state law requires they launch a Transitional Bilingual Education program. Such programs require instruction in both English and the native language, such as Spanish.</p><p>The district has budgeted $15 million to hire more bilingual teachers, dual-language program coordinators, and “other resources to support English learners,” a spokesperson said.</p><h2>Homeless students have the right to transportation</h2><p>Homeless students also have the right to receive transportation to school even if they move. And, <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/policies/700/702/702-5/">according to CPS guidelines,</a> their school must inform the student and a parent about transportation services. If a student finds permanent housing, they are still entitled to transportation until the end of the school year.</p><p>According to CPS guidelines, homeless students in need of transportation must receive a CTA card within three days of requesting one. Children in preschool through sixth grade can receive an additional card so that a parent can accompany them on public transit.</p><p>Students in those grades can also apply for school bus service if a caregiver can’t accompany them to school because the parent has work or education conflicts, a mental or physical disability, or the shelter won’t allow parents to leave during the hours of dropoff and pickup.</p><p>Citing a driver shortage, the district this year has limited school bus service to students with disabilities and those who are homeless. As of October, 113 homeless students qualified for busing, but it’s unclear how many of them opted instead for a financial reimbursement.</p><h2>Homeless students don’t need paperwork to enroll</h2><p>Schools must enroll students who are homeless even if they don’t have records normally needed to enroll, such as immunization or previous school records, proof of guardianship, or proof of residence, according to the district.</p><p>Families fleeing domestic violence or political turmoil may not have grabbed important documents, Nix-Hodes said.</p><p>It’s up to the school to “sensitively” identify that a family seeking enrollment is homeless without violating their privacy, Nix-Hodes added.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/27/chicago-60-day-shelter-limit-impact-on-migrant-students/Reema AminChristian K. Lee2024-01-19T19:06:28+00:002024-05-20T19:53:49+00:00<p>After six months in a downtown shelter, Daniela and her 11-year-old son, Luis, faced a dilemma: The city had given them until Feb. 1 to find another place to live, which would mean moving farther away from the school the fifth grader was attending.</p><p>The family, which migrated to Chicago from Venezuela, secured an apartment in South Shore with the help of Catholic Charities. Chalkbeat is using pseudonyms in this story out of privacy concerns for the interviewed families.</p><p>But their new apartment is more than 13 miles south of Luis’ school, Ogden International School of Chicago’s Jenner campus — which could mean an hour-plus commute by public transit for Luis and his mother, who had planned to look for a job.</p><p>Daniela’s predicament is one many parents could face as Chicago enforces a new rule requiring migrant families to leave shelters after 60 days. She is one of about 3,000 migrants who arrived between January and July 31 of last year and began receiving 60-day eviction notices in early December 2023, according to a press release from City Hall. If families haven’t secured permanent housing, they must get back in line for a spot at a city shelter.</p><p>But many migrant families in shelters might not know the rights their children have to district-provided transportation — or even that they can remain in the same school despite moving — if schools are not informing them, or there’s no one to help translate conversations between school staff and families.</p><p>Every school <a href="https://www.cps.edu/services-and-supports/crisis-support/students-in-temporary-living-situations/#:~:text=Every%20CPS%20school%2C%20including%20charter,email%20STLSInformation%40cps.edu.">has a liaison for homeless students</a> who is supposed to inform homeless families of their rights, a district spokesperson said. Those liaisons, along with principals and staff with the district’s Office of Cultural and Language Education, tell newcomer families how to apply for transportation services, the district said. Each school also posts a list of homeless students’ rights in English and Spanish near the main office, the district said.</p><p>Until Daniela spoke with a Chalkbeat reporter, she didn’t know that the <a href="https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?path=/prelim@title42/chapter119/subchapter6/partB&edition=prelim">federal McKinney Vento Homeless Assistance Act</a> allows homeless students to stay in the same school even if they move, such as to another shelter, and requires school districts to provide transportation. It also allows students such as Luis, who have found permanent housing, to stay at the same school until the end of the school year. No one at the school had told her, she said.</p><p>In fact, federal law says that districts “shall presume” that keeping homeless students in their original school is in their best interest unless that’s against their parents’ or guardians’ wishes.</p><p>After publication of this story, CPS provided Chalkbeat additional details about how schools are informing families of their rights under the law. They said every newly arrived family gets an enrollment packet, both in English and Spanish, that includes information about the rights of homeless students, according to the district.</p><p>Staff at the district’s Office of Language and Cultural Education also help these families fill out an application for homeless students, which “provides families with the first opportunity to review the process and ask questions,” the district said. Schools have a 24/7 translation line that staff can use to communicate with families who don’t speak English. CPS said it fulfills its legal obligation to provide transportation to homeless students by providing them with CTA cards.</p><p>The goal of the federal law is to provide stability for homeless students. One <a href="https://nche.ed.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/chron-absent.pdf">2015 study</a> found that New York City students who transferred schools were more likely to be chronically absent, and of those students, those who were also homeless were more likely to repeat the same grade.</p><p>Daniela also didn’t know Chicago Public Schools allows parents of younger homeless students like Luis to apply for yellow bus service if they can’t accompany their child on the commute. Or that CPS policy requires schools to inform families who are homeless of their transportation rights and options.</p><p>“We’re not, as a district, transporting any newcomers,” said Kimberly Jones, CPS’s director of transportation, in late November during<a href="https://wgntv.com/news/chicago-news/when-will-thousands-of-students-get-bus-service-cps-has-few-answers/"> an interview with WGN</a>. On Tuesday, a district spokesperson said the transportation department does not see students’ immigration status, but still called Jones’ statement accurate, in that she’s unable to identify any students on bus routes based on their immigration status.</p><p>But district officials have indicated they are tracking immigration status internally. At a City Council Education Committee meeting in late November, a district official testified that CPS had enrolled at least 4,000 migrant students.</p><p>This year the district is exclusively busing students with disabilities and homeless students <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/">due to a driver shortage</a> and as it’s under state watch to shorten commutes for students with disabilities. District officials have said migrant students are largely homeless, meaning they’re living in shelter, doubled up with others, or in public places.</p><p>Of the roughly 8,700 students the district is currently busing, just 128 are homeless, the district said. Another nearly 4,000 students who would typically qualify for transportation this year are receiving stipends, with just 18 of them homeless.</p><p>The school did give Daniela and her son free CTA cards for the school commute to and from their shelter, a service it is providing as part of its legal obligation to provide homeless students with transportation. But, “they did not provide the option for yellow bus service,” she said.</p><p>Ogden-Jenner did not respond to Chalkbeat’s request for comment. The district also declined to comment specifically on Daniela’s experience.</p><h2>Schools must inform families of their rights, advocates say</h2><p>CPS policy also allows families of young children who are homeless to apply for “hardship” transportation, which provides yellow bus service for children who are in kindergarten through sixth grade. Caregivers must fill out paperwork to prove they have a conflict that does not allow them to assist their child in getting to school. Examples of “hardship” include work, job training, schooling of their own, a conflict with shelter rules, court orders, or another “good cause,” according to CPS’ website.</p><p>The 60-day shelter rule is “going to require families to move more often, and it makes it more challenging to get to the school of origin and stay stable in their school of origin,” said Patricia Nix-Hodes, director of the Law Project of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless. “If they are eligible for hardship transportation, they should be getting it.”</p><p>“The onus isn’t on the family who is newly arrived to Chicago to figure out what services might be available for transportation,” Nix-Hodes said.</p><p>School liaisons for homeless students often have other duties in schools, which may make it difficult for them to keep homeless families adequately informed, Nix-Hodes said.</p><p>In addition to informing families of their rights, the liaisons should also help families figure out if they’re eligible for bus service and with filling out any required paperwork, Nix-Hodes said.</p><h2>Other families are in the dark about transportation rights</h2><p>Edgar, a friend of Daniela’s who is also getting ready to move from shelter, also did not know he could apply for bus service so that his 8-year-old daughter could travel without him from their new home to her current school, Ogden Elementary.</p><p>Edgar is moving from the same shelter as Daniela to the same South Shore apartment building with his family. When he informed Ogden about their upcoming move, staff offered to find a school close to his new home — but they didn’t mention that he could apply for bus service to help get her to Ogden, he said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/eVjIovGlYUkosO5j7CrTxAnKGA8=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/DC244CBFBZHRDK3WUGHIS7Q3ZM.jpg" alt="Daniela's son, Luis, left, poses with Edgar's daughter, right, on Wed., Jan. 3, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Daniela's son, Luis, left, poses with Edgar's daughter, right, on Wed., Jan. 3, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.</figcaption></figure><p><br/></p><p>After learning the information from a Chalkbeat reporter, he went back to Ogden to ask about bus service. The school confirmed that service was available but “these are things that take time to approve,” Edgar explained in Spanish.</p><p>Instead, with Ogden’s help, he plans to enroll his daughter at a school that’s a 12-minute walk from their new home. While his daughter is OK with leaving Ogden, she’s sad about leaving her English class, he said. Ogden did not return a request for comment, and CPS didn’t respond to questions about Edgar’s experience.</p><p>Schools shouldn’t encourage homeless families to “move schools when their living situation changes,” Nix-Hodes said.</p><p>The law allows homeless students to stay in their same school because school stability is good for children’s academic performance and social-emotional health, especially when they’re coming to the United States from another country, Nix-Hodes said.</p><p>Gwen McElhattan, a social worker with nonprofit Chicago Help Initiative, which provides meals, clothing, and other services to homeless families, has received questions from many migrant parents on how to enroll their child in school. The city has created a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/17/23797844/chicago-public-schools-migrant-families-welcome-center/">“welcome center”</a> for migrants at Roberto Clemente High School, which is supposed to help families with school enrollment and other resources. But McElhattan said that many people don’t know it exists — and doesn’t sense that many designated people are informing families of how to navigate school enrollment.</p><p>“They don’t know about it because they’re migrants — they don’t always know everything that’s happening,” said McElhattan, adding that their primary concerns are food and shelter. “They’re just trying to survive. They have children – they’re just trying to keep going.”</p><p>Luis, Daniela’s son, said he likes his teachers at Ogden-Jenner and he’s made some friends. But he’s had a tough time understanding lessons because there’s often no one who can help translate, he said. Because of the language barrier, there are days that he doesn’t want to go to school, his mother said.</p><p>Still, Daniela would prefer to keep her son enrolled at Ogden-Jenner if she can get busing because she senses it’s a good school. By state standards, it is: The school earned the Illinois State Board of Education’s <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/04/illinois-chicago-majority-black-exemplary-schools/">second-highest rating</a> for academic performance.</p><p>Daniela has not yet talked with the school about what happens next or what her options are.</p><p>It’s difficult to communicate with staff, she said. “En la escuela allí no hablan español” — At the school, they don’t speak Spanish.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/17/chicago-migrant-students-lack-info-ontransportation-rights/Reema AminStacey Rupolo2024-01-18T01:45:14+00:002024-05-20T19:53:37+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Viviana Ortiz is overwhelmed. As the only advocate for students experiencing homelessness at Cameron Elementary School in West Humboldt Park, she supports 126 students — a workload that has dramatically increased with the influx of migrant students from Latin America and other countries.</p><p>“The amount of support that our families need is incredible,” said Ortiz, who noted that she has never seen families in such need of clothing, food, and other necessities.</p><p>On Wednesday, Ortiz joined other educators, local and national union leaders, including Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, and parents of new arrivals at a roundtable at Cameron Elementary School to call for more support for migrant students from federal, state, and local governments and to draw attention to the struggles of migrant families at Cameron and across the city.</p><p>Gabriel Paez, an English learner program teacher at Cameron and chair of the Chicago Teachers Union bilingual education committee, estimate that about 200 migrant students at the school need access to more bilingual education, transportation, and basic needs — a reflection of the wider challenges presented by the arrival of thousands of migrant families to the city.</p><p>As of Jan. 17, <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/texas-new-arrivals/home/Dashboard.html">more than 30,000 migrants</a> had arrived in Chicago since August 2022, according to a city dashboard. Most crossed the southern border and were ordered bused here by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. Families and children are often fleeing countries that have<a href="https://www.npr.org/2023/10/31/1207963084/venezuela-migrants-to-us"> seen a rise of violence and political strife</a>.</p><p>At a City Council Education Committee meeting in November, a CPS official said the district had enrolled at least <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/17/chicago-migrant-students-lack-info-ontransportation-rights/">4,000 migrant students.</a></p><p>Teachers at Cameron Elementary school said they have noticed some migrant students arrive at the school without proper clothing, such as coats warm enough for Chicago winter, and in need of medical support. Many are without permanent housing.</p><p>A spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools said the district has provided additional funding for staffing and services to help schools with the increase of newly arriving students. Nearly all migrant students have been classified as English learners or Students in Temporary Living Situations. CPS officials said they are currently working with the city, state, lawmakers, and the U.S. Department of Education to receive more funding.</p><p>At the roundtable, organized by the Chicago Teachers Union, participants echoed the call for more resources to help migrant students, including more bilingual teachers and staff.</p><p>In Chicago, the number of designated bilingual teachers has declined in recent years, but teachers with bilingual or English as a second language endorsements have increased, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/16/23833661/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-bilingual-resources-2023/">according to an analysis of staffing data by Chalkbeat Chicago</a>. Another finding from the analysis found that the ratio of staff with bilingual credentials or titles to students was increasing as more English learners have enrolled.</p><p>At Wednesday’s roundtable, Paez said the district should push to cover 100% of tuition costs for educators who want to get a bilingual endorsement. He applauded the district for currently covering 50% of tuition, but said he wants to see teachers who want to get that endorsement not go into debt.</p><p>Paez also said the school needs more bilingual staff who can help students and families dealing with emergencies. Paez said he and other staff members at the school have gone above and beyond their duties to support students.</p><p>“Taking children to the ER is not in my job description, but we do it because the need is there,” said Paez. “If CPS, or the state, or the federal government could pay for someone to be in our building day in and day out whose only purpose is to help get these people on their feet, that will make the teaching and learning part of this equation a lot more manageable.”</p><p>State Rep. Lilian Jiménez, who represents neighborhoods on Chicago’s northwest side, noted that families who have migrated from Latin America need transportation and access to bus passes to get to school.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools has grappled with a bus driver shortage over the past few years. This school year, the district decided to only bus students who <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/chicago-school-district-struggling-to-add-student-bus-transportation/">are legally obligated to have transportation</a> — such as students with disabilities and those experiencing homelessness. This leaves out 5,500 students who used to get buses to and from the city’s magnet and selective enrollment schools.</p><p>Migrant students might not know that they are eligible for transportation if they don’t <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/17/chicago-migrant-students-lack-info-ontransportation-rights/">have access to stable housing under federal law.</a> The law also says students can stay enrolled at the same school even if they have to move to another shelter.</p><p>In November, Gov. J.B. Pritzker <a href="https://www.illinois.gov/news/press-release.27307.html">allocated $160 million</a> to the Illinois Department of Human Services to address the ongoing migrant crisis, with $65 million going to the city to help set up a winter shelter. With state lawmakers kicking off the spring legislative session this week, advocates are hoping for more money to support families who have migrated to the United States.</p><p>Jimenez said she’ll work throughout the spring session to get more tuition reimbursement to help teachers get a bilingual education endorsement.</p><p>CTU President Stacy Davis Gates called on the federal government to support Chicago during the migrant crisis as the city and district lack the infrastructure to assist migrant families.</p><p>“We need our collaboration to extend beyond the city. The city is not set up to deal with an immigration crisis. We do not have the infrastructure,” said Davis Gates. “So, this idea that we are just going to focus in on what isn’t here, let’s focus on who is supposed to bring the things that we need here.”</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/18/chicago-educators-need-help-during-migrant-crisis/Samantha SmylieJamie Kelter Davis for Chalkbeat2024-02-08T23:43:51+00:002024-05-20T19:53:01+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>More than 5,700 newly arrived immigrant students have enrolled in Chicago Public Schools since the beginning of the school year, district officials said Thursday.</p><p>Preliminary school enrollment data updated daily on the city data portal and analyzed by Chalkbeat shows overall enrollment increased by 4,500 students since <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants/">the official count on the 20th day of school in September.</a> After more than a decade of decline, CPS saw its enrollment stabilize this school year.</p><p>“The number is fluid and evolving,” CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said Thursday. “Our principals and teachers and school communities have been incredibly welcoming to the students and their families.”</p><p>His comments came during a virtual press conference about a new volunteer coordination effort launched by the City of Chicago aimed at supporting migrant families. It also comes after city officials <a href="https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/johnson-again-postpones-enforcement-of-60-day-shelter-stay-policy-for-migrants/3341178/">once again delayed its plan to enforce a 60-day shelter stay limit on migrant families</a>.</p><p>Publicly available data does not reveal how many CPS students are migrants or how many are living in city shelters. District officials said they do not collect information about the immigration status of students or their families “to support the City of Chicago’s Welcoming City Ordinance.”</p><p>Preliminary enrollment data analyzed by Chalkbeat indicates nearly 7,000 more students have been identified as English language learners since the end of September, when the district officially counted enrollment. English language learners can include both newly arrived immigrants, as well as students already living in Chicago.</p><p>Last school year, English language learners made up about one-fifth of all students; a decade ago, these students made up roughly 16% of CPS.</p><p>Last month, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/18/chicago-educators-need-help-during-migrant-crisis/">educators, union officials, and some local lawmakers raised concerns</a> about schools without enough bilingual staff and other resources struggling to meet those students’ language and mental health needs.</p><p>District officials said Thursday that just under 6% of schools are lacking teachers with necessary ESL or bilingual credentials. Karime Asaf, the district’s chief of language and cultural education, said officials are prioritizing those roughly 30 schools — which officials did not identify — “for any kind of services or resources.”</p><p>Asaf said schools are working to get more teachers certified to teach English learners. District officials said they’ve allocated a total of $8 million to schools that saw increases in English learners since the 20th day of school.</p><p>Martinez said around 600 teachers are currently working toward getting bilingual or English as a Second Language endorsements.</p><p>Martinez said currently 7,200 teachers have these qualifications, up from about 5,100 teachers in 2018. However, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/16/23833661/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-bilingual-resources-2023/">bilingual staffing can vary by school</a>, and often support staff, such as social workers, are not bilingual. CPS does provide a 24/7 language interpretation hotline that schools can call to get assistance communicating with families, but some parents have said they’ve <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/17/chicago-migrant-students-lack-info-ontransportation-rights/">struggled to communicate with schools or understand their school options</a> when it’s time to move.</p><p>Students who are homeless — those in shelters, living doubled up somewhere, or living in a public place — <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/27/chicago-60-day-shelter-limit-impact-on-migrant-students/">have a right</a> to remain at their school even if they move out of the school’s boundary and are entitled to transportation provided by the district, such as free CTA passes. By state law, if a school enrolls 20 or more students who speak a language other than English, the school must set up a bilingual education program with qualified staff. Asaf said this is “a multi-year process.”</p><p>“Generally, the challenge we have is when families just walk up to our buildings and we always tell our schools: Enroll the families. And then we have a process to work with those families to make sure we find the nearest program,” Martinez said.</p><p>The district also has bi-weekly meetings with staff at the city’s largest temporary shelters that are housing migrants, to “make sure that our families understand that there’s always a way to connect with the Chicago Public Schools … to make sure all their questions are answered,” Asaf said. She added that most school leaders attend these meetings.</p><p>Martinez said CPS is planning to hire newcomer adults who have received work authorization for “critical needs” at schools, including as custodians, as well as positions in transportation, nutrition, and classroom support.</p><p>Many of Chicago’s migrant families have been searching for work but need authorization to obtain jobs legally. <a href="https://www.axios.com/local/chicago/2024/01/23/migrant-work-permits-approved-illinois">Axios reported</a> that about 1,000 newcomers have received work permits as of late January, four months after the federal government expanded eligibility to nearly half a million immigrants from Venezuela, where political and economic turmoil has pushed many residents to leave.</p><p>“We were proactive working with the city to say, since we know we have these families who are looking for jobs, we have many openings,” Martinez told reporters on Thursday. “We are now just trying to make it easier for our families to be able to apply for these different jobs.”</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>. Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/08/chicago-public-schools-sees-more-migrant-students/Becky Vevea, Reema AminReema Amin2024-04-18T00:03:39+00:002024-05-20T19:42:25+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>How many migrant students are enrolled in Chicago Public Schools? The exact number is hard to pin down.</p><p>The district says about 8,900 migrant students are currently attending local schools, according to CPS data. But that number climbs to more than 17,000 when using the Illinois State Board of Education’s definition for students eligible for the <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Documents/Eligible-Immigrant-Ed-Prog-Pres.pdf">Immigrant Education Program</a> — students born outside the U.S. who started attending school in this country in the past three years are categorized in this group.</p><p>An accurate picture of how many immigrant students are arriving and enrolling in local public schools is becoming more important as schools work to support newcomers from Latin America, as well as other countries around the world. A proposal in the Illinois legislature would provide money to districts faster to help new students.</p><p>But the size of the enrollment increase — and the existing resources — depends on which agency is counting students. In response to an information request from Chalkbeat for migrant student enrollment numbers, Chicago Public Schools and the Illinois State Board of Education produced different numbers, based on different definitions and methods of categorizing newly arrived students:</p><ul><li>Chicago Public Schools says the district is currently serving 8,900 students who arrived since August 2022, including those who passed through the southern border and were bused to Chicago from Texas. The district uses five criteria to identify this cohort: students who speak languages other than English at home, have been identified as students in temporary living situations, are new to the district arriving after August 2022, were born outside of the country, or are listed on the city’s Department of Family and Support Services shelter roster.</li><li>The Illinois State Board of Education, on the other hand, says any student not born in the U.S. or Puerto Rico who has been attending school in this country for less than three years is eligible for the Immigrant Education Program. Chicago estimates roughly 17,000 students fit this definition. Chicago just started to collect this data in November 2023 and school staff are collecting the birth country and enrollment date of students.</li></ul><p>Between 2019 and November 2023, Chicago Public Schools officials said, the district stopped gathering information on students’ birth country and the date of first enrollment in the U.S. in response to threats against immigrants and their citizenship status and as part of the implementation of sanctuary provision in the collective bargaining agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. However, the district resumed the practice after being pushed by the state board of education.</p><p>In addition, the numbers continue to fluctuate. Last month, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez told reporters that the district has welcomed more than<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/19/chicago-public-schools-expanding-dual-language-programs/"> 6,000 new arrival students into schools</a> this year.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools also estimates that its population of English learners – students whose first language is not English and are in need of bilingual programs and support – has increased by 12,000 students, jumping from 76,000 to 88,000 over the last year students as of April 12. English learners may include students born in the U.S.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/08/chicago-public-schools-sees-more-migrant-students/">A Chalkbeat analysis in February </a>found that the number of English language learners in CPS grew since the end of September, with an additional 7,000 English learners enrolled in schools around the district.</p><p>Even as state and local school districts have different definitions on how to categorize students who recently immigrated to the United States, lawmakers, advocates, educators, and the Chicago Teachers Union continue to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/18/chicago-educators-need-help-during-migrant-crisis/">raise concerns that there are not enough</a> bilingual staff and resources available to support students.</p><p>State Rep. Fred Crespo, a Democrat representing suburbs northwest of Chicago, has filed a pair of bills — <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=2822&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=147949">House Bill 2822</a> and <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=3991&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=149310">House Bill 3991</a> — that would allow the Illinois State Board of Education to create a New Arrivals Grant program to distribute funding to school districts who need more support for new arrival students.</p><p>When Crespo first filed the bill last year, he asked the general assembly to approve $35 million. Now, he is asking for $188 million because the number of students has increased.</p><p>In February, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s proposed budget did not include money for newcomers requested by the Illinois State Board of Education. A spokesperson for Pritzker’s office previously told Chalkbeat that schools can access federal funding through the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act and the governor’s proposed $350 million increase for K-12 schools will help.</p><p>Local education advocates say families who have migrated from Latin America countries are transient, often moving from community to community as they look for a home to settle in. As students continue to transfer between districts, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/18/illinois-schools-migrant-students-enrollment-funding/">advocates say the state’s evidence-based funding formula</a> is unable to capture the growing need of schools.</p><p>The state distributes resources to districts based on enrollment and adds additional funding based on the number of low-income students, English language learners, and students with disabilities. The state formula looks at enrollment from two points in time during the school year. With families moving between communities, the number may not capture the number of immigrant students a district has served.</p><p>Bridget Peach, executive director of Ed-Red — an organization that advocates for suburban school districts — and a supporter of Crespo’s bill, says students migrating from the southern border often leave school districts quickly.</p><p>“At the beginning of the year, the enrollment snapshot is taken,” Peach said. “Some of those students are leaving the next week, some are staying until the end of the school year, but they aren’t re-enrolling in the district.”</p><p>State lawmakers are debating whether to include Crespo’s New Arrivals Grant program in the budget. They must pass a budget at the end of the legislative session, which is scheduled for the end of May.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/18/chicago-and-illinois-count-migrant-students-differently/Samantha SmylieBecky Vevea / Chalkbeat2024-05-20T17:35:24+00:002024-05-20T17:35:24+00:00<p><i>This </i><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/05/20/whats-going-on-with-the-near-south-side-high-school-plan/" target="_blank"><i>story was originally published</i></a><i> by </i><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/" target="_blank"><i>Block Club Chicago</i></a><i>.</i></p><p>A controversial plan for a new Near South Side high school appears to have stalled.</p><p>Families on the Near South Side and Chinatown have been asking for a dedicated community high school for years, as many families say students are forced to travel across the city to attend selective-enrollment schools that offer classes and extracurriculars nearby high schools lack.</p><p>In 2018, plans to convert National Teacher’s Academy, 55 W. Cermak Road, into a high school <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/8/6/21105507/neighbors-at-odds-heading-into-near-south-high-school-hearing/">were scrapped after outcry from families and NTA staff.</a> Instead, a $150 million school was proposed for the former Harold Ickes Homes site near 24th and State streets on the Near South Side.</p><p>That plan was met with criticism from Bronzeville and Chinatown neighbors who <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2022/10/07/local-alderman-joins-state-lawmaker-community-organizers-in-pledging-to-block-controversial-near-south-high-school/">opposed building the school on public housing land</a>. It has also <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/08/22/records-raise-questions-on-cps-transparency-over-near-south-side-high-school-plan/">drawn accusations of backroom deals</a> and prompted backlash toward Chicago Public Schools, the Chicago Housing Authority, and City Hall leaders.</p><p>Now, officials are being quiet about the status of the school, and a website <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/01/20/plans-for-the-controversial-near-south-side-high-school-are-underway-heres-what-you-need-to-know/">that served as an information hub for the proposed high school</a> has been taken down.</p><p>“We’ve been given no update yet, but as far as I know, everything is pretty much still status quo. I’m still committed to making this happen,” Ald. Nicole Lee (11th) told Block Club.</p><p>A Board of Education vote to approve a capital budget for the project was originally set for June 2023 but was pulled pending further review, sources said at the time. It’s unclear what the next steps are.</p><p>In a statement, a CPS spokesperson said the website was “currently paused,” but more information would eventually be shared.</p><p>“The Near South High School proposal is still under review as the District develops long-term strategies and objectives through work on the CPS Educational Facilities Master Plan and Five-Year Strategic Plan,” district officials said in a statement.</p><p>Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office did not respond to requests for comment. During his campaign, Johnson pledged to enforce a moratorium on building anything on public housing land, but it is unclear whether he supports the school proposal.</p><p>A month after the stalled school board vote, <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/07/05/mayor-brandon-johnson-appoints-new-chicago-school-board-members/">Johnson replaced all but one board member</a> and named Jianan Shi school board president. Shi, previously with parent advocacy group Raise Your Hand, was part of a coalition of residents calling for the high school to be built elsewhere.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/3ic5A9ot_skM50glN--GJmHhkUg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/YAUT3Q2BBJFDDPERVU7DP2FKZE.jpg" alt="The proposed site for a new CPS high school is a vacant lot at 24th and State Streets, where the former Harold L. Ickes Homes sat. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The proposed site for a new CPS high school is a vacant lot at 24th and State Streets, where the former Harold L. Ickes Homes sat. </figcaption></figure><h2>The story so far</h2><p>Near South Side neighbors and elected officials have long fought for a community high school in the area, saying the lack of options for the growing population has forced students to travel up to two hours to other neighborhoods.</p><p>But many of those proponents have pushed CPS to consider other sites for the school. They suggested <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/02/08/heres-what-a-new-sox-park-in-the-south-loop-could-look-like/">The 78 megadevelopment</a>, or a plot between 17th and 18th and Canal and Stewart Avenues. They also suggested repurposing Jones College Prep into a neighborhood school.</p><p><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/08/22/records-raise-questions-on-cps-transparency-over-near-south-side-high-school-plan/">The Illinois Answers Project reported last year</a> that CHA, CPS, and city officials had homed in on the Harold Ickes Homes site by July 2021, maintaining to the public there were no other viable locations for the school.</p><p>School board members narrowly voted in September 2022 <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2022/09/28/cps-approves-new-120-million-near-south-side-high-school-but-state-rep-vows-to-kill-funding-for-it/">to buy the land at 23rd Street and Wabash Avenue for $10.3 million for the school</a>. They also approved a land swap deal with the CHA: The district would lease land at 24th and State for the high school, and the housing agency would get the deed for the Wabash land to complete the <a href="https://southbridgechicago.com/">Southbridge</a> residential development, allowing some of the families displaced by the demolition of the Ickes Homes to return.</p><p>The school would accommodate 1,200 students from the community, 30% of them Black. It would be a feeder school for nine surrounding elementary schools: Armour, National Teachers Academy, Drake, Healy, Ward J, Holden, Smyth, Haines, and South Loop.</p><p>An ad hoc committee consisting of parents, community leaders, and district staff was formed in November 2022 to guide CPS families through the process. The following month, the City Council approved $8 million in tax-increment financing dollars to buy some of the land involved in the swap. The ad hoc committee launched a series of virtual meetings in January 2023 to get community input and was to meet twice a month ahead of the scheduled board vote.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/UIjflCN9HXOXDLfP23nR0EqfSpg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/F4OLF2UHJBDEPLS7ZJVYLJC5ME.jpeg" alt="People Matter co-founder Angela Lin talks ahead of a 2022 protest opposing the controversial proposal to build a new $150 million high school on Chicago's Near South Side." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>People Matter co-founder Angela Lin talks ahead of a 2022 protest opposing the controversial proposal to build a new $150 million high school on Chicago's Near South Side.</figcaption></figure><p>Following the land swap, Rep. Theresa Mah <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/02/21/bronzeville-chinatown-activists-push-city-officials-to-consider-alternate-site-for-near-south-side-high-school/">vowed to withdraw the $50 million in state funding she helped secure</a> because of the city’s refusal to compromise with neighbors who wanted to explore alternate sites.</p><p>Mah told Block Club earlier this month she hasn’t had a chance to speak with Johnson’s administration on the issue, but she remains firm on finding a compromise that doesn’t involve using public housing land.</p><p>“I want to revisit it, and I still believe we should consider another site because it doesn’t make sense to stick with a site so many are opposed to,” Mah said. The funding for the school will be reappropriated in the meantime, she said.</p><p>Other opponents were concerned about the siphoning of resources from other nearby high schools, including Wendell Phillips and Dunbar Vocational Academy — two predominantly Black schools that have suffered budget cuts in recent years.</p><p>Organizers from the Kenwood-Oakland Community Organization, Lugenia Burns Hope Center, People Matter, and the Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community held a series of City Hall protests and town halls after the land swap agreement, some of them calling on former Mayor Lori Lightfoot to do away with the plan altogether.</p><p>“We have not heard any news,” said Grace Chan McKibben, executive director of Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community. “We are in the process of trying to figure out who in CPS we should talk to about this. It is unclear who is leading the planning of the Near South high school, or if anyone is.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/20/new-near-south-side-high-school-appears-stalled/Jamie Nesbitt Golden, Block Club ChicagoColin Boyle/Block Club Chicago2024-05-14T11:00:00+00:002024-05-16T13:40:56+00:00<p><i>Sign up for</i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i> Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>On a recent Tuesday morning, Mayor Brandon Johnson visited classrooms at Kelvyn Park High School in Hermosa to present certificates of recognition to teachers for Teacher Appreciation Week.</p><p>Flanked by an alderman and the chief of finance for the teachers union, Johnson posed for photos and created a scene rare to find before last year: The mayor standing side-by-side with teachers, some wearing bright red Chicago Teachers Union shirts.</p><p>The scene was an indicator of the pivotal role education has played in Johnson’s agenda in office.</p><p>When Johnson, a former middle school teacher and Chicago Teachers Union organizer, was <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/12/23680850/brandon-johnson-chicago-mayor-teachers-union-progressive-win-democratic-party-education/#:~:text=Brandon%20Johnson%2C%2047%2C%20clinched%20victory,if%20not%20all%2C%20previous%20mayors.">elected last year</a>, it was no surprise education would be a central priority.</p><p>The union catapulted Johnson into office, and his win was the result of a decade of CTU organizing against how previous mayors approached public education. Instead of a system in which schools compete for students and parents choose the best option no matter how far they may have to travel, Johnson promised to focus on bolstering neighborhood schools, many which have seen declining enrollment and fewer resources.</p><p>As Johnson hits the one-year mark in office, his appointed school board has overseen a change in the district’s funding formula and directed district leaders to come up with a new five-year strategic plan, to be voted on this summer, that would <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">rethink the city’s school choice system,</a> which includes charter, selective enrollment, and magnet schools that require applications for admission.</p><p>“We have to fund our schools based upon the need,” Johnson said in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOryB0q-PZM">a February 2023 video interview</a> with Block Club Chicago. “Every single school should have a social worker, counselor and nurse as the bare minimum.”</p><p>But Johnson faces a big challenge in carrying out his education agenda: Chicago Public Schools is facing a projected <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20could%20see,next%20school%20year%2C%20official%20says&text=Sign%20up%20for%20Chalkbeat%20Chicago's,system%20and%20statewide%20education%20policy.">$391 million budget deficit</a> next fiscal year and has provided little detail on how it will close the gap. Federal <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/10/chicago-covid-relief-dollars-budgets-schools/">COVID money is running out</a> and he must bargain a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/">new contract with the teachers union.</a></p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/msJBPJ75LGHxBzmSMy-VR07cqtU=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/YGA5B7JWHNGZZG6YIOIDN2G5PQ.png" alt="" height="960" width="1440"/></figure><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/8/23591805/chicago-mayor-election-brandon-johnson-chicago-teachers-union-paul-vallas-lori-lightfoot/">Johnson’s agenda</a> also called for free public transit for students, housing for the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/14/chicago-students-in-unstable-housing-rise-as-mayor-seeks-real-estate-tax/">district’s 20,000 homeless students,</a> and creating up to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/19/chicago-mayor-brandon-johnson-expand-sustainable-community-schools/">200 more Sustainable Community Schools</a> – a partnership with the CTU that provides wraparound services at needy schools. None of these promises have seen any progress.</p><p>Still, education may be the one area where Johnson has made progress during his first year in office, said Dick Simpson, professor emeritus of politics at University of Illinois at Chicago and a former alderman.</p><p>“In comparison to, say, his other problems — solving crime, for instance — he is much further along on the school agenda,” Simpson said.</p><p>The speed with which Johnson can deliver on his education promises is important because he will soon lose exclusive control over the Chicago Board of Education, as the school board <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/">begins to transition to a partially elected body</a> this November.</p><p>In an interview with Chalkbeat, Johnson said his focus on education “has more to do with the urgency that families are calling for.”</p><p>“We’re talking about decades upon decades of school closures, the defunding of our schools, the attack on veteran educators, particularly Black educators,” Johnson said. “So our urgency is really centered around the needs of our young people and the needs that our families have.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ulTO_hJOuoNLlQd18eQPLaAzrBg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/XBBOXC7H2BGHXL5KFPDTVTRJBU.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson visits the classroom of English teacher Noe Castro at Kelvyn Park High School with Principal Keith Adams and Ald. Felix Cardona Jr. (31st) in Hermosa on May 7, 2024." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson visits the classroom of English teacher Noe Castro at Kelvyn Park High School with Principal Keith Adams and Ald. Felix Cardona Jr. (31st) in Hermosa on May 7, 2024.</figcaption></figure><h2>Bolstering neighborhood schools, but not without backlash</h2><p>Johnson’s plans to bolster neighborhood schools kicked into gear last December.</p><p>Just before winter break, the board of education passed a resolution aimed at boosting neighborhood schools and rethinking Chicago’s school choice system, which encourages kids to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/20/how-families-choose-schools-in-chicago/">enroll in public schools outside their attendance zones.</a> Half of all elementary students go to schools that are not their zoned neighborhood schools and more than 70% of high schoolers do.</p><p>Johnson has described the choice system as <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice/">a “Hunger Games scenario”</a> that forces schools to compete for students and resources and results in less investment in neighborhood schools. The resolution said the choice system “reinforces, rather than disrupts, cycles of inequity” and must be replaced with “anti-racist processes and initiatives that eliminate all forms of racial oppression.”</p><p>Though many selective enrollment and magnet schools were created under court-ordered desegregation, many still <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/after-desegregation-ends-at-chicagos-top-schools-more-racial-isolation/65ea8586-dd2b-4947-ad77-f0a68b35020c">lack the diversity of the city</a> and are largely segregated by race and class. A couple dozen are integrated, but serve more white and Asian American students than the rest of the school district.</p><p>The board’s resolution did not change any current policies or suggest the closure of any schools. Board members emphasized that public feedback would drive any changes, such as to admissions policies. Board members have, however, said they plan to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/25/chicago-public-schools-renews-charter-schools/">scrutinize charter schools more.</a></p><p>The resolution was praised by advocates who have long pushed for more investment in neighborhood schools and the Chicago Teachers Union.</p><p>Johnson “ran on equity,” said Stacy Davis Gates, president of the Chicago Teachers Union. “He said that our school district had to be more equitable, and the resolution that came from the Board of Education is speaking to the inequity and their efforts to ameliorate inequity that are often disproportionately experienced by neighborhood schools.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/NJe1waHcd-9tIYj8BmSVjUyw-m0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/NLPEPV3UDNDLRN5ONCQNLUDQFY.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson meets students as he tours Kelvyn Park High School in Hermosa on May 7, 2024." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson meets students as he tours Kelvyn Park High School in Hermosa on May 7, 2024.</figcaption></figure><p>But the resolution also sparked backlash from families whose children attend schools of choice, including those already frustrated that CPS <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">was not providing bus service</a> to general education students, largely those attending selective and magnet schools.</p><p>Those concerns pushed state lawmakers to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/11/illinois-lawmakers-file-bills-against-chicago-policies/">file a bill</a> that is up for a final vote this week, which would prevent the district from changing admissions policies for selective enrollment schools – something the current board signaled it may do. The bill would also prevent CPS from cutting funding for selective enrollment schools or <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/17/chicago-school-closings-moratorium-could-last-until-2027/">closing any school until 2027,</a> when the school board will be fully elected. The bill is supported by powerful state lawmakers and Gov. J. B. Pritzker.</p><p>Johnson said the bill would prevent the board from taking actions to help create “real equity” and would prevent the district from balancing its budget. He began rattling off the relatively small percentages of Black students at some of the city’s most sought after selective enrollment high schools and noted how those figures were higher about two decades ago.</p><p>“What I’m troubled by is that you have a school district that is hypersegregated and that stratification has continued to grow because you haven’t had leadership like mine directing the school board and the Chicago Public Schools to commit to real equity,” Johnson said. “So is Springfield intervening to protect segregation?”</p><p>Simpson noted that Johnson has “a more strained” relationship with the legislature and Pritzker, meaning he doesn’t have a lot of clout to fight for what he wants.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/l476-C93kTBbaRUNdNWCzoykAXo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/EOUAMZWNSNAAFG2YDRJMUHDYBU.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson pats the head of kindergartner Triston during a back-to-school event at Jackie Robinson Elementary School in Bronzeville on Aug. 21, 2023." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson pats the head of kindergartner Triston during a back-to-school event at Jackie Robinson Elementary School in Bronzeville on Aug. 21, 2023.</figcaption></figure><h2>CPS changes funding formula</h2><p>In March, CPS announced it would change how it distributes money to schools, delivering on another major promise Johnson made on the campaign trail to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">end student-based budgeting</a>, which provides schools a set dollar amount for every child enrolled.</p><p>The new funding formula will now give every school a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">base level of staff and discretionary money based on need, which</a> principals can use flexibly. This “needs-based” formula is meant to break a cycle in which underenrolled schools in underinvested neighborhoods lose money because they’re losing students.</p><p>That change, too, has drawn a fresh batch of concerns.</p><p>Parent leaders at selective enrollment and magnet schools said their budgets provide for fewer staffers next year under the new formula. Some Local School Councils <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/faced-with-cuts-under-a-new-funding-formula-several-cps-schools-are-rejecting-their-budgets/bae02996-e820-46eb-8323-5517740c56d3">are voting against</a> their budgets for next year.</p><p>CPS officials have said that overall funding to schools remains the same as last year but individual schools could see changes. The district is looking for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/10/chicago-covid-relief-dollars-budgets-schools/">cuts at the central office</a> to address the $391 million deficit, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez has said. CPS has not yet released school budgets for next year to the public.</p><p>The union also raised concerns about the formula, saying it lacks guaranteed positions, such as teacher assistants, and said some neighborhood schools have also seen cuts. Davis Gates blamed Martinez – not the mayor – for those flaws, because she said he is not explaining the changes well to the public or lobbying the state legislature hard enough for more money to prevent staffing cuts to some schools.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/CDAICf9848tNababpa4fa0MKBRI=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SDNOB6TXOZHTFB2JYTQNDEYM7A.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson hugs art teacher Meredith Kachel at Kelvyn Park High School as he surprised her for Teacher Appreciation Week. Johnson visited the school with Principal Keith Adams and Ald. Felix Cardona Jr. (31st) in Hermosa on May 7, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson hugs art teacher Meredith Kachel at Kelvyn Park High School as he surprised her for Teacher Appreciation Week. Johnson visited the school with Principal Keith Adams and Ald. Felix Cardona Jr. (31st) in Hermosa on May 7, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>Sylvia Barragan, a spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools, said “multiple staff members” have visited Springfield throughout the session to advocate for more funding, and Martinez has pushed for more funding “for well over two years in Springfield, at our Board of Education meetings and beyond.”</p><p>CPS officials have said that no type of school is being disproportionately impacted. But Martinez <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/26/chicago-public-schools-defends-new-budget-formula/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20officials%20defended,heavily%20on%20raw%20student%20enrollment">has acknowledged</a> that they are working to fix concerns at individual schools.</p><h2>Mayor inconsistent on police out of schools</h2><p>Some education-focused organizations have criticized the mayor’s administration for pushing big changes through or flip-flopping on commitments without properly engaging the public.</p><p>Hal Woods, director of policy and advocacy for Kids First Chicago, shared some examples. For one, the board publicly posted its resolution stating its intent to rethink school choice two days before the board voted, leaving little time for the public to digest it, Woods said. The district is currently <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/16/chicago-public-schools-strategic-plan-meeting/#:~:text=The%20plan%20%E2%80%94%20which%20will%20be,on%20Monday%20night%20for%20the">holding hearings to collect feedback</a> for the next strategic plan.</p><p>Parents and schools have also demanded more information about why the district is changing its funding formula, Woods said. He added that the former formula wasn’t working for many schools, but the district hasn’t shared enough about the new formula or its impact on schools.</p><p>Woods also said the mayor could be more clear with communities on his position to remove police from schools. Johnson supported getting rid of campus police on the campaign trail but later said local schools should have the power to choose whether to have school resource officers. Then in February, the mayor backed the school board when it voted to unilaterally <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/">remove officers from all campuses</a> by next school year.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/xB-J1ub18PUZQg6XmF55ScTOofc=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/XHV72XTQSRGFFJ6EAB245VRLFU.jpg" alt="School police officers in the hallways of Lane Tech High School in Chicago." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>School police officers in the hallways of Lane Tech High School in Chicago.</figcaption></figure><p>“There’s plenty of data that shows how police in schools impact youth mental health, right, and the disproportionate impact on Black students and Latino students, but … they’re kind of making a decision based on their values without kind of educating the public on why they’re making that decision,” Woods said.</p><p>Johnson said “he will talk to anyone” and rejected the idea that his administration isn’t transparent enough. He pointed to the handful of board of education meetings that have been held at high schools in the evening instead of downtown during the day. He believes some of that criticism comes from people who “have had unfettered access” to previous mayors, and there are “people who now have access who were shut out before.”</p><p>“I’ve said all along,” Johnson said, “there’s plenty of room at the table for everyone.”</p><h2>Fulfilling other promises before school board shifts</h2><p>There are several promises Johnson hasn’t made progress on, including <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/19/chicago-mayor-brandon-johnson-expand-sustainable-community-schools/">expanding Sustainable Community Schools,</a> a CPS partnership with the teachers union that pairs needy schools with community organizations that provide wraparound services to families. Each program costs about $500,000.</p><p>While Johnson has shifted focus toward neighborhood schools, his administration is struggling to support the 8,900 migrant students and families who have arrived in Chicago from the southern border since at least August 2022.</p><p>As a candidate, Johnson promised to <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/content/dam/city/depts/mayor/TransitionReport/TransitionReport.07.2023.pdf">invest more money</a> in bilingual education. Between August 2022 and last August – five months after he was elected – the number of bilingual-certified educators grew by 90, according to CPS. Between last August and the end of April, that figure grew by another 106 teachers.</p><p>CPS and the city also <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/17/23797844/chicago-public-schools-migrant-families-welcome-center/">opened a welcome center</a> to help migrant students enroll in school and access other resources. CPS said it helps direct families to schools with the proper resources when they are struggling with enrollment.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/DWxhePUUAyBLa-5j535GOoHJnzk=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/VB37F5HV3BD4JEMYL4SZOQIQXQ.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks at a press conference at Roberto Clemente Community Academy before the opening of a pilot CPS welcome center for newly arriving families on July 17, 2023." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks at a press conference at Roberto Clemente Community Academy before the opening of a pilot CPS welcome center for newly arriving families on July 17, 2023.</figcaption></figure><p>Still, the union, lawmakers, and families have reported that <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/18/chicago-educators-need-help-during-migrant-crisis/">many schools are struggling</a> to meet the needs of migrant children, most of whom are learning English as a new language and are homeless. Those challenges include lacking enough staff to help children with specialized English instructions.</p><p>Johnson again blamed state lawmakers for their efforts to protect selective enrollment schools, saying it would “prevent us from having the type of budget, autonomy, and flexibility to invest in those schools” that lack resources to help English learners.</p><p>Johnson also hasn’t gained ground on <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/14/chicago-students-in-unstable-housing-rise-as-mayor-seeks-real-estate-tax/">providing the district’s 20,000 homeless students</a> with housing — a bold promise tied to a signature campaign promise to pass the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/14/chicago-students-in-unstable-housing-rise-as-mayor-seeks-real-estate-tax/">Bring Chicago Home</a> referendum. That ballot measure, which would have used a tax on property sales over $1 million to help fund housing for homeless families, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/20/bring-chicago-home-referendum-being-voted-down/">failed in March.</a></p><p>Ultimately, Johnson’s education legacy and the fate of his preferred policies will depend on what the future elected school board does, Simpson said.</p><p>“I do think the new school board, as it begins to take shape, will revisit these issues and either move forward with the general direction of Johnson and the current school board, or will roll them back to an extent,” he said.</p><p>It could also depend on the ongoing financial challenges for Chicago Public Schools. Asked how he will achieve his goals in the absence of more money from Springfield, Johnson said he’s exploring other “measures and steps that we can take as a city.” When pressed for details, Johnson’s office declined to elaborate.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/14/mayor-brandon-johnson-focuses-on-neighborhood-schools-during-first-year-in-office/Reema AminColin Boyle/Block Club Chicago2024-05-15T22:38:13+00:002024-05-15T22:38:13+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools pitched a new school safety plan Wednesday that would get rid of campus police, call for more training for educators on alternative discipline practices, and require locking classroom doors.</p><p>The proposed plan, which is on the agenda for next week’s board meeting, comes three months after the Chicago Board of Education passed a resolution <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/">to remove school resource officers</a>, or SROs, by the start of next school year. At the time, the board directed CPS CEO Pedro Martinez to create a new safety plan by June 27 that focuses on restorative practices.</p><p>Thirty-nine high schools still have on-campus police officers staffed by the Chicago Police Department. At 57 other schools, Local School Councils, or LSCs, voted to remove SROs.</p><p>The board’s plan to remove police could be reversed. State lawmakers have filed a bill <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/11/illinois-lawmakers-file-bills-against-chicago-policies/">that would allow LSCs to contract with the Chicago Police Department to staff SRO</a>s. That bill is still being negotiated, according to a spokesperson for Rep. Mary Gill, the bill’s sponsor who represents Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood.</p><p>The district’s new proposed safety plan, however, extends beyond campus police. The plan builds on existing district efforts to teach kids about social-emotional skills and restorative justice practices, which are alternatives to discipline meant to resolve conflict and understand the root of student behavior, according to the proposal. All schools would be required to have a safety plan based on these new guidelines by 2028.</p><p>The plan covers “physical safety, emotional safety, and relational trust, which drives the development of a holistically safe environment,” said Jadine Chou, CPS’s chief of safety and security, during a board meeting Wednesday to review the board’s agenda for next week.</p><p>Chou said the plan was developed with community organizations and considered feedback from a survey about school safety that drew 9,000 responses. The board will vote next week to open a 30-day public comment period on the proposed plan and would vote on the plan after that.</p><p>Among the proposed plan’s highlights:</p><ul><li>All schools would be required to have at least one security guard. Schools would get more guards based on a formula that considers multiple factors, such as the size of the school building, the number of students, and neighborhood crime.</li><li>All schools would be required to have an emergency management plan that’s updated annually.</li><li>All schools would have to teach social-emotional learning and must implement restorative practices.</li><li>Schools would include training on “climate, trauma-responsive, and social and emotional learning” in professional development plans</li><li>All schools would be required to have behavioral health teams, which are charged with supporting students who are in crisis, those who have experienced trauma, or are in need of mental health assistance. Most CPS schools – 460 – already have such teams, according to a district spokesperson.</li><li>All interior and exterior doors must be locked at all times, except for bathroom doors. Staff would have keys to doors.</li></ul><p>This fall, all schools would receive data from the district to “conduct a baseline assessment of their safety, culture and climate” and would be required to develop safety plans based on that assessment.</p><p>After brief remarks from Chou on Wednesday, board members applauded the proposal. Board member Rudy Lozano said it signals a shift from discipline to a “healing-centered equity frame for students.”</p><h2>Board’s approach to school safety draws mixed response</h2><p>The board’s recent actions on school safety drew praise from advocates who had long pushed CPS to invest money in more social workers and other resources, and highlighted how Black students were <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2020/08/21/73-of-students-arrested-at-chicago-schools-are-black-but-the-majority-of-schools-voted-to-keep-police/">more likely to be arrested.</a> The decision drew opposition from some Local School Councils and elected officials who felt that LSCs should decide whether to keep police on campus.</p><p>Most <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2020/6/23/21299743/police-schools-research/">research shows</a> that schools with police tend to have higher arrest and suspension rates but doesn’t clarify whether police are the cause or if officers are more likely staffed at schools with more challenges, according to a Chalkbeat <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2020/6/23/21299743/police-schools-research/">review of research in 2020.</a> Nationally, students have generally positive views of SROs but those views tend to worsen among Black students, who are more likely to get arrested. Another study last fall found that Chicago schools implementing restorative justice practices <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">saw fewer student arrests.</a> Students also reported feeling safer at school.</p><p>David Stovall, a UIC professor of Black studies and criminology, law, and justice, said the district’s proposed safety plan reflects what many community members have asked for.</p><p>However, Stovall said, the plan will work only if officials can ensure all schools are meeting requirements, such as creating behavioral health teams with mental health professionals.</p><p>“It can’t be just one office operating out of central [office], right? You have to have teams of folks in order to do that work we’re talking about,” Stovall said.</p><p>The plan seems to require more resources at a time that CPS is projecting a $391 million budget deficit next fiscal year, which begins July 1, he said.</p><p>Mo Canady, executive director of the National Association of School Resource Officers, which works with the Chicago Police Department to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/7/10/21108474/five-questions-for-the-man-training-chicago-s-school-police/">train Chicago’s SROs,</a> said he was “deeply disappointed” in the board’s decision. Canady said officers are trained to “build positive relationships” with students, parents, and staff.</p><p>“We recognize that in some communities, there’s strained relationships with law enforcement,” Canady said. “If we’re ever going to get that right, we’ve got to get it right with the next generation [and] the next generation just happens to be adolescents that are going to become our next adults in society.”</p><p>The movement to remove SROs came into focus in 2019, when the U.S. Department of Justice placed the Chicago Police Department under a federal consent decree and raised questions about the role of campus police. Then in 2020, the district asked LSCs to vote on whether they wanted to keep their SROs after protests over Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s murder of Geroge Floyd.</p><p>On the campaign trail, Mayor Brandon Johnson said he supported getting rid of campus police, but later said he supports letting LSCs make that decision for their schools. Johnson flipped again earlier this year when he supported the board’s decision to remove officers.</p><p><b>Correction:</b> May 15, 2024: <i>This story previously said the incorrect number of days this proposal will go out for public comment.</i></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie contributed.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/15/new-safety-plan-calls-for-no-police-and-restorative-justice/Reema AminAntonio Perez / Chicago Tribune via Getty Images2024-05-15T17:31:16+00:002024-05-15T18:32:22+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Illinois will not be able to adequately fund public schools by a 2027 state deadline, according to<a href="https://ctbaonline.org/reports/fully-funding-evidence-based-formula-fy-2025-proposed-general-fund-budget"> a new report</a>.</p><p>Due to inflation and state lawmakers holding K-12 funding flat in 2020 during the height of the COVID pandemic, districts would not be adequately funded until 2034 if the state continues to only add $350 million to the evidence-based funding formula, according to a report from the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability.</p><p>But lawmakers could adequately fund schools by 2030 if they provide an additional $500 million a year, the report said.</p><p>However, state budget officials are predicting a decrease in revenue in the next year. <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/15/23511569/covid-spending-illinois-school-districts-chicago-esser/" target="_blank">Federal COVID-19 relief money</a>, which <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/10/chicago-covid-relief-dollars-budgets-schools/" target="_blank">boosted school budgets the past few years</a>, is also set to run out.</p><p>“I think school districts will have to make some tough financial decisions in the next coming years,” said Elaine Gaberik, one of the co-authors of the report. “This goes back to showing how important the state funding is going to be in these next couple years.”</p><p>In February, Gov. J.B. Pritzker proposed adding <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/21/illinois-governor-pritzker-wants-universal-preschool-by-2027/">an additional $350 million for public schools and $150 million for early childhood education</a> to the state budget for the next fiscal year, which covers the 2024-25 school year.</p><p>Hundreds of Chicago Public Schools educators are going to Springfield on Wednesday to ask for more state funding. They maintain that the district is underfunded by $1.1 billion. That is the amount Chicago would need to reach adequacy under the state formula. Mayor Brandon Johnson was also in the capitol last week to ask state lawmakers to give more money to Chicago schools.</p><p>Elizabeth Todd-Breland, vice president of the Chicago Board of Education, said during the Agenda Review Committee on Wednesday her daughter will be an adult before the state can adequately fund schools.</p><p>“Generations of public school students will be deprived of their right to a quality, fully-funded public education and we should all see that as being unacceptable,” said Todd-Breland.</p><p>Roughly <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/finance/budget/budget-2024/revenue-2024/">$2.5 billion</a> of Chicago Public Schools’ <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/28/23777373/chicago-public-schools-budget-2024-school-board-vote/">$9.4 billion budget</a> comes from state funding. Of the $2.5 billion in state money, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">$1.7 billion comes from the state’s evidence-based funding formula</a>. Seven years ago, before the state <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/5/23294189/illinois-chicago-evidence-based-funding-enrollment-property-tax/">changed its funding formula</a>, CPS received about $1.9 billion from the state.</p><p>Illinois’ evidence-based funding formula calculates how much money a public school district needs based on the needs of the students the district serves and how much local revenue a school district can raise. A district could receive additional state funding if they have a larger amount of students from low-income families, English learners, or students with disabilities. Districts in areas with less property wealth are also prioritized for more state funding, while richer districts with higher value property get less.</p><p>Since the formula was created, state funding for K-12 schools has grown by more than $3 billion, with <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/9/23633048/illinois-finances-state-budget-funding-gaps-students/">the majority of the new money going to districts</a> that need it most.</p><p>The Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, which helped design the evidence-based funding formula in 2017, looked at four possible scenarios state lawmakers could take action on. Each scenario takes into account how much money it would take to fully fund schools, estimates the amount of time, and includes other factors, such as inflation.</p><p>The report mentions other possibilities for lawmakers to weigh as they put together the budget. If the state decided that it wanted to reach the 2027 funding goal, the report estimates that it would take at least $1.1 billion a year starting in 2025. Another possibility is to continue to add $300 million to the evidence-based funding, but add more funding based on the rate of inflation. However, inflation rates can drastically change. As noted in the report, inflation rose to 5% in 2022 and 8% in 2023.</p><p>Gaberik, one of the co-authors of the report, told Chalkbeat that one of the best things the evidence-based formula did for public schools was to change the ratio of local funding to state funding.</p><p>Before the formula was put into use, school districts relied heavily on property taxes, which created inequities in educational opportunities for students across the state, according to Gaberik.</p><p>When the state’s General Assembly created the evidence-based funding formula in 2017, the goal was to adequately fund all schools by 2027. During negotiations, there was a bipartisan promise to continue to add at least $350 million a year to public schools every year until every district reached its “adequacy target.”</p><p>State lawmakers committed to this promise every year, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/5/27/21272520/illinois-state-education-budget-flat-2021-fiscal-year-but-schools-warn-covid-will-push-up-costs/">except in 2020 when they agreed to keep funding flat due to the coronavirus pandemic.</a></p><p>Since then, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/28/23377411/illinois-advocates-school-funding-budget/">education advocates</a> have been pushing lawmakers to increase K-12 funding by at least $550 million annually in order to get all school districts to adequacy more quickly. But lawmakers have continued to add $350 million annually in the years since.</p><p>Andy Manar, deputy governor for budget and economy, said in a letter dated May 8 to various Illinois agency directors that the state’s revenues are down by $800 million. Plus, the state’s share of COVID relief funds will end this year. Manar said that it is unclear how many programs this will impact, but budget officials will continue to work with the state’s General Assembly to create a balanced budget.</p><p>The legislature must pass a budget by June 30, but is expected to do so before the end of its spring session, currently scheduled to finish on May 24.</p><p><i>Reema Amin contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/15/illinois-needs-to-add-more-funding-for-schools-report-says/Samantha SmylieBecky Vevea2024-05-10T21:40:00+00:002024-05-10T21:40:00+00:00<p><i>This </i><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/05/10/chicagos-dancing-crossing-guard-wins-cps-guard-of-the-year-award/" target="_blank"><i>story</i></a><i> originally appeared in </i><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/" target="_blank"><i>Block Club Chicago</i></a><i>.</i></p><p>Chicago’s dancing crossing guard has won Chicago Public Schools’ Crossing Guard of the Year award.</p><p>Tammy Anderson will be one of four crossing guards honored at a ceremony Thursday. The Beasley Academic Center crossing guard has been escorting students safely to the school at 5255 S. State St. for eight years, <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2022/04/29/meet-the-dancing-washington-park-crossing-guard-who-has-been-making-drivers-smile-for-years/">amassing a number of fans along the way with her megawatt smile and dance moves.</a></p><p>Anderson found out about the honor on her birthday last month, when Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd) surprised her while she was on duty with a personal letter from Mayor Brandon Johnson.</p><p>“I didn’t even know who she was. She was walking towards me, so I held up the ‘stop’ sign like we’re supposed to do when someone you don’t know is walking up on you,” Anderson said. “But then she introduces herself and hands me the letter. It was the best birthday present.”</p><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Congratulations to Tammy Anderson for being named Crossing Guard of the Year by CPS. She works her magic & great smile at Beasley Academic Center at 53rd & State Streets. Our students love her. I’m so appreciative of her focus on keeping our young people safe..all with a flare!! <a href="https://t.co/FzR7e0rqGD">pic.twitter.com/FzR7e0rqGD</a></p>— Alderman Pat Dowell (@AldPatDowell3rd) <a href="https://twitter.com/AldPatDowell3rd/status/1786150612939292699?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 2, 2024</a></blockquote><p>Anderson has become a fixture of Washington Park, as she’s frequently seen directing traffic near the school while dancing, flashing her kilowatt smile, and waving and talking to drivers and commuters as they pass by.</p><p>The crossing guard <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2022/04/29/meet-the-dancing-washington-park-crossing-guard-who-has-been-making-drivers-smile-for-years/">went viral in 2022</a>, when video circulated showing her joyful personality. Two years later, Anderson’s popularity has continued to grow, from being featured in <a href="https://abc7chicago.com/black-history-month-2023-chicago-people/12755183/">Black History Month television segments</a> to making cameos in the Welcome to Chicago presentation playing at <a href="https://navypier.org/flyoverchicago/">Flyover, Navy Pier’s newest attraction.</a></p><p>And the commuters are still driving past the school to get a piece of the sunshine, still honking and waving as they pass. lt’s still one of the best parts of the job for Anderson, she said.</p><p>Now, the mom is preparing for the high school graduation of her youngest child, who will attend Georgia State University in the fall.</p><p>“She’s going to study software engineering, and she’s already been interning at LinkedIn. My goddaughter will be going there, too. I’m so proud of them,” Anderson said.</p><p>What’s next for the beloved crossing guard?</p><p>“Maybe I’ll write my life story,” Anderson said. “I think it’s time.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/10/chicago-dancing-crossing-guard-wins-cps-guard-of-the-year-award/Jamie Nesbitt Golden, Block Club ChicagoEnrique Reyes/Block Club Chicago2024-05-03T15:21:29+00:002024-05-03T15:33:31+00:00<p><i>Sign up for</i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i> Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>In a classroom normally filled with teenagers, 16 adults sat at desks arranged in a U-shape on a recent Saturday afternoon at Roosevelt High School on Chicago’s North Side.</p><p>Behind the group, there was a small table with a box of red, green, and yellow wristbands. Green meant you were fine with hugs; yellow OK’ed high fives and fist bumps; and red meant “no touching, send vibes!” according to a sign taped to the table. Next to the wristbands were a stack of packets that said “Effective School Boards Framework.”</p><p>At the front of the class, a projected slide said in big letters, “Student outcomes don’t change until adult behaviors change.”</p><p>It was time for lessons on how to be on a school board.</p><p>AJ Crabill, an author presenting to the group that day, asked the class: Who is at the top of the organizational chart of a school system?</p><p>It’s not the school board, he said.</p><p>The superintendent, someone wondered.</p><p>“It is 1,000% not the superintendent,” Crabill said.</p><p>The mayor?</p><p>“It’s definitely not the mayor.”</p><p>Students?</p><p>That would be “beautiful,” Crabill said, but that’s not how it works typically.</p><p>The correct answer: The community.</p><p>Crabill, director of governance for the Council of the Great City Schools, was explaining to the class of education advocates, parent leaders, and prospective school board members that any school system exists to serve the public — but sometimes policymakers forget that.</p><p>“The moment you realize the community is at the top of the org chart, and then you realize, ‘That seems completely incongruent with my lived experience,’” Crabill said, drawing some laughs.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/uCmkLnRPK-w800MAxSD0CAKOW5M=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/CUNSJDZARZGMFFYN3GXCZYOGQI.jpg" alt="AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, speaks to the inaugural class of Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows during School Board School held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, speaks to the inaugural class of Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows during School Board School held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>The students are the inaugural class of a new, eight-month fellowship launched by National Louis University to prepare people for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/" target="_blank">Chicago’s first elected school board,</a> said Bridget Lee, the fellowship’s executive director. The fellowship is funded by Crown Family Philanthropies, The Joyce Foundation, the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, and Vivo Foundation (Crown, Joyce, and Vivo also support Chalkbeat. Learn more about our funding<a href="http://www.chalkbeat.org/about/supporters/"> here</a>.)</p><p>Known as the Academy for Local Leadership, or ALL Chicago, the fellowship is happening at a critical time. Chicago voters will begin electing people to the city’s school board this November, and candidates are building campaigns. But Lee said the program is for advocates as well as potential candidates.</p><p>Fellows had to apply to join the program, which began in March and will last through November and are hosted across the city, said Lee, who added that they are still figuring out the timing for the second cohort of fellows. Fellows are given a $400 stipend to help cover transportation costs — an amount Lee hopes will increase in the future, she said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/a6EkEv0gfqvdxoUZRkXGPZRqaaE=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/4XGP7PVCQJDDHIZNRQIFMNSCSM.jpg" alt="Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellow Mary Nikoo takes notes during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellow Mary Nikoo takes notes during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>Over about two sessions a month, the group will learn the basics of Chicago’s school system, the district’s finances, and how to make an “action plan” for creating change in school communities.</p><p>Towards the end of the program, fellows will flesh out their actual action plan and present their vision for change during their graduation ceremony. By then, some of the fellows who are running for school board may have won their elections.</p><p>The first group of fellows includes a handful of people running for office and many with close ties to the district. It includes Sendhil Revuluri, a former board member; Danielle Wallace, a school board candidate running in District 6<i><b> </b></i>on the South Side; and Mykela Collins, a mother with two children in Chicago Public Schools who serves on a Local School Council.</p><p>Wallace, a former teacher and nonprofit leader in Englewood, was on the fence about running for school board until she started the fellowship.</p><p>“One of the most valuable things for me is becoming really clear on what my thoughts and values and positions are on different topics,” Wallace said. “That just gives me a lot of confidence on making the right decisions from that seat.”</p><p>Fellows Jesus Ayala Jr. and Carlos Rivas have also filed campaign finance paperwork to run for school board seats in District 7 on the South West side and District 3 on the North West side, respectively.</p><p>Collins said she applied for the fellowship because she wanted to know how to be a better advocate.</p><p>“I wanted to know who is important for me to go to, the type of questions I can ask and needed to ask and how I can go about getting those answers,” Collins said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/uxpCZB1xpcFkzoLplahlSxvnSq4=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/7A6DUPCQP5CPVOM32OHIQ6HPSY.jpg" alt="Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows Mykela Collins, right, and Christina Jensen, left, laugh during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows Mykela Collins, right, and Christina Jensen, left, laugh during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>Lee’s idea for the fellowship formed three years ago, when Illinois lawmakers first passed a law <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board/" target="_blank">creating the elected school board.</a> As a former teacher and CPS employee who worked in the central office, Lee wondered how the public would learn about the complicated new governance system. Lee then visited a program in Cincinnati called <a href="https://www.schoolboardschool.org/">School Board School</a>, which educates school board candidates and advocates, and decided to bring the model to Chicago, she said.</p><p>Lee said “plenty” of organizations help political candidates navigate politics. ALL Chicago focuses instead on learning about the school system and how to work with people who may not agree with you — just like a school board.</p><p>For example, this first batch of fellows sees eye-to-eye on about 80% of things: They care about children, and they want all students to succeed regardless of their backgrounds, Lee said. She wants the fellowship to be the place where people can have “productive civil discourse” about the 20% of things they don’t agree on.</p><p>“I think that fellows are sort of learning from each other, like how their own stories and their own experiences have shaped their viewpoint and how the system should run and are learning how to talk about that in a way that moves things forward,” Lee said.</p><p>Since the program began in March, the group has already heard from some experienced policymakers, including former Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson, Lee said. They’ve also started to create their plans for how they want to impact the school system.</p><p>On the Saturday afternoon when Crabill was there, however, the fellows went back to the basics.</p><p>He asked the group to ponder some big questions, such as, “Why do school systems exist?” Answers varied. One person said the goal was to prepare children for the workforce. Another said school systems also help students socialize.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/dpP4c_R3XdY4WFNIGm9tvIUFR3E=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/YHBQUKNHINFWVD2YFWDSNNBBGU.jpg" alt="Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellow Cory Cain asks a question to speaker AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellow Cory Cain asks a question to speaker AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>After learning that the community is at the top of the organizational chart, Crabill, who wrote the book, “Great On Their Behalf: Why School Boards Fail, How Yours Can Become Effective,” emphasized another basic fact of being an elected official: Your job is never over.</p><p>“You gonna be sittin’ up in the grocery store trying to find a non-squishy avocado, and somebody gonna come up to you and complain about, how come their kid didn’t get a part in the play?” Crabill said, igniting laughter across the room.</p><p>But, seriously, he said: “This becomes your life. People will roll up on you at any moment when you have put yourself in the position to be their representative — and I think it’s perfectly appropriate for them to do so.”</p><p>The fellows’ knowledge of Chicago Public Schools varied. One person talked about the district’s school bus crisis. At one point, one fellow informed another that Chicago Public Schools had scrapped its <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/26/23699911/chicago-public-schools-school-improvement-policy-board/">old school rating policy</a> last year. The second fellow replied, “Thank God.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/-hThymvw9VMYhU1IUrzdC6Xb0Hw=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/ARVPM5PJ5NB6DMX342KG3TLSRY.jpg" alt="Materials used by Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows are seen on the desks during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Materials used by Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago fellows are seen on the desks during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>Other times, fellows had some universal experiences with CPS. For instance, during a discussion about public feedback, the class started talking — and commiserating — all at once about the process of signing up for public comment during monthly Chicago Board of Education meetings.</p><p>“You gotta sign up two days in advance and it finishes in two minutes,” one fellow said.</p><p>“Yes!” another replied.</p><p>School board members should never only consider public feedback during a meeting, Crabill said, given that most people in the community won’t be represented there.</p><p>Crabill also covered the murky line of when board members should step in to solve a problem or delegate to someone else.</p><p>He asked the group to imagine a class of 26 students where six of the children have higher needs and get more attention from the teacher. Now imagine that a father of one of the other 20 children calls a school board member he knows, asking for more attention for his child. The board member then calls the teacher to fix the problem. What is the teacher going to do?</p><p>One fellow’s answer stood out: “Spend more time with that one kid,” she said.</p><p>That’s probably what would play out – but Crabill warned the group to never let that happen. School board members should be pointing the parent to the proper channels for expressing their concern instead of giving them inequitable access to power and frustrating their employees in the process.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/29M3vU-VTYQhruvIfj25Lz0g664=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/2IUZDKK7EJD3NMG7XU2FD3KS7U.jpg" alt="Fellows in the inaugural class of Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago listen to speaker AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Fellows in the inaugural class of Academy for Local Leadership (ALL) Chicago listen to speaker AJ Crabill, Director of Governance for the Council of Great City Schools, during a session held at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 2024. </figcaption></figure><p>“We’ve created a hostile work environment for our staff that pressures them to no longer do what in their judgment is the best interest of children but instead do what is in the best interest of the power that be that showed up,” Crabill said.</p><p>This lesson was enlightening for Collins, the mother and LSC member.</p><p>“Learning that the roles and the responsibilities and accountability of the board is so much different from what I ever thought,” Collins said. “I thought that the board is supposed to do everything…anything goes wrong in the school, it’s the board’s issue, but learning that’s not how it is and they delegate different folks throughout the district to make those changes.”</p><p>During the session, fellows had a meta moment. They realized that so much of what they’re learning about the school system isn’t common knowledge to the general public. Was there a way that the system or a future board could spread what they’re learning?</p><p>Crabill challenged them.</p><p>“This is a new scenario for Chicago,” Crabill said, “so write a new script.”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/03/chicago-elected-school-board-academy-for-local-leadership/Reema AminLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2024-05-02T02:06:32+00:002024-05-02T02:06:32+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>The union representing school support staff came to a tentative agreement with Chicago Public Schools Wednesday night, ending a year of contract negotiations.</p><p>The four-year deal would create a baseline salary of $40,000 for all full-time workers represented by Service Employees International Union Local 73. The tentative agreement also calls for a 4% pay increase the first two years and a 4% to 5% increase the last two years of the contract. It will cover the current school year and expire at the end of the 2026-27 school year.</p><p>SEIU Local 73 represents about 11,000 school support workers, including custodians, special education classroom assistants, bus aides, security officers, crossing guards, and parent-workers. They have been working <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/20/chicago-public-schools-still-negotiating-union-contract-with-support-staff/">without a contract since June 30, 2023</a>.</p><p>“These critical support staff professionals carry out vital work in our schools each day, supporting teaching and learning and ensuring the safety and well being of our students,” said CPS CEO Pedro Martinez in a press release on Wednesday evening. “This agreement reflects our District’s commitment to a fair and equitable contract.”</p><p>The union also successfully negotiated for more professional development and training, particularly for special education classroom assistants who work with students with disabilities, according to a joint news release. If approved, security officers would also transition from seven-hour to eight-hour employees, and all SEIU Local 73 members would get <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/31/23852221/chicago-public-schools-religious-holidays-teachers-pay-substitutes/">paid time off to observe religious holidays</a>.</p><p>“After a year-long fight, our Union members are finally being recognized for their commitment and have secured much needed raises that will greatly improve the lives of these essential workers and provide the respect they deserve. " said Dian Palmer, President of SEIU Local 73, in a combined statement with Chicago Public Schools.</p><p>SEIU Local 73 members will have to vote in the coming weeks to ratify the tentative contract deal. If approved, the Chicago Board of Education must also vote to approve it.</p><p>The union started negotiations with the district in the spring of 2023, before their contract <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/7/4/21105366/these-102-schools-failed-latest-round-of-blitz-inspections/">was set to expire on June 30, 2023</a>. Most of these school workers are often paid lower than educators and school administrators — many of them making about $40,000 a year.</p><p>In February, the union secured a win outside of their contract negotiations when the school district announced that it would <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/12/chicago-public-schools-to-end-aramark-cleaning-contract/">end its multi-million dollar deal with Aramark</a> for the management of school janitors and cleaning services after 10 years.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/7/4/21105366/these-102-schools-failed-latest-round-of-blitz-inspections/">Aramark was frequently criticized for the lack of cleanliness at schools </a>and school custodial workers represented by SEIU Local 73 often voiced concerns about the lack of cleaning supplies.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/05/02/chicago-public-schools-seiu-reach-contract-agreement/Samantha Smylie2024-04-29T16:00:00+00:002024-04-29T16:00:00+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Thirteen people running in Chicago’s first school board elections participated in a virtual debate late Sunday night and answered questions about equity, community voice, and bus transportation for students.</p><p>The Zoom session — organized by the group <a href="https://cpsparentsforbuses.softr.app/">CPS Parents for Buses</a> — marked the first time candidates fielded questions as a group in a public forum for the city’s historic upcoming school board elections.</p><p>Chicago voters <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-votes-for-elected-school-board-in-november-2024-elections/">will elect 10 school board members</a> for the first time this November to govern Chicago Public Schools, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest/">the nation’s fourth largest school district</a>, alongside 11 members appointed by the mayor. In 2026, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board/">all 21 members</a> will be elected, ending 30 years of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/28/23660693/chicago-mayor-2023-election-runoff-public-schools-education-brandon-johnson-paul-vallas/">mayoral control</a>.</p><p>Chicago has been divided into 10 districts for the 2024 election (<a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1i0ILjZyzPFfyAHGqE9KRzL1JnXGVcdQ&ll=41.83399880095677%2C-87.731885&z=10">You can find what district you live in here</a>.) In order to get on the ballot, candidates have until June 24 to collect 1,000 signatures from voters in their districts.</p><p>While the ballot is not yet set, those who attended the forum Sunday night were:</p><ul><li>Jennifer Custer and Michelle Pierre, who are both running in District 1 covering the city’s northwest side out to O’Hare.</li><li>Kate Doyle, Daniel Steven Kleinman, and Maggie Cullerton Hooper, all running in District 2, which covers the far north lakefront, including Rogers Park, Edgewater, and Lincoln Square.</li><li>Jason Dones, who is running in District 3, which spans across Humboldt Park, Irving Park, and Belmont Cragin.</li><li>Kimberly Brown and Thomas Day, both running in District 4, which covers Lakeview and Lincoln Park, as well as Angel Alvarez, who said he is considering a run in District 4.</li><li>Jesus Ayala Jr., running in District 7 which stretches from the University of Illinois Chicago campus to Gage Park.</li><li>Lanetta Thomas, who is running in District 9 to represent the far south side from Englewood to Beverly.</li><li>Adam Parrott-Sheffer and Che “Rhymefest” Smith, who are both running in District 10 to represent the south lakefront to the Indiana border.</li></ul><p>The group that organized the candidate forum has been advocating since the start of the school year around restoring busing for roughly 5,500 general education students who lost <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20won't,rest%20of%20the%20school%20year&text=Sign%20up%20for%20Chalkbeat%20Chicago's,school%20year%2C%20officials%20said%20Thursday">transportation service at the start of this school year</a>. Most of those students <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">travel to magnet</a> and selective enrollment schools.</p><p>CPS <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">stopped busing general education students</a> as it worked to ensure students with disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs require transportation were getting it and that their ride times were <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage/">not longer than an hour</a>.</p><p>All 13 candidates answered yes when asked if CPS should be responsible for busing general education students to magnet and selective enrollment schools.</p><p>Most of the questions candidates fielded went beyond bus transportation and covered the topics of equity, transparency, budgeting, and parent voice. Unlike many political debates, candidates often agreed with each other’s answers and ideas and traded compliments.</p><p>J.B. Mantz, with CPS Parents for Buses, said the group invited the current seven appointed school board members and the board’s chief of staff, but did not hear back.</p><p>Five possible Chicago school board candidates did not attend, but filed paperwork with the Illinois State Board of Elections to raise campaign cash to run for Chicago school board. They include: Ebony DeBerry, District 2; Carlos Rivas, District 3; Andy Davis, District 4; Danielle Wallace, District 6; and Katie Marciniak, District 7.</p><p>Another candidate from District 7 — Yesenia López — did not attend the virtual forum and has not filed campaign finance paperwork, but <a href="https://twitter.com/Chuy4Congress/status/1774886177130082430">got an endorsement</a> from U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia earlier this year.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/29/chicago-school-board-candidates-2024-first-virtual-forum/Becky VeveaBecky Vevea,Becky Vevea2024-04-26T02:27:04+00:002024-04-26T02:27:04+00:00<p><i>Sign up for</i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i> Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools officials defended the district’s new school funding formula Thursday night after some school communities raised concerns about losing staff next year.</p><p>The new formula <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">allocates staff and funding based on need</a> and replaces a system that relied more heavily on raw <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">student enrollment</a>. It represents an “important milestone in a long and broad struggle to improve quality of education for all of Chicago’s children, especially those farthest from opportunity,” CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said during a Board of Education meeting held at Chicago Vocational Career Academy High School that drew at least 100 people.</p><p>Martinez noted that the change is the product of long-term advocacy from the community for equitable funding to all schools. Advocates for a needs-based formula, which includes the Chicago Teachers Union, argue that such a formula can provide more support for schools that have high needs and are in need of support as they lose enrollment.</p><p>But Martinez also acknowledged that CPS is not “going to get everything 100 percent perfect” and is working through budget concerns at some individual schools.</p><p>In recent weeks, some educators and parents at selective enrollment and magnet schools have said that their schools’ proposed budgets would include fewer staffers next year under the new formula, which provides at least 10 teachers at every school and increases staff and discretionary funding based on the school’s needs.</p><p>Some have <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/04/21/opinion-chicago-cps-new-funding-formula/">also pushed</a> for more transparency around the new formula, asking the district to release each school’s preliminary budget proposal to the public. School budgets are not yet final and must be approved by their Local School Councils. Martinez said the district will release school budgets in late May.</p><p>Some schools have reported seeing an increase in their discretionary funding, which can be used to fund more staff and other programs, under the new formula.</p><p>But even the Chicago Teachers Union, which supported eliminating the student-based budgeting formula, has concerns.</p><p>Christel Williams, the union’s recording secretary, told the board Thursday that the union is concerned the new formula doesn’t specifically guarantee schools certain paraprofessional positions, such as teacher assistants.</p><p>WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times also <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/cpss-selective-and-magnet-schools-appear-to-take-a-hit-under-new-equity-funding-formula/649f570a-0ff6-468b-a8c0-ebe3991a76ae">reported this week</a> that two-thirds of selective enrollment and magnet schools appear to be seeing cuts in their initial budgets.</p><p>Martinez said that no one school type will be disproportionately impacted by the budget changes. Some in the crowd of at least 100 people yelled, “That’s not true.”</p><p>Martinez asked the crowd to let him finish, then said: “By far overall what we’re seeing is more equity, especially for our schools with the highest needs, while we’re still protecting our strongest schools,” Martinez said.</p><p>But Martinez also said there are “a few outliers,” suggesting that the formula may not have provided adequate staffing for all schools, which the district is working to address.</p><p>Board president Jianan Shi asked Martinez to provide the board with an assessment of how staffing changes will impact schools.</p><p>“This board acknowledges the uncertainty, the uneasiness some communities are feeling right now, and we hear that,” Shi said.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/26/chicago-public-schools-defends-new-budget-formula/Reema AminReema Amin,Reema Amin2024-04-24T19:00:07+00:002024-04-24T19:00:07+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>“When you think of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, what feelings come up?”</p><p>A dozen Lincoln Park High School students, most of them Jewish or Arab American, pondered the questions and attempted to sum up months of intense emotion in just one word.</p><p>The students wrote their answers on a piece of paper, which they crumpled into a ball and tossed into a bowl. Then they took turns reading each other’s emotions. Nearly all had written the same words.</p><p>Angry. Frustrated.</p><p>“We broke down those emotions,” said Intisar Alkhatib, a student organizer at Lincoln Park, describing the scene on March 22. “It’s either coming from helplessness or we felt like there was more we could all do. We were glad we were in that circle.”</p><p>The exercise was part of PzTalks, a series of student-organized forums at high schools around the city. Chi Youth 4 Justice, the “abolitionist, anti-imperialist” student network that organized the <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/01/30/cps-students-plan-district-wide-walk-out-tuesday-in-support-of-ceasefire/">walkouts</a> supporting <a href="https://occprodstoragev1.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/matterattachmentspublic/6e6ccecd-1798-4028-a9a2-b31aa069c4c9.pdf">Chicago’s Gaza ceasefire resolution</a> in January says the forums are a way of easing tensions that have arisen between Jewish and Arab American communities in Chicago schools due to the ongoing conflict in Gaza.</p><p>In an Oct. 7 attack on Israel, Hamas militants killed 1,200 people and took more than 240 hostages, with about 130 still captive, according to reports. In response, Israel has launched a military campaign in Gaza, killing thousands of Palestinians and spurring a humanitarian crisis, according to health authorities there.</p><p>Alkhatib, who is C4YJ’s co-president, said the group wants to balance activism in the streets with conversations that can bring understanding. “In protests, while they’re important, there’s only one prevailing voice,” Alkhatib said, “In conversations, there’s the fusion of many voices coming together.”</p><p>The first set of PzTalks was held between March 10 and March 23 at 10 Chicago public high schools, including South Shore High School, Lincoln Park, Von Steuben, and Hancock. Alkhatib said several more schools have PzTalks in the works.</p><p>Each school took a different approach to organizing the forums based on their school community’s demographics, environments, and priorities. Schools without significant Arab American, Jewish, or Palestinian populations focused on general solidarity and introduction to the issue.</p><p>Student organizers approached their respective school administrators about hosting the forums, and held conversations with and received advice from different organizations, including Jewish Voice for Peace, Latinxs for Palestine, and anti-war group Dissenters.</p><p>A’yanna, CY4J co-president and a student organizer at Kenwood Academy, said CY4J organizers reached out to Jewish and Arab American student groups at each school to get to know them and began the organizing process with personal conversations. Some students requested to be identified only by their first names for privacy reasons.</p><p>“We talked about not wanting to just be known for the walkout but to continue talking about these issues,” added Natalie, a student organizer at Von Steuben Metropolitan High School who did not want to provide her full name because of safety concerns. “We wanted to continue the conversation, not just have it be, we walked out and that was it.”</p><h2>A space to really listen to one another</h2><p>At Lincoln Park High School, Alkhatib worked alongside a teacher with experience in restorative justice circles to structure their PzTalk forum and focus on the connections and similarities between how Arab American, Palestinian, and Jewish students were feeling. Community facilitator Seph Mozes, an organizer and a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, also helped shape a conversation that could center those voices.</p><p>Alkhatib said some Jewish students were reluctant at first and did not want to be in a situation where they had to discuss politics, but after the initial conversation, some were appreciative and open to learning more.</p><p>With Arab American students, nobody was uncomfortable talking about it, Alkhatib said. “The idea of our lives are already politicized.”</p><p>The facilitators sought to approach this topic with understanding and recognizing the common intentions of everyone in the space, Alkhatib said.</p><p>Students began the forum by each sharing a value they wanted to bring into the space — empathy, open-mindedness, understanding — and by sitting in a circle to reinforce the sense of community and equity.</p><p>They used a talking object to ensure that everyone had their turn to speak and not interrupt one another.</p><p>“It forces you to reflect,” she said. “You have to be patient and listen to the full extent of what people have to say.”</p><p>Although the discussion included some background information and basic terminology, the focus at Lincoln Park, Mozes said, was less on having a teach-in and more about creating a conversation about how students from different perspectives could work together and bridge existing cultural gaps.</p><p>“Nobody came in intentionally trying to derail the conversation,” he said. “Everyone was focused and interested in having a productive conversation around justice at their school.”</p><p>With the forums being by and for students, some of that trust is already there, said Natalie, the Von Steuben student.</p><p>“Students feel that mutual solidarity because they know these students who are organizing,” Natalie said. “This is my friend from my club, my classmate. I have trust in that person.”</p><p>At Von Steuben, the small, intimate forum focused on giving Palestinian students an opportunity to share their experiences.</p><p>“Some students have family in Gaza and they’ve been struggling to continue their lives, having to go to school and continue to act like everything’s normal,” Natalie said. “We wanted to allow them an environment to talk about how they truly feel and how it’s been difficult for them.”</p><p>Alkhatib, who is Palestinian, said a mental toll comes with witnessing the scale of destruction in Gaza while going through the day-to-day of high school.</p><p>“Having to normalize that and still recalibrate my mind to do homework and focus on classes is driving me crazy,” Alkhatib said.</p><p>One of the students at Lincoln Park Alkhatib reached out to was Sophia Feinberg, who is Jewish. Feinberg, who attended the forum, says no close friends at school are Palestinian, Arab American, or Jewish, so Feinberg has become the go-to person for information about the conflict.</p><p>“I do my best to be like, ‘Here’s my point of view,’ but it’s not going to be the same for every person you ask,” Feinberg said.</p><p>One thing Feinberg appreciated about the PzTalk was that it provided an opportunity for students to speak one at a time and encouraged a space for them to really listen to one another, and that their experience at the forum made them want to get more involved.</p><p>“If it’s just talked about in one of your classes between friends, it’s more of an argument,” Feinberg said. “You aren’t there to hear. You’re there to defend your side. I’ve heard of instances of people at school saying something antisemitic or Islamophobic because they don’t know enough.”</p><p>Initially, Feinberg said students were a little nervous to speak, the opening circle reserved and awkward. But after Mozes asked how students were feeling, the energy shifted.</p><p>Alkhatib said when tension came up in the space, it was productive.</p><p>“It was emotionally charged because of the seriousness of what we talked about, but it felt comfortable,” she said. “Everyone was reassuring each other mentally, emotionally, through our body language.”</p><p>Mozes said he was familiar with being in the position of only hearing about Israel and Palestine from a Jewish perspective and wanting to understand Palestinian perspectives. He found that Arab American and Palestinian students in the forum were expressing the same sentiment — of only hearing about the topic from their cultural perspective and wanting to understand the Jewish perspective.</p><p>“It was coming both from Jewish students and Arab and Palestinian students wanting to get out of their own cultural perspective and hear from other students,” he said. “I think that speaks to the importance and power of youth being in public institutions that are diverse and have access to cultural perspectives that are not their own.”</p><h2>‘A right to know and love each other’</h2><p>More than 30 students attended the forum at John Hancock College Preparatory High School.</p><p>Student organizers partnered with Latinxs for Palestine, whose founders Ricardo Gamboa and Haneen Shriam spoke. Students discussed intersectionality and similar struggles between Latino and Palestinian communities.</p><p>Raven, a student organizer at Hancock who also did not want to share his full name due to safety concerns, said he hopes students who attended the event gained a better understanding of why community members are advocating for Palestinians, and that peers expressed that the space made them feel less alone.</p><p>So far, Alkhatib said, there hasn’t been large-scale pushback over the PzTalks. At Hancock, Raven there was some concern from community members that students were uninformed, but the support he and his peers have received far outweighs any disapproval.</p><p>“We put hours and days into the research we do for our talks and teach-ins,” he says.</p><p>While some school administrators have been supportive, others have not been, CY4J organizers said.</p><p>“Some have been wary because they are scared or because it’s not a priority to them, so that’s one of the struggles,” Alkhatib said. “When we’re trying to implement the PzTalks, we try to get admin approval and work with teachers and resources within the school to ensure it’s the safest and most productive.”</p><p>Chicago Public Schools administrators declined requests for comment.</p><p>In addition to more schools hosting talks in the coming weeks, CY4J hopes to use the structure they have established to continue unpacking topics around Israel and Gaza and for other social justice issues, and to build coalitions with other culture clubs and community clubs within the school, Alkhatib said.</p><p>A’yanna said that CPS students are often disconnected outside their respective schools, and they hope the forums empower their peers to create more spaces to discuss and organize around issues that matter to them.</p><p>“As CPS students, we have the right to know and love each other,” said A’yanna, the Kenwood Academy student, “and if you have proper facilitation, you can have these conversations.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/24/chicago-student-conversations-about-israel-and-gaza/Lindsay EanetJim Vondruska / Block Club Chicago2024-04-24T15:57:00+00:002024-04-24T16:25:12+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>There’s a uniquely Chicago election happening this week: Local School Councils.</p><p>Every resident of the city is able to vote — either as a community member or at the school where they work, attend, or have a child enrolled. (More on that below.)</p><p>The elections take place at all Chicago Public Schools from 6 a.m. until 7 p.m. Voting at elementary schools takes place Wednesday, April 10 and at high schools on Thursday, April 11.</p><p>Elementary schools also have parent-teacher conferences on Wednesday and kindergarten through eighth grade students are off. High school parent-teacher conferences are Thursday, and there’s no school for high school students.</p><p>Originally <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/fulltext.asp?DocName=010500050K34-2.1">established in 1988</a>, each district-run school in Chicago Public Schools has a Local School Council, or LSC, traditionally made up of six parents, two teachers, two community members, a student, and the school’s principal.</p><p>LSCs can be an important vehicle for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/05/chicago-local-school-council-elections-2024/">parent and community voice and power</a>. Their primary duties are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">approving school budgets</a>, crafting <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/26/23699911/chicago-public-schools-school-improvement-policy-board/">school improvement plans</a>, and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/27/chicago-principals-answer-to-many-bosses/">selecting and evaluating the principal</a>. In recent years, they’ve also had the power to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/16/23308391/chicago-public-schools-police-school-resource-officers-restorative-justice-whole-school-safety-plan/">decide whether or not</a> to staff police officers at schools — a decision that the school board is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/">now planning to make unilaterally</a>.</p><p>More than <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/cps-history/">17,000 candidates</a> ran in the first LSC elections in 1989, but those numbers have declined to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/22/23886028/chicago-public-schools-local-school-council-elections-2024/">just over 6,000 applicants</a> in 2022. Turnout in 2022 rebounded, reaching its highest level since 2010 and after a slump in 2020 amid the COVID pandemic.</p><p>But in many cases, LSCs suffer from <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board/">persistent vacancies</a>. For several years, LSCs at low-performing schools lost much of their decision-making power.</p><p>The looming <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/">shift to an elected Chicago Board of Education</a> with 21 members has the potential to overshadow LSCs or reinvigorate them.</p><p>Here’s more on how to participate in these hyperlocal elections:</p><h2>Who can vote?</h2><p>Anyone in Chicago can vote for up to five candidates at their local schools. In order to vote, you just need to live within a school’s attendance boundary or voting district. Schools without a neighborhood boundary – such as magnet and selective enrollment schools — do have a boundary drawn for the purposes of LSC voting.</p><p>There may be multiple schools where you can cast a vote, and you can <a href="https://schoolinfo.cps.edu/map-lscelection/">search your address using this tool</a> to find out where you are eligible to vote. A CPS spokesperson said to double check with the school if you’re unsure.</p><p>All students, parents, and guardians of students enrolled at a school may vote at that school, even if it’s outside their neighborhood.</p><p>All staff who work more than part time at a school can also vote at the campus where they work. Teachers and staff can vote for up to two candidates for teacher or staff representative.</p><p>Students are eligible to vote for their school’s student representative.</p><h2>How do I vote?</h2><p>Voting takes place at school buildings all day on Wednesday at elementary schools and Thursday at high schools. If you’re a parent or school staff member, you can cast a ballot while you’re at the school for parent-teacher conferences, which are also taking place on those respective days. Many schools do offer virtual conferences, but LSC elections could serve as an incentive to go in person.</p><p>If you’re a community member interested in voting, you can <a href="https://schoolinfo.cps.edu/map-lscelection/">look up where you’re eligible to vote</a> and cast a ballot at any of the schools that show up.</p><p>Erykah Nava is running for parent representative at Lloyd Elementary in Belmont-Cragin where her daughter is in third grade. She’s been reminding people to make sure they mark an X on the ballot by the names of the candidates they want to elect. District officials say any other mark will not be counted as a vote and will result in your entire ballot being thrown out.</p><p>Two forms of identification are needed. For parents, one must establish you are the parent or legal guardian of a student enrolled.</p><h2>Why vote for the Local School Council?</h2><p>Local School Councils were created to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/05/chicago-local-school-council-elections-2024/">empower communities and parents</a> to improve their schools. They “represent bottom up democracy, participatory grassroots democracy,” said Michael Brunson, a community representative at Harlan High School, member of the district’s LSC Advisory Board, and former recording secretary for the teachers union.</p><p>“I can’t think of a better introduction to politics than the Local School Council,” Brunson said, adding that a handful of the city’s current aldermen once served on an LSC.</p><p>Chicago will <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/">soon begin electing people to the Chicago Board of Education</a>, which will expand to 21 members in 2025. But Brunson said “an elected school board is not the answer to all problems.”</p><p>Nava said she sees LSCs as complementary to the soon-to-be elected school board.</p><p>“I think having the super hyper local accountability and then having more wider citywide accountability, I think those can work very well hand in hand,” Nava said.</p><p>Even though some LSCs struggle to fill all their seats, there are competitive races at many schools.</p><p>Josh Levin is running for re-election as a community representative at Brentano Elementary, which has more candidates than seats this year. Levin attended Brentano as a child and his dad served on the LSC at Whitney Young Magnet High School in the 1990s.</p><p>“It’s always been a funny little governing body,” Levin said. “The ones that work, I think, help contribute to their schools and make a difference.”</p><p><i>Correction: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated when Levin’s father served on the LSC at Whitney Young Magnet High School. It was during the early 1990s, not the inaugural LSC in 1989.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/09/how-to-vote-in-chicago-local-school-council-elections-2024/Becky VeveaCassie Walker Burke2024-04-23T19:00:41+00:002024-04-23T19:00:41+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>The city of Chicago is using pandemic relief money to offer $500 grants to students with disabilities who come from low-income families, Mayor Brandon Johnson announced Tuesday.</p><p>Families need to apply for the one-time grants, which will be awarded to up to 8,000 people.</p><p>The Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities is partnering with Ada S. McKinley Community Services to distribute $5 million through the new Diverse Learners Recovery Fund, supported by American Rescue Plan dollars, which the federal government distributed to help cities and states recover from the pandemic. Chicago received nearly $1.9 billion in those funds, which must be allocated for spending by December 2024, <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/chicago-recovery-plan/home.html">according to the city.</a></p><p>Most of the dollars in the Diverse Learners Recovery Fund will go toward grants to families, while $1 million is reserved to cover administrative costs for Ada S. McKinley Community Services, according to a spokesperson for the mayor’s office.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/mDEUKnuv_Pt7R-zCKi25-K6-z3o=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/LTDPZDHMLBFHFIAXP6FJCRDQSY.jpg" alt="Sherry Henry, the mother of a child with autism, speaks with Mayor Brandon Johnson during an event announcing $500 grants for low-income families of students with disabilities." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Sherry Henry, the mother of a child with autism, speaks with Mayor Brandon Johnson during an event announcing $500 grants for low-income families of students with disabilities.</figcaption></figure><p>Sherry Henry, a Hyde Park mother of a 12-year-old boy with autism, said her family had spotty access to the internet during remote school, which made it difficult for her son to log onto virtual classes, leading him to fail a math class.</p><p>She did not have to pay for services out of pocket, but she says she could use the grant to buy supplies to help him with dealing with his sensory integration, a disorder that impacts his ability to process his senses, such as touch. Because of that, Henry buys special shoes for her son and recently purchased tennis rackets to help with his grip.</p><p>“When I hear about things like this, I always come out to see how I can support my son for my household,” Henry said.</p><p>Parents and guardians of students with disabilities can apply for up to two grants per household. Applicants must be residents of Chicago and must earn a household income equal to or less than 300% of the federal poverty level, or $93,600 at most for a family of four, according to the <a href="https://aspe.hhs.gov/topics/poverty-economic-mobility/poverty-guidelines">U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.</a> They must also have documentation proving their child receives services at school, such as an Individualized Education Program or 504 plan, or certification from a doctor that their child has a disability.</p><p>At an event announcing the grants, Johnson acknowledged the challenges that young people with disabilities faced during the pandemic, when “typical support systems” were cut off as schools shut down.</p><p>“Many families have had to make difficult financial choices to ensure that their children remain on track with their education, and I want to honor those families for all of their hard work and the extra hours that it took to provide for and nurture and raise a family of a child, particularly one with a disability,” Johnson said.</p><p>Students with disabilities are legally entitled to school services that are outlined in an Individualized Education Program, or IEP. Those services are meant to provide accommodations for students or give them extra help or therapies in school, but school closures forced by the pandemic separated many students with disabilities from those critical supports.</p><p>Like other districts, Chicago Public Schools fell behind in evaluating what support students with disabilities needed. In the 2019-20 school year, when the pandemic hit, more than 10,050 reevaluations, initial evaluations, and annual reviews of student IEPs were incomplete, according to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/8/3/22602388/iep-plans-chicago-special-education-students-disability-expired-covid/">a Chalkbeat investigation.</a> That’s triple the number from the previous school year.</p><p>Bridgeport mother Shareia Ramey, whose 15-year-old son has a seizure disorder, said she’s spent a lot of money out of pocket to meet his needs for services not provided by his school, such as a walker to help him balance himself and other medical costs.</p><p>Ramey thinks the grant will be helpful for many families but she’s hoping for more support from the city and public schools, noting that “this is a continuous lifetime that our children with disabilities have,” Ramey said.</p><p>Josh Long, the new chief of Chicago Public Schools’ Office of Diverse Learners, saw the pandemic’s impact on students when he was a principal at a school that provides specialized support to older students with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Those students had suddenly lost “repetition and consistency,” which they critically need in order to learn, he said.</p><p>“What we saw across the board with all of our students was gaps just in their learning,” Long said.</p><p>Long applauded the city’s idea of offering grants, which could provide relief for families who are paying out of pocket for medical costs, food, or even transportation to and from therapy services or doctor’s appointments, he said.</p><p>Families will be chosen for grants through a lottery system. Those interested can apply online at <a href="https://michelledamico-com.jmailroute.net/x/d?c=40204037&l=b31071e4-c8d2-4df3-b9d4-df57752b0391&r=5b211ee2-c5a0-4f3c-84c5-3506fa985329">www.AdaMOPD.com</a> or can text “AdaMOPD” to (877) 478-1359.</p><p>Applications will be open through Oct. 30.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/23/chicago-offers-grants-to-students-with-disabilities/Reema AminReema Amin2023-05-26T20:50:13+00:002024-04-22T18:49:52+00:00<p>Illinois lawmakers are giving themselves more time to divide Chicago into districts ahead of the city’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/4/23711633/chicago-school-board-of-education-elections-faq-guide">first school board elections</a>.</p><p>Under <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=10300SB2123ham007&GA=103&SessionId=112&DocTypeId=SB&LegID=147000&DocNum=2123&GAID=17&SpecSess=0&Session=">a measure</a> passed late Thursday night, the deadline for drawing the maps for the city’s school board moves to April 1, 2024 — seven months before the first elections are scheduled to be held. Chicago will move from a seven-member board appointed by the mayor to a 21-member board, with 10 members elected Nov. 5, 2024 and the rest elected in November 2026.</p><p>In a <a href="https://twitter.com/RepAnnWilliams/status/1662098553957765120?s=20">statement</a>, Rep. Ann Willliams, who represents parts of Chicago’s north side and chairs the state House Democrats’ Chicago Public Schools Districting Working Group, said conversations have been “extremely productive.” But, “in order to create the strongest possible map and ensure all Chicagaons are able to elect the candidates that best represent their values, our work must continue.”</p><p>The delay comes after <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/5/23672184/chicago-elected-school-board-public-hearings-illinois-lawmakers-diversity">Chicagoans voiced concerns</a> over whether voting districts would reflect CPS enrollment or the city’s overall population.</p><p>They also <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/18/23729443/chicago-elected-school-board-map-illinois-lawmakers-latino-representation-voting">criticized legislators</a> for rushing to create districts that will determine representation for the next several years before adjourning their spring session to meet a previous July 1 deadline.</p><p>Several advocates applauded the decision to delay.</p><p>“I’m very glad that the voice of reason prevailed and they did not just ram a flawed map down our throats,” said Valerie Leonard, the leader of the Illinois African Americans For Equitable Redistricting, which <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/house/committees/103Documents/CPS/2023-04-24%20Valerie%20Leonard%20IAAFER%20Proposed%20Elected%20School%20Board%20Boundaries.pdf">submitted a map</a> based largely on existing City Council Ward boundaries.</p><p>Leonard urged lawmakers to use the time wisely. So did Miriam Bhimani, a Chicago Public Schools parent who is part of The FOIA Bakery, a group of parents and data advocates pushing for a transparent map-making process.</p><p>“The extra time means that we can engage honestly and transparently with communities across the city about what an elected school board should look like and what their responsibilities are,” Bhimani said.</p><p>In an effort to spur more public engagement and conversation, The FOIA Bakery <a href="https://observablehq.com/@fgregg/districting-for-the-chicago-public-schools-elected-board?collection=@fgregg/cps">published 2,000 computer-generated maps</a> earlier this month they say comply with the <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs4.asp?DocName=001001200HArt.+5&ActID=3298&ChapterID=3&SeqStart=100000&SeqEnd=375000">Voting Rights Act</a>, and maximize minority representation, as well as take into account where public school students live.</p><h2>Drawing a representative map in a segregated city, school district</h2><p>Lawmakers <a href="https://www.ilsenateredistricting.com/chicago-school-board">released two drafts</a> in recent weeks. The <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1gKLnDWKsjYsWQePZF2Zs_MYke0V0dHA&ll=41.8339988009568%2C-87.731885&z=10">most recent draft</a> has seven Black majority districts, five majority Latino, two with a Latino plurality, five majority white, and one with a white plurality. The <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/9/23717876/illinois-chicago-elected-school-board-maps-elections">initial proposal</a> had two districts with a white plurality and one with a Latino plurality. Currently, one of seven <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/">appointed school board members</a> is white.</p><p>Typically, electoral districts are drawn – and redrawn – based on voting-age population or total population after every census. In Chicago, the population is 33% white, 29% Latino, and 29% Black, but the public school district’s student <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">population is 46.5% Latino, 36% Black, 11% white, and 4% Asian American</a>. The city is also one of the country’s most segregated, making that dissonance even more of a challenge to those trying to draw representative maps.</p><p>“It’s a segregated city, the North Side doesn’t know what’s going on in the South Side; a parent who doesn’t have a kid in CPS, they don’t know their needs,” said Vanessa Espinoza, a public school parent who’s part of Kids First Chicago, which <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/senate/committees/103Documents/CERS/Claiborne%20Wade,%20Kids%20First%20Chicago%20submission.pdf">submitted a map</a> and testimony to state lawmakers. “Even if you have a good intention, you don’t have the knowledge and experience.”</p><p>Espinoza said lawmakers should try to draw a map that considers the public school student population.</p><p>Leonard, with African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, said she also wants to see a responsive, representative school board with members who have “lived experience with our schools versus people in ivory towers who have never experienced poverty.”</p><p>But she said that giving neighborhoods where more Chicago Public School students live more weight could violate the constitution’s equal protection clause.</p><p>“It could fly in the face of the one man, one vote, equal protection under the law, even though it’s a noble idea.” Leonard said.</p><p>Jianan Shi, executive director of Raise Your Hand for Illinois Public Education, a parent group that was part of a coalition of community groups that <a href="https://lookerstudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/69b29fc7-6ac5-4879-838c-92ef631827d7/page/p_t837n6g15c">submitted maps</a> in partnership with the Chicago Teachers Union, said he hopes the extended deadline will allow everyone to “get to the table” to find a compromise.</p><p>“There’s no perfect map,” Shi said. “How do we take in as much feedback as possible and keep making versions until we get closer?”</p><h2>New deadline could shorten school board campaign season</h2><p>The first-ever Chicago school board elections are scheduled to take place on Nov. 5, 2024. So when lawmakers approved the measure to give themselves a new April 1, 2024 deadline, Shi initially thought: “Shoot. I wish I was going to get out this information as soon as possible to our parents.”</p><p>“I want as much time as possible to educate people about the maps and where the boundaries are,” Shi said. Raise Your Hand is one of a few community groups that help train parents and community members to run for and serve on Local School Councils in Chicago. The councils are like mini-school boards serving individual campuses that make decisions over school improvement, principal selection, and parts of the budget.</p><p>Max Bever, a Chicago Board of Elections spokesman, said Friday the board had been planning to notify voters of their new school board districts through mailers around Labor Day this year, but will now face “a time crunch to get that all done.”</p><p>“Our team will be ready, but it’s more just having enough time for people to have awareness of: What’s your district? Who is running?” Bever said. “This also might be a very quick period for candidates.”</p><p>Bever said the timeline for candidates to collect the 250 signatures needed to get on the ballot will likely be during summer 2024. Because Chicago’s school board elections are nonpartisan, they will not be on the ballot in the March 2024 primary.</p><p>Rep. Ann Williams said the election is still on target for November 2024. The legislature will wrap up their spring session this week, but members are due back for a veto session in the fall when they could take action on a school board map. They could also wait until the next spring session begins in early 2024 to finalize how the city will be divided.</p><p>Lawmakers could also decide in the next session to clarify or tweak the law that created the 21-member elected school board for Chicago. There have been questions about whether board members should be compensated or if there should be campaign spending limits that are stricter than Illinois’ broader election limits. Neither exist in the law as it’s currently written.</p><p>“I think some of the campaign spending limits that people have talked about would be really helpful to ensure that the everyday Chicago mom and dad could run for the board without having to have either wealth or special interests backing them,” said Daniel Anello, CEO of Kids First Chicago.</p><p>Another concern raised by Kids First Chicago and others is that noncitizens will not be allowed to vote or serve on Chicago’s school board. However, the existing law requires a noncitizen advisory committee be created. Leonard said she would like to see something similar for Black families. Her group is proposing the creation of an African American Affairs Committee.</p><p>“If, for some reason, we end up with representation that doesn’t necessarily reflect the school population, at least you’ll have those permanent committees in place to make sure the interests of minorities are represented,” she said.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at bvevea@chalkbeat.org.</i></p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/26/23738680/chicago-elected-school-board-map-deadline-illinois-legislature/Becky Vevea2023-04-06T02:28:54+00:002024-04-22T18:49:18+00:00<p>Chicagoans who spoke at a public hearing Wednesday evening want to see the soon-to-be elected school board better represent the mostly Black and Latino students attending the city’s public schools.</p><p>The hearing was the <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/senate/committees/hearing.asp?CommitteeID=3040">first of five</a> held by the Illinois’ Senate’s Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board, which is tasked with drawing the districts where school board members will be elected. The board has a July 1 deadline. The first Chicago school board elections will be held November 2024.</p><p>According <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs4.asp?DocName=010500050HArt%2E+9&ActID=1005&ChapterID=17&SeqStart=61300000&SeqEnd=62800000">to state law</a>, school board districts must reflect the city’s population. In Chicago’s case, public schools serve predominantly Black and Latino students, while the city’s overall population is 33% white.</p><p>Kee Taylor, a band teacher at Michele Clark High School on the West Side, said they want the maps drawn in a way that gives a voice to Austin, North Lawndale, and Garfield Park residents, because schools in these neighborhoods don’t have the resources necessary to be academically successful.</p><p>“For me, it’s important that as we draw these boundaries that we are prioritizing and centering communities that we neglected,” Taylor said. For example, Taylor said Michele Clark does not have a race track, and students on the track team have to practice in the hallway.</p><p>Valerie Leonard, founder of Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, said that in addition to drawing representative maps, there needs to be a stronger relationship between local school councils and the board of education to amplify the needs of schools in different communities.</p><p>“We need you to strengthen the relationship between the local school councils and the Board of Education to further amplify the voices of schools in their communities,” said Leonard. “This can be achieved by seeking local school council representation, or by developing an advisory structure where local school councils can provide more robust feedback.”</p><p>Chicago’s mayor has appointed the members of the school board since 1995. That will come to an end under an <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">elected school board bill </a>that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">Gov. J.B. Prtizker signed in July 2021</a>. The new school board will eventually have 21 elected members, creating one of the largest school boards in the nation.</p><p>Elected members will be phased in starting with the November 2024 election, when 10 members will be elected and 11, including the board’s president, will be appointed by the mayor. In November 2026, the 11 appointed seats will be up for election.</p><p>By January 2027, a fully elected board will be in place. The school board will then have staggered elections, with half the seats up for election every two years.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools is the fourth largest public school district in the nation, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">serving roughly 322,000 students.</a> A majority of students are Black and Latino, and 72% come from low-income families.</p><p>As the district transitions to an elected school board, it could face a budget crisis. While Chicago’s operating budget is $9.5 billion, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2022/12/19/23517691/schools-esser-covid-spending-stimulus-money-federal">federal COVID-19 relief money will end by 2025</a>.</p><p>The district may also pick up more costs after transitioning to an elected school board.</p><p>There will be four more public hearings this month, and Chicagoans can also submit feedback through<a href="https://www.ilsenateredistricting.com/"> an online portal. </a></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><br/></p><p><aside id="fupzzP" class="sidebar float-right"><p id="lbYxWX"></p><h2 id="1h58tG">APRIL PUBLIC HEARINGS</h2><p id="Vw9vGJ">The Illinois General Assembly will hold in-person and online public hearings to hear from parents and advocates about drawing maps for Chicago’s elected school board. </p><ul><li id="tNYzoo">April 6, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Imani Village, 901 E. 95th Street</li><li id="eLhyo9">April 12, 4 p.m.-6 p.m., Copernicus Center, 5216 W. Lawrence Avenue</li><li id="Le6IKq">April 13, 4 p.m.-6 p.m., National Museum of Mexican Art, 1852 W. 19th Street</li></ul><p id="x6DXi8">April 17, 6 p.m.-8 p.m., virtual hearing on <a href="http://www.ilga.gov">www.ilga.gov</a>. </p></aside></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/5/23672184/chicago-elected-school-board-public-hearings-illinois-lawmakers-diversity/Samantha Smylie2023-11-01T22:00:04+00:002024-04-22T18:46:20+00:00<p>As trick-or-treating got underway Tuesday night, Illinois lawmakers released <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Db4BN9WccvYBclkzZrCcI3yMaUP62UA&ll=41.8339988009568%2C-87.731885&z=11">a new draft map</a> for Chicago’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/4/23711633/chicago-school-board-of-education-elections-faq-guide">soon-to-be-elected Board of Education</a>.</p><p>It’s their third attempt at drawing districts future school board members will represent.</p><p>The new map has seven majority Black districts, six where Latinos make up 50% or more of the population, and five where the population is 50% or more white. Two districts — one representing Rogers Park on the North Side and the other representing Portage Park and Old Irving Park on the North West side — are plurality white, with Latinos making up the second-largest population.</p><p>Chicago’s Board of Education holds significant power over public schools. School board members approve the district’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/28/23777373/chicago-public-schools-budget-2024-school-board-vote">annual multi-billion dollar budget</a>, determine <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/26/23699911/chicago-public-schools-school-improvement-policy-board">how schools are measured</a> and held accountable, authorize contracts with third parties <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/22/23652555/chicago-public-schools-bus-routes-transportation-4-million-contract-consultant">to bus students to and from school</a>, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2018/7/4/21105366/these-102-schools-failed-latest-round-of-blitz-inspections">clean classrooms and hallways</a>, and even <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial">operate entire schools under charter agreements</a>.</p><p>The board has been <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial">appointed by the mayor</a> since 1995, when the state legislature gave control of Chicago Public Schools to then-Mayor Richard M. Daley. After former Mayor Rahm Emanuel <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/25/23806124/chicago-school-closings-2013-henson-elementary">closed 50 public schools in 2013</a>, community organizations and the Chicago Teachers Union <a href="https://www.npr.org/2013/05/23/186195961/disappointed-by-school-closing-vote-union-targets-elected-officials">began fighting for an elected school board</a>.</p><p>Valerie Leonard, with the <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1p6oaDMbREAJXzekNERRgdtLgJrHMySk&ll=41.834070779557166%2C-87.7320335&z=10">Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting</a>, said under mayoral control, school board members were perceived to be not connected to the community.</p><p>“People felt — and I was one of them — like they were out of touch with what the community wanted, and they were only responsive to what the mayor wanted,” Leonard said. “It matters to have someone [on the school board] from your community who understands what people in your community are experiencing.”</p><p>After many years of advocacy and lobbying, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">signed a law in 2021</a> to create a 21-member elected school board with phased-in elections.</p><p>Under <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/102/SB/PDF/10200SB1784ham002.pdf">state law</a>, Chicagoans will elect 10 school board members from 10 districts in November 2024. The mayor will appoint 10 members from those same districts, and will also appoint a school board president. A 21-member hybrid board will be sworn in January 2025.</p><p>Then in November 2026, the 10 appointed members and school board president will be up for election, while the 10 elected in 2024 will continue serving their four-year terms. Going forward, all members will serve four-year terms and elections will be staggered, with half of the seats up for election every two years.</p><p>However, the law does not spell out how the map will move from 10 to 20 districts. Lawmakers continue to draw a map with 20 districts and have not made clear how they plan to divide the city into 10 districts for the 2024 election.</p><p>Sen. Robert Martwick, a Democrat representing the North West side of Chicago and west suburbs, said that figuring out how to create 10 districts for the 2024 elections and 20 districts for the 2026 elections has been difficult for legislators.</p><p>“The original idea was that we would draw ten districts and then after the election we would split them into 20 districts,” Martwick said. “Another variation on that would be to draw 20 districts and combine them for the purposes of the first election. The idea there was that everyone in the city of Chicago would get to pass a vote on this new elected school board.”</p><p>State Rep. Ann Williams, who represents parts of the city’s North Side and chairs a special task force of House Democrats working on drawing school board districts, said the transition from 10 districts to 20 is “still under discussion,” but the goal is to vote on a map during next week’s veto session.</p><p>“At some point we have to get a map so that people can start looking at the districts and prepare to run for office,” Williams said.</p><p>“No map is ever going to be perfect. No map is ever going to make every single person happy,” she added. “But we really truly felt like this is the product that most incorporated the feedback that we got from the communities during all those hearings.”</p><p>Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has been a longtime supporter of an elected school board. But when asked through a spokesperson Wednesday if he supported the latest draft or would weigh in on how school board districts are drawn, the spokesperson wrote back: No comment.</p><p>Lawmakers were supposed to draw a map of Chicago school board districts by July 1, 2023, but <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/26/23738680/chicago-elected-school-board-map-deadline-illinois-legislature">extended the deadline to April 1, 2024</a> after <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/18/23729443/chicago-elected-school-board-map-illinois-lawmakers-latino-representation-voting">pushback from the public</a> for not drawing districts that would be reflective of student enrollment.</p><p>That’s a difficult task in a city whose population does not mirror the public school enrollment. Chicago’s population is 33% white, 29% Latino, 29% Black, and 7% Asian, but the school district’s student <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">population is 47% Latino, 36% Black, 11% white, and 4% Asian American</a>.</p><p>School board seats are non-partisan so there will be no primary. According to the <a href="https://app.chicagoelections.com/Documents/general/2024%20Election%20Calendar.pdf">Chicago Board of Elections calendar</a>, the first day candidates running for nonpartisan school board seats can circulate nominating petitions is March 26, 2024. They must collect 250 signatures from voters in their districts by June 24, 2024, in order to be on the ballot.</p><p>Last week, Martwick and state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Democrat, put forward <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=&SessionId=112&GA=103&DocTypeId=SB&DocNum=2610&GAID=17&LegID=150659&SpecSess=&Session=">a proposal</a> that would also <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/24/23930903/chicago-school-board-education-compensation">allow school board members to be compensated</a>.</p><h2>Mixed reactions to new draft map roll in</h2><p>Legislators held two public hearings last month to gather additional feedback on their proposed school board districts. On Wednesday, several of the groups who have repeatedly testified and submitted public comment on previous maps reacted to the latest iteration.</p><p>Kids First Chicago, a nonprofit education advocacy organization that supports Black and Latino families and has an Elected School Board Task Force, called the latest proposal “more trick than treat.” The group took lawmakers to task for dropping a new draft map on Halloween when “most Chicago families were out celebrating with their children.”</p><p>Hal Woods, director of policy for Kids First Chicago, said the map continues to give white Chicagoans “substantial voting power” over a school district that serves just over 10% white students. He said parents see “more work that could be done.”</p><p>“Even with redlining, even with segregation, even with discriminatory housing policies that have forced many Chicago neighborhoods to be segregated … we have put forward prototypes that even with those historical inequities still adhere to all relevant election law,” Woods said.</p><p>A group of parents and data advocates called The FOIA Bakery released an <a href="https://observablehq.com/@fgregg/districting-for-the-chicago-public-schools-elected-board">analysis of the third draft map</a> that looks at the proposed districts through the lens of the 2023 municipal election results. They say only seven districts in the new draft map would have elected a “minority-preferred candidate.”</p><p>But others say the new draft districts are much better than previous versions.</p><p>Jeff Fielder, executive director of the Chicago Republican Party, previously raised concerns about gerrymandering and argued for an independent commission to draw the maps. He said the third draft is better than the previous two because it has less gerrymandering.</p><p>“I’m sure there’s going to be lawsuits as it is but of their efforts, this is probably the best one,” Fielder said.</p><p>Cassie Creswell, executive director of Illinois Families for Public Schools, said she’s mostly concerned about not having a map solidified yet.</p><p>“The shorter the time between a final map and next year’s election, the worse it is for genuinely grassroots candidates who are trying to decide whether or not to run and then mustering the resources to do so,” Creswell said.</p><p>Political consultant Eli Brottman said the new map is “1,000 times better” and called six solid Latino districts a “huge win for our schools and our kids.” He said it took him multiple attempts to draw a map that would have six Latino majority districts.</p><p>Brottman said he suspects the lawmakers’ latest draft map has a “significant chance” of passing next week. Whenever that happens, he encourages people to get up to speed on what district they live in and who is running.</p><p>“Whoever we elect in these first couple rounds, helps to set a precedent for the future,” Brottman said.</p><p>Leonard, whose group <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1p6oaDMbREAJXzekNERRgdtLgJrHMySk&ll=41.834070779557166%2C-87.7320335&z=10">Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting</a> put out a 10-district map that <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/house/committees/103Documents/CPS/2023-04-24%20Valerie%20Leonard%20IAAFER%20Proposed%20Elected%20School%20Board%20Boundaries.pdf">tries to align school board districts with City Council wards</a>, said lawmakers are getting closer with this latest iteration. But they need to figure out how their 20 districts become 10 for the 2024 elections, she said.</p><p>Corrina Demma, an organizer with Educators for Excellence Chicago that supports the map Leonard’s group proposed, raised concerns that lawmakers could propose residents in only 10 of the 20 districts would vote in 2024, meaning “only half of Chicago will have the privilege to vote … while the other half will lack a voice.”</p><p>“We need Illinois lawmakers to get the maps right, for the sake of the 323,000 students that are depending on it,” Demma said.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at bvevea@chalkbeat.org.</i></p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers/Becky Vevea2023-11-03T23:45:00+00:002024-04-22T18:45:59+00:00<p>Roughly half of Chicago voters would get to elect school board members in 2024 and the other half would vote in 2026, according to new language proposed by state lawmakers late Friday.</p><p>Earlier this week, legislators released <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers">a new draft map</a> that divides the city into 20 districts. Each district has roughly 137,000 people in it. The new proposal <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Q9cFdgH5bZ-FW6Jjb2ctdTM2dRZ8_10&ll=41.83399880095687%2C-87.73205050000003&z=11">assigns each district a number</a> and says odd-numbered districts would vote in 2024. The state legislature could vote on the proposal during next week’s veto session.</p><p>In addition to outlining how Chicagoans would vote in the 2024 and 2026 election, the proposal includes ethics requirements for elected members and a conflict of interest provision that falls in line with state law.</p><p>The proposal also calls for the board of education to create a Black Student Achievement Committee to address the needs of Black students throughout the district and create a strategic plan to close the gap in academic achievement between Black students and their peers.</p><p>Valerie Leonard, of Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, has pushed during public hearings for the Senate’s committee on the elected school board to create a Black Student Achievement Committee.</p><p>According to state law passed in 2021, 10 members of the school board are to be elected and 10 are to be appointed by the mayor in 2024. The mayor will also appoint a school board president. In 2026, the districts with appointed members will vote and the entire city will vote for a school board president.</p><p>People interested in running for Chicago’s Board of Education must collect 250 signatures from their districts and can begin circulating petitions on March 26, 2024. To get on the ballot, petitions must be filed by June 24, 2024.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at bvevea@chalkbeat.org.</i></p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/3/23945824/chicago-elected-school-board-voting-districts/Samantha Smylie, Becky Vevea2023-11-10T01:30:46+00:002024-04-22T18:45:55+00:00<p>How Chicago school board members will be elected one year from now is still in limbo after Illinois lawmakers couldn’t agree on the details of the transition this week.</p><p>But lawmakers in both chambers appeared to agree on the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers">third draft of an electoral map</a> dividing Chicago into 20 districts. That map has seven majority Black districts, six where Latinos make up 50% or more of the population, and five where the population is 50% or more white.</p><p>However, they could not agree before adjourning their fall veto session on how elections would happen in 2024 and 2026 in order to transition to a fully-elected school board.</p><p>The state legislature is scheduled to meet again in mid-January.</p><p>According to a 2021 <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/fulltext.asp?Name=102-0177&print=true&write=">law</a> — and its <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/102/SB/PDF/10200SB1784ham002.pdf">subsequent trailer bill</a> — 10 school board members are to be elected on Nov. 5, 2024 from 10 geographic districts. The mayor would appoint a school board president and 10 members from those same districts. In November 2026, the appointed seats would be elected and a school board president would be chosen by all Chicago voters.</p><p>By January 2027, Chicago will have a 21-member fully-elected school board. The shift comes after three decades of mayoral control over Chicago Public Schools.</p><p>Lawmakers were supposed to divide the city into electoral districts by July 1, 2023, but gave themselves an extension in May to get the maps drawn by April 1, 2024. Many lawmakers and advocates hoped to define the map and how school board elections would roll out during this week’s veto session.</p><p>“By Senate standards, we are years ahead of schedule by being months ahead of schedule,” said Senate President Don Harmon, before the chamber voted 38-12 to approve a plan he put forward earlier this week to have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/7/23951580/chicago-elected-school-board-legislation-changes/">all 20 districts vote right away</a>, leaving only the board president up for mayoral appointment.</p><p>Under that plan, Mayor Brandon Johnson would lose the power to appoint 10 members and keep control via a hybrid Board of Education with 11 mayoral appointees.</p><p>“I am very hopeful that when all is said and done, this will be the law in Illinois, and we will have a fully elected school board after November of 2024,” Harmon said.</p><p>But lawmakers in the House passed a different proposal that would more closely aligns with the current law. It would <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/3/viewer?mid=1dLQ_CRG7_Kc14QWgBIJTdWnPD7AUa6s&ll=41.86587409038445%2C-87.650529562427&z=11">pair up the 20 districts</a> and result in 10 elected school board members and 10 appointed by the mayor from each pairing of districts. A school board president would be appointed by the mayor in 2024 and elected at-large in 2026.</p><p>“This has been a decade-long project, and is the product of years of advocacy and quite literally years of negotiation discussion with stakeholders, community members, leadership, elected officials, so it’s not surprising that it’s not an easy thing to implement,” said State Rep. Ann Williams, who chairs the House Democrats’ Chicago Public Schools Districting Working Group.</p><p>Williams said Harmon’s proposal to go to a fully-elected board and eliminate the hybrid period when the mayor would still maintain control by appointing 11 of 21 members was a surprise Wednesday.</p><p>“Opening up the bill again with only a day or so left in the veto session was a difficult prospect and created a lot of complications in the conversation,” Williams said. “I don’t think it’s something we could have done in just one day.”</p><p>Johnson said he was “very much committed” to the bill that passed in 2021 that would allow him to appoint half the school board in 2024. He also noted there are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/11/3/23439557/chicago-public-schools-elected-school-board-financial-entanglements/" target="_blank">financial entanglements</a> between the city and CPS that need to be “worked through.”</p><p>“This is going to be a tremendous adjustment for the people of Chicago and adjusting in a way that provides confidence in a new body of government is something that we have to take into real serious consideration,” Johnson said. “What we don’t want is to set individuals up with expectations that cannot be met.”</p><p>Harmon said Wednesday he would not call the House version for a vote in the Senate because it had “woefully inadequate ethical provisions” and “opens the door for corruption” by exempting future Chicago school board members from <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=689&ChapterID=11">state law</a> governing conflicts of interest for public officials, including school board members, throughout the rest of the state. The House, however, passed a bill Thursday afternoon agreeing to the Senate’s ethics provisions.</p><p>Senate Democrats initially proposed having voters in <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/3/23945824/chicago-elected-school-board-voting-districts/">only 10 of 20 districts cast a ballot</a> for a school board representative in 2024. That was met with criticism from advocates who said it would disenfranchise half of the city by making them wait until 2026 to have a say in who is elected to the school board.</p><p>In a statement Wednesday night, the Chicago Teachers Union said Harmon’s proposed changes could “delay and deny the democracy Chicago so desperately needs and deserves.” The union has been fighting for an elected school board in Chicago since 2013 and supports the House version.</p><p>Hal Woods, chief of policy for Kids First Chicago, said waiting until January or the April 1 deadline to finalize the details of school board elections will leave potential candidates less time to run and voters less time to decide on who to support.</p><p>Corrina Demma, an organizer for the nonprofit Educators for Excellence-Chicago, echoed those concerns.</p><p>“It gives us so little time to learn anything about these candidates, and get to know them,” Demma said.</p><p>“We’re on a budget cliff with the COVID funds running out,” she added. “There’s a lot of big decisions that are gonna have to be made that will affect all Chicago’s children and families. And who’s going to be making those decisions? How do we know if they’re gonna be qualified, if they have any lived experience, and can make choices that are best for the communities that they’re a part of?”</p><p>Demma said she wished lawmakers had also taken up the issue of compensating board members. State law currently prohibits school board members from being paid.</p><p>Lawmakers did also appear to agree on requiring the Chicago Board of Education to create a Black Student Achievement Committee that would focus on improving academic achievement for Black students.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/09/lawmakers-disagree-on-chicagos-elected-school-board-transition/Becky VeveaSamantha Smylie2023-11-08T00:39:39+00:002024-04-22T18:45:37+00:00<p>Illinois lawmakers are debating competing proposals that would allow all Chicago voters to cast a ballot in the city’s first school board elections in 2024.</p><p>A new <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=4221&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=150927">proposal</a> put forward by House Democrats <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/3/viewer?mid=1dLQ_CRG7_Kc14QWgBIJTdWnPD7AUa6s&ll=41.86587409038445%2C-87.650529562427&z=11">pairs up the 20 districts</a> the city is currently divided into under <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers">a third draft map</a> released last week.</p><p>That plan, filed by Rep. Ann Williams, who chairs the House Democrats’ Chicago Public Schools Districting Working Group, would result in 10 elected school board members and 10 appointed by the mayor from each pairing of districts. A school board president would also be appointed by the mayor.</p><p>Meanwhile, following a Senate executive committee meeting, Senate President Don Harmon <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/103/HB/10300HB2233sam002.htm">put forward a plan</a> to have all 20 districts vote in 2024 and let the mayor appoint only the school board president. That came shortly after a senate committee <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=2233&GAID=17&GA=103&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=146532&SessionID=112">passed an amendment</a> that suggested only <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/11/3/23945824/chicago-elected-school-board-voting-districts">10 of 20 districts vote in 2024</a>.</p><p>Harmon said creating an <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">elected school board for Chicago</a> has been “a long journey.”</p><p>“Hopefully, we are in the closing chapter in Springfield,” he said.</p><p>According to state law passed in 2021, Chicago will move from having a seven-member school board appointed by the mayor to a 21-member elected school board by 2027.</p><p>But the transition from an appointed board to a hybrid one to one that’s fully-elected has puzzled lawmakers tasked with dividing the city into electoral districts.</p><p>According to the <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/fulltext.asp?Name=102-0177&print=true&write=">law</a> — and its <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/102/SB/PDF/10200SB1784ham002.pdf">subsequent trailer bill</a> passed in 2021 — 10 school board members are to be elected on Nov. 5, 2024 from 10 geographic districts. The mayor is to appoint 10 members from those same districts and a school board president at-large. In November 2026, the appointed members would then switch to being elected, including the school board president who would be elected at-large.</p><p>By January 2027, all 21 members will be elected. Going forward, elections will be staggered, with half the board up for election every two years.</p><p>The senate’s previous proposal to assign <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Q9cFdgH5bZ-FW6Jjb2ctdTM2dRZ8_10&ll=41.83399880095687%2C-87.73205050000003&z=11">each district a number</a> and only have people living in odd-numbered districts vote in 2024 was met with criticism by advocates who spoke during Tuesday’s committee meeting.</p><p>Kurt Hilgendorf, special assistant to Chicago Teachers Union’s president Stacy Davis-Gates, said that while the senate’s plan proposes a more representative map and addresses concerns around candidate eligibility and ethics, the union has decided not to take a position because of the proposal to only allow roughly half of the city to vote in 2024.</p><p>“That creates a disenfranchisement lawsuit risk and that we think that maximum participation should be done in the first election,” said Hilgendorf. “We think that all the voters in the city of Chicago should have the right to vote in that first year election.”</p><p>Valerie Leonard, of Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, expressed the same concerns as Hilgendorf and suggested all 20 districts vote immediately.</p><p>“All districts should be up for election with half the terms being two-year terms and the other half being four years and that would create your stagger,” Leonard said.</p><p>At the end of Tuesday’s meeting, Harmon said having only 10 districts vote was the “Achilles’ heel” of the proposal Senate Democrats put forward late last week.</p><p>Shortly after the meeting ended, Harmon filed the amendment that would have residents in all 20 districts vote. Members elected in odd-numbered districts would serve four-year terms and members elected in even-numbered districts would serve two-year terms. The mayor would only appoint the school board president and in 2026, that position would be elected at-large by all Chicago voters.</p><p>If the House passes its new proposal to pair districts, it would need Senate approval. Similarly, the Senate’s proposal to have all 20 districts vote in 2024 would need House approval. Lawmakers are scheduled to be in session until Thursday.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/7/23951580/chicago-elected-school-board-legislation-changes/Becky Vevea, Samantha Smylie2024-04-19T20:44:05+00:002024-04-19T20:48:12+00:00<p><i>Read in </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/" target="_blank"><i>English</i></a><i>.</i></p><p>Algunas de las cuestiones sobre las que se preguntan los habitantes de Chicago en cuanto a las primeras elecciones de la junta escolar tienen que ver con el tema del dinero en las campañas, los distritos electorales, y la compensación de los miembros de la junta escolar.</p><p>A partir del 15 de enero de 2025, la Junta de Educación de Chicago cambiará de siete miembros nombrados por el alcalde a una junta de 21 miembros con 10 miembros elegidos por votación y 11 nombrados por el alcalde Brandon Johnson. La temporada de campaña está oficialmente en marcha y los candidatos están surgiendo.</p><p>El<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/26/chicago-school-board-candidates-must-collect-1000-signatures/"> martes fue el primer día en que se pudieron recoger firmas</a> para participar en las elecciones del 5 de noviembre. Hasta el miércoles, seis candidatos han presentado documentos de financiación de campaña ante la<a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/campaigndisclosure/CandidateSearch.aspx?ddlLastNameSearchType=uhV70GVj7rs2mYAJ0IPVG%2fPXF28eNgo%2f&ddlFirstNameSearchType=uhV70GVj7rs2mYAJ0IPVG%2fPXF28eNgo%2f&ddlAddressSearchType=uhV70GVj7rs2mYAJ0IPVG%2fPXF28eNgo%2f&ddlCitySearchType=uhV70GVj7rs2mYAJ0IPVG%2fPXF28eNgo%2f&ddlState=AZtd53SKB4s%3d&ddlElectType=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&ddlDistrictType=rH50535cPEDibH70R3Riuw%3d%3d&ddlDistrict=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&ddlOffice=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&ddlParty=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtLastName=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtFirstName=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtAddress=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtCity=ZNadX3yLXDhi%2fFhHPX%2bhdA%3d%3d&txtZip=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtZipThru=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&txtElectYear=NNlQIQBAYRSjMhTCf1JEQA%3d%3d&radFairCampaign=Ry707kcsXsM%3d&SortDirection=Gl5sibpnFrQ%3d&SortColumn=xF443FTCAJbIL3atac%2fUjEg7Y4yklgT1"> Junta Estatal de Elecciones de Illinois</a>.</p><p>El mes pasado, Chalkbeat<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/06/chicago-school-board-of-education-election-questions/"> preguntó a sus lectores</a> qué preguntas tenían sobre el cambio de Chicago a una junta escolar elegida por votación. Las contestaremos en los próximos meses, empezando con estas seis que se centran en el proceso electoral.</p><h2>¿En el pasado, cómo se elegían los miembros de la Junta de Educación de Chicago?</h2><p>La Junta escolar de Chicago está formada actualmente por siete miembros nombrados por el alcalde, que tiene poder para elegir a quien desee. En el pasado, estos nombramientos eran secretos hasta que el alcalde los anunciaba, a menudo en una<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/6/3/21121073/mayor-lori-lightfoot-appoints-parents-former-grads-educators-for-new-chicago-school-board/"> rueda</a> o<a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/mayor/press_room/press_releases/2015/june/mayor-emanuel-announces-board-of-education-appointments.html"> comunicado</a> de prensa. Tanto la ex alcaldesa Lori Lightfoot como el ex alcalde Rahm Emanuel reemplazaron a toda la junta escolar tras ser elegidos.</p><p>El estado otorgó al alcalde de Chicago el poder de nombrar a los miembros del consejo escolar en 1995, cuando el entonces alcalde Richard M. Daley estaba en el cargo. Antes de eso, el alcalde seleccionaba a los miembros del consejo escolar a través de un proceso de nominación comunitario.</p><h2>En las elecciones de noviembre, ¿habrá elecciones en todos los distritos? ¿Por cuánto tiempo serán miembros de la junta?</h2><p>Sí. Los legisladores de Illinois dividieron a Chicago en 10 distritos para las elecciones de 2024. El 5 de noviembre habitantes de cada distrito elegirán un miembro para representarlos por dos años. Antes del 16 de diciembre de 2024, el alcalde Brandon Johnson nombrará a 10 miembros - uno de cada distrito - y un presidente para servir en términos de dos años.</p><p>Así es como funcionará.</p><p>Cada distrito también se subdivide en dos regiones. Por ejemplo, el Distrito 1 se compone de dos partes: 1A y una 1B. Si el candidato ganador en el Distrito 1 vive en la zona 1A, el alcalde tiene que nombrar a alguien que viva en la 1B. Si el ganador en el Distrito 2 vive en 2B, el alcalde debe nombrar a alguien que viva en 2A, y así por el estilo.</p><p>En 2026, los habitantes de Chicago votarán por candidatos para un mandato de dos o cuatro años. El presidente de la junta escolar será elegido ese mismo año para un mandato de cuatro años, que comenzará el 15 de enero de 2027.</p><h2>¿Qué cualificaciones se necesitan para ser miembro del consejo escolar de Chicago?</h2><p>La ley estatal dice que para servir en la junta escolar de CPS, usted debe ser:</p><ul><li>ciudadano estadounidense.</li><li>votante registrado.</li><li>tener al menos 18 años.</li><li>ser residente de la ciudad, distrito o subdistrito durante al menos un año inmediatamente antes de la elección o nombramiento.</li></ul><p>Además, los miembros de la junta no deben ser delincuentes sexuales registrados ni contratistas o proveedores que trabajen con el distrito. Los candidatos también deben conseguir al menos 1,000 firmas en una petición electoral, entre otras normas.</p><h2>¿Habrá algún tipo de supervisión con respecto a las finanzas de campaña de los miembros de la junta escolar? ¿Cómo se puede comprobar quién hace donaciones a las campañas?</h2><p>La Junta de<a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/requirements_for_elected_board_members.pdf"> Educación de Chicago</a> exige a sus miembros que presenten una declaración de intereses económicos y recomienda a los miembros de la junta que lleven una lista de los donantes de la campaña. Los interesados pueden comprobar quién financia la campaña de un candidato consultando<a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure/ReportsFiled.aspx"> el sitio web de la Junta Electoral del Estado de Illinois</a> o la<a href="https://illinoissunshine.org/"> base de datos Reform for Illinois’ Sunshine</a>.</p><h2>¿Serán compensados los miembros de la junta escolar?</h2><p>La respuesta corta es no. Los miembros de juntas escolares en Chicago y el resto de Illinois sólo pueden ser reembolsados por gastos relacionados con sus deberes.</p><p>Sin embargo, el otoño pasado, los legisladores estatales <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/24/23930903/chicago-school-board-education-compensation/">propusieron un proyecto de ley con el fin de eliminar</a> la<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/24/23930903/chicago-school-board-education-compensation/"> prohibición</a> de compensar a los miembros de las juntas escolares. Este proyecto de ley no obligaría al distrito escolar a proporcionar un salario ni establecería unos mínimos sobre cuánto se pagaría a los miembros de la junta escolar. Simplemente permitiría a los consejos locales decidir. Este proyecto de ley está estancado en la comisión de Asignaciones del Senado desde octubre.</p><h2>¿Recibirá la nueva junta escolar formación de la Asociación de Juntas Escolares de Illinois?</h2><p>No necesariamente. Según el<a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/fulltext.asp?DocName=010500050K10-16A"> código escolar del estado</a> y una<a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/board-rules/chapter-2/2-18/"> norma de la Junta de Educación de Chicago</a>, todos los miembros de la junta escolar, nombrados o elegidos, deben recibir entrenamiento. Sin embargo, los miembros de la junta escolar no tienen que ser entrenados por la Asociación de Juntas Escolares de Illinois.</p><p>El estado exige que los miembros de la junta reciban entrenamiento en leyes educativas, leyes laborales, supervisión financiera, y rendición de cuentas, responsabilidad financiera de los miembros de la junta escolar y entrenamientos sobre la importancia de los traumas en los estudiantes y el personal. La Junta de Educación de Chicago dice que los miembros deben ser entrenados en la Ley de Reuniones Abiertas, el Código de Ética, y la ley de Illinois Mandated Reporter, entre otros temas.</p><h2>¿Aún tiene preguntas? Háganos saber en el siguiente formulario.</h2><p><iframe src="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeQ4zXLXC5HWmaTuZlc0adUnKbXeq7UR_K12fKdA2zOMP4d8Q/viewform?embedded=true" width="640" height="2162" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0">Loading…</iframe></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie es la reportera de educación estatal de Chalkbeat Chicago y cubre los distritos escolares de todo el estado, la legislación, la educación especial y la junta estatal de educación. Póngase en contacto con Samantha en </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea es la jefa de redacción de Chalkbeat Chicago. Póngase en contacto con Becky en </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Traducido por INN.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/19/chicago-campanas-electorales-2024/Samantha Smylie, Becky VeveaMauricio Peña / Chalkbeat2024-04-19T18:15:00+00:002024-04-19T18:15:00+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Sitting in a circle with dozens of students at Collins Academy on Chicago’s west side, Mayor Brandon Johnson asked a straightforward question: “What do you need?”</p><p>Melvin Hines, a soft-spoken junior in purple track pants and a black zip-up jacket, chimed in: “More resources, better opportunities, and more exposure.”</p><p>Answers from other students ricocheted around the room like a pinball: a law program, more connections to businesses, a grocery store in their neighborhood.</p><p>“Sometimes it feels like the only thing that’s available for us are leftovers, right?” Johnson said, nodding.</p><p>The roundtable discussion — organized with the local, state, and national teachers union, including American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, as well as district leaders — gave the mayor and his allies a moment to advocate for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union/">expanding Sustainable Community Schools</a>. The concept provides up to $500,000 a year to a school to partner with a local nonprofit on before- and after-school programming, community outreach, parent engagement, and other wraparound services.</p><p>Johnson has <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/7/23787069/chicago-public-schools-brandon-johnson-transition-committee-report/">promised</a> to grow the number of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union/">Sustainable Community Schools</a> from 20 to as many as 200, possibly including Collins. It’s one of the ways he wants to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">invest more in neighborhood schools</a>.</p><p>“This is about making sure that every single child has a library or librarian, wraparound services, class sizes that are manageable,” Johnson said. “There’s a lot of work to be done, but unfortunately, because of a long history of systemic racism, disinvestment has left our communities in despair.”</p><p>But Chicago Public Schools faces <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">a $391 million shortfall</a> in its <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/13/23759818/chicago-public-schools-fy24-budget-education/#:~:text=After%20years%20of%20steady%20increases,would%20go%20directly%20to%20schools.">$9 billion-plus budget</a> next school year. The district is about to begin <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/">contract negotiations with the teachers union</a> and officials recently sent principals individual school budgets using <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">a new formula</a> that provides <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">set staffing levels</a> and extra money based on need. Officials say the total amount distributed to schools is not decreasing, but individual campuses could see cuts.</p><p>Stephen Mitchell, the local school council chair at Bronzeville Classical Elementary School, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/9/7/21105658/a-new-school-in-bronzeville-says-a-lot-about-what-parents-want/">a selective enrollment school that opened in 2018</a>, said their budget is seeing reductions. He said it’s possible the school has to either let staff go or cut other resources.</p><p>“I think this is kind of pitting one against the other, which I don’t think is right,” Mitchell said. “I think we need to adequately fund our neighborhood schools and continue to fund selective enrollment schools.”</p><p>State lawmakers are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/11/illinois-lawmakers-file-bills-against-chicago-policies/">moving legislation to block</a> Johnson and his hand-picked school board from making “disproportionate” budget cuts at selective enrollment schools and also extend a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/17/chicago-school-closings-moratorium-could-last-until-2027/">moratorium on any school closures until 2027</a>, when <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-votes-for-elected-school-board-in-november-2024-elections/">a fully elected school board is in place</a>.</p><p>The bill passed out of the House late Thursday and is headed to the Senate.</p><p>CTU President Stacy Davis Gates characterized the bill with a handful of strong words — racist, disengaged, silly, an abomination — because it targets an issue “that does not exist.”</p><p>“There was a resolution that said that the Chicago Board of Education was going to finally prioritize Collins High School … and then you get a bill that says you can’t do that,” she said. “Everyone who votes for that bill needs to go into that room and engage with the same group of students that we just engaged with and explain to them why they cannot have more.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ClY-aWMQBovtXEExbTGONgBtUnI=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/ZKSDNYLHEJCNJI7CK3IPLN7CPU.jpg" alt="Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson poses with students at Collins Academy after a roundtable discussion about school funding and expanding the number of Sustainable Community Schools in the city. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson poses with students at Collins Academy after a roundtable discussion about school funding and expanding the number of Sustainable Community Schools in the city. </figcaption></figure><p>Johnson, Davis Gates, and Mitchell, the Bronzeville parent, said Springfield should be focused on fully funding all public schools through the evidence-based funding formula approved in 2017.</p><p>That formula promised to get all Illinois school districts, including CPS, to “adequate” funding by 2027 by adding $350 million in new money for K-12 education every year. Since that time, the amount of state money allocated to Chicago schools annually has grown by more than a billion dollars. But the formula says CPS is still another $1 billion short of “adequacy.”</p><p>During the roundtable discussion with the students at Collins, Johnson and others, including the local alderwoman Monique Scott, whose <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/18/us/18chicago.html">dad</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/7/15/23220813/chicago-public-schools-mayor-lori-lightfoot-board-of-education/">brother</a> both served on Chicago’s school board, told the students they were advocating for more money from the state.</p><p>As the conversation wound to a close, Collins senior Marshall Douthard Jr. raised his hand.</p><p>Everyone has been talking about “the resources and the money problems,” Douthard Jr. said. “I would like to know when they come through: How do you plan to fulfill these requests?”</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/19/chicago-mayor-brandon-johnson-expand-sustainable-community-schools/Becky VeveaBecky Vevea2024-04-16T21:20:12+00:002024-04-16T22:02:59+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>The Chicago Teachers Union wants its next contract to include raising the salary floor for paraprofessionals, more dual language programs, sports and fine arts programs for every school, and more Sustainable Community Schools, which <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union/" target="_blank">provide wraparound services</a> for students, CTU President Stacy Davis Gates said Tuesday.</p><p>The union also wants bargaining sessions to be open to the public, Davis Gates said at a press conference at Richards Career Academy on the Southwest Side, a Sustainable Community School where she was flanked by teachers and other union members.</p><p>Davis Gates said having more Sustainable Community Schools is just one area that the union agrees on with Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former middle school teacher and former CTU organizer. That commonality is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/">different from contentious negotiations of the past</a> that led to two strikes, she noted.</p><p>That changing dynamic is coupled with the union’s desire to open bargaining sessions up to the broader public, such as through livestream, because the contract is meant to benefit everyone, Davis Gates said.</p><p>“When I say that this contract is about the common good, I am saying that in the front yard of this city, we will be inviting families to participate, our students to participate,” Davis Gates said. “We will be inviting Chicagoans who believe that this is the greatest city on Earth, to participate in building the greatest school district on Earth.”</p><p>Davis Gates later said that the public sessions can only happen if CPS agrees. A CPS spokesperson said the district “looks forward to learning more” about CTU’s request to publicly bargain. A representative for City Hall did not immediately return a request for comment.</p><p>“Although contract talks between CPS and the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) have not yet commenced, the District looks forward to negotiating a fair contract that balances the interests of the hard working educators with our budget constraints,” said Evan Moore, district spokesperson, in a statement.</p><p>There is some precedent. In Colorado, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/colorado/2020/6/17/21294903/denver-district-union-negotiations-start-thursday-freezing-teacher-pay/">state law requires</a> teachers’ contract negotiations to be done in public. In Chicago, with a union-friendly mayor who drew heavy support from the CTU on the campaign trail, contract negotiations this year may not result in a long battle or lead to a strike, as they have in past years under former mayors Rahm Emanuel and Lori Lightfoot.</p><p>However, bargaining will occur as the district is deciding how to close a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">$391 million budget</a> deficit <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/10/chicago-covid-relief-dollars-budgets-schools/">as federal COVID dollars run out.</a> That challenge raises questions about how many costly demands CPS can commit to.</p><p>In an interview last week with Chalkbeat, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said the district’s structural deficit — when expenses exceed revenue — preceded the pandemic and, in recent years, was due in part to the 2019 CTU contract agreement that will expire this June. Budget watchdogs have noted that this financial situation prevents the mayor from agreeing to every union demand.</p><p>Asked about the economic implications of the contract, Davis Gates did not provide more specific details but said the union will ask for “substantial amounts of investment into our school community,” and emphasized that schools still don’t have enough staff.</p><p>However, CTU and the district already agree on at least one thing: Both believe <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2024/03/25/ctu-negotiations-will-feature-a-new-battleground-this-year-springfield">the state should provide more funding</a> to CPS to help alleviate its financial pressures and have said they are pushing lawmakers to do so. The state has boosted funding for CPS since overhauling its funding formula in 2017. But that new formula indicates that CPS would still need $1.1 billion to be considered adequately funded.</p><p>There are no signs yet that more money is coming. Gov. J.B. Pritzker has proposed a budget that would increase K-12 funding <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/21/illinois-governor-pritzker-wants-universal-preschool-by-2027/">by the same amount</a> as last year.</p><h2>CTU delivers demands across the city</h2><p>After the press conference Tuesday, union leaders rode a trolley to deliver its demands to Pritzker’s office, as well as Johnson’s office and some of its critics, such as the Civic Federation, a nonpartisan government watchdog group. The trolley also stopped at the offices of White Sox and Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf, who <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/white-sox/2024/02/20/jerry-reinsdorf-house-speaker-chris-welch-south-loop-white-sox-ballpark-the-78">has sought $1 billion in taxpayer subsidies to build a new Sox stadium.</a> Asked why the union approached him, a CTU spokesperson said, “because he loves Chicago as much as we do.”</p><p>Before the trolley took off, various school staffers took the microphone at Richards to discuss different contract demands.</p><p>Christel Williams-Hayes, the CTU’s recording secretary, highlighted the work of paraprofessionals who provide additional support to schools and can include special education assistants, teacher assistants, school clerks, and parent advocates, among others. The union plans to demand a higher salary floor for paraprofessionals, Davis Gates said. Their pay can range based on the specific paraprofessional job title and years of experience.</p><p>One of the lowest paid paraprofessional positions is a teacher assistant, which has a starting salary this school year of $36,259, an increase from $30,862 in the 2019-20 school year, according to the <a href="https://contract.ctulocal1.org/cps/a-1f">CTU’s current contract.</a></p><p>Charese Munoz, an English teacher at Spencer Technology Academy in Garfield Park, said the city must expand dual language programming to more Black students who can benefit from learning a language other than English.</p><p>Rolando Perez, a restorative justice coordinator at Brighton Park Elementary School, which is also a Sustainable Community School, said the union wants “each school and each student” to have a restorative justice coordinator who oversees an alternative form of discipline that focuses on resolving conflicts. The Board of Education recently directed the district to create a new safety plan by removing school resource officers from campuses and implementing alternative disciplinary practices, such as more restorative justice.</p><p>“Simply put,” Perez said, “how can a student be ready to learn when they come into a school if they are not feeling fully supported socially and emotionally?”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/16/chicago-teachers-union-contract-demands-bargaining/Reema AminImage courtesy of Paul Goyette2024-04-16T03:57:48+00:002024-04-16T13:13:23+00:00<p>Chicago Public Schools is mapping out its goals for the next five years and wants feedback from the public.</p><p>The plan — which will be finalized this summer — will focus on three priorities: how to improve students’ daily experiences in the classroom, staffing and funding, and collaborating more closely with school communities, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez told a crowd of about 40 people at Crane High School on Monday night for the first of seven community forums. Many of the attendees were district staff. Others were parents, community advocates, and representatives from outside organizations.</p><p>The plan gained some attention in the winter when the Chicago Board of Education <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">announced it would move away from the school choice</a> system. The board said it would outline a new approach in the strategic plan, and specific changes would depend on community feedback.</p><p>But school choice didn’t come up at Monday’s session. Martinez told Chalkbeat the district will ask families their opinions on school choice and capital planning in May, because those are “big topics.” The next three meetings this month will focus more on the daily school experience and funding, though parents also can share their thoughts about school choice, he said. Martinez said he’s already heard from Spanish-speaking parents who have struggled to navigate the GoCPS system.</p><p>As Martinez went over the district’s priorities, he highlighted some successes, including a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/19/chicago-public-schools-reading-scores-pandemic-recovery-growth/">recent growth in reading and math</a>.</p><p>“We are building a five-year plan so this continues, and we continue to accelerate,” Martinez told the crowd.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/9/15/22674936/pedro-martinez-chicago-public-schools-cps-ceo-superintendent-san-antonio/">Martinez, who was hired in 2021,</a> <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/24/23320648/chicago-public-schools-pedro-martinez-blueprint-pandemic-recovery/">established a three-year blueprint</a> in the fall of 2022. The district is developing the next five-year strategic plan at a moment of big change.</p><p>Chicago is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/27/chicago-school-board-race-campaigns-election-2024/">holding its first school board elections</a> this fall and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/26/chicago-school-board-candidates-must-collect-1000-signatures/">candidates are starting to emerge</a>. In January 2025, a hybrid board with 10 elected members and 11 members appointed by the mayor will be sworn into office.</p><p>Since taking office a year ago, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s appointed school board has <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/">voted to remove police officers</a> from schools in addition to passing the resolution to shift away from school choice. Both moves prompted a response from state lawmakers who are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/11/illinois-lawmakers-file-bills-against-chicago-policies/">debating bills that could prevent those changes</a>.</p><p>District officials have also rolled out a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">new budgeting formula</a> that provides <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">set staffing levels to all schools</a> and additional discretionary spending based on need. They’ve also <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-may-not-have-busing-for-some-students/">cut bus service for general education students</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/29/23850842/chicago-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-stipends/">struggled to comply with providing transportation</a> to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/">students with disabilities who are legally entitled to it</a>.</p><p>Martinez and other district officials spent the first hour of Monday’s meeting talking about the vision for the district over the past few years, as well as the feedback officials have collected so far through other community meetings and focus groups, such as on <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/12/chicago-public-schools-wants-ideas-for-black-student-success/">how to ensure the success of Black students.</a> So far, that feedback has run the gamut, Martinez said, including asking the district to better prepare students for life after high school, focus more on supporting students’ mental health, provide more funding for building repairs and transportation, and include families in decision making.</p><p>In the second hour, attendees rotated between three tables. At each, CPS staff talked about their work — such as changing the funding formula for school budgets or their desire to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/19/chicago-public-schools-expanding-dual-language-programs/">expand dual language programming</a> — and then took questions from members of the community.</p><p>At one table, which focused in part on funding, most of the roughly 15 people seated were CPS staff. One of the few community members was Catherine Jones, a longtime education advocate on the West Side who asked if the district was still considering enrollment under its new funding formula. Budget Director Mike Sitkowski told Jones that the new formula would “guarantee that even the smallest school has a baseline” of staff.</p><p>“Which is good,” Jones responded.</p><p>At another table, parent Alexandra Beltrand, a mother of three CPS kids, asked if the district could expand dual language programs.</p><p>By 8 p.m. — the scheduled end of the meeting — attendees had only rotated tables twice, and attendees at at least two of the tables had just a few minutes to ask questions after hearing from CPS staff. Attendees were encouraged to write down their questions and feedback so that staff could review and record it later.</p><p>“We’re going to see what worked today, what didn’t — so for example, we didn’t have as much time to have more rotations,” Martinez said. “We’re even wondering, do we start having even more groupings instead of three?”</p><p>Still, Beltrand said the meeting was helpful. After the meeting ended, she chatted one-on-one with staff from the district’s Office of Cultural and Language Education.</p><p>“I felt heard,” Beltrand said.</p><p>People interested in attending the meetings can register <a href="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc25r-j1LVtckxy_9QDfr-BWRTF8SKBLVe2osdAeJ9eU4bhBA/viewform" target="_blank">online here.</a></p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/16/chicago-public-schools-strategic-plan-meeting/Reema AminReema Amin2024-04-10T21:06:27+00:002024-04-11T15:40:08+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>For principals in Chicago, putting together a school budget has always involved difficult choices.</p><p>Then three years ago, a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/12/21/22847296/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-funding-accountability/">$2.8 billion windfall of federal COVID money</a> for Chicago Public Schools, meant to help students recover from the pandemic, suddenly changed the equation.</p><p>At one school, where nearly all of the students came from low-income households, the additional money meant more after-school programs for everyone, tutoring for struggling students, open gym, and even a staff-created crafting class where students could get additional social-emotional support. Test scores went up and staff noticed fewer fights, said a former school administrator who requested anonymity in order to speak candidly.</p><p>“Winning the lottery is what it felt like,” she said. “Everything your kid ever asked for, you could give them.”</p><p>Research shows Chicago students are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/19/chicago-public-schools-reading-scores-pandemic-recovery-growth/">rebounding faster than other districts,</a> particularly in reading, efforts <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/18/23875659/chicago-public-schools-cps-tutor-corps-esser-covid-relief/">such as tutoring</a> are <a href="https://educationlab.uchicago.edu/2024/03/national-study-finds-in-school-tutoring-programs-are-successfully-accelerating-student-learning-reversing-pandemic-era-learning-loss/">paying off</a>, and the number of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/9/23500744/chicago-public-schools-social-worker-student-mental-health-covid-trauma-support-services/">school social workers</a> in CPS has doubled.</p><p>But the extra federal money that helped make that progress possible, known formally as Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief or ESSER, is running out, meaning some of those programs could be curtailed or cut.</p><p>A Chalkbeat analysis of school budgets for the past three years found that federal COVID relief made up 7% of all the money that went to schools. And while officials said Monday they will not reduce the total amount of money dedicated to schools, they said some campuses’ “funding levels may change,” as they shift to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">a new funding formula</a> that guarantees <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/">a minimum number of staff for all schools,</a> according to a letter district officials sent to families and staff.</p><p>Next year, CPS plans to spend the last $300 million of its $2.8 billion allocation of federal COVID money, but will still face <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">a $391 million deficit.</a> CEO Pedro Martinez signaled recently that hard cuts, such as for critical building repairs, could be ahead but he wants to protect classrooms from losing resources.</p><p>Looking back, more than half of Chicago’s federal COVID money went to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/3/16/22981374/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-principals-teachers-esser/">staff salaries and benefits</a>. In an interview with Chalkbeat, Martinez said the federal COVID dollars helped the district avoid cuts because of a longstanding structural deficit – when expenses exceed revenue.</p><p>That deficit was a problem even before the pandemic for many reasons, he said, including the 2019 CTU contract, which committed to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/10/31/21121050/wins-losses-and-painful-compromises-how-5-major-issues-in-chicago-s-teacher-strike-were-resolved/">hiring more staff and increasing salaries and benefits</a>. The district is once again negotiating <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/">new contracts with the Chicago Teachers Union</a> and the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/20/chicago-public-schools-still-negotiating-union-contract-with-support-staff/">union representing school support staff</a>. Both will impact future school years when federal COVID money is gone.</p><p>Chalkbeat’s analysis of budget records and expenditure data from the past three years found the largest uses of COVID money at the school level were for reducing class sizes, supporting middle school programs, and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/29/chicago-public-schools-used-covid-dollars-on-prek/">expanding pre-K</a>.</p><p>District officials said they want to preserve programs they believe have helped students, such as <a href="https://news.uchicago.edu/story/national-study-finds-school-high-dosage-tutoring-can-reverse-pandemic-era-learning-loss">tutoring</a>, professional development for teachers, after-school and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/17/23603531/chicago-public-schools-summer-school-enrollment-attendance-covid-pandemic-recovery/">summer programs</a>, and investments in social-emotional learning. But some schools will be hit by changes next year.</p><p>For example, according to a presentation given last week to Local School Council members, some schools may lose their <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/25/23729023/chicago-public-schools-academic-interventionist-covid-learning-recovery/">interventionists. These positions were</a> created with federal COVID dollars to provide extra support to struggling students.</p><p>Next year, only Title I schools, which enroll large shares of students from low-income families, will be guaranteed interventionists.</p><p>Principals received their budgets Monday for next school year and could decide to pay for certain positions or programs using discretionary money. By early May, Local School Councils must vote on the budgets. Simultaneously, district officials are reviewing non-school spending and central office budgets before presenting a full budget to the school board for a vote in June.</p><p>“Literally every day, I kid you not, we’re going through all of our central office budgets, all of our operations, and seeing, ‘Where do we need to scale back?,’” Martinez said. “Our intention is going to be that as schools finish their budgets, we’re going to be able to protect those resources at the school level.”</p><h2>How federal COVID money was spent at schools</h2><p>At one Chicago school, which also serves many students from low-income families, having more adults in the building has made a big difference.</p><p>The school’s principal, who asked to remain anonymous in order to speak candidly, said the districtwide tutoring effort, known as Tutor Corps, allowed her to hire a handful of tutors who have “had a profound impact” on children who were struggling in reading and math and are now showing signs of improvement in those subjects.</p><p>The principal was also able to shrink class sizes by hiring more teachers. That was possible because the district decided to cover the salaries of two teachers the principal tapped to become interventionists. Because they were some of her most veteran teachers with high salaries, the principal said, that freed up a good chunk of money to hire other staff.</p><p>But the principal didn’t know that the district used federal COVID money to help pay for her school’s pre-K teachers, or that her school’s budget was covered by millions in relief dollars over the past three years.</p><p>“Wow, it didn’t feel like that,” she said, referring to the amount of money her school received.</p><p>The disconnect might stem from complicated budgeting practices. CPS must first spend money, then submit claims to the state to get reimbursed with federal COVID dollars, said Mike Sitkowski, budget director for CPS. In order to collect that money, which helped keep school budgets afloat, officials were “shifting expenses throughout the year” – which did not impact school operations, he said, but may have gone unnoticed by school communities.</p><p>Between July 2020 and June 30, 2023, Chicago Public Schools budgeted a total $1.4 billion in federal COVID dollars directly to schools. Another $1.2 billion was budgeted for centrally funded programs, including those rooted at schools, such as tutoring, one-on-one academic intervention for students who fell behind, and summer school.</p><p>Multiple educators were surprised to hear how much of the COVID relief dollars had been budgeted for their schools. Some parents and students have also felt in the dark about how the money got spent.</p><p>Hal Woods, chief of policy for advocacy organization Kids First Chicago, said without that knowledge or a tracker detailing where the money is going for each school, parents and schools aren’t able to “be in lockstep” if they want to advocate for more funding or raise questions about how funds are being spent.</p><p>Wallace Wilbourn Jr., a teacher at Oscar DePriest Elementary School on the West Side and a member of the school’s Local School Council, said he doesn’t know how most of the money was spent. He joined the LSC last year, but wasn’t aware of any conversations the school had with staff about how the money was being spent, even though the LSC votes on a school’s budget.</p><p>Between 2021 and 2023, nearly $2.2 million in federal COVID dollars was budgeted for DePriest. Expenditure data obtained by Chalkbeat through an open records request found slightly more than that – about $2.5 million – was spent.</p><p>DePriest had Tutor Corps tutors, Wilbourn said, an expense he supports because he felt many students needed the extra help as they returned to in-person school. Still, he wishes there was more transparency early on about the money.</p><p>“It’s nice to know what those dollars are being used for so then it gives you the power to advocate for those funds,” Wilbourn said.</p><p>Martinez said the district has been “very transparent” about how it was spending the federal dollars in multiple public presentations. However, Martinez said “it gets very technical, so I can understand why it’s confusing for folks.”</p><p>Asked how the COVID money was distributed, a spokesperson did not share an exact formula in time for this story. A spokesperson said schools received federal COVID dollars based on “stakeholder meetings” that focused on what schools’ needs were, such as class sizes and limited split classrooms, access to arts and other “specialty” classes, intervention supports, social and emotional supports, resuming in-person school, and professional development.</p><h2>Chicago schools have uncertain financial future</h2><p>The district has not yet detailed how it will fill its looming $391 million deficit. That’s the shortfall after using roughly $300 million in federal COVID money still left to spend.</p><p>Ralph Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, said the district shouldn’t have plugged the federal money into operating costs, such as salaries, because that created a cliff – a sudden loss of money that could mean the loss of programs and staff that directly impacts students.</p><p>“It’s very disruptive, right?” Martire said. “What message does that send to the kids? It creates a lot of unintended and hard-to-anticipate issues.”</p><p>Martire argues the district should have used the money to pay for one-time costs, such as critical building repairs. The district might have to delay such repairs in response to budget challenges, Martinez said at a recent event about the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/19/chicago-public-schools-expanding-dual-language-programs/">district’s Latino students.</a></p><p>Martinez told Chalkbeat he is proud of the choices the district made in spending federal COVID money, pointing to the recent research around student growth in Chicago and crediting the “amazing work” of principals, teachers, and students.</p><p>“What the evidence is telling me right now is that we used the resources in a way that our students are doing even better today than they were prior to me coming here,” he said.</p><p>Officials have vowed to push state lawmakers to give the district more money. The state has increased the district’s funding by about $1 billion since Illinois overhauled its funding formula in 2017. But the state’s formula, which aims to allocate new money to districts based on need, indicates CPS would still need $1.1 billion to be considered adequately funded.</p><p>State lawmakers typically finalize a budget in late May or early June. The Chicago Board of Education usually votes on the district’s overall budget in late June. CPS is planning to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">fund schools differently</a> this year, using a formula that allocates staff positions and prioritizes student and community needs instead of doling out a set number of dollars per student.</p><p>Two principals said they’ll be able to keep some of the extra programming, such as Tutor Corps, because they oversee high-needs schools. But even that will come with some changes: The tutors will use a different, less expensive curriculum, they said.</p><p>The administrator who launched more after-school programs said losing the federal COVID money could limit what a school can do. Instead of hosting programs for most of the school year, for example, her former school may have to go back to 10 or 20 weeks out of the year.</p><p>“The altruistic ones of us wish the lesson will be learned that extra money really makes a difference, and the city and state will keep providing additional funds for these sorts of investments,” said one principal. “But I am imagining that we are going to be trimming to be leaner schools with less programming.”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/10/chicago-covid-relief-dollars-budgets-schools/Reema AminStacey Rupolo2024-04-09T16:23:10+00:002024-04-09T16:23:10+00:00<p>For a moment on Monday, the sky almost turned black.</p><p>Sixteen-year-old Jaelyn held a pair of paper glasses over her eyes and looked up. The view through the protective lenses reminded her of something from childhood.</p><p>“When you watch a Disney movie, and you see the little person sitting on the moon — it’s like that,” Jaelyn said. “A little person sitting there fishing on the moon. It was pretty cool.”</p><p>Students gathered on the football field at <a href="https://www.newcranemedicalprep.org/">Crane Medical Prep High School</a> on the city’s West Side to watch the solar eclipse firsthand in Chicago — where close to 94% of the sun was covered by the moon and the city was, for a little while, cast in an eerie darkness.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/Q5QjMbCvvvXahMllala53Ji0olg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/4MGWB5J2TJER3BHK45XXOUTR2E.JPG" alt="High school students view the solar eclipse from the Crane Medical Prep High School football field on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>High school students view the solar eclipse from the Crane Medical Prep High School football field on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. </figcaption></figure><p>Crane was one of several schools across Chicago that held special viewing events to teach students about the rare astronomical event. The next total solar eclipse won’t cross North America until 2044, 20 years from now.</p><p>In <a href="https://www.vox.com/culture/2017/8/18/16078886/total-solar-eclipse-folklore">ancient Greece</a>, people saw an eclipse as a sign that the gods had abandoned them. Even in the information age, seeing the moon pass in front of the sun has the power to stir thought: Is it a reminder of human frailty — our smallness under the machinations of two celestial bodies? Or is it something darker — a bad omen, a symbol of the ill will lurking in the tangled depths of the human heart?</p><p>Crane’s AP English teacher had planned to explore some of those questions in a lesson on how the concept of a solar eclipse appears several times in <a href="https://www.folger.edu/blogs/shakespeare-and-beyond/eclipses-shakespeares-plays/">Shakespeare’s writings</a>: as a portent of bad tidings, in “King Lear”; as a metaphor for the darkness of the human psyche after Othello murders Desdemona; and in his poetry as the ruination of beauty. A solar eclipse occurred during Shakespeare’s lifetime in 1598, passing across England.</p><p>But Shakespeare didn’t have to contend with AP Exams, which on Monday ended up trumping that lesson plan in favor of content that was going to show up on upcoming exams.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/HKc7NJAdeAEK0qBPRofV8Y_WUHo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/YISXAUJFAJAZVABJZGACD3TKIU.JPG" alt="Taniyah, 16, a ninth grader, watches the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Taniyah, 16, a ninth grader, watches the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. </figcaption></figure><p>Marilyn, 16, another student at Crane, said this was the first time she got a chance to look at an eclipse because the school provided protective glasses so students wouldn’t damage their eyes.</p><p>“I saw one in 2017 when I was young, and I was like ‘Why can’t I look up at the sun?’” she said, laughing. “I’m so glad I didn’t. Because right after that, I saw an interview with a woman who lost her vision because she looked at it.”</p><p>Some schools organized field trips for students to head to the path of totality — or parts of the U.S. where the sun’s face was completely blocked by the moon. Students from Budlong Elementary School visited Toledo, Ohio and middle schoolers from Mitchell Elementary School traveled to an organic farm in Noblesville, Indiana on Monday to see the total eclipse.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/yFhbQVUm11kAx6ENTbjb5CFyvBc=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/3YGSC7QU5BCXREBCPGDKKZM5RI.JPG" alt="Teachers from Crane Medical Prep High School watch the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Teachers from Crane Medical Prep High School watch the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. </figcaption></figure><p>At Crane, students were clearly excited to get a look at the sun during the eclipse — and to get a chance to spend some time outdoors on a day with a high of 71 degrees. Kids laughed, talked, looked at the eclipse, and took the chance to throw a football in the brief reprieve between classes.</p><p>Chicago saw the most lunar blockage of the sun starting around 2:07 p.m., according <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/eclipses/future-eclipses/eclipse-2024/where-when/">to NASA</a>. But people gathered across the city on Monday starting around 1:50 p.m., when the moon just started inching in front of the sun.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/MIPjoodmv1sXgNO6yXDnMH_RT2o=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/UAJC243J45F3TM2BZCLYDCLY3U.JPG" alt="Crane Medical Prep High School geometry teacher Matthew Atias teaches about the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Crane Medical Prep High School geometry teacher Matthew Atias teaches about the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.</figcaption></figure><p>Matthew Atias, a geometry teacher at Crane, said he was excited to get a chance to show students how they could model the solar eclipse using quarters and a nickel to represent the sun and moon. He got the classroom assignment directly from NASA, Atias said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/4b7yJ-vKasSu16629gjxlgMXJJc=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/UVMPQD466JDD5KFGXBGLL3XVAY.JPG" alt="Crane Medical Prep High School geometry teacher Matthew Atias shows off geometry homework from NASA that helped students track the trajectory of the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Crane Medical Prep High School geometry teacher Matthew Atias shows off geometry homework from NASA that helped students track the trajectory of the solar eclipse on Mon., April 8, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. </figcaption></figure><p>“So this would have them follow the sun path and the moon path … to simulate the size between the sun and the moon and the apparent size from the distance,” he said. “It’s really a well-done activity.”</p><p>“We just started this unit last week. But the calculation we’ll be doing, it’s what we call ‘tangent lines,’” Atias said, noting that the unit aligns with the Common Core standards.</p><p>In the broader U.S., a large belt where the sun was completely blocked by the moon — known as “the path of totality” — stretched from the upper Eastern Seaboard down through Texas in a descending arc. According to NASA, the eclipse began over the South Pacific Ocean, and Mexico’s Pacific coast was the first location in North America to experience totality.</p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/09/chicago-public-schools-students-view-solar-eclipse/Michael GersteinMichael Gerstein for Chalkbeat2024-04-05T15:00:00+00:002024-04-05T14:59:08+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Elementary schools will get one teacher for every 26 students next year and high schools will get one teacher for every 21 students, according to details about the new budget formula replacing <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/">student-based budgeting</a> shared by Chicago Public Schools officials.</p><p>Those ratios will decline for higher-needs schools — potentially providing them with additional teachers — and all schools will be staffed with at least 10 classroom teachers for the 2024-25 school year, officials told Local School Council members Thursday night.</p><p>The numbers discussed by CPS officials shed additional light on how the switch to a new position-based budget formula that’s partially based on needs will affect schools, teachers, and students. However, the student-to-teacher ratios outlined by officials are not necessarily equivalent to class sizes.</p><p>Principals are slated to get detailed school budgets with actual positions and dollar amounts on Monday.</p><p>Officials said the total amount of funding that is allocated to schools “will not be cut,” but “individual schools’ funding levels may change.”</p><p>The <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/28/23777373/chicago-public-schools-budget-2024-school-board-vote/">$9.4 billion budget for the current 2023-24 school year</a> categorized $4.8 billion as school-level funding.</p><p>CPS plans to use a recently updated <a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1b89FqoqvpZRbOozdrRBpoov6VEVdjHvwwT0gmeOsfwg/edit#gid=0">Opportunity Index</a>, which was created during the pandemic, to measure a school’s need and distribute resources more equitably. It’s based on how many students with disabilities, English learners, and students from low-income households are enrolled, and the socioeconomics of the surrounding neighborhood, among other factors. Schools with higher scores are considered to have higher needs.</p><p>Every CPS school will get a principal, an assistant principal, a clerk, at least one counselor, and at least one part-time school assistant. The number of counselors and assistants will increase at schools with more students or more needs; elementary schools will get an additional counselor for every 600 students, while high schools will get an additional counselor for every 500 students. High schools with more than 300 students will also get an athletic director.</p><p>Special education teachers and paraprofessionals will continue to be funded centrally.</p><p>Elementary schools will be allocated at least three “holistic” teachers for specialty classes, such as art, physical education, or foreign language. The formula will provide one specialty position for every five core classroom teachers at schools with more students.</p><p>“We believe that the daily experience for our students will be joyful, affirming and meet students’ social and emotional needs, and prioritizes historically underserved students,” said CPS Chief Budget Officer Mike Sitkowski.</p><p>Principals will still get flexible or discretionary money in addition to the base number of positions, officials said. Elementary schools will get at least $365 per student and high schools will get at least $1,095 per student. More money per student is added based on a school’s Opportunity Index score.</p><p>The switch away from budgeting money to schools based on student enrollment to a system that promises minimum staffing based on need and enrollment isn’t the only big fiscal transition coming up for CPS.</p><p>Next year’s budget will be the last to benefit from federal COVID money, and officials have said there’s about $300 million remaining for the coming school year. Those relief dollars will be used to help plug the district’s projected budget deficit and will help reduce the shortfall <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">to $391 million</a>, officials have said.</p><p>In order to further reduce the budget gap, the district is looking for cuts at the central office level, instead of making cuts to schools to balance the budget, officials said. CPS is also seeking a larger funding increase from the state.</p><p>Sitkowski said principals will receive their school budgets next week. Local School Councils will need to vote on them so principals can submit them back to the district’s budget office in early May.</p><p><i>Reema Amin contributed.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/05/chicago-public-schools-shares-new-budget-formula-student-teacher-ratios/Becky Vevea2022-12-07T18:38:16+00:002024-04-02T22:43:19+00:00<p>When I was appointed to the Chicago Board of Education in June 2019, I knew my prior experiences — as a teacher, a Chicago Public Schools employee, an educator collaborating with over 30 districts, a CPS parent, and a<b> </b>member of a Local School Council<b> </b>— still might not prepare me for the duties of effectively governing our large and complex district. What I didn’t know was what awaited us in the months and years to come, including a global pandemic.</p><p>The heroic efforts of educators and district leadership have kept our district running, and we’ve even made progress in some important areas. CPS launched its <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/equity/">equity framework</a>. The Office of Safety & Security reimagined an approach to <a href="https://www.cps.edu/services-and-supports/student-safety-and-security/whole-school-safety-plans/">whole school safety</a>. The board <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@ChiPubSchools/streams">livestreamed and recorded</a> its meetings, and opened new and revised policies to <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/proposed-policies-or-rule-changes-open-for-public-comment/">public comment</a>. We’ve engaged community members to inform policy on school <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/ara">programming</a>, <a href="https://www.cps.edu/press-releases/cps-launches-formal-engagement-process-to-further-promote-equity-and-sustainability-in-school-funding/">funding,</a> and <a href="https://www.cps.edu/strategic-initiatives/accountability-redesign/">accountability</a>.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/bmvkvZRph5Ej7Mzh62vOYx9GwC0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/CS7DQ7MLO5AJDOFMECS45QWG4U.jpg" alt="Sendhil Revuluri" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Sendhil Revuluri</figcaption></figure><p>Today is my final board meeting. As I step away from the toughest and most rewarding volunteer role I’ve ever held, I want to share some reflections I have about the changes and challenges our district has in store.</p><h2>Our educators focus on student learning outcomes. Our school board should, too.</h2><p>School systems exist to improve student outcomes. Having great buildings, happy parents, balanced budgets, or satisfied teachers are incredibly important and valuable. But they are the means, not the ends.</p><p>Over the last few years, my fellow school board members and I have committed many, many hours to the role, far beyond those visible in public, holding office hours, attending events, visiting schools, talking with stakeholders. But the current reality is that much of our time, attention, and energy is spent not on student outcomes — what matters most to our students and their families — but on the methods used to get there.</p><p>Our educators focus on our students to guide their practice. But in some of our most contentious board discussions, on topics such as school reopening, COVID mitigation, or the role of School Resource Officers, the loudest voices often centered adult interests, values, or concerns.</p><h2>The school board should represent the voice of our community.</h2><p>Our role as a board is to represent the vision and values of the community. Our main duty as a board is to listen to the community, form a coherent vision, then set, resource, and monitor focused goals that advance that vision.</p><p>So while discussions and decisions about effective methods are essential, they’re not our job as a board, but the domain of district leadership. For example, if we hear our community say “it is important that our students read well,” our role is to set a clear goal about student literacy outcomes. What approach or curriculum to use, selecting staff, and so on — that’s the responsibility of district leadership. Then the board must monitor the progress toward that goal.</p><p>Our community has varied ideas about which student outcomes matter most, and which means should be used to achieve them. As board members, we have different experiences, opinions, and priorities. We may not agree on everything, including which student outcomes are the most important. As a fellow board member once told me, “if we all agree, then some of us are superfluous.” But when we find areas of broad agreement, we will know where to set our goals.</p><h2>Whoever is on the board, however they’re selected, what matters most is how they work.</h2><p>Many Chicagoans have (and have shared) strong opinions about how board members are selected. These discussions often focus on beliefs about what is more democratic, but it’s far less frequent that people ask what will most benefit student outcomes. I believe that the composition of the school board or the method of its selection is far less important than whether it is governing effectively.</p><p>Advocates of an elected board have embraced democracy and argued for parity with other Illinois school districts. One can agree with them on these beliefs — as I do — and yet push further, to ensure that the board, however it is selected, governs the district in a way that delivers educational experiences that work better for all of our students.</p><p>This is especially crucial right now. <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/10/23/23417098/naep-nations-report-card-chicago-public-schools-math-reading-scores">Recent results</a> from the National Assessment of Educational Progress show that our students’ current achievement has been set back by the multiple effects of the pandemic. We must ensure this unfinished learning does not lead to a loss of future opportunity, especially given the challenges many of our students face accessing post-secondary education.</p><p>Our students need us to govern effectively, and there are tangible, evidence-based, and feasible steps to move in this direction. <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AgwRqqFwE2jUVDLSjbS2wEuIQ5ZoyzfV3BcudR6EJoc/edit">The steps</a> are both well-defined and adaptable to local context, and with commitment and focus, can be accomplished in six months or less. We owe it to our students not to be distracted from these steps toward effectiveness by political preference, power dynamics, or adult needs.</p><p>Just as a classroom teacher assesses their students’ learning, the school board and the public will be able to see and monitor progress towards these outcomes in the whole district, allowing for adjustment and improvement along the way to deliver our students what they deserve.</p><p>We must ensure that board members, regardless of the selection process, are informed about their role, and skilled in how to govern to get results for our students. They must be ready to listen to the community, set clear goals, and be held accountable for student outcomes.</p><p>And the community must engage on the desired results — and not just at election time. Whether appointed or elected, I hope future board members will be selected based on their commitment, focus, energy, and ability to keep student outcomes first and foremost, rather than the opinions they embrace, the allies they bring, or promises to adopt specific methods.</p><h2>If we don’t face facts about our buildings and budget, we will shortchange our students.</h2><p>Like many large urban districts, our student enrollment has changed significantly — including an <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">almost 20% drop in the last decade</a>. While it’s helpful to understand the reasons for this decline, I believe it’s most important to best serve the students who are enrolled in the district now.</p><p>That won’t be easy with a finite and <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/District.aspx?source=environment&source2=evidencebasedfunding&Districtid=15016299025">inadequate</a> budget, as measured by the evidence-based funding methodology adopted by the state of Illinois. <a href="https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/edunomicslab/viz/ILFY18-19/ILFY18-19">Data compiled</a> by the Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University shows that in some schools we spend far more per student while providing neither strong learning outcomes nor the rich and broad experiences they deserve. Our budget is currently balanced, thanks to a once-in-a-generation infusion of federal COVID relief. But as a <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/analysis_of_cps_finances_and_entanglements-final-103122.pdf">recent report</a> shows, in just a few years, continuing to do what we’ve always done will lead to annual deficits of hundreds of millions of dollars.</p><p>It is a time to choose: between preserving features of how the district has worked in the past and ensuring that our students’ futures are secure. We can’t move our buildings, but we can choose policies and spending to give our students the best possible educational experience we can with the resources and population we have.</p><p>At some point, choices to keep our existing buildings, addresses, or school names will impede the quality of students’ educational experience and their learning outcomes. While those spaces may have value to a person or a community, we can’t put that in front of whether our students are safe, learning, and thriving. We must look forward to their future.</p><p>One key lever that CPS could apply is making budget projections more visible. This form of long-term financial planning is a <a href="https://www.gfoa.org/materials/long-term-financial-planning">best practice</a> recommended by the Government Finance Officers Association and is used by both the City of Chicago, under the direction of both <a href="https://chicityclerk.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/reports/Executive%20Order%202011-7_0.pdf?VersionId=5UCBXDYiEDa6yryjNZCt1cyXu4GgxABY">Mayor Emanuel</a> and <a href="https://chicityclerk.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/reports/Executive%20Order%202019-3.pdf?VersionId=wFV20Jct.Koloqf7VYRDpepXL2DetqNQ">Mayor Lightfoot</a>, and <a href="https://www.cookcountyil.gov/sites/g/files/ywwepo161/files/documents/2022-11/Volume%20I%20-%20Budget%20Overview%20FY23%20Executive%20Budget%20Recommendation.pdf#page=39">Cook County</a>.</p><p>When each of our students may be with our district for 14 years, a long-term perspective is essential. We are in a car heading for a fiscal cliff. While turning the car off our well-traveled road may be a bit bumpy, the reality of our finite resources means that the only alternative to making changes now is to turn abruptly in several years — causing nausea or injury.</p><h2>Our choices will determine how well we deliver what our students need and deserve.</h2><p>Like any big event in our own lives — a graduation, a wedding, or the birth of a child — this moment of governance transition may bring stress, but it also brings the joy of possibility. This is another opportunity to deliver what our students need and deserve. But if we don’t face and accept our current reality, it will be hard for us to change it.</p><p>To change, to adapt, to grow is hard — so hard most people don’t even try. But we can do hard things. And we owe it to our students to do so. Their futures, especially those most vulnerable and who are currently furthest from opportunity, are in the balance.</p><p><a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/about/bios/19"><i>Sendhil Revuluri</i></a><i> is a parent of two CPS students, a former teacher, and has served as vice president of the Chicago Board of Education since June 2019. He is stepping down this month.</i></p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/7/23498321/chicago-board-of-education-sendhil-revuluri-resignation/Sendhil Revuluri2024-03-26T10:00:00+00:002024-04-01T17:54:51+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/04/01/candidatos-al-consejo-escolar-de-chicago-pueden-recolectar-firmas/" target="_blank"><i><b>Leer en español.</b></i></a></p><p>Today is the first day people can collect signatures to get on the ballot for Chicago’s first school board elections.</p><p>Chicago voters will head to the polls on Nov. 5 to choose 10 of 21 members to serve on the Board of Education beginning Jan. 15, 2025. After those elections, the mayor will also appoint 11 members.</p><p>The city is <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1i0ILjZyzPFfyAHGqE9KRzL1JnXGVcdQ&ll=41.95142374499551%2C-87.75504255439408&z=12">divided into 10 districts</a> for these first elections and each will be represented by one elected member and one member appointed by the mayor. The mayor will also appoint a school board president.</p><p>Candidates must live in Chicago in the district they plan to run for at least one year. They must be a U.S. citizen, registered to vote, and cannot be a child sex offender. In order to get on the ballot, candidates have to collect at least 1,000 and no more than 3,000 valid signatures from voters in the district they’ll represent.</p><p>Signatures must be filed with the Chicago Board of Elections between June 17 and June 24.</p><p>In addition to signatures, candidates will be fundraising to support their campaigns. Once a candidate fundraises more than $5,000, state law requires them to file disclosure paperwork with the <a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure.aspx?MID=rfZ%2buidMSDY%3d">Illinois State Board of Elections</a>. So far, four candidates have done that under committees that include their names, while other political action committees have been formed.</p><p>CPS parent and former CPS teacher and principal Adam Parrott-Sheffer <a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure/CommitteeDetail.aspx?ID=0JmXYIfUiSPhs8p1RIp0yQ%3d%3d">filed campaign disclosure paperwork</a> earlier this month and <a href="https://adam4chi.com/">launched a website</a> to announce he is running to represent District 10, which includes his Hyde Park neighborhood and stretches most of the city’s south lakefront from I-55 to the Indiana border.</p><p>Parrott-Sheffer told Chalkbeat he jumped in the race after not seeing others throw their hat in the ring. He said because school board members will not be compensated beyond expenses related to doing the job, parents and people not connected to special interests will have a harder time.</p><p>“I don’t think that the seats should be like they are in [Los Angeles]LA, where it’s a fight between business and charter and unions,” Parrott-Sheffer said. “I think that there’s a lot that all those perspectives can learn from each other, and are really valuable when we’re thinking about all of them together.”</p><p>Parrott-Sheffer, <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamparrottsheffer/details/experience/">now an education consultant and adjunct professor</a>, said being a principal gave him the skills to be a strong school board member who can balance the needs of parents, the district, organizers, teachers, community organizations, and businesses while keeping kids “front and center.”</p><p>“Politics is not my thing,” Parrott-Sheffer said. “I like schools, I like making schools better. I like making them work for kids. And so that kind of was the ultimate decision.”</p><p>CPS parent Kimberly Brown is planning to run in District 4, which encompasses the north lakefront neighborhoods of Lincoln Park, Lakeview, and Uptown. Brown is the chief marketing officer at a global manufacturing company and has two small children – one who attends a neighborhood school in Lakeview.</p><p>“The reality is the most change that affects you happens in your backyard with your local politics and most specifically your local school,” she told Chalkbeat. “And if you don’t have kids, local schools affect your public safety. They affect your public infrastructure. They affect the businesses and the economy that makes your streets wonderful. Local schools build local economies.”</p><p>If elected, Brown said she’s hoping to promote more transparency and communication from the district. That desire comes after spending the past eight months talking to CPS parents to understand what they want from the district, who don’t know “if the Board [of Education] is really trying or not,” Brown said.</p><p>Michelle Pierre also <a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure/CommitteeDetail.aspx?ID=WPrPwALVGsYAH4MZne6MWA%3d%3d">filed campaign disclosure paperwork</a> Friday and plans to run in District 1, which covers neighborhoods, including Portage Park and Jefferson Park, on the northwest edge of Chicago near O’Hare airport. Pierre started her career as a teacher in New York, became a principal in D.C., and moved into district leadership roles in D.C. and Cleveland. She’s the former chief of schools for the LEARN Charter School Network in Chicago and now works for New Leaders, a national nonprofit focused on training principals and school administrators.</p><p>“I just plan to be out knocking on doors, going to events in our community — It’s starting to warm up in Chicago, which is great — and going to places where parents are,” Pierre said.</p><p>Pierre has served on the Local School Council at her high-school aged daughter’s school and said she believes in parents having a strong voice and also supports school choice.</p><p>Carlos Rivas also <a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure/CommitteeDetail.aspx?ID=WPrPwALVGsZlg%2bCndo7REQ%3d%3d">filed campaign disclosure paperwork</a> Monday and is planning to run in District 3, representing the north west side neighborhoods of Logan Square, Humboldt Park, Hermosa, and part of Belmont Cragin. He’s a former college counselor and alumni support manager at the Noble Network of Charter Schools and now serves a public affairs chief for Chicago’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability.</p><h2>Education-focused political committees could play a role</h2><p>Both the Chicago Teachers Union and the Illinois Network of Charter Schools have active political committees that have supported local candidates for Chicago City Council and the Illinois legislature in the past decade. As of Dec. 31, 2023, the charter group’s political funds had a collective $1.8 million and the teachers union’s two PACs had just over $200,000 in their accounts.</p><p>Andrew Broy, president of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, said his organization plans to meet with school board candidates and determine who to support over the summer after candidates have filed signatures to get on the ballot. He raised concerns about state lawmakers increasing the signature requirement to 1,000 from 250 under previous legislation. For comparison, Chicago aldermen <a href="https://app.chicagoelections.com/Documents/general/M2023%20Quick%20Reference%20Guide.pdf">must get 473 valid signatures</a> to get on the ballot.</p><p>“Given that <a href="https://www.chicagobusiness.com/juice/petition-challenges-chicago-mayors-race">petition challenges</a> are a feature of Chicago politics, you need to have more than 1,000 to actually be competitive,” Broy said. “I think that was probably a ballot access barrier of sorts put in place at the 11th hour in Springfield.”</p><p>Two familiar names in Chicago’s education landscape — <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/27/23614124/chicago-mayor-race-paul-vallas-chicago-public-schools-kam-buckner-brandon-johnson/">former mayoral candidate and former CPS CEO Paul Vallas</a> and <a href="https://www.chicagomag.com/chicago-magazine/february-2014/uno-juan-rangel/">former charter school leader Juan Rangel</a> — recently filed <a href="https://www.elections.il.gov/CampaignDisclosure/CommitteeDetail.aspx?ID=0JmXYIfUiSMoY9r2aSE%2f3Q%3d%3d">paperwork to form a political action committee</a> called Urban Center PAC.</p><p>Rangel said the PAC could possibly support Chicago school board candidates, but it’s not the group’s sole focus. He recently launched a nonprofit of the same name, <a href="https://theurbancenter.org/what-we-stand-for/">The Urban Center</a>, that more broadly focused on community organizing around more centrist political views. “Access to High-Quality Schools” is listed on the organization’s website as something the group stands for, which includes “parents to choose a school — public or private — that best fits the needs of their children.” Rangel recently worked for Empower Illinois, one of the state’s top scholarship-granting organizations under the tax-credit scholarship program Invest in Kids, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/14/illinois-laws-voucher-scholarship-private-schools-end/">which is sunsetting</a>.</p><p>“We want to be a resource for candidates who want to run for public office and that would include for school board,” Vallas said. He added that he is not planning to run for Chicago school board and hopes future board members will focus on “empowering the community to have input into the transformation of their local schools.”</p><p><i>Reema Amin contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/26/chicago-school-board-candidates-must-collect-1000-signatures/Becky VeveaMax Lubbers / Chalkbeat2024-03-26T19:00:00+00:002024-03-29T19:11:11+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>When Nastassia Tyler attended Lincoln Park High School in 2018, she noticed that her school had an “unofficial” dress code that seemed to be enforced disproportionately on Black and Hispanic girls.</p><p>For example, Lincoln Park made students whose shorts were deemed to be too high-cut wear gym clothes for the rest of the day, and security guards responsible for enforcing the policy tended to target “fuller-bodied” Black and Hispanic girls as opposed to their white peers, said Tyler, who is Black.</p><p>Tyler graduated from Florida Atlantic University in 2022 and currently works as a firefighter in Georgia, but she still thinks about what she believes were unfair conditions in her high school.</p><p>“It was hard to dress sometimes in the summer because it was so hot and the school didn’t have AC, but if you happen[ed] to show too much of your legs or something you’d get in trouble,” she said. “I remember thinking it was ridiculous to control what someone wears in a hot classroom.”</p><p>Across Chicago Public Schools, low-income Black students and other students of color are more likely to attend a high school with a dress code, according to data for the 2023-24 school year.</p><p>Schools that maintain strict dress codes are more likely to enforce punitive discipline, such as suspensions and expulsions, said Jacqueline Nowicki, a director at the U.S. Government Accountability Office who has published research regarding inequalities in public schools.</p><p>Numerous studies show that dress codes are not equally enforced across the country, with students of color being punished for infractions <a href="https://www.aclu.org/news/racial-justice/why-school-discipline-reform-still-matters#:~:text=Harsher%20punishment%20for%20the%20same,who%20committed%20the%20same%20infraction">even though they do not commit them at a higher rate</a>. This unequal enforcement of dress codes and other punishments can lead to <a href="https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-18-258">students of color dropping out of school</a> or having to repeat a grade.</p><p>A Northwestern/Chalkbeat analysis of CPS data on the Chicago Data Portal found that 94 of Chicago’s 169 high schools, or 55.6%, currently have dress codes. Of those high schools, 93 have a black or Hispanic plurality of students, while nearly three-quarters of their 104,357 students are listed in the city’s data as “low-income.” CPS defines low-income or “economically disadvantaged students” as students who “come from families whose income is within 185 percent of the federal poverty line,” according to a budgeting presentation for fiscal year 2023.</p><p>At all but eight of Chicago’s public high schools, a majority of students are listed as “low-income” in CPS data. Six of the eight schools with low-income populations below 50% do not enforce official dress codes. All eight schools have white populations exceeding 20%, more than double the average white population of 8.78% across Chicago public high schools. Four of the eight schools have a plurality of white students.</p><p>Demographic information was not available for two of the high schools.</p><h2>The rise of dress codes in Chicago</h2><p>Many schools across Chicago’s South Side instituted dress codes around the early 2000s to prevent students from wearing gang-affiliated clothing, said Lionel Allen, a clinical assistant professor of educational policy studies at the University of Illinois Chicago.</p><p>“They no longer had to police what students were wearing or worry if what they were wearing had any sort of gang significance because everyone was in uniforms,” he said.</p><p><a href="https://www.cps.edu/globalassets/cps-pages/about-cps/policies/student-code-of-conduct/for-print_cps_srr_2023_brochure_eng_06.16.23.pdf">Current CPS policy</a> bans “overt display of gang affiliation,” but does not specify what gang signs are banned or what constitutes a gang sign.</p><p>Allen has over a decade of experience as a teacher, principal, and administrator in CPS. From 2010 to 2018, he was the chief academic officer at Urban Prep Charter Academy for Young Men, a system of three all-male schools with locations in the Loop, Englewood, and Bronzeville.</p><p>Allen said Urban Prep maintained a strict dress code while he was there, requiring students to wear dress shoes, khaki pants, long-sleeve dress shirts, red ties, and black blazers adorned with the school logo. Allen said the policy was designed to prevent students from wearing gang-affiliated clothing and to cut costs for families on tight budgets – at the time, Urban Prep’s students paid a $150 annual charge for one blazer, one tie, field trips, and curriculum materials.</p><p>Urban Prep’s policies were designed to create an air of prestige, and some students who were initially resistant to wearing uniforms came to view them as a source of pride, Allen said. “When people in the street would see the young men walking around with their blazers and ties on, they were applauded.”</p><p>But since then, Allen has noticed that some schools in low-income areas of the city have started to use dress codes primarily as a tool for compliance.</p><p>Schools can get so preoccupied with enforcing dress codes that they get distracted from teaching students, and the language of some dress codes allows policies to be unevenly enforced, he said in a recent interview.</p><p>“Students who attend schools on the South and West sides of Chicago oftentimes aren’t able to come to school as their full, authentic selves,” he said. “They are victims of policies that are more concerned about how they act and their behaviors and less concerned about their intellectual academic development.”</p><p>Urban Prep Charter Academy for Young Men did not respond to multiple requests for comment.</p><p>CPS <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/2022/06/22/chicago-public-school-dress-codes-now-cannot-ban-head-coverings-tied-to-race-ethnicity/">last updated its dress code policy in 2022</a> to prevent schools from banning head coverings historically tied to race or ethnicity, but charter schools such as Urban Prep are exempt and can set their own codes of conduct.</p><p>“Chicago Public Schools (CPS) aims to ensure that our District policies are consistently applied for all students and schools,” said Chicago Public Schools spokesperson Evan Moore in a written statement responding to a request for comment. “District and school team members will work together to improve our school dress code and uniform policies to support a safe, inclusive and welcoming learning environment for all students.”</p><h2>Chicago mirrors national trend</h2><p>Dress codes and other forms of school discipline have come under scrutiny across the country as recent data has revealed that the policies disproportionately target girls and students of color.</p><p>Of public school districts nationwide, 90% prohibit at least one clothing item worn by girls, compared to 69% for boys, according to <a href="https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-23-105348">a 2022 study by Nowicki</a> for the US Government Accountability Office.</p><p><a href="https://nwlc.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/5.1web_Final_nwlc_DressCodeReport.pdf">A 2018 study by National Women’s Law Center</a> found that Black girls in Washington, D.C. were more likely to be targeted for dress code violations than white girls, and 20.8 times more likely to be suspended from school.</p><p>Dress codes often include adults taking measurements of students’ bodies or clothing, which can create uncomfortable conditions for girls in particular, said Nowicki.</p><p>“That can introduce some concern around safety when you have adults touching students,” she said.</p><p>Public schools tend to disproportionately punish students of color for a variety of reasons, including dress code violations, according to <a href="https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-18-258">another one of Nowicki’s reports</a>. The report found that 15.5% of public school students were Black, yet accounted for 39% of students suspended from school for all causes between 2013 and 2014.</p><p>Allen, the former Urban Prep official, said he also regrets maintaining other restrictive policies while he was principal, such as “silent hallways,” where students were not allowed to speak as they passed between classes.</p><p>“Nobody questioned me – as a matter of fact I was celebrated … because it showed I could control African American and Latino students,” he said. “But my job is to educate, not to be a prison ward.”</p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/26/cps-schools-dress-codes-disadvantaged-students-of-color/Adam Babetski, Hanin Najjar, Xiuyue YanYana Kunichoff2024-03-21T22:08:53+00:002024-03-22T16:14:01+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools plans to do away with a decade-old system in which school funding was largely based on student enrollment. Instead, starting next year, each school will get a set number of staff and additional funding based on need.</p><p>The change, announced Thursday at a Chicago Board of Education meeting, is part of a revamp of the district’s funding formula and delivers on a promise Mayor Brandon Johnson made <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/8/23591805/chicago-mayor-election-brandon-johnson-chicago-teachers-union-paul-vallas-lori-lightfoot/">during his mayoral campaign</a> to end student-based budgeting.</p><p>The district had already started to move away from a student-based approach in the previous two budget cycles, as it funded more positions – such as social workers – centrally. The current formula also accounts for student needs, such as how many students with disabilities need additional support.</p><p>Under the new formula, every school will have certain guaranteed staff, including an assistant principal, a counselor, and core classroom teachers. It would guarantee “a baseline level of resources for every school, regardless of enrollment,” then add more based on need, according to a district presentation.</p><p>Ralph Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, welcomed the move away from student-based budgeting, calling it an inequitable approach “because not every student has the same needs and doesn’t generate the same resources.”</p><p>It will, however, likely be challenging for the district to roll out a new funding model when schools already have “a certain funding expectation” they rely on to pay for contracts or programming. The district should try to hold schools harmless, meaning schools shouldn’t lose money under the new formula, Martire said.</p><p>In 2013, Chicago Public Schools switched from using a budgeting system that funded a set number of staff at each school to one that allocated money per student. As schools lost enrollment, their budgets often tightened. But budgets have also grown over the past few years with the influx of $2.4 billion, so far, in federal COVID relief funding.</p><p>The district’s enrollment <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest/">declined significantly over the past decade</a>, losing more than 75,000 students since 2013. Enrollment <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants/#:~:text=Enrollment%20in%20Chicago%20Public%20Schools,are%20registered%20at%20CPS%20schools.">stabilized this year</a> with about 323,000 students enrolled. At the same time, the <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/staffing-grows-in-chicago-public-schools-even-while-enrollment-drops/900e6d93-88e2-40ae-a83d-da7deee643fd">number of employees has grown</a>. <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/finance/employee-position-files/">District staffing data</a> shows CPS employed roughly 43,500 people as of the end December, up from around 37,000 as of December 2018.</p><p>District officials and school board members did not immediately share more details about the formula. It remains unclear exactly how funding will be allocated to campuses or how much autonomy a principal and Local School Council would have over their school’s budgets.</p><p>Schools will also receive discretionary funding, but it is not clear how that will be calculated.</p><p>A school’s need will be determined by something called the “opportunity index,” which considers several factors, such as the percentage of students with disabilities, those who are homeless, those learning English as a new language, those who come from low-income families, the number of teachers a school was able to retain, and whether a school is segregated by race or ethnicity. The index also considers data about the surrounding community and how a school has been funded historically.</p><p>“Maybe it’s just more striking because I’ve been here for a while now, but this is a major shift and it’s important,” said Elizabeth Todd-Breland, vice president of the Chicago Board of Education.</p><p>The funding formula shift comes as the district is also facing a projected $391 million deficit, as federal COVID relief funding runs out. That gap must be filled by revenue that has not yet been identified, Mike Sitkowski, the district’s budget director, told the board Thursday.</p><p>District officials are projecting an additional roughly $25 million in K-12 funding next year under the state’s Evidence-Based Funding formula, or EBF, which makes up the largest portion of state funding for CPS. That would bring total EBF funding for Chicago to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">nearly $1.8 billion</a>. State officials have gradually provided more funding to Illinois school districts under the formula, but CPS officials are advocating for a larger increase, arguing that the district is still owed more than $1 billion.</p><p>When accounting for all state funding, Illinois gave Chicago Public Schools nearly $2.5 billion for this current fiscal year, up from $1.5 billion in 2017, the year before the state reformed how it was funding school districts.</p><p>Even with the budget challenges, the district is working to keep several of the new investments it made using federal COVID dollars, including high-dosage tutoring, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/8/22566906/one-counselor-665-students-counselors-stretched-at-chicagos-majority-latino-schools/">additional counselors</a>, and extended learning time, such as the expansion of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/17/23603531/chicago-public-schools-summer-school-enrollment-attendance-covid-pandemic-recovery/">summer school</a>, as well as before- and after-school programming.</p><p>Officials defended those investments by highlighting a recent study that showed Chicago’s reading scores have bounced back from the pandemic at <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/19/chicago-public-schools-reading-scores-pandemic-recovery-growth/">a greater rate than most big school districts.</a></p><p>“It should not take a crisis for us to fully fund our schools,” Bogdana Chkoumbova, the district’s chief education officer, said during her presentation Thursday.</p><p>In an interview earlier this week, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said the district may also have to make “hard decisions” this year. That could include pausing “critical” repairs for buildings, he said.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-ending-student-based-budgeting/Reema AminStacey Rupolo2024-03-21T18:56:46+00:002024-03-21T18:56:46+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools may not provide busing next school year for general education students, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said during a board meeting Thursday.</p><p>Martinez shared the update one day before families of elementary school children will receive admissions offers to magnet and selective enrollment schools, which provided busing to eligible students until this school year. The district is currently providing busing to students with disabilities and those who are homeless.</p><p>As a result, the district is extending the deadline for accepting school offers by a week, to April 19 at 5 p.m., Martinez said.</p><p>Martinez said the district is working to find other options for transportation, such as adjusting bell times, but for now, the district cannot guarantee busing for next year. The district remains under a state-issued corrective action plan that requires CPS to shorten bus commute times for students with disabilities to less than an hour. A Chalkbeat analysis in December found that hundreds of routes were <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/">carrying fewer than 10 students</a>.</p><p>“We want to make sure families are aware of the challenges,” Martinez said during the meeting.</p><p>CPS <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20won't,rest%20of%20the%20school%20year&text=Sign%20up%20for%20Chalkbeat%20Chicago's,school%20year%2C%20officials%20said%20Thursday">canceled busing this year</a> for about 5,500 general education students as it worked to ensure students with disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs call for transportation were getting it. The state required CPS to take multiple corrective actions over the past two years to ensure students with disabilities entitled to busing were receiving it and that their ride times were not longer than an hour.</p><p>The district is also now taking state-mandated corrective action for how it assigns students with disabilities to schools. Those assignments are often far away from where they live.</p><p>The district’s “unwavering commitment” to provide legally required transportation to students with disabilities and those who are homeless “has, admittedly, presented challenges in accommodating general education students,” said Mary Fergus, a district spokesperson, in a statement. The district said it has not attracted the number of drivers it needs, despite efforts to hire more of them that include increasing pay.</p><p>The district said Thursday it’s currently busing 8,700 students. As of December, nearly all of the students who received busing were students with disabilities.</p><p>For general education students, the district is offering prepaid Ventra cards, a move that has drawn criticism from families who don’t have the flexibility to accompany young children on public transportation. Additionally, about 3,700 students with disabilities have opted for stipends of up to $500 to cover their transportation needs on their own, down from 4,000 students at the start of the year, according to the district.</p><p>Currently, about 130 students with disabilities are on bus routes longer than an hour, according to CPS. That’s significantly down from the 3,000 such students on long routes last year, but it is up from <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage/">47 students at the start of the school year.</a></p><p>Many families with general education students at magnet and selective enrollment schools have protested the district’s decision and have demanded a stipend to cover their transportation costs. Some families who have struggled to juggle transportation <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">have pulled their children out of magnet schools</a> and enrolled them somewhere closer to home.</p><p>This week, 27 Chicago alderpeople signed a letter urging the district to make several changes to transportation, including to provide stipends to families with general education students.</p><p>“We cannot afford to live in Lincoln Park or Lake View, so please include transportation,” Laura Leon, the grandmother of a student who lost busing this year, said during the board meeting.</p><p>On Thursday, a district spokesperson said stipends are “not sustainable” this year as the district focuses on students with disabilities and homeless children, and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/">faces a projected $391 million budget deficit</a> next year.</p><p>Advocates have also suggested regional transportation hubs in which students would join an existing route. However, that has been a challenge to implement, Fergus said. Hubs “would work for some but not all routes, thus not serving all families and schools in an equitable manner, but, again, we will continue to explore all options for the coming school year.”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/21/chicago-public-schools-may-not-have-busing-for-some-students/Reema AminLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2024-03-14T19:55:36+00:002024-03-18T17:49:32+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Derrianna Ford lived with her grandmother on Chicago’s north side growing up, but when the older woman lost her home, Ford and her siblings had to relocate to the south side for about a year.</p><p>They moved from the city’s West Ridge neighborhood to the South Side during her freshman year at Mather High School. Ford said she had to wake up at 4 a.m., take a bus to the southernmost stop on Chicago’s Red Line, ride almost the entire 26-mile route north, and then get on another bus in order to get to school by 8 a.m.</p><p>During the week, she would occasionally stay with a friend closer to school to avoid the long commute.</p><p>“This is so normal to us,” Ford said. “You don’t see yourself as struggling because you’re used to it. You don’t see it as homelessness.”</p><p>These days, Ford, now 20, is searching for a place of her own. But she has another goal. She’s knocking on doors to help pass a ballot referendum in Chicago on March 19 that advocates say could put a real dent in reducing homelessness.</p><p>Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/14/23640368/chicago-mayor-election-runoff-public-schools-brandon-johnson-teachers-union-paul-vallas/">teachers union organizer</a> and middle school teacher, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/8/23591805/chicago-mayor-election-brandon-johnson-chicago-teachers-union-paul-vallas-lori-lightfoot/">promised</a> in his <a href="https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/63508047b998ed2c03e7e37d/63e3c03ffccd4ae0bc384f1f_Plan%20for%20Stronger%20School%20Communities.pdf">education platform</a> and <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/content/dam/city/depts/mayor/TransitionReport/TransitionReport.07.2023.pdf">transition plan</a> to house the city’s homeless, with a focus on more than 20,000 students in Chicago Public Schools currently facing housing instability. In the last year, the number of CPS students in unstable housing situations — which can disrupt or derail students’ academic progress — has risen by roughly 50%.</p><p>To address that, Johnson and his allies are pushing to <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/bring-chicago-home-referendum-will-soon-go-to-chicago-voters/ae6bad0a-4f39-4f34-9a3e-b45aca421889">increase a real estate transfer tax on sales of property sales worth more than $1 million</a> to generate an estimated $100 million annually to fund services for the homeless and affordable housing.</p><p>Some progressive groups, including the Chicago Teachers Union which helped propel Johnson to office, have been advocating to increase the city’s real estate transfer tax to help the homeless since Rahm Emanuel was mayor. The effort — dubbed <a href="https://www.bringchicagohome.org/">Bring Chicago Home</a> — is something Johnson emphasized often on the campaign trail last year.</p><p>“The people of Chicago voted for me because I said that I’m going to address homelessness,” Johnson said Wednesday. “Bring Chicago Home is an opportunity to address homelessness.”</p><p>A document obtained by Chalkbeat outlining Johnson’s first-term goals suggested his administration hopes to help house 10,000 students and their families.</p><p>But opponents of the initiative challenged the ballot question’s legality in the courts, even asking <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/real-estate-groups-want-illinois-supreme-court-to-block-bring-chicago-home/3518d898-e14b-492f-a779-935407a3238d">the Illinois Supreme Court to block the measure</a>, which <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/03/13/illinois-supreme-court-declines-to-hear-bring-chicago-home-appeal-dealing-win-to-backers/">the court declined to do Wednesday</a>. Still, some groups, <a href="https://civicfed.org/sites/default/files/2024-03/BringChicagoHomePosition.pdf">including the nonpartisan budget watchdog Civic Federation</a>, are concerned the mayor and City Council have not been specific enough about how the money would be used.</p><p>“This is the mayor’s signature item,” said Ald. Brendan Reilly, who represents much of downtown and opposes the referendum because it lacks specifics and could have unintended consequences on rental property and commercial real estate. “He’s put a lot of political capital into it and right now the Chicago electorate gets to give him a report card. I think this is as much about the policy as it is about a commentary on his agenda.”</p><p>Chicago Public Schools would not directly get any of the estimated $100 million in revenue that a change to the real estate transfer tax would generate. CPS officials did not comment on the ballot initiative, but said the district will continue to support homeless students and protect their rights under federal law.</p><h2>More Chicago Public Schools students identified as homeless</h2><p>The number of students in temporary living situations enrolled at Chicago Public Schools has hovered around 5% for at least the last decade — <a href="https://nche.ed.gov/data-and-stats/">twice the national average</a>. Recent data indicates the problem is getting more acute as the numbers climb.</p><p>District data shared with Chalkbeat from the end of February indicated 21,855 students currently enrolled at CPS were considered Students in Temporary Living Situations, or STLS. That’s up from more than 14,317 such students last February. CPS data includes any student categorized this way at any time during the school year, and once a student is marked as such, they keep that status for the remainder of the year.</p><p>The vast majority — around 16,000 students — are classified as “doubled up,” meaning they are living with another family temporarily, like Ford was while a freshman in high school.</p><p>But the number of CPS students listed as living in a shelter, hotel or motel, or living out of a car, park, or other public place more than tripled in the last year — from about 2,000 last February to nearly 8,000 as of Feb. 29. The jump has coincided with the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/08/chicago-public-schools-sees-more-migrant-students/">ongoing influx of migrants arriving</a> from the southern border.</p><p>Chicago grappled with students facing homelessness or housing instability long before <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/4/21/21230502/for-homeless-students-school-provided-more-than-an-education-here-s-how-they-are-coping-now/">the COVID pandemic</a> and recent wave of migrants. A <a href="https://urbanlabs.uchicago.edu/attachments/2b784ae5f9d450e3e1496ee377dab30c129fe659/store/1b887d90ec3bf6d86e9ba1205b34c335bfae7e00893d9c1d89d392bca006/Known%2C+Valued%2C+Inspired_2021-08-04.pdf">2021 study</a> from the University of Chicago Inclusive Economy Lab analyzed nine years of district data between 2009 and 2018 and found that, over the course of their K-12 experience, about 13% of CPS students experienced housing instability.</p><p>The report noted that research shows homeless students <a href="https://nche.ed.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Homeless-Student-Absenteeism-in-America-2022.pdf">come to school less often</a>, <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/23360364?seq=1">have lower academic achievement</a>, and are <a href="https://publicintegrity.org/education/unhoused-and-undercounted/graduation-gap-hurting-homeless-students/">more likely to drop out</a>. At the same time, school districts like CPS “have limited capacity to connect students to housing supports.”</p><p>Cook County Commissioner Tara Stamps, the daughter of a <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/1996/08/29/marion-stamps-cabrini-activist/">longtime housing activist</a>, saw this “heartbreaking” reality up close during the more than two decades she spent as a classroom teacher, including working alongside Johnson at a school serving the Cabrini Green public housing complex.</p><p>One time, she said, a single mom of one of her students had no place to stay, so Stamps and the school’s security guard “called and called and called around” to help them find housing.</p><p>Stamps, who now also works for the Chicago Teachers Union, said past administrations have emphasized academic achievement and improving test scores without prioritizing the conditions students faced that affected those scores: “There is no [academic] progress … if a baby doesn’t know where they’re going to sleep at night, if they don’t know where they’re going to eat.”.</p><p>Federal law requires school districts to support students facing housing insecurity. Some districts also get money through competitive grants to support homeless students. Students identified as such are entitled to transportation, the right to enroll without a permanent address, and the right to continue attending the same school through the end of the academic year even if they move.</p><p>But few districts have been directly involved in finding families housing.</p><p>With the help of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2021/3/12/22328181/schools-stimulus-money-questions/">federal COVID money</a>, some schools across the country have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/12/21/schools-help-homeless-students-navigate-housing-challenges-with-covid-aid/">added staff to help families with housing</a>, others have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/12/18/homeless-children-family-homelessness-students-hotel-stays-covid-funding/">provided emergency hotel stays</a> and even <a href="https://hechingerreport.org/a-shelter-in-a-school-gym-for-students-experiencing-homelessness-paid-off-in-classrooms/">propped up shelters inside schools</a>.</p><p>Alyssa Phillips, an education attorney with the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, which has been advocating for Bring Chicago Home for several years, said the city needs a consistent revenue stream to tackle homelessness, along with input about what works from people experiencing homelessness and service providers.</p><p>“I think the most important thing is having that continuous funding,” Phillips said.</p><h2>Federal COVID money for homeless set to expire</h2><p>During the COVID pandemic, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2020/5/7/21250714/homeless-students-housing-instability-schools-on-the-front-lines/">housing instability rose</a> across the country. Homeless students were <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/4/21/21230502/for-homeless-students-school-provided-more-than-an-education-here-s-how-they-are-coping-now/">disconnected from schools</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2020/11/23/21611900/fewer-students-identified-as-homeless-during-pandemic/">districts struggled to identify</a> how many students were entitled to additional support and resources.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools received about $10.1 million in federal pandemic aid to serve homeless students, as part of roughly <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2021/4/26/22404530/states-help-homeless-students-focus-on-finding-kids/">$800 million distributed nationally to states and school districts</a>.</p><p>The city and school district <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2021/09/09/cps-provide-500-microgrants-students-families-need">created a program</a> to <a href="https://www.cps.edu/strategic-initiatives/support-grants/">give $500 stipends</a> to families in Students in Temporary Living Situations, using money from the initial 2020 wave of federal COVID relief dollars. It’s not clear how many families received the money, and district officials deferred to the city, which administered the program.</p><p>Ald. Maria Hadden, who represents Chicago’s north lakefront and is a supporter of the Bring Chicago Home initiative, said the city also used some of its share of federal COVID dollars to <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/doh/provdrs/renters/svcs/emergency-rental-assistance-program.html">provide rental assistance to thousands of people</a>. She recounted helping one family in her ward with a CPS student with epilepsy avoid an eviction because they were able to get six months of rental assistance.</p><p>But soon, federal COVID money is drying up. Expenditure data obtained by Chalkbeat shows most of the school district’s share of federal COVID money has been spent, primarily for school staff.</p><p>If the ballot initiative to raise the real estate transfer tax on property over a $1 million is approved, Hadden said, the city could revive, continue, or expand pandemic-era programs, like rental and mortgage assistance and rapid rehousing efforts for people living in tent encampments.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/vElzh85umT3pB_Jtag7RBBzljKs=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/3KYYU2KTXRDYHEEUHVFXL4ZQVQ.jpeg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson is greeted by supporters after he spoke while dozens rally for the Bring Chicago Home resolution outside the Thompson Center before a City Council meeting on Nov. 7, 2023." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson is greeted by supporters after he spoke while dozens rally for the Bring Chicago Home resolution outside the Thompson Center before a City Council meeting on Nov. 7, 2023.</figcaption></figure><h2>Political ‘slush fund’ or nimble revenue stream?</h2><p>Ford and others continue to knock on doors to garner support from <a href="https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/bring-chicago-home-what-you-need-to-know/">voters who will ultimately decide</a> whether Chicago should have a graduated real estate transfer tax.</p><p>Meanwhile, the Chicago Teachers Union is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/">gearing up for another round of contract negotiations</a> with a mayor more amenable to their views than his two predecessors. During <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2019/10/8/21109097/chicago-where-the-teachers-union-s-demands-extend-far-past-salary-is-the-latest-front-for-common-goo/">contract negotiations in 2019</a>, the union pushed to include provisions around affordable housing. But then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the union contract was “not the appropriate place for the City to legislate its affordable housing policy.”</p><p><a href="https://twitter.com/illinoispolicy/status/1764639350200148037?s=20">Leaked contract proposals</a> for upcoming contract talks include two focused on affordable housing: mortgage and rental assistance for teachers, and a vocational program that would have students build affordable housing.</p><p>Whatever happens with the teachers union contract, Johnson is <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/03/13/johnson-1-25b-bond-plan-moves-forward-alderman-says-mayor-dodging-spending-oversight/?lctg=64B2E5E66475255654D57401D7&utm_email=64B2E5E66475255654D57401D7&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=https%3a%2f%2fwww.chicagotribune.com%2f2024%2f03%2f13%2fjohnson-1-25b-bond-plan-moves-forward-alderman-says-mayor-dodging-spending-oversight%2f&utm_campaign=Afternoon-Briefing&utm_content=curated">forging ahead</a> with a plan to <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/johnson-pitches-125-billion-borrowing-plan/3b300404-a57d-43f4-8eb3-9b2140541460">borrow $1.25 billion dollars</a> to fund affordable housing and other development. On Wednesday, the mayor said he’ll soon name a new chief homelessness officer. And he directed the city’s Department of Family Support Services to work with CPS to match the district’s most vulnerable students with housing. The two agencies meet weekly, a spokesperson confirmed.</p><p>If voters approve the ballot initiative, the City Council would still need to pass an ordinance spelling out how to appropriate the revenue.</p><p>Reilly, the downtown alderman, said that “anyone who has a soul” cares about the homeless and wants to find solutions. But he worries that if the tax is approved, the revenue could quickly turn into a “slush fund” for political allies of whomever is mayor.</p><p>“There’s no guarantee that any of this money lands with helping the homeless people,” Reilly said. “It’s just going to be a big stack of money that a whole lot of people are gonna wanna fight over.”</p><p>Emma Tai, campaign director for the Bring Chicago Home Ballot Initiative, said the revenue would be legally dedicated to fund affordable housing and services for the homeless. A <a href="https://chicityclerk.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/HaddenPublicHearing_NoI_0.pdf">draft ordinance for implementing the change to the transfer tax</a> would create a 15-member panel appointed by the mayor and approved by City Council to make recommendations annually based on the “most pressing needs.”</p><p>“The idea is for the funds to be nimble,” Tai said, noting that during the height of the pandemic, there was a critical need to provide housing to domestic violence victims, whereas now that pandemic-era eviction moratoriums have ended, there’s a need for emergency rental assistance. The idea is that the panel’s recommendations would take such shifts into account.</p><p>For young people like Derrianna Ford, who experienced housing insecurity as a student and is searching for an affordable apartment now, the issue boils down to one thing: “stability.”</p><p><i>This story has been updated to more accurately characterize Tai’s comments about how housing needs have shifted in Chicago.</i></p><p><i>Chalkbeat reporter Reema Amin contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/14/chicago-students-in-unstable-housing-rise-as-mayor-seeks-real-estate-tax/Becky VeveaAlex Wroblewski / Block Club Chicago2024-03-12T21:27:04+00:002024-03-12T22:24:00+00:00<p><i>Sign up for</i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i> Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools will host a series of meetings over the next two weeks to hear about how it can improve the school experience for Black students.</p><p>The first of eight meetings is taking place at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at Uplift Community High School in Uptown.</p><p>The public meetings are part of the district’s new <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/five-year-plan/black-student-success-plan/">Black Student Success Working Group</a>, which CPS created in the fall to provide district leaders with recommendations for its upcoming “Black Student Success Plan.” That blueprint will then be folded into the district’s overall five-year strategic plan, which is expected to be finalized this summer.</p><p>CPS, like <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2023/10/4/23904023/nyc-test-scores-state-exam-math-reading-disparities/">other districts</a> <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/indiana/2021/11/9/22771268/indianapolis-education-workforce-black-hispanic-racial-equity-businesses-graduation-waivers/">across the</a> <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2024/02/05/learning-loss-study-finds-surprising-academic-recovery-growing-inequality/">nation</a>, has long reported <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/1/22555568/black-latino-boys-students-of-color-covid-education-learning/">academic disparities</a> between Black students and their peers, who make up 35% of the school system. In Chicago, 79.7% of Black students graduated on time last year, a rate that has gradually improved but is still behind the graduation rate for all other racial groups, according to district data. And 12.6% of Black students dropped out last year, the highest percentage for any racial group.</p><p>“We’re meeting as a working group because historically and today, Black students are situated furthest from opportunity,” said Fatima Cooke, CPS’s chief of equity, engagement and strategy.</p><p>“There is so much more work that still needs to be done to create those holistic systems that foster environments where Black students are empowered, that they feel seen, and that they have a sense of belonging.</p><p>The working group is made up of more than 60 members, including parents, students, educators, district employees and other community members, according to a CPS press release. The group has been meeting since December and has also convened focus groups of students, families, and staff, Cooke said.</p><p>While the working group has already drafted some recommendations that that focus on academics, the members don’t want to present those ideas to the community yet because they want “authentic” input, said Ayanna Clark, a CPS parent who is a member of the working group and also serves as assistant chief of staff to the City Council’s education committee under Ald. Jeanette Taylor.</p><p>“We don’t want to go into a space where we’re once again telling people what to think and giving them a set of options and telling them to choose from the set of options,” Clark said.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/07/illinois-lawmakers-vote-on-plan-for-chicago-elected-school-board/">State legislation</a> that paves the way for Chicago’s first elected school board creates a “Black Student Achievement Committee in response to advocacy from longtime community advocates. Cooke said this work “is parallel to that” and won’t “impede” a committee.</p><p>The district working group is focused on three priorities. These are Black students’ daily school experience; “adult capacity and continuous learning,” which focuses on workforce diversity and professional development to ensure teachers are meeting student needs; and how community organizations can support Black students’ needs that “can’t be met by the school-based budget,” said Christopher Shelton, a former science teacher who now works for the district’s central office and is helping to facilitate the group.</p><p>The group has also discussed ideas to better support Black students, including providing teachers with more professional development; focusing on conflict resolution practices; diversifying the teacher workforce; and to “leverage corporate, government, and community partnerships to bridge resource gap,” according to a presentation posted on the <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/13FZ4CR6ko_UDDs8qDphfSc9C8v4qQhwn/view">district’s website</a>.</p><h2>‘Focusing on what the students need’</h2><p>The group’s first meeting in December included a history of <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1S69uz3PX-vGYrYrVJFEMacDCfy5kENHN/view">how city policies have impacted Black families and students</a>. Some of the topics that members highlighted during that meeting were the <a href="https://www.archives.gov/research/african-americans/migrations/great-migration">Great Migration,</a> the <a href="https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/redlining">practice of redlining</a> that drove racial segregation, and the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/25/23806124/chicago-school-closings-2013-henson-elementary/" target="_blank">closing of 50 schools</a> — most of which were majority Black schools — under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel.</p><p>The group also reviewed data on academic disparities. At the beginning of this school year, 62% of Black students in grades kindergarten to second grade were behind one grade level in reading, while 66% were behind in math, according to iReady <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1S69uz3PX-vGYrYrVJFEMacDCfy5kENHN/view">data presented to the group</a> at the December meeting. That’s higher than most other racial groups except for Hispanic students, who are behind in both subjects at the same rates, and the 76% of Haiwaiian or Pacific Islander students who were behind in math.</p><p>Chicago’s Black students are the least likely to earn early college credit, which can help offset college costs. And outside of academics, the group looked at data showing that Black girls received more than 7 out of every 100 out-of-school suspensions last school year, while Black boys received more than 10 — the highest rates for any racial group, which grew from 2022.</p><p>One bright spot that the group has heard about: Over the past six years, more Black eighth graders have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/30/chicago-expands-access-to-middle-school-algebra/" target="_blank">enrolled at schools that offer algebra.</a></p><p>Then there are factors that can place an additional burden on Black students outside school buildings. For example, roughly 20% of Black students travel six or more miles to school compared with 11% of all students.</p><p>District officials have previously highlighted how students should not have to leave their neighborhoods to attend a school that fits their needs. In December, the Board of Education made waves when it announced that, as part of the creation of that strategic blueprint, it was planning to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">rethink the district’s school choice system and invest more in neighborhood schools</a>. That system includes schools that require an application, including charters, magnets, selective enrollment schools, and gifted programs.</p><p>Jahnae Roberts, a junior at Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts and a member of the working group, said she hears the need for more support around mental health and social emotional learning for Black students. Her peers have also shared with her that they don’t feel some teachers know how to work with or teach them.</p><p>The working group is “focusing on what the students need, not just education-wise, but what are they receiving at school that they might not receive at home to make it a better place for them?” Jahnae said.</p><p>The working group and the ensuing community meetings are one component of the district’s development of a new five-year strategic plan. The district hosted meetings over improving school facilities, and it will have more community meetings around the broader strategic plan.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/12/chicago-public-schools-wants-ideas-for-black-student-success/Reema AminJamie Kelter Davis for Chalkbeat2024-03-06T22:24:06+00:002024-03-06T22:24:06+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>When former Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey thinks about the dynamics between City Hall and the union, he flashes back to 2011. That’s when then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel defended a decision to cancel pay raises for teachers by saying they got other types of salary boosts, while <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/emanuel-kids-got-the-shaft-while-cps-teachers-got-raises/12032603-68a3-46d6-ad33-de1bcbb31d61">“our children got the shaft.”</a></p><p>The stinging quip illustrates how contentious contract negotiations and the relationship between the CTU and city officials were back then, ultimately leading to a weeklong teachers strike in 2012, said Sharkey, who currently sits on the union’s executive board.</p><p>After years of thorny relationships with district officials and mayors who did not align with the union on how to improve or support schools, the CTU is expected to begin bargaining this spring over a new contract with a district that now answers to Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former middle school teacher who rose to power as a CTU organizer.</p><p>“This is going to be a struggle because the culture in Chicago with the public schools and the teachers union is a culture of ‘No,’ and ‘Make me,’ and ‘OK,’” current CTU President Stacy Davis Gates said during a City Club speech Tuesday. “That’s different from what we are embarking on this time. We’re saying, ‘How might we?’ That’s a different question.”</p><p>In a statement, CPS spokesperson Damen Alexander said the district “looks forward to negotiating a fair contract that balances both the interests of the District’s hard-working educators and our duty to be fiscally responsible.”</p><p>A City Hall spokesperson declined to comment for this story.</p><p>The latest contract talks will come amid massive change for Chicago Public Schools. The first-ever school board elections will take place this fall and a 21-member partially elected board will take office next January. And bargaining will happen as the district attempts to fill a projected <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/#:~:text=The%20%24391%20million%20deficit%20is,aid%2C%20according%20to%20Sitkowski's%20presentation.">$391 million budget deficit</a> for next year, after four years of being buoyed by <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/3/16/22981374/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-principals-teachers-esser/">$2.8 billion in federal COVID relief dollars</a> that will soon run out.</p><p>Amid those challenges, the union has a strong ally in office.</p><p>The CTU was Johnson’s <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/31/23665374/chicago-mayors-race-campaign-donations-paul-vallas-brandon-johnson-teachers-union-betsy-devos/#:~:text=While%20a%20full%20accounting%20of,million%20since%20October%201%2C%202022">largest campaign donor</a>, and Davis Gates <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/4/23670272/chicago-mayor-2023-election-day-brandon-johnson-paul-vallas-runoff-schools-education-teachers-union/">introduced him</a> at his victory party.</p><p>Before the union propelled one of its own into the mayor’s office, the teachers union <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2021/04/02/pritzker-signs-bill-restoring-bargaining-rights-chicago-teachers">regained some bargaining power in 2021</a> when state legislators passed a law that restored its right to bargain over a broader set of issues — such as class size or the length of the school day — which had been restricted since 1995.</p><p>Still, Johnson signaled on the campaign trail that he would face “tough decisions” as mayor in negotiations with the CTU and wouldn’t be able to meet all of the union’s demands.</p><p>“So who better to deliver bad news to friends than a friend?” he said <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/politics/2023/3/18/23646277/johnson-vallas-exchange-jabs-over-schooling-budget-plans-at-heated-mayoral-forum">during a mayoral forum last year. </a></p><p>But the Johnson administration has already overseen policy changes the union counts as victories, including <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/8/23754587/chicago-public-schools-cps-teachers-paid-parental-leave-policy-changes-fmla/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20employees%20will,school%20systems%20across%20the%20country.">expanded parental leave</a> for CTU members, a promise to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/">remove school resource officers</a> by next school year, and a commitment to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">rethink school choice</a> policies.</p><p>The union’s House of Delegates, made up of hundreds of educators across the city, is scheduled to vote Wednesday on proposals crafted by the union’s various committees and developed as a response to what CTU members said they wanted to see in the next contract, according to the union.</p><p>Those proposals include a wide range of ideas, from pay raises and housing assistance for teachers to providing affordable housing and support for homeless students and their families.</p><p>While union officials acknowledge that things are different this time around, they have also emphasized that Johnson does not “have a magic wand” and pushed back against the idea that the union will get everything it asks for.</p><p>“I think it is ridiculous for anyone to think that the Black man on the fifth floor who comes from the progressive movement has fairy dust to sprinkle to end this quickly,” Davis Gates said in an interview with Chalkbeat last month. “There is an entire bureaucracy that has been hired and trained to tell the Chicago Teachers Union, ‘No.’”</p><p>Joe Ferguson, president of Civic Federation, a nonpartisan government watchdog group, said the mayor can’t meet all of the union’s demands because “the money isn’t there for it.” He said the public deserves to hear from the board and the mayor on where they’ll draw the line.</p><p>“Where those boundaries are, nobody can say,” Ferguson said.</p><h2>Past tensions between CTU and City Hall prompted strikes</h2><p>Over the past decade, contract negotiations between CPS and the CTU have resulted in two strikes that garnered national attention and inspired education labor fights around the country.</p><p>In 2012, after months of simmering disagreement and the city skipping a raise for teachers, the union <a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2012/09/10/160868924/chicago-teachers-on-strike-affecting-400-000-students">went on strike</a> for seven days at the start of the school year. Emanuel had pushed for a longer school day and embraced education reform ideas sweeping the country at the time, including a new way to evaluate teachers, which the union strongly opposed. He also refused to bargain over issues like class size, which at the time, state law did not require CPS to do.</p><p>An 11-day strike happened in 2019 under then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who the union had initially expected to align with more than Emanuel. The union was fighting for “common good” ideas that exceeded the scope of a teacher’s daily duties but were meant to improve students’ and families’ lives, such as ensuring that every school had a nurse, social worker, and librarian. The contract <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/10/31/21121050/wins-losses-and-painful-compromises-how-5-major-issues-in-chicago-s-teacher-strike-were-resolved/">ultimately locked in</a> some of those demands, as well as other wins, such as a $35 million fund to help reduce class sizes, but ultimately, the long strike left many teachers and families frustrated.</p><p>Those sour dynamics appear to be gone with Johnson’s election, said Robert Bruno, professor of labor and employment relations at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who co-wrote a book about CTU’s 2012 strike.</p><p>“Both parties believe that the other party understands and would be respectful of each other’s perspectives, which certainly wasn’t the case with the two previous mayors or even the previous CEOs — and we’ve gone through a few of them in Chicago,” he said.</p><p>Sharkey noted that Johnson’s priorities include many ideas the union agrees with and gave rise to, such as creating more <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union/">sustainable community schools</a> that provide wraparound services to families. His campaign platform also closely mirrored a document CTU first put out in 2012 titled “<a href="https://www.ctulocal1.org/reports/schools-chicagos-students-deserve-2/">The Schools Chicago’s Students Deserve</a>,” which was updated in 2018 and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/28/23375737/chicago-public-schools-teachers-union-covid-vaccine-mental-health-clinics/">most recently, in 2022</a>.</p><p>In general, the union has found that working with the district has been easier and more receptive since Johnson has taken office, according to Sharkey and Davis Gates.</p><p>But Davis Gates said she expects plenty of disagreement because she still feels that the agency has a bureaucracy “that cannot collaborate, that does not say yes, and has a difficult time understanding how to partner with us.”</p><h2>Union again pushing ‘common good’ demands</h2><p>The union is expected to push for cost-of-living raises that keep up with or exceed inflation and a more uniform overtime pay policy, according to <a href="https://x.com/illinoispolicy/status/1764639350200148037?s=20">proposals leaked to conservative think tank Illinois Policy Institute,</a> which a CTU spokesperson confirmed are real. The union also wants changes to the teacher evaluation process, including to codify that evaluations cannot be used for layoffs.</p><p>Proposals also include codifying health care policies, such as gender-affirming care, paid parental leave for employees, abortion coverage, and access to weight loss medical care, such as bariatric surgery.</p><p>In a more novel demand, the union will also push for housing assistance for its members, but the leaked proposal doesn’t include more details on how that would be done. Under Emanuel, the city offered assistance to police officers who wanted to buy homes in the areas they worked in, but few officers <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/housing-help-for-police-officers-left-on-the-table/fd5a0be7-059a-4de2-bf9a-75f7d51e369d">took advantage of the program.</a></p><p>In the classroom, the union is expected to renew a push to give elementary school teachers more preparation and collaboration time during the school day, Sharkey said. That was <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/10/30/21121042/here-s-the-full-tentative-agreement-that-chicago-s-teachers-union-delegates-have-approved/">a major demand in the 2019 contract</a> negotiations that largely did not come to fruition – and could again be difficult to secure this time around given the complicated logistics of tweaking a school day.</p><p>Union officials also expect proposals around bilingual services for students, including on attracting staff and expanding access to bilingual training for teachers, and retaining more special education staff. Both bilingual and special education <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/2/23583345/illinois-districts-teacher-substitute-shortages-funding/">are teacher shortage areas.</a></p><p>Davis Gates said they’ll continue demanding a librarian and nurse be staffed at every school.</p><p>Separately, union officials are expecting to push for more common good items, Davis Gates said. This will include creating a career and technical education program that would involve building houses for homeless students and their families, according to the leaked proposals.</p><p>Common good proposals will also include creating more sustainable community schools, Davis Gates said. The union is also interested in pushing for more “green” – or energy efficient – schools, such as by installing more solar panels. The district is already planning to purchase <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/09/chicago-public-schools-federal-grant-buys-electric-buses/">50 electric school buses</a>.</p><h2>CPS’s budget deficit could complicate negotiations</h2><p>Contract talks will begin as the district plans for its budget next year, which is projected to be $391 million in the hole. That could make costly union proposals a tough sell for the district.</p><p>District officials have for months publicized the budget deficit as federal COVID relief dollars run out. The district can either cut programming or find more money, which officials want to do by demanding more funding from the state.</p><p>Bruno, the labor expert, said it is a good sign the union agrees that Springfield should provide more money, because that means all negotiating parties agree on a solution to a significant problem.</p><p>However, Ferguson, from the Civic Federation, has little hope that more money is coming, in part because of what appears to be a <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/city-hall/2023/12/4/23982863/johnson-pritzker-conflict-migrants-dnc-democratic-convention-chicago-crime">“frayed” relationship</a> between City Hall and Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office. Pritzker recently proposed a budget that provides the same increase to K-12 funding <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/21/illinois-governor-pritzker-wants-universal-preschool-by-2027/">as last year.</a> And because CPS’s deficit is driven by the loss of COVID relief dollars, this year’s negotiations are “a fairly unique stew,” he said.</p><p>“There have been deficits being faced in the past [and] constraints on funding sources, but none that have come in this particular context, where not only is there a question of, where is more money coming from, but it also comes at a moment when we all know that recent existing streams are going to end,” Ferguson said. “And it has also been made abundantly clear by Springfield, by the governor, that there is no money to be gotten from the state.”</p><p>Union officials said they don’t yet know the price tag of their proposals, and they don’t expect to propose “money-saving” ideas. But Sharkey said they’ll have ideas on how the district can fund their proposals “and would expect the board to try to work with us on that.”</p><p>Asked how the district’s financial picture will impact its approach to negotiations, a CPS spokesperson pointed to the district’s budget deficit and said the district must be “fiscally responsible.”</p><p>Even with financial challenges, Sharkey said he expects the union and the district to work out disagreements in a more timely manner, unlike past negotiations that were “unproductive for months.”</p><p>Davis Gates said CTU continues to see its contract as “leverage for the common good,” has “high expectations” for upcoming negotiations, and is hoping for more agreement that will finally deliver on the CTU’s push to get schools more resources.</p><p>At the City Club speech this week, in a room full of business leaders, educators, and philanthropists, Davis Gates said she expects people to be skeptical that the mayor is going to “give CTU everything it’s asking for.”</p><p>“I hope he does,” she said.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/03/06/chicago-teachers-union-prepares-for-contract-negotiations/Reema AminJose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune via Getty Images2024-02-06T22:22:30+00:002024-02-29T15:59:34+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Less than a year from now, Chicago Public Schools will swear in its first elected school board members.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/4/23711633/chicago-school-board-of-education-elections-faq-guide/">Chicago’s elected school board is coming soon. Here’s what you need to know.</a></p><p>But even with a firm swearing-in date of Jan. 15, 2025, many unanswered questions still remain about the election on Nov. 5 that would usher in those new board members — and how the board will function once in place. State law says 10 members will be elected this year, but <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/09/lawmakers-disagree-on-chicagos-elected-school-board-transition/">lawmakers are debating</a> whether to elect all 21 now. (Mayor Brandon Johnson recently asked the legislature to <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2024/2/2/24059766/chicago-public-schools-elected-board-10-seats-hybrid-mayor-brandon-johnson-ctu-teachers-union">ensure that just half are elected this year</a>, the Sun-Times reported.)</p><p>The state legislature must also finalize district boundaries for school board members. Lawmakers <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/09/lawmakers-disagree-on-chicagos-elected-school-board-transition/">appear to have agreed</a> on a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers/">third draft of the map</a> last November.</p><p>Once members are sworn in next January, what’s next? How will the board work in comparison to the appointed board it will replace?</p><p>Chalkbeat Chicago wants to hear your questions about the upcoming school board elections and the elected school board. We’ll aim to answer your questions through our reporting as we follow campaigns and elections this year.</p><p>Answer the survey <a href="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfKGO66yc4DguOocChTkisF281IhzaeiNkDU-P4DlQ9nu4FvA/viewform?usp=sf_link">here</a> or fill it out below. We will not use your name in our reporting without your permission.</p><p><iframe src="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfKGO66yc4DguOocChTkisF281IhzaeiNkDU-P4DlQ9nu4FvA/viewform?embedded=true" style="width:100%; height:2500px;" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0">Loading…</iframe></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/06/chicago-school-board-of-education-election-questions/Reema AminMax Lubbers / Chalkbeat2024-02-28T22:35:00+00:002024-02-29T13:45:30+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Nicole Watson began checking the <a href="https://www.cps.edu/gocps/">GoCPS website</a> early in the morning on Feb. 23, in case Chicago Public Schools released the high school enrollment results early.</p><p>Results were scheduled to go online at 5 p.m. that day, but she couldn’t stop herself from looking at the website every hour.</p><p>After months of touring schools, preparing for the High School Admissions Test (HSAT), and ranking school choices last fall, her son Daniel Watson was about to find out where he would be spending the next four years of his academic career.</p><p>Daniel’s grades in seventh grade were stellar and he did well on the HSAT — both criteria considered in the application process, alongside their neighborhood’s “Tier,” which is based on socioeconomics, and the order in which they ranked their preferred high school programs. The Watsons felt good about his chances of getting accepted at his top choice schools, but Nicole Watson was still anxious.</p><p>When she checked the website shortly after 5 p.m. and saw that he’d been accepted to his top choice selective enrollment school, Gwendolyn Brooks College Prep, she had to hold back tears.</p><p>“I knew he could get in, that the possibility was real, but seeing it felt really nice,” she said, letting out an audible sigh. “Not quite overwhelming, but a relief.”</p><p>Some families also felt that relief last Friday evening as they saw their results; the uncertainty and stress of the high school enrollment process came to a successful end for them.</p><p>But others found disappointment and further uncertainty staring back at them from their screens after their children were denied or waitlisted at their top choice schools.</p><p>“It worked out for us. But I think about all of the kids and families who were disappointed because they didn’t get an offer, or they didn’t get their first choice,” said Watson. “Break that news to a kid, and then how do you continue to build their confidence and let them know ‘it’s not you, it’s the system?’”</p><p>Students who are unhappy with their offers can apply for Principal Discretion, which allows selective enrollment high school principals to fill seats outside of the regular selection process. Students can also appeal the decision, or they can wait a few more months to see if they get off the waitlists and into their top schools.</p><p>But, after the Board of Education’s December vote to develop a new <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">five-year strategic plan</a> that would, among other things, shift “from a model which emphasizes school choice to one that supports neighborhood schools,” even families whose eighth graders were offered seats at their top choice high schools have a lot to think about. Some worry about how much the plan will impact the schools they chose while others worry about how the process and the schools will be different for their younger kids.</p><p>Last year, Chalkbeat followed <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/how-students-feel-applying-to-high-school-in-chicago/">four families as they went through the CPS high school enrollment process</a>. Now, after results have been released, we’ve checked in with them to see how they fared, what they think of the process now that they’ve received results, and how they’re thinking about the future as the school choice system stands to undergo big changes.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/zP9t6doy6kAkeTM4xcreBND1Pb0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/ZJ4PQO2CWNDCLPLH2YT7O2JMCQ.jpg" alt="Daniel Watson leaned on art techniques to help manage his stress during the enrollment process. His mother Nicole Watson has helped him apply to career-focused high school programs in hopes of broadening his options." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Daniel Watson leaned on art techniques to help manage his stress during the enrollment process. His mother Nicole Watson has helped him apply to career-focused high school programs in hopes of broadening his options.</figcaption></figure><h2>Daniel Watson</h2><p>Daniel Watson played it cool when he learned he had an offer for a seat at his top choice schools, said his mother. But “he couldn’t stop smiling,” so she knows he was excited.</p><p>Nicole Watson said she wouldn’t do anything differently, but when the Watsons potentially have to go through the process again for her third grade son, she’ll do exactly what she did for Daniel and make sure that he is the one who picks his top choices.</p><p>“Because this is his high school experience,” she said. “I’m glad that I did that and that I just didn’t make the decision myself, that I really allowed it to be his decision.”</p><p>Now that the process is over, the Watsons will focus on the big transition to high school, but the fact that her youngest son’s turn will be coming up in the midst of the Board of Education’s next five-year strategic plan, which could de-emphasize school choice, is on her mind.</p><p>“That means that this particular kid potentially could be impacted by it,” she said. “We understand that strong neighborhood schools indicate a strong, thriving neighborhood. But at the same time, there’s nothing wrong with having a more rigorous academic setting for kids who need that.”</p><p>For Daniel and the Watsons, they’re already onto the next thing — thinking about college. Nicole Watson said that looking ahead she’s most excited about the potential for dual-credit and Advanced Placement classes for her son to help reduce the cost of college.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/D9VeN9FifscE0xNz52Il7h_kHL0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SAWYYTKIMFCH3PVZVQR3SQOUYU.jpg" alt="Katherine Athanasiou, left, and Chloe Athanasiou. Chloe Athanasiou hopes to one day help to repair some of the flaws in the youth mental health system. She hopes that attending a high school where she can take an Advanced Placement Psychology course will be a step towards that dream." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Katherine Athanasiou, left, and Chloe Athanasiou. Chloe Athanasiou hopes to one day help to repair some of the flaws in the youth mental health system. She hopes that attending a high school where she can take an Advanced Placement Psychology course will be a step towards that dream.</figcaption></figure><h2>Chloe Athanasiou</h2><p>When Chloe Athanasiou first began considering high schools, one of their goals was to attend a school where they knew people. For Chloe, that school was Walter Payton College Prep, her top choice.</p><p>So Chloe was relieved when they were offered a seat at Payton, but “it wasn’t happiness until I heard from friends that are important to me,” they said.</p><p>Chloe advises students going through the process this year not to worry about “what other people are doing. Worry about yourself first, then you can worry about others.”</p><p>Focusing so much on attending Payton to be with their friends, Chloe said, put even more pressure on getting into the school, “even if it wasn’t the best decision for me,” they said. “If I were to do it all again, I probably would have put a lot less pressure on myself.”</p><p>Even with their success in the process, Chloe still thinks the whole system needs to be changed.</p><p>“I think it’s a ridiculous amount of stress and pressure for you to deal with. And it’s not necessary,” they said. “We could figure out a different solution.”</p><p>Katherine Athanasiou, Chloe’s mother, also felt the pressure and said she would’ve tried to stay, or at least appear, calmer if she had to do it over again, which she will next year when her sixth grade son goes through it.</p><p>“But this is a really crazy process and I feel like we all have to show ourselves a little bit of grace,” said Katherine Athanasiou.</p><p>Even with the Board of Education’s move away from school choice to support neighborhood schools, Katherine Athanasiou said she’s still going to push her son to get straight A’s next year, because in the current process, “if you get a B in seventh grade, you’re pretty much locked out of selective enrollment schools,” she said.</p><p>But Chloe, who attended a neighborhood school through sixth grade before transferring to a selective enrollment elementary school, said they are hopeful that the board’s plan will improve things for everyone.</p><p>“It would have definitely changed my experience [at the neighborhood school] if more time and effort was put into making sure that those spaces were safe and that they were receiving a good amount of resources,” said Chloe. “I think it will, in the long term, benefit everyone.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/GCoOOJysQmsfca0DNmrmRQxPJJY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/NN56EKFN2JEUVDE6OONETDSLKU.jpg" alt="Selah Zayas, left, hoped to follow in her mother Andrea Zayas’ footsteps and attend her alma mater Lane Tech College Prep. Selah was accepted to one of her other top choices: Noble Street College Prep. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Selah Zayas, left, hoped to follow in her mother Andrea Zayas’ footsteps and attend her alma mater Lane Tech College Prep. Selah was accepted to one of her other top choices: Noble Street College Prep. </figcaption></figure><h2>Selah Zayas</h2><p>This year’s high school enrollment process has changed everything for the Zayas family.</p><p>Selah’s HSAT scores came back lower than expected. So they weren’t surprised when she didn’t get an offer at her top choice selective enrollment school, Lane Tech College Prep, but the family was disappointed.</p><p>The <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1whgNt2dzFeCJ6PURElRVbQAPs-9pzq2U/view">HSAT cut-off scores for Lane Tech</a> were among the top five highest this year. Students who scored below that cut-off score did not get offers.</p><p>The other schools with higher cut-off scores were Walter Payton, Whitney Young, Northside, and Jones College Prep, all of which consistently rank as the top high schools in Chicago in the <a href="https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/illinois">U.S. News & World Report rankings</a>.</p><p>Students rank selective enrollment schools and “choice” schools — charter schools, magnet programs, and other non-selective enrollment schools — separately. Selah did receive an offer at Noble Street College Prep, which she ranked as her number one “choice” school, largely because it is where her brother attends — so she could take advantage of sibling preference. Although she is disappointed, Selah said she still feels relieved to “have some clarity” about where she’s going in the fall.</p><p>“At least I didn’t have to go to my neighborhood school,” said Selah, but she envies the kids who had more choices. “I just wanted the same opportunity and selection.”</p><p>Her mother, on the other hand, is questioning everything.</p><p>Andrea Zayas teaches at a dual-language charter school where Selah and her two younger sons attend, and now she’s worried that the school did not adequately prepare her daughter for high school and also may be underpreparing her younger sons.</p><p>Specifically, she no longer trusts the school’s grading system.</p><p>A low grade is supposed to be a “red flag,” she said. But Selah had a 4.0 grade point average in seventh grade. So Andrea Zayas was surprised when her test scores were low.</p><p>“It definitely makes me reconsider the elementary school that they’re currently at,” she said. “It’s kind of like the fruit of my discontent over the years with their instruction.”</p><p>“My children have not been acknowledged as having challenges, because they were always compared to their peers versus being compared to a standard,” she said.</p><p>To help her daughter cope with the disappointment, Andrea Zayas has been reaffirming that Noble Street is a good school, but she is really rattled and is questioning not just her daughter’s elementary school preparation but the school choice system as a whole.</p><p>“I feel like sometimes there’s an illusion of choice. The true preparation doesn’t begin in middle school or eighth grade, the true preparation begins in kindergarten, when you choose a school that is going to prepare your child for their next step.”</p><p>“There’s all these schools,” she said. “But do you have access? There might be options, but without access, what do options matter? And access is the instruction that occurs every day. It’s the elementary school that you’re going to and what they are doing.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/xYz3zfKjT_DogG8KqBfOXkjwzCs=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SYNBV42PQFHJFGI5DSW2BIZE6A.jpg" alt="Elias Gray’s interest in engineering has him eyeing schools with strong STEM programs, but this process has directed his thoughts even further into the future as he considers college and beyond." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Elias Gray’s interest in engineering has him eyeing schools with strong STEM programs, but this process has directed his thoughts even further into the future as he considers college and beyond.</figcaption></figure><h2>Elias Gray</h2><p>“Three words,” said eighth grader Elias Gray three days after receiving enrollment results, “It’s. Finally. Over.”</p><p>Gray was genuinely surprised when he learned that he had an offer to attend Brooks College Prep, which was his top choice selective enrollment school. Although he did very well on the HSAT, he got a couple of B grades in seventh grade, bringing down his overall score on the high school enrollment rubric.</p><p>“I just feel excited because I never thought I’d be able to get into Brooks,” Elias said.</p><p>At school the Monday after results were released, however, his classmates had a mix of emotions, he said.</p><p>“Some are happy. Some are depressed because of how low they got.”</p><p>Either way, he said, he doesn’t know a single kid at his elementary school who will be attending the neighborhood school — Morgan Park High School.</p><p>“Our neighborhood school is like the final line, the last line,” said Elias. “It used to be good, but I don’t know what it is now.”</p><p>With the board’s plan to shift from school choice, Elias’s mother Shanya Gray wonders what that will mean for her younger son when he considers high schools.</p><p>“I just don’t want my kid to be a guinea pig,” she said.</p><p>But, she said, she feels much more prepared now that she’s gone through the process and understands how everything works. That’s the advice she has for families preparing for this year’s enrollment process — learn everything you can about the system.</p><p>“There’s no one place where you can go and get all the information, all the tips and so on,” she said. “There are these pieces that you have to find or have to know. The people who are most successful in this system are the ones who have cracked it. It isn’t necessarily the smartest. It isn’t necessarily the best. It’s the people who have cracked the system.”</p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/28/chicago-high-school-admissions-results/Crystal PaulStacey Rupolo2024-02-27T20:48:12+00:002024-02-27T20:48:12+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>During Femi Skanes’ 10 years as a Chicago principal, her boss was primarily a district official known as a network chief, she said. Alan Mather, who was also a principal for a decade, says he answered to then-Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan.</p><p>Many principals in Chicago also feel their Local School Council, or LSC, is a boss, while others view the council as more of a partner.</p><p>Principals are the leaders of their schools and staff. But in Chicago, multiple entities have power over principals. Later this year, Chicagoans will begin electing school board members, marking another shift in control over the city’s school system, which has been run by the mayor and a hand-picked CEO since 1995 and by a decentralized system of elected LSCs since 1988.</p><p>The city’s principals <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/12/23720406/chicago-public-schools-principals-union/">have unionized</a> in hopes of creating more job protections for a role that has seen <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/2/23/22947818/chicago-public-schools-teacher-principal-resignation-retirement-covid/">high turnover in recent years.</a></p><p>“Right now it’s kind of the wild wild west,” said Cynthia Barron, program coordinator and assistant professor with UIC’s Urban Education Leadership Program. “We’re kinda all waiting to see what’s going to happen.”</p><p>Barron, who spent more than three decades at CPS, said she doesn’t foresee immediate changes as a result of unionization or an elected school board. But, given that details around the future principals union contract and the elected school board are still being ironed out, she said there are “so many unknowns.”</p><h2>How Chicago principals ended up with many bosses</h2><p>Those unknowns — as the principals union takes root and the city moves to an elected school board — may disrupt an already complicated hierarchy.</p><p>As it stands now, a Chicago principal’s direct supervisor is the head of their network — the geographic area their school is organized under — and they are also accountable to their Local School Council, or LSC, a unique-to-Chicago elected body at most schools made up of parents, teachers, students, and community members, that can hire principals. Both have different hiring and firing powers.</p><p>Local School Councils were created in 1988 under the state’s Chicago School Reform Act, which gave LSCs the power to hire principals, approve school budgets, and approve annual school improvement plans.</p><p>The state amended that law in 1995 in an effort to centralize and improve the city’s school system. Lawmakers voted to keep LSCs but mandated training for them. The changes also gave the mayor sole authority over appointing the school board and replaced the superintendent title with “chief executive officer” — which stands today.</p><p>Today, LSCs can hire a principal and offer them a four-year contract. They can decide to keep the principal or fire them when their contract is up for renewal.</p><p>Network chiefs, on the other hand, work for the district and are tasked with ensuring that schools are complying with district policies and meeting academic and instructional goals, according to interviews with school leaders. Network chiefs answer to district leaders who report to the CEO, the Board of Education president, and the mayor. School leaders can also turn to their chiefs when they need extra support.</p><p>Both chiefs and LSCs use a similar rubric to evaluate principals annually. Only network chiefs can fire principals at any time for just cause.</p><p>Though LSCs hold power over principals, they do not have the same connection to district officials and the school board that a network chief does. It’s also not clear how they’ll interact with the school board once it expands and includes elected members.</p><p>Froy Jimenez is a member of the city’s Local School Council Advisory Board, which the state created to advise the Board of Education. Jimenez, a teacher and LSC member at Hancock College Preparatory High School, said he believes that LSCs and principals are “co-leaders” with the shared goal of supporting students.</p><p>“When we look at [the] budget, when we look at curriculum, when we look at any specific need of our school,” Jimenez said, “we’re doing it like we’re collaborating.”</p><h2>Principals balance multiple interests</h2><p>Principals’ responsibilities have grown over the past two decades and especially since the pandemic. Today, in addition to being instructional leaders, they’re expected to maintain relationships with students, families, staff, and sometimes elected officials, said Jasmine Thurmond, director of Local School Council principal support at CPS.</p><p>Some school leaders appreciate the variety of voices, but others often feel torn between conflicting demands.</p><p>One principal, who asked to remain anonymous in order to speak candidly, was asked by parents who attended LSC meetings to “publicize or encourage things like picketing or public demonstrations” over a district decision <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/">this year to suspend bus service</a> for 5,500 general education students, largely those at selective enrollment and gifted schools.</p><p>The principal agreed that the lack of busing has been challenging for many of her students. But she explained to parents and the LSC that publicly protesting the busing decision could put her in hot water with her other boss: the district.</p><p>“I have to figure out how I can advocate for the needs of my students and the needs of my families,” she told Chalkbeat, “but in a way that is very respectful of the people that are making these decisions — and that is a really difficult balance to strike.”</p><p>She has a good relationship with her LSC, which she said is “fair and reasonable” but also demanding. The council requests a lot of data and presentations. Meeting those needs and building personal relationships can be difficult along with all of her other responsibilities as a school leader, she said.</p><p>Ryan Belville, principal of McAuliffe Elementary School, said he has a close bond with his LSC that grew during the pandemic, when they worked hand-in-hand to make sure students and families had what they needed. Belville said the LSC has also held him accountable “to serve the school community effectively.”</p><p>“I really see why LSCs were developed and why they were put into action,” Belville said. “It’s something we’re very fortunate to have in Chicago.”</p><p>Sometimes the LSC wields its power, as Hancock College Preparatory High School did last year when it <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/09/08/john-hancock-college-prep-school-council-ripped-by-community-for-not-renewing-principals-contract/">decided not to renew its principal’s contract</a> in the face of student and teacher opposition.</p><p>But there are limits to an LSC’s authority.</p><p>At Jones College Prep, the LSC voted in 2022 to recommend the district fire then-principal Joseph Powers based on various allegations, including that he was ignoring problematic teachers and was not addressing issues around gender and racial discrimination. His contract was not up for renewal at the time, so the LSC could not fire him outright.</p><p>CEO Pedro Martinez <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2022/4/22/23037986/jones-college-prep-principal-joseph-powers-cps-public-school-cassie-creswell-local-school-council">declined to fire Powers,</a> saying there wasn’t sufficient evidence. Later that year, CPS put Powers on leave after a student dressed in a Nazi uniform was seen goose-stepping in the school’s Halloween parade. Powers then <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/06/28/jones-college-prep-principal-retires-after-cps-removed-him-from-school-last-year/">retired.</a></p><p>One Chicago elementary school principal, who asked to remain anonymous in order to speak candidly, said that contract renewal time can sometimes feel political. She must ensure that she’s keeping “these X number of people happy or satisfied” so that she can keep her job. At the same time, she wishes she had “more robust” feedback from her LSC, which she thinks is lacking at her school because people often don’t have time to participate — an issue <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board/">many LSCs</a> face.</p><p>On Chicago’s West Side, the LSC at Oscar DePriest Elementary School is working on ensuring enough participation on its council. It is also figuring out how it will work with the school’s new principal, whom it hired in November after interviews and a candidate forum, said Wallace Wilbourn, a teacher and LSC member.</p><p>He wants the LSC to have a greater voice on the school’s curriculum, its culture, and how it approaches assessments.</p><p>But he’s already seen that many people are trying to hold the principal accountable. Ever since being hired, Wilbourn said, his principal has had to spend a lot of time in meetings with the network.</p><h2>Network chiefs, top CPS officials hold power</h2><p>Barron, with UIC, said the relationship between a network chief and principal more closely resembles a typical employee-manager relationship: The two work together on a leadership plan that has goals to hit throughout the year.</p><p>Skanes, who was the <a href="https://www.beverlyreview.net/news/community_news/article_1442e8a6-9f05-11ec-a295-9351e3a377b2.html">principal of Morgan Park High School until 2022</a>, always viewed her network chief as her main supervisor. Feedback from the network chief was sometimes “attached to next steps, even in terms of promotion and opportunities,” she said.</p><p>The Chicago elementary school principal said the network chief is looking for things at the school that parents or community members may not have expertise in, such as best teaching practices, she said. Her LSC is more interested in school uniform policies or community events for families, she said.</p><p>“I think both of those perspectives are super important,” she said. “It shouldn’t be all one or another.”</p><p>A former Chicago principal, who asked to remain anonymous in order to speak candidly, said most of his network chiefs were good listeners and open to his ideas of how to improve his school. But he also felt pressure from the network to boost certain metrics, such as raising attendance by 10 percentage points, including by visiting student homes.</p><p>Those efforts resulted in a lot of pressure on staff and kids at his school who were already experiencing “so much trauma,” he said. After hitting the network’s goal, the principal eased up those efforts, saying it didn’t feel “worth the squeeze and my time and emotional energy.” Attendance rates dropped.</p><p>In that case, he decided to “take the heat from the network” because it meant more “sanity” for his school, he said.</p><p>A small share of schools have Appointed Local School Councils, or ALSCs, which don’t have the power to hire or fire principals but can provide nonbinding input on who they want to lead their schools. In those cases, the CEO gets final say on hiring a principal.</p><p>That was the case for Alan Mather, now the president of the Golden Apple Foundation. He became the principal of Lindblom Math and Science Academy in 2005 when the school was reopened as a selective enrollment high school. Mather was appointed by then-CEO Arne Duncan and the new school, which drew high-performing students from across the city, did not have an LSC. It wasn’t until his last year at Lindblom that an ALSC was formed, Mather said.</p><p>Mather considered Duncan to be his boss and was given a lot of autonomy to craft Lindblom’s culture and academics, such as adopting a year-round schedule during his time.</p><p>“It was the CEO who could have removed me at any time,” Mather said. “I was not working under a contract.”</p><h2>As principals unionize, a question about management</h2><p>When the Chicago Principals and Administrators Association, or CPAA, decided to unionize last year, its president Troy LaRaviere <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/12/23720406/chicago-public-schools-principals-union/">promised to fight</a> for better pay, less focus on bureaucratic tasks, more job security – including the ability to voice opinions publicly without punishment – and more due process when principals face accusations of misconduct.</p><p>LaRaviere did not respond to multiple requests for an interview for this story. Another CPAA representative declined to comment, including to confirm whether the union has started bargaining, and deferred to LaRaviere.</p><p>The unionization effort could impact how network chiefs discipline and evaluate principals. But huge questions remain.</p><p>“We don’t know what is to come,” said Thurmond, from the district. She added that they’re “looking forward to deepening the collaboration” with CPAA to make sure principals are supported, versus the district “being perceived as an enemy.”</p><p>Some observers have wondered how a union contract might impact the authority of a network chief or LSC. For instance, will it be tougher for the LSC not to renew a principal’s contract?</p><p>Changes to an LSC’s powers, however, would likely require a change to the state law that created them, said Barron, the expert from UIC.</p><p>For the district’s part, Thurmond said CPS will continue “empowering LSCs and ALSCs” so that “communities continue to have control of their schools.”</p><p>One former principal thinks an elected school board could make LSCs feel redundant or powerless, since board members will represent different parts of the city.</p><p>LSCs were created when there wasn’t an elected board and are seen by some as mini-school boards at individual schools. But come January 2025, the Chicago Board of Education will be made up of 10 members elected by their communities and 11 members appointed by the mayor.</p><p>“If we have an elected school board of 21 and you have them passing resolutions saying we’re doing this, this and this,” he wondered, “then what does the LSC have the autonomy to say and do if it’s all coming from downtown?”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/27/chicago-principals-answer-to-many-bosses/Reema AminBecky Vevea,Becky Vevea2024-02-27T00:15:00+00:002024-02-27T14:18:29+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>The small theater is achingly silent after Niya Kenny’s desperate shouts echo across the room.</p><p><i>Nobody’s gonna help her? You did this! You didn’t even have to call the administrator!</i></p><p>Projected on the back wall, footage of a 2015 incident Kenny witnessed at Spring Valley High School in Columbia, South Carolina plays: It shows a school resource officer violently throwing her classmate, the then-16-year-old student known only as Shakara, from her desk, then dragging her across the room.</p><p>Lights dim and Kenny fades back into darkness.</p><p>In the audience, students from Alcott College Prep High School in Roscoe Village are still and rapt. The restless energy and teenage snickering they’ve exhibited at other moments during the two-and-a-half-hour play suddenly quieted.</p><p>Kenny and Shakara’s story – portrayed by actors Adhana Reid and Mildred Marie Langford in a scene from TimeLine Theatre’s production of “Notes From the Field” by Anna Deavere Smith – struck close to home.</p><p>“Notes from the Field,” centered around police violence and the school-to-prison pipeline, is a particularly relevant subject for Chicago students right now. Chicago Public Schools are on the precipice of major change after the Chicago Board of Education<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/20/chicagos-school-board-wants-to-remove-police-from-all-schools-starting-next-school-year/"> voted last week to remove police officers from schools</a> by the start of next school year.</p><p>“Notes from the Field,” which runs through March 24 at TimeLine Theatre in Chicago’s Lakeview East neighborhood, examines the school-to-prison pipeline in the U.S. through a series of monologues with various people affected by and working to combat it. It was drawn from over 250 interviews Deavere conducted on the subject, including with well-known figures such as the late civil rights leader and U.S, Rep. John Lewis.</p><p>This particular matinee on Feb. 14 was a special performance just for students at Alcott College Prep as part of TimeLine Theatre’s Living History Education program.</p><p>The program sends theater artists into CPS classrooms and brings students to the theater to engage them in productions steeped in history and current events that touch their lives.</p><p>The play’s themes – discriminatory policing and violent encounters with police – are all too familiar for Alcott students and faculty, who say they still occur in students’ communities outside of school.</p><p>In the 19th police district where Alcott is located, Black residents made up 54% of the subjects of police use of force incidents since 2019, according to the <a href="https://home.chicagopolice.org/statistics-data/data-dashboards/use-of-force-dashboard/">CPD Use of Force Dashboard</a>. Citywide that percentage is 74.48%, while Black residents are about 28.8% of the Chicago population, according to <a href="https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/chicagocityillinois/PST045223">2022 U.S. Census Bureau estimates</a>.</p><p>As Alcott junior Leo Sepulveda said in a post-show discussion at his school, “It still goes on. On your own time, out in the neighborhood.”</p><p>And as some Alcott students learned from “Notes from the Field,” such experiences can affect students’ futures whether they happen in school or in their communities.</p><h2>Connecting theater to the classroom, students’ lives</h2><p>Seeing the play is only one part of the Living History program. Before the students are ready to watch the story unfold on stage, they spend six to 13 sessions working with Living History teaching artists – learning more about the play and the social context around it and even acting out scenes from the play.</p><p>Then they attend a special matinee at the theater, followed by a debrief with the actors back in their classrooms the next day.</p><p>With a play like “Notes,” dealing with something so close to the students’ experiences, the teaching artists make sure to help students process the subject matter and express their feelings about it.</p><p>“It allows you to sit in a space and note that it is not your fault. It is the fault of the system failing people,’ said Living History teaching artist Marcus D. Moore. “It takes that burden off of them, because they are carrying already so much in the world.”</p><p>Alcott students understand violence at the hands of police officers “because they live it in their neighborhoods,” said Beth Pfeiffer, Sepulveda’s teacher at Alcott who coordinated the workshops with TimeLine.</p><p>And across Chicago, some students live it at school.</p><p>Although the number of calls to police in CPS have decreased in the past decade, police are still called on Black students in schools at a disproportionate rate, despite the fact that Black students do not commit crimes at a higher rate. In the 2022-23 school year, 68% of the more than 1,300 CPS students who received police notifications were Black, according to district data.</p><p><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2020/08/21/73-of-students-arrested-at-chicago-schools-are-black-but-the-majority-of-schools-voted-to-keep-police/">Black students also still make up a disproportionate number </a>of in-school arrests, which have <a href="https://www.cps.edu/press-releases/chicago-public-schools-proposes-progressive-reforms-to-school-resource-officer-sro-program-based-on-feedback/">decreased overall by approximately 80%</a> districtwide between 2012 and 2019, according to an August 2020 press release from CPS.</p><p>That is part of why Pfeiffer, who has coordinated with TimeLine’s Living History program for 15 years, decided the 80 students in her three English and general education classes needed to see “Notes from the Field.”</p><p>So, the first week of February, TimeLine teaching artists came to Alcott and took over Pfeiffer’s classes. Students did breathing and movement exercises, studied some of the monologues from “Notes,” and drew connections between the play and their own lives.</p><p>On day three of the six-session “residency,” as TimeLine calls it, the students stood in a tight misshapen circle crowded by the desks that had been pushed against the walls. Three teaching artists led them through an acting exercise in which they had to try to physically embody some of the characters from the play.</p><p>As they went around the room, most of the students were uncomfortable and shyly shrugged or fidgeted with the slips of paper with their monologues on them.</p><p>When they split into groups to practice stepping into their characters’ shoes and recite their lines, things livened up. Junior Felipe D. laughed as he lounged on a table, stood on a chair, and tried out increasingly unlikely postures to embody former NAACP Legal Defense President Sherrilyn Ifill.</p><p>When teaching artist and TimeLine company member Charles Andrew Gardner approached, he didn’t shut down the students’ antics. Instead he rolled with it, encouraging them to examine why they chose those postures.</p><p>“It’s very student-led,” he said after the class. “Like, what environment would you all work in best to do your best work? And then we just match that energy.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/jUBhwq9dr7YDyIL5Qan2og5qonw=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SGKHTJCVHNDR7M75RFSJGM2BHY.jpg" alt="Felipe D. tries out an exaggerated posture and gesture to embody the character in his assigned monologue on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024 at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Felipe D. tries out an exaggerated posture and gesture to embody the character in his assigned monologue on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024 at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago.</figcaption></figure><p>A cluster of young women across the room giggled through their lines but also tried out gestures of support to portray their characters such as holding hands.</p><p>Nearby, another group was deadly serious as they rehearsed at a makeshift podium.</p><p>The students’ different approaches were welcomed by the three facilitators who floated around the room offering tips and adapting to each group’s different vibe.</p><p>It is, after all, uncomfortable work trying to put yourself in someone else’s shoes, said Gardner.</p><p>“One of the main transferable skills of theater is empathy,” he said. “It’s literally ‘how can I look at this script and try to understand this person who they may not share anything with?’”</p><p>But it’s not just about empathy for the characters, it’s about empathy for themselves and each other too, he said.</p><p>“I think that that’s the arts job to say, ‘We’re listening. So express yourself,’” he said</p><p>The Alcott students began their dive into “Notes” just a couple of weeks after <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/02/06/after-4-students-killed-outside-schools-anti-violence-organizers-say-chicago-kids-need-a-lifeline/">four students in Chicago were shot and killed outside their schools</a>. The shootings didn’t come up specifically during the residency, but Pfeiffer said students have brought it up separately in class.</p><p>“We’re fools if we don’t think that they’re absorbing what’s going on,” said teaching artist Lexi Saunders.</p><h2>‘They see it in their own lives’</h2><p>Pfeiffer doesn’t shy away from difficult subjects. In 2018, for example, she signed her AP Psychology students up for a residency with TimeLine built around a play called “Boy,” which took on topics such as gender identity and surgical transition.</p><p>Aside from programming with TimeLine, she has also introduced her students to Bryan Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, a Montgomery, Alabama-based nonprofit that offers legal representation to wrongly-convicted prisoners, and she’s brought police officers into the classroom to shed light on their experiences.</p><p>“I like to take more risks than other teachers,” she said. “Sometimes I don’t think they are ready. But I want to get myself ready and get them ready, so they can get as much out of it as they can. And if you wait, we may never be ready.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/07X0VwKc1h_rEQuM5q99qqWKMBs=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/AFL7XEAKSRAQLHHRT3NUSDKZSI.jpg" alt="Beth Pfeiffer sits with her students during a post-show talk with “Notes from the Field’ actress Shariba Rivers at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Beth Pfeiffer sits with her students during a post-show talk with “Notes from the Field’ actress Shariba Rivers at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago.</figcaption></figure><p>When she signed her students up for “Notes,” she knew a two-and-a-half hour play full of monologues would be a challenge for restless high schoolers.</p><p>But the 11th graders in her classes have grown up amid high-profile police brutality cases, school shootings, nationwide protests for racial justice, and, of course, a pandemic.</p><p>“I think when they get it, they get it all too well, and they see it in their own lives,” said Pfeiffer.</p><p>When the house lights came back on after the matinee performance on Valentine’s Day and the play ended, one of TimeLine’s Living History teaching artists posed a question to the crowd of students: “What stood out to you?”</p><p>Without a beat, the first answer was shouted from the audience: “The girl who was thrown across the room.”</p><p>In written post-show reactions the next day, they reflected powerful insights and emotional connections to the play.</p><p>“The childhood a child has and the treatment they receive really affects them in their adulthood. It’s a full cycle that continues to happen,” wrote 11th grader Julia R.</p><p>Felipe D. wrote that he was particularly moved by the scene with Niya Kenny and Shakara.</p><p>“It seemed so deep and still sticks to my head,” he wrote.</p><p>“My takeaway was the theme of hate coming from police, not racism, but hate. That was a quote I remember. In almost each scene it was either about hate or the reaction to hate,” wrote Ismail C.</p><p>Two days after the Alcott students saw the play, two “Notes” actors visited Pfeiffer’s classes to debrief with the students and answer questions.</p><p>During the discussion, student Sammy C. noted how the play reminded her of Laquan McDonald, the 17-year-old Chicago high school student who was shot 16 times in the back by a Chicago police officer in 2014. She learned about McDonald last year when the class read “The Hate U Give” by Angie Thomas and then researched police brutality cases and shared what they learned with their peers.</p><p>These reflections demonstrate everything the teaching artists and Pfeiffer hoped the students would get out of the experience – empathy, emotional resonance, and greater understanding of the school-to-prison pipeline.</p><p>It’s Pfeiffer’s plan to take it a step further and turn those reactions into action.</p><p>“It’s very frustrating if you don’t focus on any glimmers of hope,” she said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/b0c6YfFgqXN83ogXhJYXTx1Y4QQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/Q3ROSP5EDNBOTK7QTO4SXRQOQQ.jpg" alt="Actress and instructional coach Shariba Rivers talks to Alcott students two days after acting in a special matinee performance of “Notes from the Field" at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Actress and instructional coach Shariba Rivers talks to Alcott students two days after acting in a special matinee performance of “Notes from the Field" at Alcott College Prep High School in Chicago.</figcaption></figure><p>The energy from the students crackled to life when actor Shariba Rivers let some of her anger and raw emotion break through as she talked about the scene of the play that moved her most – Kevin Moore’s monologue about filming the brutal 2015 beating of Freddie Gray, a Baltimore man who died of a severe spinal cord injury sustained while in police custody.</p><p>Rivers, who spent almost 30 years as an educator in Chicago and is now an instructional coach on the South Side, recited his lines: “‘Can you crush your own larynx? Can you sever your own spine? Can you do this to yourself?’”</p><p>“The first time I heard the story that way, I was gutted,” Rivers said, before settling into a calm anger.</p><p>“He did not deserve to be treated like that,” she said. Nods and mumbles of agreement arced around the classroom. “He still deserved a day in court, he needed to show up alive. It doesn’t matter if you’re doing something wrong. You still should be allowed to show up alive in court.”</p><p>The school bell rang, cutting her off mid-thought. But the students paused their usual rush of packing up — and gave Rivers hearty applause.</p><p><i>Correction: A previous version of this story misidentified Living History teaching artist Marcus D. Moore.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/27/chicago-public-schools-students-see-school-to-prison-pipeline-through-theater/Crystal PaulCrystal Paul2024-02-23T03:12:51+00:002024-02-23T03:12:51+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy.</i></p><p>During a meeting in which tempers flared and community members argued over the merits of school police, Chicago’s Board of Education voted Thursday to eliminate all school police officers by the next academic year and create a new “holistic” school safety policy.</p><p>The board <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/20/chicagos-school-board-wants-to-remove-police-from-all-schools-starting-next-school-year/">approved a resolution</a> that directs Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez to draft a school safety policy by June 27 that explicitly bans school resource officers, or SROs, from campuses. These officers are trained and employed by the Chicago Police Department, but the district covers their salaries.</p><p>The district’s new school safety policy must instead emphasize more “holistic” approaches to student discipline, such as restorative justice practices, the resolution said. Such practices, which focus on conflict resolution instead of punishment, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">have replaced sworn officers</a> in some schools over the past few years. The resolution approved Thursday will directly impact the 39 high schools that currently have a total of 57 SROs.</p><p>The board’s decision — which drew dozens of public speakers, including 20 elected officials — addresses a yearslong grassroots movement that has pushed the district to remove SROs from school campuses. Advocates instead want the district to spend more money on social workers, mental health resources, and practices focusing on conflict resolution. A recent study found that schools implementing restorative justice practices <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">saw drops in student arrests. </a>Students also reported feeling more safe.</p><p>But the decision drew significant pushback as well, including from several city aldermen, who argued that schools in their communities feel safer when officers are on campus.</p><p>At one point during Thursday’s meeting, former school board member and community activist Dwayne Truss sparred with audience members over his criticism of the board’s decision — causing advocates to chant “SROs, we want you out.” Truss was on the <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/local-school-councils/school-resource-officer-program-information/">board when it decided to let Local School Councils vote</a> on whether to keep their officers. He argued that was the most “democratic” solution at the time and still is today.</p><p>Truss, who is Black, accused the Board of Education of “telling Black folks, ‘We know what’s best for you.’”</p><p>In defending the board’s decision, Board Vice President Elizabeth Todd-Breland said it was fulfilling a 2020 promise from the previous board, which committed to phasing SROs out of schools. The board’s goal is to reduce disparities among those who are disciplined at school, she said. Calls to police disproportionately involve students with disabilities and Black students, who are also disproportionately suspended, compared to their peers, according to the resolution.</p><p>The board has discussed the policy change for several months with the district and Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office, Todd-Breland said, noting that it’s “about more than just SROs.”</p><p>“This is a shift, and this shift to a model of holistic safety is really necessary for all of our schools, not just schools that currently have SROs,” Todd-Breland said. “Continuing the district’s progress in moving from a more punitive approach to a holistic, healing centered approach is evidence-based work.”</p><p>Board member Rudy Lozano Jr. said the district will still rely on the Chicago Police Department to help with arrival and dismissal and to respond to emergencies. In response to criticism about pulling power away from LSCs, board member Tanya D. Woods said state law requires the district to “deal with discipline disparities.”</p><p>Makayla Acevedo, a junior at Hyde Park Academy and a member of Southside Together Organizing for Power, or STOP, said officers at her school don’t stop the many fights that break out. She wants to see the funding for SRO salaries go toward more career programming at her school, such as for nursing training, as well as restorative justice programming.</p><p>“I just feel like we just really need those funds, to invest all of that money to get the programs in order for all students … to be successful in life and reach their dreams,” Acevedo said.</p><p>The district has spent nearly $4 million on “alternative safety interventions,” such as restorative justice, at 14 schools where SROs have already been removed, according to the resolution.</p><p>After the meeting, Martinez said, “We actually have not paid for any of these services for CPD for the last three years. We weren’t even going to pay for this year.” A district spokesperson later confirmed that although money was allocated, no payments have been made to the police department since 2020, when <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/8/6/21357674/schools-will-not-be-charged-for-police-during-remote-learning/">schools went remote during the COVID-19 pandemic.</a></p><h2>Longstanding tensions come to a head</h2><p>The movement to remove SROs grew in 2019, when the Chicago Police Department was placed under a federal consent decree. The next year, after protests over Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s murder of George Floyd, the district asked LSCs to vote on <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/7/16/21327527/chicago-tasked-local-school-councils-with-voting-on-police-in-schools-but-some-arent-following-rules/">whether they wanted to keep SROs.</a></p><p>But the resolution has exposed long-simmering tensions.</p><p>At Thursday’s meeting, arguments erupted between Truss and audience members from organizations that have long pushed for the district to remove SROs. Those organizations include Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, Good Kids Mad City, and STOP.</p><p>As they yelled at each other, the board called a brief recess and cleared the room for several minutes.</p><p>Truss cited recent shootings outside three Chicago schools that left four students dead, and argued that some communities may feel the need to keep police at schools in order to feel safe. That sentiment was echoed by several other speakers.</p><p>“The fact is that Black folks are tired of getting disrespected by folks who don’t live in our community,” said Truss.</p><p>Ald. Monique Scott, whose 24th Ward represents North Lawndale on the West Side, said the decision needs to be made by local communities. Scott’s brother and predecessor, Michael Scott Jr., <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/7/15/23220813/chicago-public-schools-mayor-lori-lightfoot-board-of-education/">replaced Truss on the school board in 2022</a> and served until the end of former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s term last summer.</p><p>“Every school doesn’t have to have them, but some schools need them and I think that it should be based on the LSC to determine that,” Scott said.</p><p>The district’s Local School Council Advisory Board, charged with advising the Board of Education, “overwhelmingly” approved a resolution Feb. 12 that called for leaving decisions about campus police to LSCs, according to Froy Jimenez, a member of the advisory board and a teacher at John Hancock College Preparatory High School.</p><p>The advisory board members were concerned that stripping LSCs of that power chips away their right to make decisions about their schools, Jimenez said. Jimenez noted that his own LSC voted to get rid of the school’s campus police. However, Jimenez said he represents a part of the city “where some schools would want to have [them].”</p><p>The board’s decision was celebrated by several advocacy organizations that have rallied for years to stop staffing police in schools, as well as the City Council’s progressive caucus. Several speakers asked the district to spend more money on social workers and boost restorative justice.</p><p>Kennedy Bartley, executive director of United Working Families, a progressive political organization, credited Thursday’s vote to the years of advocacy from students and educators, which “built enough political power to elect a mayor with a mandate for transformative change.”</p><p>The Chicago Teachers Union, which also supports the change, has submitted a request with the district to bargain over the new school safety policy, CTU Vice President Jackson Potter told the board Thursday. Potter said the union wants several things to be considered in the new policy, including more “trauma supports” and training on restorative practices.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/23/chicago-board-of-education-votes-out-police-officers/Reema AminTrey Arline / Block Club Chicago2024-02-20T19:32:03+00:002024-02-21T18:47:38+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>The Chicago Board of Education wants to remove police officers from schools starting next school year, according to a resolution included in the agenda for Thursday’s board meeting.</p><p>The resolution directs CPS CEO Pedro Martinez to come up with a new policy by June 27 that would introduce a “holistic approach to school safety” at district schools, such as implementing restorative justice practices, which <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">focus on resolving a conflict instead of punishment</a>.</p><p>That policy “must make explicit that the use of [school resource officers] within District schools will end by the start of the 2024-2025 school year,” the <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/february_22_2024_public_agenda_to_post.pdf">resolution said</a>. (Find the resolution on page 15 of your PDF reader.)</p><p>The resolution nods to the district’s shift in student discipline to more restorative practices, which has led to “significant progress” in <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">reducing suspensions</a>. However, the resolution notes that disparities in suspension rates are disproportionately higher for students with disabilities and Black students, compared to their Hispanic and white peers.</p><p>Most CPS schools don’t have school resource officers who, unlike security guards, are trained and employed by the Chicago Police Department, but are stationed in schools full-time. If passed, the resolution would directly impact 39 schools – all high schools – that have a total of 57 officers on campus, according to the resolution and district officials. Fourteen schools voted to remove a total of 28 officers and instead received a total of $3.9 million for “alternative safety interventions,” including for restorative justice and social service coordinators, the resolution said. CPS also employs more than 1,400 security guards at schools, according to staffing data from the end of December 2023.</p><p>Schools that have voted to keep their officers have cited <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2020/07/15/school-where-cops-were-caught-on-video-dragging-student-down-stairs-votes-to-keeps-its-officers/">a variety of reasons for doing so</a>, including that in some cases, school resource officers have strong relationships with students. Opponents of police on campus argue that the presence of officers can lead to more punitive student discipline and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/16/23308391/chicago-public-schools-police-school-resource-officers-restorative-justice-whole-school-safety-plan/">can leave children feeling unsafe.</a></p><p>Last month, <a href="https://nadignewspapers.com/school-board-reportedly-looking-into-eliminating-on-campus-police-at-all-chicago-high-schools-taking-decision-away-from-lscs/">Nadig Newspapers</a> and <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/chicago-board-of-education-is-considering-removing-cops-from-schools/809ab8f6-14b6-4a62-8594-d533ebe41f08">WBEZ</a> reported that the board was planning to remove Chicago Police Department officers from schools. Mayor Brandon Johnson later confirmed to WBEZ that <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/chicago-mayor-backs-removing-police-from-schools/30968d71-0578-48a8-9bba-27562ec2f34b">he’s in support of such a plan.</a></p><p>The resolution, which the board is slated to vote on Thursday, represents Johnson’s hand-picked school board’s clearest statements on removing police officers from Chicago schools. As a mayoral candidate, Johnson had said police officers “<a href="https://elections.suntimes.com/questionnaire/">have no place in schools</a>,” WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times reported. However, last year, he told the outlet <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/candidate-brandon-johnson-wanted-police-out-of-schools-mayor-johnson-says-otherwise/9bd04cad-9323-432f-825d-a3c08ad2b77a">he would leave the decision up to LSCs</a>.</p><p>The resolution said the district would continue to partner with the Chicago Police Department, but district officials did not immediately explain what that relationship would look like.</p><p>Having police stationed inside Chicago schools came under scrutiny in 2019 as part of the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/5/31/21108240/by-next-school-year-federal-police-monitor-expects-chicago-to-revamp-school-police-program/">police department’s federal consent decree</a>. In 2020, amid protests and the racial reckoning that swept the country after George Floyd’s murder at the hands of Minneapolis police, Chicago schools <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/21/22587410/majority-of-chicago-high-schools-will-reduce-police-presence-on-campus-this-year/">began voting one-by-one</a> on whether or not to keep their school resource officers.</p><p>Driven by similar issues, Denver Public Schools removed police from schools in 2020 and 2021, but its work to implement a new school safety policy, as Chicago’s board is seeking, was derailed by the pandemic. The Denver school board <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/colorado/2023/6/15/23763041/police-denver-schools-sros-return-board-vote-school-safety-east-high-shooting/#:~:text=Board%20President%20X%C3%B3chitl%20%E2%80%9CSochi%E2%80%9D%20Gayt%C3%A1n,I%20think%20it's%20worth%20it.%E2%80%9D">reversed its decision last June</a> after a shooting inside a high school.</p><p>In 2022, the Chicago school board reduced its contract with the police department from more than $30 million to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/7/27/23281617/chicago-public-schools-board-of-education-police-officers-whole-school-comprehensive-safety-plan/">roughly $10 million</a> and allocated money for schools to implement alternatives to police, such as restorative justice counselors. The contract was <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/28/23777534/chicago-public-schools-police-contract-whole-school-safety/">renewed last summer</a> for $10.3 million and about $4 million to improve school climate was separately allocated to schools that had removed their officers.</p><p>Research from the University of Chicago <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/">released last fall found an improvement in student engagement and a decline in suspensions</a> at schools that had implemented restorative practices in recent years.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/20/chicagos-school-board-wants-to-remove-police-from-all-schools-starting-next-school-year/Reema Amin, Becky VeveaColin Boyle / Block Club Chicago2024-02-19T11:00:00+00:002024-02-19T14:25:07+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools students’ reading scores are recovering faster since the pandemic than most school districts across the country, according to a <a href="https://educationrecoveryscorecard.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/ERS-Report-Final-1.31.pdf">new national report</a>.</p><p>The district’s surprising rebound, <a href="https://educationrecoveryscorecard.org/">documented</a> by researchers at Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University and The Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University, also found the state of Illinois led the nation in reading growth between 2022 and 2023 and is one of just four states to return to pre-pandemic achievement levels.</p><p>However, the bounce back has not been as strong in math. Both Illinois and Chicago were in the middle of the pack for math score recovery compared to other states and districts.</p><p>Chicago Chief Education Officer Bogdana Chkoumbova attributed the growth to how the district spent its federal COVID money.</p><p>“The federal pandemic aid actually has allowed us to invest fully in the day-to-day what I call the bread and butter of education,” Chkoumbova said.</p><p>Chicago spent a large portion of its $2.8 billion allocation on <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/2/11/22927568/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-american-rescue-plan-spending/">existing staff</a>. Documents obtained by Chalkbeat in 2021 showed the district planned to use the money to cover salaries and benefits for roughly 30% of its workforce. Expenditure data obtained by Chalkbeat late last year indicates $1.4 billion of the $2.4 billion spent so far went to staff salaries and benefits.</p><p>CPS employed just over 38,000 people on the eve of the pandemic, and staffing records show that number has grown to more than 43,500 as of Dec. 31, 2023. The district’s overall budget grew from <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/8/13/21108643/more-administrators-more-money-for-small-schools-here-are-8-items-getting-more-funding-in-chicago-sc/">$7.7 billion</a> the year the pandemic hit to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/28/23777373/chicago-public-schools-budget-2024-school-board-vote/">$9.4 billion</a> this school year.</p><p>A lot of the district’s increased staff costs were tethered to specific initiatives aimed at helping students recover from two years of disrupted learning:</p><ul><li>The district tapped hundreds of mostly existing staff within schools to become <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/25/23729023/chicago-public-schools-academic-interventionist-covid-learning-recovery/">academic interventionists</a>, who worked one-on-one or in small group settings with struggling students.</li><li>CPS also <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/18/23875659/chicago-public-schools-cps-tutor-corps-esser-covid-relief/">hired hundreds of tutors</a> across the school system and worked with an <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/03/27/small-group-tutoring-is-key-to-help-students-get-back-on-track-study-of-chicago-schools-shows/">outside company to do high-dosage tutoring</a>. According to a district spokesperson, 600 tutors in 230 schools provide tutoring in reading and math during the school day.</li><li>Summer school and after-school programs <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/9/28/22690530/summer-school-in-chicago-revamped-missing-data-learning-recovery/">expanded significantly</a> over the past few summers — spending between $20 million and $40 million each summer. However, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/17/23603531/chicago-public-schools-summer-school-enrollment-attendance-covid-pandemic-recovery/">tracking student participation has proved difficult</a>.</li><li>Chkoumbova said the district has also hired more than 180 “instructional coaches” dedicated to supporting teachers and school staff in schools with the highest needs.</li></ul><p>The growth in CPS between the 2021-22 and 2022-23 school year documented by researchers at Harvard and Stanford on their <a href="https://educationrecoveryscorecard.org/">Education Recovery Scorecard</a> bucks a broader trend of widening <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2024/02/05/learning-loss-study-finds-surprising-academic-recovery-growing-inequality/">inequity between high-poverty and wealthier districts</a>.</p><p><a href="https://educationrecoveryscorecard.org/">According to the data</a>, Black student scores in CPS grew even more than the district average in reading. District officials said their improvement meant they “emerged from the pandemic two-thirds of a year ahead of where they were in reading than before the pandemic.”</p><p>“Our teachers, our staff, our principals, assistant principals, they also have experienced the effects of the pandemic, but they really stepped in a big way and I think it has to be celebrated,” Chkoumbova said.</p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar/">State test score data released last fall</a> showed more Chicago students were catching up, but still remained below pre-pandemic achievement levels. Gaps between Black and Latino students and their white and Asian counterparts remain and there’s more work to be done to help <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/10/17/23407561/students-disabilities-iep-special-education-covid-learning-recovery/">students with disabilities</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/08/chicago-public-schools-sees-more-migrant-students/">immigrant students</a>, Chkoumbova said.</p><p>With <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871838/schools-funding-cliff-federal-covid-relief-esser-money-budget-cuts/">federal COVID money running out</a> later this year, Chicago Public Schools is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/#:~:text=The%20current%20budget%20is%20%249.4,a%20way%20to%20boost%20revenue.">projecting a $391 million dollar shortfall</a>. Officials have been urging the state to increase funding.</p><p>“We have a good plane that we can fly. We just need a lot more fuel to sustain the speed with which our students are recovering and also to gain some altitude,” Chkoumbova said.</p><p>Governor J.B. Pritzker is set to release his budget proposal next week and state education officials have proposed increasing overall education funding by <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/25/illinois-education-budget-proposal-is-less-than-what-advocates-want/">more than $650 million</a> next year, which includes increases for both K-12 and early childhood education. Lawmakers will have the final say over how much is ultimately allocated.</p><h2>Pre-pandemic progress may have helped rebound</h2><p>This is not the first time Stanford researchers have found promising academic growth in Chicago Public Schools.</p><p>A report released in 2017 that looked at test scores between 2009 and 2014 found Chicago students saw <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/2017/11/2/18330871/cps-student-scores-show-equivalent-of-6-years-of-learning-in-5-years">six years of growth in five</a> and were improving faster than 100 of the nation’s largest school districts.</p><p>Paul Zavitkovsky, an assessment specialist at the Center for Urban Education Leadership at the University of Illinois Chicago, did a similar study that same year looking at 15 years of data and found the often negative <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/perception-vs-reality-chicago-students-outperform-kids-in-rest-of-illinois/5445214e-cc48-48a9-9019-4d1c05305940">perception of Chicago Public Schools did not match reality</a>. In his study at the time, CPS students in every demographic group were outscoring their counterparts in the rest of the state.</p><p>He said that the latest pandemic recovery identified by national researchers could be due to the “carry-over impact” of high reading achievement levels of students in second, third, and fourth grades at the end of 2019. These students, Zavitkovsky said, “entered the pandemic better prepared than any comparable cohort in CPS history.” He likened their academic bounce back to a sponge.</p><p>“If you have a sponge, and it hasn’t had water for a long time, it tends to shrivel up a little bit,” he said. “When you pour water on it, it immediately soaks up that water because it’s got all this sort of latent capacity to absorb it.”</p><p>He cautioned that the promising growth may not last forever and raised concerns about students who may have missed key early literacy instruction.</p><p>Chkoumbova, who <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/29/23379164/chicago-publlic-schools-bogdana-chkoumbova-pandemic-recovery/">also worked as a teacher and principal in CPS</a>, said the district has been focused on early literacy for decades. On the eve of the pandemic, the district released a new literacy framework and when schools returned in-person, she said they emphasized the importance of strong foundational reading skills in kindergarten through fifth grade.</p><p>“We have been getting a little bit more specific about the need for this explicit teaching of foundational skills, phonics, phonemic awareness,” she said. “Our schools are really embracing this effort.”</p><p>She added that many schools have been using early literacy curriculum that is part of the district’s universal curriculum bank Skyline, which <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/6/17/22538834/cps-new-curriculum-skyline-135-million-mcdade-jackson-culturally-relevant/">launched during the pandemic</a>, or a curriculum from <a href="https://www.wilsonlanguage.com/programs/wilson-reading-system/">Wilson Reading</a>. A district spokesperson said Skyline has been <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/31/23663499/chicago-public-schools-skyline-curriculum-covid-recovery/">adopted on a voluntary basis</a> by nearly half of CPS schools.</p><h2>Cautious optimism as other indicators lag</h2><p>Elaine Allensworth, Lewis-Sebring Director of the UChicago Consortium, said the findings were “exciting and surprising,” but also a little puzzling because attendance is still low and absenteeism is still high.</p><p>“Maybe there’s just a lot of focus on math and English language arts instruction right now because people are so worried about pandemic learning loss,” Allensworth said. “I know a lot of teachers feel under pressure to increase students’ test scores… which makes me nervous, honestly, because then I start to wonder, ‘Well, what are they not doing?’”</p><p>Chkoumbova said for the past two years, her message from the top has been to keep challenging students with grade-level work and “resist that urge” to do too much remediation on basic skills.</p><p>“If it is kill and drill and remediation, kids will not love coming to school,” Chkoumbova said.</p><p>She said she is “paying very close attention” to rates of chronic absenteeism. In Illinois, a student is considered chronically absent if they miss 10 percent – or roughly 18 days — in a school year, regardless of whether the absence was excused or not.</p><p>The percentage of chronically absent students in Illinois <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/12/16/22839529/illinois-chronic-absenteeism-covid-reopening-quarantine/">shot up in the 2020-21</a> school year and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/19/23512704/illinois-chronic-absenteeism-covid-mental-health/">got even worse in 2021-22</a>. In CPS, 39.8% of students were chronically absent <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/district.aspx?source=studentcharacteristics&source2=chronicabsenteeism&Districtid=15016299025#:~:text=Illinois%20law%20defines%20%E2%80%9Cchronic%20absentee,for%20a%20family%20member%2C%20etc.">during the 2022-23 school year</a>, down from 44.6% the previous year.</p><p>But Allensworth said Chicago schools use data and research more and collaborate more frequently across teacher teams and networks – both of which are associated with school improvement.</p><p>“I think there’s just a lot of different things that are going on in Chicago that are different than other places,” Allensworth said. “It’s not glamorous or scandalous or whatever. And so locally people don’t know but people outside of Chicago look at Chicago as a place that’s kind of an exemplar in a lot of ways.”</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/19/chicago-public-schools-reading-scores-pandemic-recovery-growth/Becky VeveaChristian K. Lee for Chalkbeat2024-02-15T00:35:02+00:002024-02-15T23:40:24+00:00<p>Marlita Ingram was an English teacher at Chicago’s Manley Career Academy High School in the early 2000s when she realized that she wanted to be a school counselor.</p><p>She noticed that students who struggled in class were often dealing with a problem outside of school. She learned that if she built a relationship with them, then they would sometimes open up.</p><p>Ingram, who has been a counselor for the past 18 years, helps students work through a range of problems – from issues with their class schedule to dealing with gun violence, which recently claimed the lives of four students near <a href="https://wgntv.com/news/chicagocrime/innovations-high-school-closed-monday-after-2-students-shot-and-killed-friday-police-still-seeking-suspects/">three</a> <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/edgewater-community-holds-vigil-for-students-shot-near-senn-high-school/cebfb34a-e7af-438c-bdd4-d7e29f1ab6d8">Chicago</a> <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2024/1/22/24047515/brothers-shot-fatally-cics-wood-longwood-chicago-maurice-clay">schools</a>.</p><p>Even as a seasoned educator, Ingram, a department chair at Foreman College and Career Academy High School, is still learning new ways to connect with students. Recently, as the school has welcomed many new migrant students, Ingram has relied on Google Translate, bilingual staff, and trusted friends of her Spanish-speaking students to facilitate conversations.</p><p>“I’ve had kids who are not even on my caseload [say], ‘Can I talk to you?’ I’m like, ‘OK, yeah, baby, you can talk to me,’ and it’s because one of their friends brought them,” she said. “The more approachable you are … I think they gravitate, and they are willing to tell you more than what you want to know, but they’ll tell you what they have on their mind.”</p><p><i>This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.</i></p><h3>Was there a moment when you decided to become a counselor?</h3><p>Outside the classroom, I was doing a lot more community-based work with my students. They needed help with navigating different things in the community. They were having issues at home with family, and I started engaging with that work. And then one summer, I kinda helped out the school counselor at the school, and I was like, “I think this is what I want to do.” I still always tell people my passion or my niche is to teach or to help educate. I just do it in a different way with school counseling.</p><h3>How do you get to know your students?</h3><p>It varies. Kids say my presence is always “automatic” when I come in the room because I’m very boisterous. I’m very alive when I’m doing class instructions or class lessons with students. But I’m also a person who notices the small things.</p><p>If it’s a student I’ve never known before and they’re on my caseload, I might do a general introduction via email. We can see kids’ pictures; I just do a random look at the pictures so that I can start putting names and faces together. If I start seeing them in the hallway, I’m just like, “Hi, I’m Dr. Ingram, your counselor. What’s your name again?” I start that very general conversation, and then I build from there.</p><p>I try to be in the hallway during passing periods so I can observe how kids are interacting with each other. Do I see anything that’s not positive – bullying or something like that? I stay away from being security because that’s more punitive, and that’s not my role. But you will hear me in the hallway be like, “Ay!” Especially if it’s one of my kids that I’ve known for a while [like], “Uh-uh, Joshua, you already know where you’re supposed to be. I know your schedule by heart.” I don’t, but they think I do.</p><p>Every interaction builds to the next interaction. I’m in the middle of programming, so we sit one-on-one with our kids, and we start having conversations, like, “So what do you want to do? … Let’s start seeing where we need to plug in classes that might fit well with what you think you may want to do, and you can change your mind.” Kids flock to you when they know that you care.</p><h3>Over the past month, multiple students in Chicago have been fatally shot near school, causing a lot of grief for not just the families, but also for students and staff. What are the first steps you take to support students experiencing grief?</h3><p>On a school level, we may do some acknowledgment. We have these two groups, right, that don’t necessarily live by each other. They live in certain pockets of the city. One of our African American students may have heard about something in that particular area, whereas my Latino students may not know because they don’t live in that area. It’s sometimes challenging to be able to finagle what’s happened in what community, but when we do have that information, we do offer crisis services for students here at the school with our social workers. We have great outside partners, with <a href="https://www.youth-guidance.org/">Youth Guidance</a>, with <a href="https://www.youth-guidance.org/bam-becoming-a-man/">BAM</a> and <a href="https://www.youth-guidance.org/working-on-womanhood/">WOW.</a> They chime in and help as much as needed. On a daily basis, in the counseling suite, we have a wellness room. It’s a space for students to utilize to kind of regulate their emotions. [One student was] dealing with the loss of her father. That was her saving grace when she transitioned back into school.</p><p>And then we are starting to help teachers get more involved in the regulation because sometimes kids won’t come to us. So we’re in the process [of] ordering different things that kind of help create a space, that if a kid just wants to take a timeout, and they don’t want to come all the way down to the counseling office, teachers can have these chair corners already established in their room that have gadgets and fidgets, meditating things, some breathing exercises, coloring, all the different things that can kind of help a student regulate and refocus.</p><h3>What’s something happening in the community that affects what goes on inside your school?</h3><p>We have [had an] increase in one part of the community of robberies. I’ve got a couple of kids who have been stuck up for shoes, jackets.</p><p>[Separately], we have an influx of our migrants that are coming in. Our bilingual numbers have doubled. So learning how to communicate with the students and make them feel welcome and safe.</p><p>I have learned over the years a few phrases, but I cannot hold a complete conversation in Spanish, but I utilize Google Translate. [Students learning English] become very resourceful, and they’ll find a peer partner to help translate. We have a list of staff that are bilingual or trilingual that I can reach out to like, “Hey, can you translate for me real quick?” especially with a parent and or a student. So we just try to maneuver, and I’m still trying to learn Spanish because I think I should just learn it anyway.</p><h3>Tell us about a memorable time — good or bad — when contact with a student’s family changed your perspective or approach.</h3><p>I had a student who didn’t know how to come out to his family. That transition was a very hard time for him. And this was early on in my career. It was the first time I had a student who came out to me, right? And the love and support that I saw from [his mother and aunt]. It really, truly made me understand the need for that full circle, for that student to be that courageous, to be able to say, “This is who I am, and this is why you know. I’m not going to hide it anymore.” So it made me very much more in tune to try and check to see if I had any biases, and if I did, to try to correct those to be a support.</p><h3>What part of your job is most difficult?</h3><p>The meetings. As leaders in the building, we are pulled into quite a few meetings, and balancing that with being available for students in need [is a challenge]. Our leadership, our administration, only allows students to see us during the lunch period. (If a kid is in crisis, it doesn’t matter when it is.) But trying to balance being a presence, providing our perspective, being in leadership roles in the building, and being available to students — sometimes that just totally throws off your day. I’ll have days where I’ve been in meetings most of the day and I feel like I haven’t been available for my students. I’m learning as a department chair that sometimes your impact may be indirect because you’re making decisions … that are going to affect students indirectly. So I’m servicing them, it’s just not the direct service. And my passion is the direct service, right?</p><p>The second part is student advocacy. If I’m advocating for a student, be it for an academic issue or social-emotional or something like that, that is part of my job. It sometimes makes that tension [with another teacher or administrator] a little strong, I’m gonna say. [Teachers] feel as though I’m taking the kid’s side — I’m not.</p><h3>What was the biggest misconception that you initially brought to teaching?</h3><p>In teaching, my biggest misconception was that I thought all kids wanted to learn. I figured, if you came to school, you want to be there. That’s not how it is. We got kids who come for other reasons. It took me a while to learn that. I believe that a lot of students come to school for socialization. That doesn’t mean that we don’t have kids who want to learn — that’s not what I’m saying. But I am saying, kids feed off of interacting with their peers and growing those relationships.</p><p>As a counselor, I think my misconception was that I would have more freedom and fluidity throughout my day, and I really don’t. It’s very structured. Like [people will say], “Oh, you don’t have a class, so what are you doing?” When I walked in the door, it’s literally boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, sneak in a lunch, boom, boom.</p><h3>What’s the best advice you’ve received?</h3><p>With school counseling, the best advice was for me to be transparent to students and families, to be vulnerable. If I can show them I was OK being transparent and I was comfortable being vulnerable with them, then they would do the same. If we can have that baseline of vulnerability and respect, we can go wherever we needed to go.</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/15/chicago-school-counselor-builds-relationships-with-students/Reema AminImage courtesy of Chicago Public Schools2024-02-15T21:45:00+00:002024-02-15T21:45:00+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>When Jorge Alaves looks around room 110 at Lindblom Math and Science Academy each Wednesday morning, he sees 36 versions of his teenage self: Latino boys with a lot of potential at a high school full of high-achieving students trying to figure out how to be successful after graduation.</p><p>This is what’s known as “Lindblom Colegio,” a peer mentoring and postsecondary planning group for Latino boys that meets during the school’s colloquium days.</p><p>Alaves, one of Lindblom’s five counselors, launched the group about six years ago after noticing that Latino boys at the selective enrollment high school were less likely to apply to college and would sometimes struggle academically and socially.</p><p>Lindblom admits top students from elementary schools across the city based on an admissions test. Students like Freddy Lazaro.</p><p>Lazaro attended a charter school for kindergarten through second grade, but then transferred to Beasley, a gifted school in Washington Park. Lazaro got into Lindblom’s Academic Center in seventh grade and is now a senior.</p><p>“It was diverse and that’s what I liked about the school,” Lazaro said. “I was able to meet a lot of different people who came from different backgrounds.”</p><p>Latino students make up about 27% of Lindblom’s otherwise primarily Black student body, which includes just over 1,300 students.</p><p>Lazaro said it was a hard transition academically when he got to Lindblom because he was suddenly taking Chinese and pre-algebra. Initially, his grades weren’t the best, he said, but they got better over time.</p><p>Since joining “Colegio” as a sophomore, he said he’s been able to explore career options and visit a variety of colleges, including University of Illinois where he was recently admitted to the business school.</p><p>“Those college trips definitely influenced my post-secondary plans,” Lazaro said.</p><p>When Alaves first started “Colegio” six years ago, he recruited Latino boys with a 2.0 to 2.9 GPA. He would talk to teachers during team meetings and review freshman grades to identify students who might benefit from additional support.</p><p>“But it’s grown so much to where, it’s just word-of-mouth,” Alaves said. “They themselves share with their friends and will bring their friends here to my office, and they’ll say, ‘Hey, Mr. Alaves. I think that he’s a really great fit. I think that he would do really well in ‘Colegio.’”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/0GKRuO8K5XFjAoiCnG_gu5xSEZY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/HIXDKPMIRVA3HMLWZISTLCHUUM.jpg" alt="Counselor Jorge Alaves poses for a portrait at Lindblom Math and Science Academy in Chicago. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Counselor Jorge Alaves poses for a portrait at Lindblom Math and Science Academy in Chicago. </figcaption></figure><p>Like his students, Alaves was a high achiever in elementary school and got into a prestigious high school: De La Salle Institute, the alma mater of many famous Chicagoans, including two former Chicago mayors, Richard J. and Richard M. Daley.</p><p>He went to Florida State University on a full scholarship because he felt like that was what was expected of him.</p><p>“In reality, I was first-generation, I had no idea what I was doing,” Alaves said. “I had never stepped foot on any college campus and a big, big environment like that was not the best fit for me.”</p><p>Alaves transferred and finished his degree in psychology at DePaul before landing a job at a nonprofit in Little Village, where he ran a youth program after school and during summers. After getting a master’s in school counseling and clinical mental health counseling, he became Lindblom’s counselor for the seventh and eighth grade students in the Academic Center.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/jTGVWEut5Ns4WR_X1je10coSM3I=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/S4IVWEXZNJG4BDGKHPE3CXGHPU.jpg" alt="Eduardo Serna, a junior, gives a presentation to his classmates in the "Lindblom Colegio," which provides mentoring, counseling, and postsecondary planning for Latino boys at the predominantly Black selective enrollment high school." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Eduardo Serna, a junior, gives a presentation to his classmates in the "Lindblom Colegio," which provides mentoring, counseling, and postsecondary planning for Latino boys at the predominantly Black selective enrollment high school.</figcaption></figure><p>Shortly after the bell rang on Valentine’s Day, junior Eduardo Serna stood before his classmates to give a presentation about a program he’s part of this school year called <a href="https://www.cps.edu/academics/work-based-learning/chicago-builds/">Chicago Builds</a>, a pre-apprenticeship program for high school juniors and seniors to learn construction trades, such as carpentry, electricity, welding, and HVAC.</p><p>Serna explained how his teachers are part of the electricians union and showed off pictures of a small house he built. Then he touted the pay-off.</p><p>“When you’re working overtime, you get 1.5 times pay and you can get double time hours as well,” Serna said. “Your salary can be well up to or over $100,000.”</p><p>Alaves chimed in to tell the group that Chicago Builds can help students get into competitive apprenticeships with the unions after high school.</p><p>“To get into a union, it is really, really, really competitive,” Alaves said, adding that there are 2,000 applications for about 200 spots every year. “They do want strong students. You can’t just give up on high school and say I’m going to do a trade. If you’re thinking about the trades, you still have to be doing well academically now and keeping your grades up.”</p><p>Serna said he plans to get his bachelor’s degree in business and hopes to one day run his own construction or trade company.</p><p>As the class period came to an end, Alaves reminded the boys to return their permission slips for the group’s upcoming visit to Roosevelt University while he handed out black sweatshirts. Emblazoned on the front, in the school’s maroon and yellow colors, were the words: “Lindblom Colegio.”</p><p>Wear these shirts proudly, he told the boys. They represent the school and the values of the “Colegio”: Be on your best behavior. Be respectful. Be on time to class. Keep your grades up and ask for help when you need it.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/15/chicago-lindblom-high-school-mentors-latino-males/Becky VeveaBecky Vevea2024-02-13T01:41:10+00:002024-02-13T14:57:28+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools said Monday it is not planning to renew a multi-million dollar deal with Aramark for the management of school janitors and cleaning services after a decade.</p><p>The move comes after years of concerns and complaints over <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/7/4/21105366/these-102-schools-failed-latest-round-of-blitz-inspections/">school cleanliness</a> from staff, parents, and students.</p><p>The school board’s latest agreement with the Philadelphia-based company is set to end June 30, 2024. According to a school board committee <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/february_14__2024_arc_public_agenda_to_post.pdf">agenda</a> posted Monday, the district is asking board members to increase the current contract, which started Aug. 2021, from $369 million to $391 million “due to unforeseen expenditures associated with overtime, custodial supplies and custodial equipment.”</p><p>A district spokesperson confirmed Monday the district is not renewing the contract with Aramark and the school board will vote on seven new contracts at its Feb. 22 meeting.</p><p>Charles Mayfield, chief operating officer at CPS, said the district is looking forward to more direct oversight of janitorial services and supplies and allowing principals to have more say on school cleaniness. Mayfield said the district will contract with seven vendors for custodial services. He said he doesn’t anticipate any job losses with this change.</p><p>CPS employs more than 1,000 custodians, according to staffing records updated at the end of December.</p><p>“We had an opportunity to renew at Aramark and we opted not to,” said Mayfield. “There were some challenges there, but they’ve also been great partners over a number of years. Sometimes change happens.”</p><p>A spokesperson for Aramark wrote in a statement that the company was disappointed to not be selected to continue providing facility services for CPS.</p><p>“We are proud of the efforts of our dedicated employees and are committed to ensuring a smooth transition to the school district’s new provider,” said Chris Collom, Aramark’s vice president of corporate communications.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools first contracted with Aramark in 2014. Budget officials at the time promised that outsourcing the management of school cleaning would save money and ease the burden on school principals.</p><p>But the deal <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/custodial-contract-causing-problems-at-start-of-school-year/f255656b-e7f9-413d-9e9c-dfba89162e39">backfired in the first school year</a> when staff returned from summer break to dirty classrooms and, in some buildings, fewer custodians. Then-CPS CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett admitted the shift to privatized management of custodians was <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/schools-ceo-privatizing-janitorial-services-not-as-smooth-as-we-would-like/42dc05a3-4195-4bc2-874d-a588cfe0fa73">not going smoothly</a> and the board <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/aramark-cps-change-plan-to-cut-school-janitors/cfc80203-8f04-4cce-ba9a-72b9e66e0f5f">reversed nearly 500 planned layoffs</a>. By the spring of 2015, the contract with Aramark had <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/chicago-school-cleaning-contract-millions-over-budget/9d1de86e-e66b-4d5d-8536-d7cb073bc0f0">gone millions of dollars over budget</a>, WBEZ reported.</p><p>The union representing school janitors <a href="https://seiu73.org/2024/02/victory-for-cps-board-custodians/">called the move a victory</a> for its members. SEIU Local 73 — the union that also represents school employees such as special education classroom assistants, bus aides, and crossing guards — has been meeting with the district’s facilities department for almost three years to raise concerns about Aramark’s management of equipment and supplies for custodial staff.</p><p>Stacia Scott Kennedy, executive vice president of SEIU, said she is thrilled the contract is over.</p><p>“I feel hopeful that this change in management will improve the outcomes of cleanliness,” said Scott Kennedy. “I also feel hopeful that it’ll improve the working conditions of our members who have suffered under private contract with management for the last 10 years.”</p><p>SEIU Local 73 has been in contract negotiations with Chicago Public Schools since its contract ended June 30, 2023. One of the union’s economic proposals was to ask the district to get rid of the contract with Aramark. Scott Kennedy said they will keep the proposal as negotiations continue.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/12/chicago-public-schools-to-end-aramark-cleaning-contract/Becky Vevea, Samantha SmylieSmith Collection/Gado2024-02-08T16:32:48+00:002024-02-08T16:32:48+00:00<p><i>Updated: This story has been updated to reflect an extension to the deadline for candidates to file paperwork to run for LSC. It is now Wednesday, Feb. 14.</i></p><p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>In the halls of Uplift Community High School, Karonda Locust is known as “Mama T.”</p><p>“If you need help, go tell my mom,” her daughter Tiara, now 23, would tell her friends when she was a student there.</p><p>“That’s how I got stuck here,” Locust said with a laugh on a recent Monday.</p><p>For four years while her daughter attended Uplift, Locust served as a parent representative on the school’s Local School Council, the governing body of community members, parents, and school staff that make decisions about the school’s budget and academic plan and evaluate the school’s leaders. Locust has also served on the LSC at Willa Cather Elementary school, where her youngest daughter still attends, for nine years.</p><p>For Locust, the LSC was a gateway to more involvement in the school.</p><p>“That’s how it should be,” said Locust’s sister Taschaunda Hall, who is also an active member of the Cather’s LSC and briefly served on the LSC at Uplift as well.</p><p>Chicago’s LSCs are unique and powerful. There’s nothing quite like them in other school districts across the U.S. The Chicago School Reform Act of 1988 established that every CPS-run school would have a <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/fulltext.asp?DocName=010500050K34-2.1">Local School Council</a>. Today LSCs are made up of six parents, two teachers, two community members, a student representative, and the school’s principal.</p><p>But while the first LSC elections in 1989 had <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/cps-history/">over 17,000 candidates</a>, those numbers have plummeted over the years. The last LSC elections in 2022 saw just <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/22/23886028/chicago-public-schools-local-school-council-elections-2024/">over 6,000 applicants</a>, but <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/5/26/23143188/chicago-public-schools-local-school-council-election-results/">voter turnout was at its strongest in a decade</a>, with students making up the majority of the 110,700 voters.</p><p>Still, LSC members have successfully advocated for change and improvements and many believe the councils are the key to better schools across the city.</p><p>Now, with Chicago’s Board of Education <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/4/23711633/chicago-school-board-of-education-elections-faq-guide/">adding elected seats for the first time this year</a> and transitioning to a fully elected board in 2026, LSCs may become a sort of proving ground for positions with a broader reach.</p><p>“I do predict many of our LSC members may put their hat in the ring,” said Kishasha Ford, director of the CPS LSC Relations office. “Our LSC members [are] very well-equipped to do this work because they have some experience being on a kind of a board, because if you think about it, LCSs are like mini school boards for their local school.”</p><p>Elections for these “mini school boards’' are <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/local-school-councils/lsc-elections/">happening again this spring</a>. The deadline to run for LSC is<b> </b>3 p.m. next Wednesday, Feb. 14 and election day for elementary schools is April 10 and April 11 for high schools, with new two-year terms of office beginning July 1, 2024.</p><p>As of Feb. 1, 1,902 people had filed to run for LSC, according to district officials. At the same time last election cycle in 2022, 852 people had applied.</p><p>Over the decades, LSCs have changed the names of schools named after enslavers, removed controversial leadership, won capital improvements, even helped open new schools. Others have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board/">sat mostly empty</a>, served as little more than a rubber stamp, or been rendered ineffective by infighting and conflicting interests.</p><p>It depends on who’s running the ship, says Kendra Snow, the lead parent organizer for grassroots organization Raise Your Hand for Illinois Public Education.</p><p>Studies showing that <a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/news-item/the-impact-of-parent-engagement-on-improved-student-outcomes">parent involvement in schools can have a major impact </a>on student outcomes are abundant, but for LSCs to be effective, Snow argues, parents have to do more than just show up, they have to be informed.</p><p>But the “showing up” part is still a major part of the battle.</p><p>After elections in 2022, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board/">over a thousand LSC positions were unfilled</a> and according to CPS data, <a href="https://schoolinfo.cps.edu/Map-LSCMembers/">311 schools still have vacancies on their councils</a>. Still, according to CPS, 97% of LSCs had enough members to meet “quorum,” which requires that seven members be present for the LSC to vote and conduct business.</p><p>Chalkbeat caught up with four parents who have served on LSCs, where they called for improvements and guided their schools through challenges. Their experiences demonstrate what LSCs are capable of, some of the reasons parents may be opting out, and how the role of LSCs may shift as Chicago gets an elected school board.</p><h2>The mom who wants to open LSCs to more people</h2><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/4lkB15Ha6pbh9YZv2Ha3AP85rMM=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/433LXX2E6BBVZO7BEZYLEMMQ6I.jpg" alt="Karonda Locust (right), a current LSC parent representative at Willa Cather Elementary School and former LSC parent representative at Uplift Community High School, stands with her sister, Taschaunda Hall (left), on the playground outside Cather. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Karonda Locust (right), a current LSC parent representative at Willa Cather Elementary School and former LSC parent representative at Uplift Community High School, stands with her sister, Taschaunda Hall (left), on the playground outside Cather. </figcaption></figure><p>Karonda Locust is decked out in the red and black of Willa Cather Elementary school on a recent Monday morning. Today, she’s helping out at the security check-in at the front doors before heading to work, but “I’m always there, everywhere,” she says.</p><p>She chats easily with staff and students and no one questions her presence as she walks the halls. They all know who she is.</p><p>Locust has served on the LSC at Cather alongside her sister Taschaunda Hall for nine years. When her eldest daughter moved on to Uplift Community High School in 2019, she joined the LSC there as well. For four years, she served on both LSCs at the same time.</p><p>Her time on the LSC at Uplift helped her forge relationships with the staff and kids and she continues to volunteer there even though her daughter has graduated. That’s the point of LSCs, she said, to invest in not just your own kids, but the school community as a whole.</p><p>That’s why in 2022 when her daughter was a senior at Uplift, she and her daughter (who sat on the LSC as a student representative) advocated for a bus service to bring in more students from the West Side. Her own daughter would never benefit from it, but other kids would.</p><p>Now, a bus picks up kids from Cather Elementary to bring them to Uplift, giving West Side kids a chance to attend the school without leaving parents to figure out the hour-and-a-half commute.</p><p>“That’s one of the things that I’m most proud of – that we were able to bring kids from other neighborhoods to Uplift and they can have that experience as well,” said Locust.</p><p>With the first Chicago Board of Education elections happening later this year, Locust said several friends and community members have asked her to run for a seat, but she doesn’t have the time.</p><p>Instead, now that her daughter has graduated – she earned a scholarship to study education at Truman College and plans to become a teacher – Locust is shifting some of her focus to advocating for changes to the structures and rules of LSCs.</p><p>Some of the requirements for serving on LSCs, she says, are keeping people out.</p><p>When Locust herself was a teen mother, she had a hard time making it to her daughters’ school events. In her stead, she often sent grandparents or aunts or uncles, any way to make sure her kids felt supported. But none of those family members could run for the LSC as a parent representative – and none lived within the school’s neighborhood boundaries, making them ineligible to serve as a community representative.</p><p>Family structures have changed in the past three decades, said Locus, and she wants to open up LSCs to more family members outside of the traditional parent-child paradigm.</p><p>“We’re actually losing out on opportunities for family members that could support the school because of the structure that was created over 30 years ago,” said Locust. “This is a non-paid position, so if somebody wants to serve and help my kids’ school, God bless ‘em.”</p><p>She also hopes to end the fingerprinting and background check requirements for LSC parents, saying it alienates parents with criminal records and scares off <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/9/17/21105687/how-chicago-schools-fingerprinting-requirements-are-scaring-away-undocumented-parents/">parents who are undocumented,</a> though, <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/board-rules/chapter-6/6-30/">barring convictions for certain offenses</a>, both are legally allowed to serve on LSCs.</p><h2>The veteran LSC leader who built a new school</h2><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/zyxdikawFd48gk9s86mbtkkSjxw=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/F4XEHEFKRBFXJMXF4NWAKTXXKE.jpg" alt="José Quiles, a community representative on LSCs at Mary Lyon Public School, Steinmetz College Prep, Belmont-Cragin Elementary School in Belmont-Cragin, speaks inside of a classroom on Fri., Jan. 25, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.
" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>José Quiles, a community representative on LSCs at Mary Lyon Public School, Steinmetz College Prep, Belmont-Cragin Elementary School in Belmont-Cragin, speaks inside of a classroom on Fri., Jan. 25, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.
</figcaption></figure><p>José Quiles has served on LSCs since they were first created in 1989. In his 35 years as a parent representative and then as a community representative, he’s seen it all.</p><p>The stories roll out of him with ease on a recent Thursday as he leads a Local School Council information session at the Belmont-Cragin not-for-profit organization he founded in 2015, the Education Community Committee (ECC).</p><p>He currently sits on LSCs at three schools – Mary Lyon Public School, Steinmetz College Prep, and Belmont-Cragin Elementary School – and when he’s not conducting LSC business, he’s teaching other people in the neighborhood how to join their LSCs and get things done on them.</p><p>In the workshops at ECC, they talk about things like how to read a budget and the rules and expectations for LSC members.</p><p>But what he hones in on and repeats over and over in the workshops is that the LSC is about the kids. All of the kids, not just their own.</p><p>That’s what sustained the eight-year movement he helped lead to get a new school built in Belmont-Cragin, he said – knowing that it was what the kids in the area needed.</p><p>“Belmont-Cragin started because Mary Lyon had 1800 kids,” said Quiles.</p><p>Initially, to address the overcrowding, some of the Mary Lyon kids were sent to a nearby site on Mango St. that was formerly the Catholic school St. James. When it became clear that the principal at Mary Lyon was struggling to oversee both school facilities, the LSC requested a separate principal and LSC to separate the school from Mary Lyon altogether, thereby creating a new school.</p><p>“Basically, we gave birth to it,” he said with a laugh.</p><p>Amid the <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/08/03/chicago-closed-50-schools-10-years-ago-whats-happened-since-then">swath of school closures in 2013</a>, the St. James facility was closed and the students were relocated to a site on Palmer St., but the LSC found that there were not enough bathroom facilities for the students.</p><p>The LSC and other community organizations began pushing for a new school to be built at Riis Park.</p><p>In January 2023, the new <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/16/23602985/chicago-mayor-election-public-schools-mayoral-control-lori-lightfoot-teachers-union/">Belmont-Cragin Elementary School officially opened</a> in the park, offering 32 classrooms with park views, a black box theater, library, music room, and access to the connected park fieldhouse.</p><p>Quiles’ own children and foster children have long since graduated from the schools where he currently serves as community representative on the LSCs.</p><p>At 68, he says he wants to retire, but he’s worried that the LSCs aren’t ready for him to do so.</p><p>“A strong council moves mountains,” he told participants in Spanish during a recent LSC workshop. “But a weak council goes in no direction. And when you don’t move in any direction, there is no progress.”</p><p>That’s what his work with ECC is all about – educating parents so they know what questions to ask and how to push for change, whether on LSCs or as members of the new elected school board or as the voters who put people on those governing bodies.</p><p>Despite his insistence that he needs to retire, Quiles still has his ear to the floor at his local schools.</p><p>Right now, he says the biggest issues his LSCs are working on are the social emotional impacts of the pandemic on the students and supporting immigrant students and parents.</p><h2>Advocating for the South Side</h2><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/BQoILHccr8a0xXgvdSbm0S9zl80=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/G3GTBWNQ4ZDCFINZN7E7SF2BTA.jpg" alt="Kendra Snow is running for LSC at Christian Fenger Academy High School in Roseland. She is a former LSC member at Harvard Elementary School in Auburn-Gresham.
" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Kendra Snow is running for LSC at Christian Fenger Academy High School in Roseland. She is a former LSC member at Harvard Elementary School in Auburn-Gresham.
</figcaption></figure><p>Back in 2002 when Kendra Snow sat on her first Local School Council at a school in Auburn-Gresham, “it was like a puppet show,” she said.</p><p>The principal “hand-picked” the parents she wanted on the council and ran the meetings, quickly going over budget lines. No one asked any questions or knew what anything meant.</p><p>“We were just bodies here to put a signature to something,” she said.</p><p>Then, Snow began to learn on her own.</p><p>“I had to learn this for myself, it’s the parents with the power, and if you want to know something then you read into it the same way she did,” said Snow. “So now I’m the troublemaker, because I challenged things.”</p><p>CPS supports LSCs with trainings and office hours, as well as 13 specialists supporting 511 LSCs, according to the department’s director Kishasha Ford.</p><p>There is a 300-page manual for LSC members and online modules as well as in-person trainings, said Ford.</p><p>“That’s the biggest part of our job is the education piece.” she said. “Because it is a lot to know and we can’t expect every single LSC member to know every single nuanced thing. That’s why we’re here to help support and to guide them.”</p><p>Snow read the manual and did the online modules, but she says, it’s not quite enough.</p><p>“You got to just do more than just watch these videos,” she said, suggesting that CPS incorporate questions into the modules to make sure viewers understood the material before moving on to the next video.</p><p>She supplemented her CPS training with resources and workshops from community organizations. Now, Snow works to empower other parents so they can have a voice on their LSCs. She is the lead parent organizer with Raise Your Hand for Illinois Public Education.</p><p>The mother of seven, Snow has been entrenched in public education since her eldest son, now 31, first attended school. In fact, it was when her son was accepted into a school on the North Side that Snow was able to compare his experience there to the schools her other children attended on the South Side.</p><p>The biggest difference?</p><p>“Resources,” she said. “We’re not fighting the same battles. The resources that are in those schools, we don’t have in our schools.”</p><p>In her experience, Snow said parents are angry about the lack of resources and come into the schools shouting about it. She sees it as her job to give them a more effective way to get things done.</p><p>“You’re not getting results that way. So now let’s fight a different way for what we need in the school,” she said. “You hit them with policies. You hit them with facts.”</p><p>Snow has concentrated her efforts specifically on the South Side where she grew up and where most of her children have attended public schools.</p><p>In her work as a CPS-certified LSC trainer, she hopes she can not only encourage more South Side parents to run for LSC seats, but help make sure they are informed and therefore empowered to help improve their schools – one parent at a time, one school at a time.</p><p>“Know your power. Know that this is for your kids,” Snow said. “You have to fight for your kids. Just be there. Just show up. It’s a couple hours out of the month. Just show up. That time is worth it for public education.”</p><h2>Educating fellow parents, ousting a principal</h2><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/DjtgJ97Q61JguYpQ7qAxkAk0A7Q=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/VIKLZU5PIRD3DLBEUPA4EEDVTA.jpg" alt="Vanessa Espinoza is former LSC member at Orozco Community Academy in Pilsen." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Vanessa Espinoza is former LSC member at Orozco Community Academy in Pilsen.</figcaption></figure><p>Vanessa Espinoza has been volunteering in Chicago Public Schools since before she had kids.</p><p>When she became a mother and began making friends with other parents, it opened her eyes to some of the inequities and challenges in CPS. Espinoza, who is bilingual, became particularly interested in supporting English language learners as well as students with IEPs, or Individualized Education Programs, to help students with special needs.</p><p>She soon joined the LSC at Orozco where her kids were enrolled and was surprised that few of the parent representatives understood the documents and policies they were supposed to be making decisions about.</p><p>“Why are you expecting the parents to approve something that they don’t understand totally?” she said. “You gave them the power just to say yes and no, but not do anything else.”</p><p>The trainings offered by CPS to parent representatives, she said, were superficial. For example, they teach the names of the budget lines, but not that each budget line can only be used for certain purchases.</p><p>“None of that was taught to the parents who were going to make this decision on the budget” she said.</p><p>However, Espinoza’s background as a support worker at another school gave her a leg up in this area. And her knowledge of finances turned out to be particularly important on Orozco’s LSC in 2014.</p><p>Because she knew how to read the budget, Espinoza soon discovered that the principal at the time was transferring large sums of money between budget lines, something that required approval from the LSC.</p><p>So she asked to see all of the reports on the budget and the school’s internal accounts. The principal refused and Espinoza requested an audit. The LSC tried to work with her, Espinoza said, but the principal was not amenable.</p><p>“This money’s for the kids. You don’t want to tell us where the money is and how you’re going to use it, then that’s it,” she said. " So we requested her removal.”</p><p>The <a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20141121/pilsen/orozco-local-school-council-moves-fire-principal-nancy-paulette-aguirre/">council voted unanimously to remove Principal Nancy Paulette-Aguirre</a> in November 2014.</p><p>But it wasn’t an entirely popular decision.</p><p>Most of the teachers at the school supported the decision, raising issues about turnover among other things and other LSC members said Paulette-Aguirre refused to work with the council, but non-LSC parents were split. On the day of the vote, 12 parents protested outside the school. Paulette-Aguirre was later <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/2019/4/25/18621570/principal-removed-from-brighton-park-elementary-over-detrimental-conduct">removed from a second school in 2019</a>.</p><p>“Even though the parents have the power to make significant changes, you have to be able to educate the parents with the information needed to make educated decisions, and [CPS] is not. In my opinion, they’re not.” said Espinoza.</p><p>She worries that these same issues might bleed over into the newly elected school board but is still hopeful that parents will gain some of the 10 elected seats this year.</p><p>“To have an elected school board that is going to be successful you have to have parents involved,” she said. “They know what their kids need.”</p><p>Espinoza’s children have graduated out of CPS, but Espinoza remains an advocate for education and serves as the bilingual communication specialist with Kids First Chicago and as the president and co-founder of Amigos de Gunsaulus, a parent-led non-profit that supports Gunsaulus Scholastic Academy in Brighton Park, where one of her children graduated.</p><p>Despite her challenging experience on Orozco’s LSC, she’s hopeful things can change as long as LSCs are filled with people who put the kids first.</p><p>“To be honest with you, it’s a lot of responsibilities, and it’s not well rewarded in a sense, not a monetary reward. Sometimes you get enemies,” but, she said, “If in your mind and your heart is the best for the kids’ education, I think you should run.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/05/chicago-local-school-council-elections-2024/Crystal PaulCrystal Paul,Crystal Paul2024-02-05T23:31:44+00:002024-02-06T18:52:48+00:00<p>Arika Henderson’s kindergarten class at LEARN South Chicago campus usually starts the day with a math lesson. On this early morning in January, the kindergartners are working through addition problems.</p><p>Henderson, an 18-year veteran teacher, asks a student to help model to the class how to solve 1+2. Together, they use brightly colored blocks to represent the numbers in the equation and count out loud together.</p><p>Henderson then pairs off the kindergartners to solve more problems on their own — a strategy she uses to see if students are grasping the concept and provide additional guidance to those who need a little more help.</p><p>As schools across the country grapple with <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/21/23767632/naep-math-reading-learning-loss-covid-long-term-trend/">low math scores that have dropped over the last decade and plummeted even further during the COVID-19 pandemic</a>, educators like Henderson are searching for ways to engage students and build proficiency in math.</p><p>In Chicago, some schools have brought in math coaches to help teachers hone their instruction, while other educators are turning to a concept called “productive struggle,” where students are encouraged to find their own strategy to solve math problems before a teacher steps in to give them a solution.</p><p>Finding ways to help young learners build a solid foundation for math learning is key to students’ success in later grades, experts say.</p><p>Math concepts build over time, so instilling those basic math skills is critical, said Susan Levine, a professor of psychology at the University of Chicago.</p><p>“Evidence shows that the level of math that you go into kindergarten with is predictive of your long term-trajectory,” said Levine. “It doesn’t mean students can’t catch up, but research shows that it is better to start early.”</p><h2>Students who skip pre-K or K may miss early math skills</h2><p>In kindergarten, students learn how to count to 100, add, subtract, and identify shapes — building blocks for more advanced skills such as multiplication, division, order of operations, and the Pythagorean theorem.</p><p>In Illinois, state law does not require parents to put children in school until the age of 6. It is unclear how many young children do not attend preschool or kindergarten, since the state only tracks the number of children in publicly funded programs.</p><p>But research has found that students enrolled in kindergarten, especially full-day programs, have significant gains in reading, math, and social emotional skills. Young children who don’t attend school before first grade may fall behind in being introduced to foundational math.</p><p>Enrollment in the early grades also <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/10/29/22751615/illinois-student-enrollment-pandemic-decline-prekindergarten-early-education/">took the biggest hit during the pandemic</a> as parents were concerned about safety and virtual learning.</p><p>That may have further stalled progress in math for many young children.</p><p>The Illinois State Board of Education’s KIDS exam is an assessment given to students in the fall that measures the readiness of children entering kindergarten. Teachers are asked to assess students’ readiness in math, social-emotional skills, and language and literacy development. In Chicago, teachers found that 31% of kindergarten students were ready for math during the 2020-21 school year, down by 3 percentage points from 2019.</p><p>When Illinois shuttered schools in 2020 in response to the pandemic, Henderson’s kindergarten class that year was in its second semester. During virtual learning, she said, only 14 students showed up consistently on the computer.</p><p>“It was only so much you could control from your end,” Henderson said.</p><p>Now, those students are third and fourth graders. Henderson suspects many did not have a good kindergarten experience to build their foundational knowledge in math, she said. “I just feel so bad.”</p><p>At Ruggles Elementary located on the city’s South Side in Chatham, Shekinah Curry, a second grade math teacher who has only been in the classroom for three years, said she’s noticed gaps in students’ foundational skills when it comes to writing numbers and counting.</p><p>“You may have students who are still writing numbers backwards. There was one student, she put 97 when it was supposed to be 79,” said Curry. “I have students who may not know how to count by fives or students who are questioning ‘if I’m counting by 10s correctly.’”</p><h2>Schools turn to math coaches, shifting strategies</h2><p>As districts work to close the learning gaps, educators are shifting to different strategies, such as productive struggle, and schools are scrambling for ways to help teachers become more effective in teaching math. In CPS, the district has started to roll out the Skyline curriculum, which encourages students to be active participants in class.</p><p>Katie Gleason, a first grade teacher at LEARN South Chicago campus, learned about productive struggle during her monthly meetings with teachers who are a part of the charter school network’s math professional learning community.</p><p>The approach — which Henderson used in her classroom and involves allowing students to work out ways to solve problems on their own after the teacher has first modeled a strategy — is effective because it requires students to make a connections between math concepts they are learning in class, Gleason said. However, the approach can be difficult for teachers to adapt to because some were taught to stand in front of the class and show students how to get the right answer.</p><p>“The math professional learning community has really taught us to allow students to have that productive struggle to try it on their own first and to teach them that it’s okay to make mistakes,” said Gleason. “We actually learn a lot through our mistakes.”</p><p>Some Chicago schools are also investing in math coaches — who observe educators in class to provide them with feedback and instruction strategies — to help bridge the gap in student learning and get students engaged in math.</p><p>At LEARN, math coach Midm Yi, who was a teacher for 11 years working with third, fourth, and fifth grade students, understands how difficult it can be for classroom teachers to catch students up to their current grade level while teaching new material.</p><p>In his role as a math coach, Yi spends his time observing teachers from anywhere between 25 to 45 minutes to evaluate engagement strategies teachers are using. Then he provides debriefing notes to teachers and resources they can use to improve their instruction. At the end of each week, he meets with other coaches in the network to go over training plans, professional development plans for teachers, and other projects.</p><p>Yi said he not only wants to see how teachers are working to fill in holes in students’ foundational skills, but also how they are “delivering that high, rigorous content that the curriculum is also providing for us. Are you intentionally using your plan time to effectively carve out specific time where you will be addressing those needs?”</p><p>In CPS, <a href="https://www.cpsstem.cps.edu/apps/staff/">Corey Morrison</a>, director of mathematics at the district, said his department has a math specialist for each grade who looks at research to see what math strategies are useful and a program manager who analyzes real-time data to see what interventions students need.</p><p>A CPS spokesperson said the district also has 198 coaches who support teachers in literacy and math. In addition, the district has also given funding to every school to hire <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/25/23729023/chicago-public-schools-academic-interventionist-covid-learning-recovery/">at least one academic interventionist to work with students</a>.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/aYWnY2aKvtnQ2jKT_mz5V349BNw=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/DDRJULPTRBCKZIKLGIAQSBN3OY.jpg" alt="Shekinah Curry stands next to her second grade class on Thursday, Jan. 25, 2024 at Ruggles Elementary school in Chicago, Illinois." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Shekinah Curry stands next to her second grade class on Thursday, Jan. 25, 2024 at Ruggles Elementary school in Chicago, Illinois.</figcaption></figure><p>CPS’s Skyline curriculum, which is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/31/23663499/chicago-public-schools-skyline-curriculum-covid-recovery/">still being rolled out across the district</a>, has also been a main force in changing how students learn math, Morrison said. Lessons are designed to encourage students to try their own math strategies in class, while teachers help students facilitate the conversation.</p><p>“It allows students to form their understanding based on what they’re naturally bringing to the classroom,” said Morrison. “Then, the onus is on the teacher to facilitate them to a point of deep understanding.”</p><h2>School officials see promising growth</h2><p>With the new support for educators and students the district added last year, Morrison said, schools are starting to see growth on students’ test scores.</p><p>“Last year was our first real year back from COVID,” said Morrison. “We saw a lot of promise from the strategies we put in place, and I think more of the intentionality around building positive math identity.”</p><p>Chicago Public Schools assesses students in reading and math between kindergarten and second grade three times a year on the i-Ready exam. At the beginning of the 2022-23 school year, 12% of K-2 students were at grade level at the beginning of the year. That number jumped to 50% by the end of the school year, according to data Chalkbeat Chicago received from a Freedom of Information Act request.</p><p>LEARN charter school network found that teachers who received math coaching or were a part of the network’s professional learning council during the 2022-23 school year saw their students score a higher proficiency rate on the NWEA and Illinois Assessment of Readiness exams, compared to teachers who were not receiving coaching. The charter school network — which serves 4,200 students across 11 schools in Chicago, northern suburbs, and Washington D.C. — went from one math coach last coach to five this year, according to a spokesperson. Three are shared between schools in Chicago and North Chicago; the schools in Waukegan, Illinois and Washington D.C. have one school-based coach each.</p><p>Teachers at LEARN like Katie Gleason have found math coaching and being a part of the professional learning community helpful. While Arika Henderson doesn’t receive math coaching, she is practicing productive struggle in her classroom.</p><p>Since the pandemic has eased, Henderson says she has seen growth in her students — some of whom had never been in school before — this year.</p><p>“They are getting in a routine of things,” she said. “The lightbulb has kind of come on and I can see the difference.”</p><p>On the cold January day in Henderson’s classroom, after she modeled a way to solve addition problems, her students worked on their own in their textbooks for about 10 minutes, tackling equations such as 2+1, 2+2, and 2+3.</p><p>Most students sat at tables named after flowers — sunflowers, tulips, lilies, roses, chrysanthemums — and worked with cubes. Others were asked to sit with Henderson’s instructional aide to get more hands-on support. Henderson walked around the classroom, keeping students on task and offering support where needed.</p><p>Some needed time to solve the problems, while others already found the answers. One student told Henderson: “I don’t need the counters. I already know it.”</p><p>A few minutes later, Henderson asked the class to share their answers and how they solved the problem.</p><p>Nearly every hand shot up, as the kindergartners jumped with excitement to tell their teacher and classmates what they had learned.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/05/chicago-schools-change-instruction-to-teach-math/Samantha SmylieSamantha Smylie2023-08-23T19:15:00+00:002024-02-04T22:34:22+00:00<p>The first week of school highlights yet another facet of the challenge Chicago faces in supporting newly arrived migrants: enrolling their children in school. For the past two days, I saw it up close while helping two migrant families enroll their daughters at a neighborhood high school in Brighton Park.</p><p>These families, recent arrivals from Venezuela, are among more than 1,200 migrants currently sleeping in police stations; about 6,500 more are staying in local shelters.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/8XlLVBnDz-MFgGThWgrfY-eF8vM=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/MGC3UONCJREZVK67URP25VUDIE.jpg" alt="Maureen Kelleher" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Maureen Kelleher</figcaption></figure><p>Since mid-July, Chicago Public Schools has been beefing up its efforts to enroll migrant students. The district <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/17/23797844/chicago-public-schools-migrant-families-welcome-center">opened a welcome center</a> at Clemente Community Academy in West Town. School officials say they have enrolled about 1,000 new English learners over the summer and expect 1,000 more to enroll in the coming weeks. However, there’s no way to tell how many of them are recently arrived migrants. In a last-minute push, the district said teams from the Office of Language and Cultural Education are visiting police stations to help migrant families staying there to enroll.</p><p>And together with mutual aid groups supporting migrants at police stations, the Chicago Teachers Union held a Zoom training for volunteers helping families enroll and signed up migrant students as part of a back-to-school party at union headquarters.</p><p>Yet some families are still struggling to get their children in school. As the <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-migrant-students-turned-away-chicago-public-schools-20230822-zjf2zvqjr5c33j65rp2dccauli-story.html">Chicago Tribune</a> and <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/2023/8/21/23840607/cps-disputes-claim-that-migrant-children-from-police-station-were-turned-away-at-school">Chicago Sun-Times reported</a>, volunteers and young migrants staying in South Side neighborhoods with few Latino students say schools have turned them away because they lack staff qualified to teach English learners.</p><p>But even enrolling in schools with the staffing to support new arrivals can be daunting, especially in high school, where the red tape is extra-thick. As a volunteer with the mutual aid network for the 9th District police station in Bridgeport and a longtime education writer, this is what I saw. I’m sharing it here with the families’ permission. Their names have been changed because their asylum cases are pending.</p><h2>Monday, Aug. 21, 2023</h2><p><b>7:45 a.m., Kelly High School, 4136 S. California Ave.</b></p><p>While hundreds of Kelly students wait to enter school on the first day of the new year, I’m meeting aspiring freshmen Sofia and Marianna and their respective mothers as they get out of another volunteer’s car.</p><p>Inside, a security guard tells us registration for new students doesn’t start until 9 a.m. We can wait or come back later. The four of them haven’t had breakfast, so we head out.</p><p><b>8 a.m., Tio Luis Tacos, 3856 S. Archer Ave.</b></p><p>Over plates of pancakes for the girls and eggs with nopales, chorizo, and cecina for the grown-ups, we get to know each other a little. We speak in Spanish, though mine is only mediocre. Like many migrants coming to Chicago, Rosa, Sofia’s mom, says her family has been at the Bridgeport police station for three weeks. She and her husband have two children: Sofia and a 1-year-old boy.</p><p>Maria, Marianna’s mom, tells me her family has been at the station for just 10 days. In addition to Marianna, she and her husband have two other children: a 10-year-old boy and a 4-year-old girl. Both of them have already been enrolled at Holden, a neighborhood elementary school close to the police station. Her 10-year-old went to Holden on time for Day 1; her little girl has to wait while they make sure the preK has enough room for another student.</p><p>They tried to enroll Marianna there, too, but the school staff said she had to move on to high school due to her age: She’ll turn 15 in February.</p><p>Marianna has a taste for the salsa roja on the table with the chips, which makes both moms laugh. From volunteering, I know that Venezuelans, unlike Mexicans, don’t usually like their food spicy. Sofia is the more talkative one, convincing Marianna to have pancakes with her. Both girls love the pancakes, which vanish quickly. The sausage, not so much. Sofia takes some of her scrambled eggs in a to-go box.</p><p><b>9:10 a.m., Kelly High School, Door 4</b></p><p>When we get back to Kelly, a few other families are waiting by the registration entrance — Door 4. They have been buzzing, but no one is answering. I press the buzzer just for good measure, then text one of the lead volunteers with the District 9 group, who teaches at Kelly.</p><p>It’s starting to get hot outside. Maria holds her manila envelope full of papers up against her right cheek to shield her face from the sun.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/Bp6muTGZlBsXzRJjb93HLJlJ6JY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/G2OTXZBU7FGWLD2ONRRCD25GRA.jpg" alt="" height="960" width="1440"/></figure><p>After a few minutes, the Kelly teacher opens the door for us. We walk up to the security guard, who is helping with registration. She looks at the papers in Maria’s folder and a smaller stack of papers Rosa brought. Both moms have their daughters’ birth certificates, but neither has any transcripts from previous years. Both girls completed seventh grade in Colombia before making the trek to the U.S., their mothers say, but there are no records.</p><p>The security guard says she can’t register them without a transcript evaluation. How do you do a transcript evaluation without transcripts? We’re not sure what to do next, so we step out.</p><p>The Kelly teacher meets us outside and texts me a photo of a flyer outlining a two-step process for transcript evaluation. It’s translated into Spanish and Chinese. Step 1: Call the downtown office to make an appointment. Step 2: Bring the following documents downtown for review: a birth certificate and/or passport (if they have one) and any grades or transcripts they have from previous schools they attended outside the U.S.</p><p>I call the office to ask if we need an appointment, and the woman on the phone says we can come right away. So, off we go.</p><p>On the way, we make a pit stop back at the police station to pick up Sofia’s little brother. Rosa thinks it’s better for her to have him if we’re going to be gone for a while.</p><p>Maria’s husband, Juan, is at the station with Marianna’s little sister, who can’t start school today. They want to come, too. Juan especially wants to meet me since we haven’t met before and now I’m driving his wife and older daughter all over town. So we all pile in my ‘97 Camry. Juan sits shotgun; the moms and kids are squished together in the back.</p><p>On the way north to the Loop, I ask Marianna’s and Sofia’s parents if registering their children for school in Colombia had been easier. They say yes.</p><p><b>10:25 a.m., Chicago Public Schools Central Office, 42 W. Madison St., Garden Level</b></p><p>We walk through the revolving doors and down the stairs. Two security guards sit behind a Plexiglas barrier. I explain that we called ahead and name the person who is expecting us.</p><p>After a short wait, another staffer comes to meet the two families. She interviews them in Spanish and confirms both girls were born in Venezuela. Then she asks, in Spanish, “What school are you accepted to?” The girls and their families all give blank stares because they haven’t memorized the name of their soon-to-be high school yet.</p><p>“Kelly,” I answer.</p><p>The central office staffer asks, “Is that a neighborhood school?”</p><p>“Yes.”</p><p>Later that night, I received messages that suggest I might have misheard the question about neighborhood school. It’s possible she asked me, “Is this <i>the</i> neighborhood school?” The messages I received indicated that CPS wants families currently in police stations to register at the neighborhood school nearest the station, and then transfer if the school can’t provide the services they need.</p><p>But that’s really hard on people who have been living in constant motion, especially children. Our mutual aid group decided to bring them to Kelly because it is a convenient bus commute from the police station, has bilingual teachers, and English as a second language class. There’s also a teacher there who is also a mutual aid volunteer to help them if they have any problems.</p><p>Finally, the staffer comes back with some new papers to add to each family’s stack, allowing them to go ahead and register their daughters as ninth-graders at Kelly.</p><p><b>11:54 a.m. Kelly High School, Door 4</b></p><p>We’re back. This time, Door 4 is propped open. We tell the security guard we went downtown and show her the additional papers. She gives each family a packet of enrollment papers to fill out.</p><p>The security guard asks Rosa for her ID. It’s back at the police station. Rosa, Sofia and the little guy pile in the car with me to go get it.</p><p>By 1:05 p.m., we’re back at Kelly for the fourth time today. The chances Sofia and Marianna will get any class time on Day 1 have already vanished. Now I’m afraid Sofia’s registration gets pushed another day too.</p><p>But the guard gives her a number – 45 – on an index card and tells us to wait in the auditorium. Marianna and her family are already there, among a dozen other families, holding an index card with a number, too. Hers is 40.</p><p><b>1:30 p.m., Kelly High School Auditorium</b></p><p>While waiting, Sofia and Marianna fine-tune all the paperwork. Heads bowed, they tick off the to-dos. Media release, done. Consent for school text messages, done. Racial/ethnic survey, done.</p><p>A short woman walks in and calls the number 33. A family follows her out of the auditorium. Sofia’s baby brother sleeps in his mom’s lap. Marianna’s little sister miraculously fell asleep while sharing a wooden auditorium seat with her big sis. The older girls are yawning. Eventually, they each put their head on their mother’s shoulder, their long hair hiding their faces as they burrow in for a rest.</p><p>There are two counselors down near the stage. I ask them what happens next. They say the girls must get registered in the main office; then, they can receive class schedules. If the girls don’t make it to the main office today, they will have to come back at 9 a.m. tomorrow and keep on waiting.</p><p>Suddenly, there are end-of-day announcements coming over the intercom. They’ve missed the first day, and it’s looking like they won’t be able to attend class tomorrow, either.</p><p><b>2:47 p.m. Kelly High School Main Office</b></p><p>Finally, Marianna’s number – 40 – is called. I follow her family to the main office, where they get to wait again, this time in padded office seats.</p><p>When Marianna and her parents start talking with the school clerk, she asks for two proofs of address. I interrupt and say, “They are STLS,” which means students in temporary living situations. These students are legally entitled to enroll in school without the usual documents.</p><p>Once that’s done, I play with the 4-year-old while Marianna and her parents hand over the paperwork. Eventually, the clerk shares the good news before the bad: Marianna is officially registered. But tomorrow she’ll have to come back at 9 a.m. tomorrow to take an English proficiency test before she gets a class schedule.</p><p>We head back to the auditorium. Sofia and her family aren’t there; their number has been called, too. Both girls are registered and can test tomorrow.</p><p>We leave Kelly around 3:40 p.m. No one except Sofia has eaten since breakfast; she had her leftover eggs.</p><h2>Tuesday, August 22</h2><p><b>9:10 a.m. Kelly High School, Library</b></p><p>Tuesday morning, Sofia, Marianna, their moms, and the 1-year-old all come with me to Kelly while the girls take the English-language placement test. While we all wait in the library, a teacher brings in a box of donut holes to share with all the families waiting to register or have their children test for English placement. After about half an hour, a teacher comes in to take Sofia and Marianna downstairs for testing.</p><p>I leave them my cell number to call when the test is finished. When I return, the girls and their mothers are outside, talking with two young women who appear to be Kelly students. I join the circle between Sofia and Marianna and ask in Spanish, “How did it go?”</p><p>“Excellente!” Sofia says with a wide smile. Marianna smiles shyly, and I stretch my arms each way to give them both a quick shoulder hug. Soon after, the conversation wraps up, and we head back to the station.</p><h2>Wednesday, August 23</h2><p><b>8:00 a.m. Kelly High School, Main Office</b></p><p>At the office, the girls get paper printouts of their schedules. The secretary says they can get IDs and bus passes at lunchtime.</p><p>When they see they have a class together, they squeeze hands and smile. Then they head to their first-period class: English as a Second Language.</p><p><i>Maureen Kelleher is a volunteer with the District 9 mutual aid group and a longtime education writer. She previously wrote a First Person piece about </i><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2018/11/6/21106075/it-s-hard-to-leave-the-school-you-love-but-sometimes-it-s-necessary"><i>choosing a new school for her daughter.</i></a></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/23/23842869/chicago-migrant-student-enrollment-first-person/Maureen Kelleher2024-02-02T22:54:57+00:002024-02-02T22:54:57+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Comfort Agboola was thinking about her upcoming math lesson while keeping an eye on her middle school students during an assembly this morning to celebrate her school’s recent achievement as one of only <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/04/illinois-chicago-majority-black-exemplary-schools/">five majority-Black Chicago schools to earn an “Exemplary” designation</a> from the state.</p><p>At least that’s what she thought the assembly was about.</p><p>Until one of the visitors at the assembly turned to announce a $25,000 award to one of Poe Classical Elementary School’s teachers. It was Agboola.</p><p>The gym erupted in applause and cheers as Poe students waved light blue Poe Classical flags and paper signs with Agboola’s face on them. The glittering Poe cheer team burst into dance, and colleagues rushed to hug a stunned Agboola.</p><p>The event brought out some special guests – including Congresswoman Robin Kelly, State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders, and Chicago Public Schools Chief Executive Officer Pedro Martinez – to the selective enrollment school in the city’s Pullman neighborhood.</p><p>Jane Foley, the senior vice president of the Milken Educator Awards, announced the award, which is given to up to 75 educators across the U.S.</p><p>Agboola is the only Illinois educator to receive the award this year and the <a href="https://www.milkeneducatorawards.org/about/state-partners/view/14">first Chicago Public Schools district teacher to receive the award since 2010</a>.</p><p>The Milken Educator Award was created by Lowell Milken in 1987 to honor early- to mid-career education professionals based on their achievements and “the promise of what they will accomplish,” according to a press release from the Milken Family Foundation.</p><p>“I was just in shock,” Agboola said afterward. “It pushes me to do more in the classroom.”</p><p>Martinez said in a statement that “exceptional efforts” for Agboola’s students “exhibit what we as a District can accomplish if we continue to focus on core instruction and welcoming, supportive school communities.”</p><p>Along with the cash award, honorees attend an all-expenses-paid forum with Milken in Los Angeles, receive mentorship opportunities, and become lifetime members of the Milken Educator Network, a nationwide group of educators and education professionals including past award recipients.</p><p>“They never let you go,” said Mark Jordan, who won the award in 1989 when he taught music at Gompers Fine Arts Option School in Chicago.</p><p>“It’s the Oscars of education. I don’t see anyone saying I do it for the accolades,” he said after helping to present the award to Agboola Friday. “So, if I see another educator being honored, I want to be there.”</p><p>The $25,000 award is unrestricted, and recipients have used the money in diverse ways, including spending funds on their children’s or their own education, establishing scholarships, or taking a dream vacation, according to the press release.</p><p>Agboola teaches reading, English language arts, and math at Poe. Her passion, however, is writing, and she brings that passion into the class. In her classroom, for example, students have a living room, library, and publishing area where they can practice spelling and respond to writing prompts on a collection of typewriters, while also learning about typewriter mechanics.</p><p>Outside of the classroom, Agboola extends student learning with opportunities like spelling bees, a podcast club, debate, and Model UN. She has earned several other distinctions including a Pulitzer Center Teacher Fellowship, the 2020-21 Network 13 Teacher of the Year Award, and the State of Illinois’ 2023 Meritorious Service Award in the Teacher Category.</p><p>“I like her teaching style,” said Jayson Ridgell, one of Agboola’s sixth grade students. “She doesn’t yell and she’s patient.”</p><p>He said Ms. A, as her students call her, visits every table in the classroom to work with individual students.</p><p>Agboola joined Poe in 2020 during the pandemic and spent her first year there teaching virtually, but that wasn’t the first challenge she’s faced in her teaching career.</p><p>In her first teaching job at the <a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20141029/avondale/st-hyacinth-basilica-school-avondale-close-at-end-of-school-year/">now-closed St. Hyacinth Basilica School </a>in Avondale more than a decade ago, she worked with a young student who was non-verbal. When the student spoke for the first time in Agboola’s presence, she knew teaching was her calling - just as it was her mother’s.</p><p>“Parents are sending their most valuable thing to us,” she said. “I know that anything they do they are still growing and learning. They need our support.”</p><p>When the celebration waned and most students returned to their classes, Agboola remained surrounded by cameras as she called another important educator in her life: her mother.</p><p>“I just want to thank you too, mom,” she said over the phone. “Because you inspired me in your career as an educator.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/02/chicago-teacher-awarded-milken-educator-award/Crystal PaulCrystal Paul2024-02-01T21:35:08+00:002024-02-01T21:35:08+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Standing next to a 3D model of the Altgeld Gardens neighborhood spread across a conference room table, eighth grader Rondell Sims gave a call to action to a room of city officials and classmates.</p><p>“As development comes to our community, you all will be advocates alongside in creation of a plan that is for us, by us,” Rondell said during a presentation on Wednesday inside the Altgeld Gardens Chicago Public Library Branch.</p><p>Rondell and his fellow middle schoolers at <a href="https://aldridgeeagles.org/" target="_blank">Aldridge Elementary</a> were laying out a vision for the future of Altgeld Gardens that would include a grocery store, a new recreation center, public art by a planned new public transit stop, and a museum to honor Hazel Johnson, the “<a href="https://www.chipublib.org/blogs/post/hazel-m-johnson-mother-of-the-environmental-justice-movement/">mother of the environmental justice movement</a>” who lived in the neighborhood and fought against air pollution and toxic conditions in the community.</p><p>“You can’t really speak on something that you don’t live,” Rondell said after the formal presentation ended. “I feel like by us adding these things to the community and making more things that will be better for the people that’s in the community is just amazing. It will give a better name for our community.”</p><p>The <a href="https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/62813fce853a4240975b6809de7467ec">project</a> — that allowed middle schoolers to play the role of city planner and propose changes to their community — is the culmination of more than two years of collaboration between Aldridge teachers and the Field Museum.</p><p>“The work that we do in schools can’t just be isolated to grades,” said Principal Afua Agyeman-Badu. ”I wanted them to see the power that exists within them to make decisions and create a plan about what it is that they want for this place.”</p><p>Built in 1945 by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to house Black veterans returning from World War II, Altgeld Gardens is a planned community made up of mostly three-story townhomes operated by the Chicago Housing Authority.</p><p>The neighborhood — near the site of the old steel mills and the Pullman factory — sits 19 miles from Chicago’s Loop at 130th Street and has no access to the city’s public transit system, which ends at 95th Street. City officials have been talking about extending the Red Line for decades, but the <a href="https://www.transitchicago.com/rle/">project now appears on the cusp of becoming a reality</a>.</p><p>Agyeman-Badu said the Red Line extension project is a learning opportunity for Aldridge students.</p><p>“I want them to be able to one day see when the ribbon is cut for them to see their ideas as a part of that plan for the Red Line extension,” Agyeman-Badu said.</p><p>Raven Mayo, Aldridge’s middle school science teacher, said the students have been working on this project since sixth grade and it’s evolved over time. The news of the Red Line extension prompted engaging discussions in class when students questioned why the community doesn’t have access to public transit and is isolated from the rest of Chicago.</p><p>“This created an opportunity for them to share their gripes in a productive way,” Mayo said. “Like this is what we deserve, just like the rest of the city.”</p><p>“The kids are speaking, they have a voice, their voice matters, their desires matter, they’re the future.” Mayo said. “In the next five years, they’ll be working adults, and they need to have access to get it downtown and to be a part of the workforce in Chicago.”</p><p>Bill Mooney, chief infrastructure officer for the Chicago Transit Authority, and other city officials attended the presentation on Wednesday to give feedback and take notes.</p><p>“This is one of the coolest things I’ve been able to participate in my 26 years at CTA.” Mooney said. “We are in a unique moment. Not often does what’s right, and what’s possible align.”</p><p>He urged the students to keep fighting to bring their ideas to fruition. The Red Line extension project cleared a hurdle <a href="https://www.transitchicago.com/cta-red-line-extension-in-line-for-1973-billion-in-federal-funding/">last fall in the process to secure nearly $2 billion in federal funding</a>, but the final award won’t be determined until late 2024. It’s not expected to be completed until 2029.</p><p>Jasmine Gunn, a city planner for the Far South Region with Chicago’s Department of Planning and Development, said often community meetings draw an older demographic, so it was refreshing to see the youth perspective.</p><p>“They’re gonna be living in this community longer than any of us,” Gunn said. “To start any development, we need the vision and seeing their vision is really great. I’m actually trying to set up a field trip for our staff to come look at the presentation.”</p><p>Eleanor Sweeney, an educator with The Field Museum who works with the Aldridge students, said students are more likely to be engaged with learning when there’s a connection to their own lives. They also have so many good ideas.</p><p>“If anyone is making decisions about the future of their neighborhood, consult your local middle schoolers,” Sweeney said with a smile.</p><p>Terrence Perry, an eighth grader who worked on the public art piece of the project, said he’s hopeful that city officials will pick up some of their ideas.</p><p>“Once everybody sees it? They’re gonna be like, “Oh, I get what they’re trying to do,’” Terrence said. “A lot of people are gonna want to move out here.”</p><p>He stood near the 3D model on the conference room table and pointed to a tiny display near his home. It read: “Power and peace starts within me.”</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/01/altgeld-gardens-middle-school-students-pitch-community-development-plan/Becky VeveaBecky Vevea2024-02-01T19:58:07+00:002024-02-01T19:58:38+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools has proposed calendars for the next two academic years, pushing next year’s start date back by a week to avoid overlapping with the Democratic National Convention.</p><p>The Board of Education is slated to vote on the proposed calendars for <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IuFtvFYBHiIs-TNTbRbqFhyQowGDDETP/view">the 2024-25</a> and <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Daa3Uy4F5-3t2Q17hZ4QRZcAhCDfJCTQ/view">2025-26</a> school years at its Feb. 22 meeting.</p><p>The first day of school for <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IuFtvFYBHiIs-TNTbRbqFhyQowGDDETP/view">the 2024-25</a> academic year would be on Aug. 26, about a week later than recent years. The move avoids starting school the same day Chicago is set to begin hosting <a href="https://chicago2024.com/">the Democratic National Convention</a> from Aug. 19-22. The convention is expected to bring in about 75,000 visitors, according to a news release from CPS.</p><p>“This shift not only accommodates the city’s logistical needs as they relate to the influx of Conventiongoers, but it also allows time for students to attend, volunteer, and participate in the civic process of hosting the Convention,” district officials said in a press release.</p><p>Because of the later start, the first semester next year would also end after a two-week winter break on Jan. 17, 2025. School would end on June 12, 2025, about a week later than this year.</p><p>For the <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Daa3Uy4F5-3t2Q17hZ4QRZcAhCDfJCTQ/view" target="_blank">2025-26 school year,</a> the first day would return to the third week of August – on Aug. 18, 2025 – and classes would end June 4, 2026.</p><p>Both proposed calendars would continue the recent practice of taking a full week off at Thanksgiving.</p><p>The district is asking parents, staff, and students for their feedback. A <a href="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfYdIKoI4_k4LjT_5MlWaJswbhV00yjdfx6ngVfEEKcnELrRA/viewform">survey for parents, staff, and other community members</a> will close at 5 p.m. Feb. 7. while a survey that CPS distributed Tuesday to students in grades 6-12 ends at 5 p.m. Feb. 2.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/02/01/chicago-public-schools-pushes-start-date-for-2024-25-school-year-dnc/Reema AminReema Amin,Reema Amin2024-01-29T23:23:50+00:002024-01-30T16:13:57+00:00<p>Public preschool has been a lifeline for Kristen Larson.</p><p>Larson and her husband couldn’t afford private day care for both their daughters, who are 4 and 1. So last fall, when Larson was able to get a preschool seat just four blocks from their Bridgeport home for her 4-year-old, she was relieved.</p><p>Without that, she said, “I probably would have had to quit my job.”</p><p>Thousands of Chicago parents like Larson depend on the district’s free public preschool program, which has been expanding over the past five years. This year, the district has 16,062 full-day seats for 4-year-olds and another 7,300 half-day seats for both 3- and 4-year-olds, a spokesperson said. That expansion was possible in part because of tens of millions of dollars in temporary federal COVID relief money, according to data obtained by Chalkbeat through a Freedom of Information Act request.</p><p>But the federal relief funds will <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2024/01/18/biden-white-house-focus-on-tutoring-summer-school-chronic-absenteeism/">run out next school year</a>, raising a critical question: How will the district continue funding universal preschool?</p><p>Since July 1, 2020, Chicago Public Schools had spent close to $700 million on pre-K programs through the end of last school year, including new summer initiatives and programs for children under the age of 3, according to district budget records. It has budgeted another $262.7 million for this fiscal year, which covers the current school year. Of all of that funding, COVID relief dollars have so far covered about 14% of those costs, or $137 million, most of which went toward employee salaries, according to expense data obtained by Chalkbeat through an open records request.</p><p>Chicago is slated to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/12/21/22847296/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-funding-accountability/">receive a total $2.8 billion</a> in Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund, or ESSER, dollars which districts could use broadly to help students and schools recover from the pandemic, and had spent $2.4 billion as of mid-November. The district has used the bulk of the money to fund existing costs, such as <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/2/11/22927568/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-american-rescue-plan-spending/">employee salaries</a>. It has also launched new programs, such as <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/18/23875659/chicago-public-schools-cps-tutor-corps-esser-covid-relief/">TutorCorps,</a> <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/9/28/22690530/summer-school-in-chicago-revamped-missing-data-learning-recovery/">expanded summer school</a>, and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/13/23506463/chicago-public-schools-technology-spending-tracking-computers-covid-relief/">purchased new technology</a>.</p><p>CPS officials said it used federal dollars to help expand pre-K — and sustain it — because it didn’t have enough state funding to do so, and creating more seats was a district priority.</p><p>Studies have found that kids who attended preschool are more likely to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2019/4/17/21107969/can-pre-k-help-students-even-if-they-don-t-attend">have higher test scores, were less likely to be disciplined</a>, <a href="https://co.chalkbeat.org/2019/5/13/21108132/preschool-has-enduring-benefits-for-disadvantaged-children-and-their-children-new-research-finds">have better employment outcomes, and are less likely to be involved with crime</a>.</p><p>CPS has steadily reduced its reliance on COVID relief dollars for pre-K over the past four years, increasing spending of district dollars on early childhood programs by $6 million this year, officials said. And observers are expecting the state to increase funding for early childhood education. Last week the Illinois State Board of Education <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/25/illinois-education-budget-proposal-is-less-than-what-advocates-want/">proposed a budget</a> that would increase the state’s Early Childhood Block Grant – which helps cover the district’s pre-K program – by $75 million.</p><p>But as federal funds dry up, the district is grappling with how to avoid cuts while also plugging a projected <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/#:~:text=The%20%24391%20million%20deficit%20is,aid%2C%20according%20to%20Sitkowski's%20presentation.">$391 million budget deficit</a> next fiscal year, which begins July 1. That includes figuring out how to cover the cost of pre-K with local or more state dollars.</p><p>Asked if the district is considering cutting pre-K seats or laying off teachers in order to save money, district officials said they were not ready to comment on that. But neither is their first choice; the district is pushing the state for more money.</p><p>“Chicago Public Schools is committed to ensuring that every 4-year-old in Chicago has the opportunity to attend free preschool to develop valuable academic and social-emotional skills and experiences,” said Sylvia Barragan, a spokesperson for the district, in a statement.</p><h2>Preschool expansion plan predates pandemic</h2><p>In 2018, then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel pledged to open a pre-K seat for every 4-year-old in Chicago before announcing he would not seek a third term. It would mean <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/2/6/21106776/why-rahm-emanuel-s-rollout-of-universal-pre-k-has-chicago-preschool-providers-worried/">big shifts for the city’s preschool system</a>, which included a mix of half- and full-day programs at public schools and in community-based programs that served 3- and 4-year-olds.</p><p>Emanuel’s promise was picked up by his successor, former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who set a goal <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/5/30/21108243/here-are-12-things-chicago-parents-want-to-know-about-universal-pre-k/">to make pre-K for 4-year-olds universal</a> by this year.</p><p>Since 2019, CPS has added 1,950 new preschool spots, district officials said.</p><p>But even as the district has expanded pre-K, enrollment has been fluctuating amid the COVID pandemic and as Chicago continues to see <a href="https://dph.illinois.gov/data-statistics/vital-statistics/birth-statistics.html">birth rates decline</a>.</p><p>Enrollment initially grew – from 12,900 4-year-olds in the 2018-19 school year to 14,300 the fall before the pandemic – and then <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/10/16/21519560/chicago-public-schools-loss-of-14500-students-is-putting-reopening-pressure-on-district-leaders/">plummeted</a> by 34%, to about 9,500 students in the 2020-21 school year.</p><p>This school year, just over 13,000 4-year-olds were in pre-K at CPS schools.</p><p>The district has reached universal demand in nearly all Chicago communities, said Leslie McKinily, the district’s chief of early childhood education.</p><p>As of September, when the district officially counted enrollment, 75% of all pre-K seats were filled, according to the district. That has grown to 81% as of last week, McKinily said. The district’s goal is 85% because officials want to have spots available for new families throughout the year, McKinily said.</p><p>CPS does not have plans to open more pre-K spots, but McKinily’s team is looking to see where they need to “right-size.” For example, she said, the city has not met the demand for pre-K seats in the North Side neighborhood of West Ridge. But there <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/why-arent-more-chicago-parents-taking-advantage-of-free-preschool/4df58410-7b83-42bd-82b9-957bce5faefa">are other parts of the city</a> where pre-K seats <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/9/23298933/preschool-availability-chicago-elementary-schools-enrollment/">are going unfilled</a>.</p><p>“We’re really thinking about right now, do we have our programs in the right spaces? And how do we ensure that the programming meets the needs of the community?” McKinily said.</p><h2>Chicago shrinks reliance on federal COVID dollars for pre-K</h2><p>Over the past four years, pre-K instruction accounted for the third largest use of the district’s COVID relief dollars, behind reducing class sizes for grades K-3 and spending on administrative costs related to federal relief funding, according to the data obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Nearly all of the spending of COVID relief dollars on pre-K – about $130 million – went towards employee salaries, pensions, and benefits, according to the data. When looking at all expenses related to pre-K, including separate line items for pre-K students with disabilities, the district spent a total $137 million in the relief funds.</p><p>Pre-K programs in Chicago are mostly funded through state dollars as part of Illinois’ Early Childhood Block Grant. The program is also funded by some local taxpayer dollars and other federal money unrelated to COVID relief funding.</p><p>District officials said a portion of the federal COVID recovery money went toward early childhood programs outside of the regular school day, including a new summer program called Preview to Pre-K.</p><p>A spokesperson provided an additional breakdown of budget figures to show how much was being spent directly on daily preschool instruction during the school year. It showed the district spent nearly $590 million from the fall of 2020 through the 2022-23 school year and about 13% came from ESSER dollars, according to CPS. In that time period, state funding grew by just $3 million.</p><p>The data show the district has cut down on its use of ESSER funding in that time period while boosting local dollars.</p><p>Theresa Hawley, executive director of the Center for Early Learning Funding Equity at Northern Illinois University who previously worked on early childhood education initiatives in Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration, said Chicago officials assumed “with decent enough reason” before the pandemic that the state would pump more money into the block grant and allow them to continue opening more pre-K seats.</p><p>Pritzker is a longtime champion of early childhood education and has promised to make universal preschool more accessible across Illinois.</p><p>But in 2020, the pandemic put “a wrench in that plan” when Pritzker <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/15/23600277/illinois-pritzker-2024-budget-early-childhood-education-child-care/">decided not to increase block grant funding,</a> Hawley said. Illinois, as well as state governments across the country, worried about how the public health crisis would impact local resources as the economy slowed down.</p><p>When the federal government sent billions of COVID relief dollars to school districts, CPS decided to spend a chunk of its share to expand pre-K in absence of more state dollars, district officials said. Officials continued to invest in expansion efforts even after enrollment dropped in 2020.</p><p>“We did monitor and adjust our enrollment expansion throughout the pandemic,” McKinily said.</p><p>Still, district officials said that pre-K expansion was one of several priorities that “couldn’t wait.” The federal dollars have also helped CPS pay for existing pre-K costs, staving off budget deficits.</p><p>As the district used federal funds on pre-K in recent years, one Logan Square mother enrolled both of her sons in preschool at their neighborhood school. The program saved the family from shelling out tens of thousands of dollars in day care costs, said the mother, whose name Chalkbeat is withholding because of concerns over immigration status.</p><p>She’s currently seeing pre-K’s impact on her younger son, who is 4. For example, he used to try to snatch toys from his older brother because he couldn’t wait to play with them. But after learning how to take turns in pre-K, her son now says to his brother, “When you’re done, can I play with it?”</p><p>The mother was surprised to learn that the district used emergency funding toward pre-K. But she thinks it was the right decision.</p><p>“They have to allocate money to keep the program going,” she said, saying she is concerned about what will happen if the district can’t find extra money.</p><p>“Day care is very expensive in Chicago, and I see how important it is to have early childhood education,” she said. “And if it’s only available to people who can afford to send your child to fee-based preschool, then it’s not equitable to children.”</p><h2>What lies ahead for pre-K?</h2><p>Fiscal watchdogs have warned districts against using temporary federal dollars for a program they want to keep permanently, such as pre-K. Doing so can result in painful cuts that can affect children and families, so such spending decisions should come alongside lots of planning for the future, said Joe Ferguson, Chicago’s former inspector general who is now the executive director of Civic Federation, a nonpartisan government watchdog group.</p><p>“Obviously, no one’s going to say pre-K education [or] early childhood support is not an important priority,” Ferguson said. “But if it’s an important priority, then the work should have been done already – certainly needs to be done now – to identify where the revenue stream is going to come [from] to maintain it.”</p><p>Chicago isn’t alone. In New York City, former Mayor Bill de Blasio used COVID relief funds to expand his signature universal pre-K program for 3-year-olds <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2022/9/22/23366660/nyc-3-k-expansion-federal-stimulus-funding-eric-adams/">without a plan for how to pay for those seats</a> once the federal funds ran out. His successor, Mayor Eric Adams, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2022/11/16/23463419/ny-3k-expansion-preschool-early-childhood-education-eric-adams/">halted the program’s expansion</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2024/01/17/eric-adams-school-funding-cuts-less-than-expected/">recently proposed slashing $170 million in early childhood programming,</a> which includes preschool for 3- and 4-year-olds.</p><p>Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has signaled an opposite approach, saying on the campaign trail that he wanted “child care for all” and would lobby Pritzker to increase early childhood education funding.</p><p>Last year, Pritzker <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/15/23600277/illinois-pritzker-2024-budget-early-childhood-education-child-care/">proposed a four-year plan</a> that aims to expand early childhood.</p><p>The state increased the Early Childhood Block Grant this year <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/15/23600277/illinois-pritzker-2024-budget-early-childhood-education-child-care/">by $75 million</a>, of which nearly $28 million went straight to Chicago Public Schools, as required by state law. Pritzker has not yet proposed a budget for next fiscal year, but the Illinois State Board of Education is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/25/illinois-education-budget-proposal-is-less-than-what-advocates-want/">proposing another $75 million increase.</a></p><p>District officials have said that more state funding for K-12 would also help. CPS, like other districts, is on a ramp toward “adequate” state funding and is $1.4 billion short of that goal, according <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/district.aspx?districtid=15016299025&source=environment&source2=evidencebasedfunding">to the Illinois State Board of Education.</a></p><p>Elliot Regenstein, partner at law firm Foresight Law and Policy and an advocate for early childhood education who helped launch the state’s Preschool for All program under former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, said maintaining pre-K funding in the future depends on leadership.</p><p>“To some degree, all of those sustainability plans are just a hope and a guess that when the one-time funding runs out, that whoever is in charge at that moment will make decisions that carry on the momentum of those one-time funds,” Regenstein said.</p><p>He said Chicago’s decision to invest in pre-K, even with temporary dollars, is backed by research that shows it’s beneficial for children.</p><p>“The pandemic has had an impact on all children,” Regenstein said. “I think it’s great that CPS looked at its data and said ….we can’t ignore the kids who haven’t even entered kindergarten yet and we believe that if we invest in those kids it will help set them on a positive trajectory.”</p><p>Larson, the mother from Bridgeport, agreed. She said much of her daughter’s first years were during the pandemic and in social isolation. Pre-K has helped her make new friends, on top of learning about letters and numbers.</p><p>“Sometimes you need to be investing in a program to make it a program that you want people to send their children to,” she said.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/29/chicago-public-schools-used-covid-dollars-on-prek/Reema AminChristian K. Lee for Chalkbeat2024-01-25T23:01:29+00:002024-01-26T17:24:28+00:00<p>The Chicago Board of Education voted Thursday to renew agreements with 12 charter networks, impacting 49 schools. The decision followed months of pleading from charter school leaders, educators, and students.</p><p>The board extended contracts for all of the schools up for renewal. It renewed most of the contracts by either three or four years, starting this July. The maximum extension allowed under state law is 10 years.</p><p>Each renewal came with a set of conditions, ranging from monitoring services for students with disabilities and students learning English as a new language to improving facilities, financial compliance, and accuracy of teacher licenses. Those conditions were a result of “issues that were identified during our comprehensive review,” said Zabrina Evans, executive director of the district’s Office of Innovation and Incubation in the Office of Portfolio Management.</p><p>The vote represented the first round of charter renewals under the current board. In the months leading up to Thursday’s vote, Chicago’s charter school community <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">worried</a> that the board, appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson, would make it more challenging for charters to get renewed. Johnson, who rose to power as an organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union, has long been critical of charter schools, but has also said he doesn’t oppose them.</p><p>More recently, the board passed a resolution <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">stating its intention to move away from school choice</a> and focus on sending more resources to neighborhood schools. The resolution does not call for the closure of schools of choice, such as charters, but board leaders said they would be more closely scrutinizing charter schools.</p><p>The board’s vote to renew all contracts isn’t surprising: State law has barred school closures in Chicago until 2025. In July, a Cook County judge overturned the previous board’s decision not to renew its contract <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/14/chicago-public-schools-renews-urban-prep/">with Urban Prep Charter Academy</a> after ruling that the state’s school closure moratorium applies to charters.</p><p>Board Vice President Elizabeth Todd-Breland said she appreciates the improvement she’s seen in some charter schools, but said that others have failed to keep up finances or follow federal laws.</p><p>“I still maintain that as a private operator getting public money, there should be a higher level of scrutiny,” Todd-Breland said.</p><p>District officials said they evaluate charter schools based on performance in three criteria: academics, finances, and operations, which focuses on 13 areas related to state and federal law, requirements in their charter contract, and CPS policy. Five-year extensions are awarded to schools that meet or exceed academic and financial standards and receive the highest rating for operations. Extensions beyond five years go to schools that exceed all standards.</p><p>Board President Jianan Shi said he wanted the district to continue focusing on the student experience portion of the operations category for charter evaluations. He said he was concerned to see schools not meeting expectations focused on students with disabilities, students who are learning English as a new language, and student discipline. No school met standards for all three of those categories.</p><p>“‘I’m elated that we have schools that are doing well academically and financially, but I want kids to enjoy going to school every day,” Shi said.</p><p>During several board meetings since the summer, charter school leaders have asked the board to renew their contracts for the maximum 10 years. While it was previously common for schools to receive five-year extensions, district leaders have more recently renewed charters for shorter terms. Last January, the previous board – appointed by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot – <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/1/25/23571810/chicago-public-schools-charter-renewals/">handed out two-year extensions</a> to nearly half of the charter schools up for renewal, while another two got five years.</p><p>On Thursday, no school received five years. Just over half were extended for four years, and just over 40% were extended for three years. The board approved a one-year extension for Instituto Justice and Leadership Academy Charter High School and a two-year extension for Chicago High School for the Arts.</p><p>Ebonie Durham, executive director of Great Lakes Academy, a charter school that received a three-year extension, asked the board to provide schools and families with more clarity on what it takes to get a 10-year extension.</p><p>Great Lakes met academic and financial performance standards, but did not meet benchmarks for operations, including for student discipline, students with disabilities and students learning English as a new language.</p><p>As conditions of Great Lakes’ extension, the board called for the school to implement the district’s recommendations for serving students with disabilities. The conditions also call for monitoring how the school is serving English language learners, its disciplinary practices, and how it tracks repairs to facilities.</p><p>“If the CEO’s recommendation is accepted and we receive three years, in two years I will be back in front of this board again pleading to be renewed,” Durham said.</p><p>Before the board vote, some teachers raised concerns about Instituto Justice and Leadership Academy, which serves students ages 16-21 who became disengaged with school. The teachers at the school, who are part of the Chicago Teachers Union, have voted to strike Feb. 6 in response to concerns over several issues, including staffing levels for students with disabilities, “sanctuary protections” for immigrant students and employees, and compensation, according to <a href="https://www.ctulocal1.org/posts/instituto-strike-ready/">the CTU.</a></p><p>Stacy Davis Gates, president of the Chicago Teachers Union, highlighted the fight at Instituto as one reason the renewal process should reflect “what the people, the stakeholders in that school community deserve.” One of her recommendations included creating Local School Councils so that charter parents have more of a voice.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/25/chicago-public-schools-renews-charter-schools/Reema AminReema Amin2024-01-23T15:40:08+00:002024-01-23T15:40:08+00:00<p><i>This story was originally published by the </i><a href="https://illinoisanswers.org/2024/01/16/chicago-public-schools-bus-driver-shortage-solution/" target="_blank"><i>Illinois Answers Project</i></a><i>.</i></p><p>Every weekday at 7:45 a.m., Michael Craft is notified that a ride-share driver has arrived at his home in Aurora, Colorado. Craft walks outside to confirm the driver’s identity and then helps his foster teenager into the car, sending him off to high school about 15 miles away.</p><p>The platform he uses, HopSkipDrive, notifies him that the ride has started, and soon he’ll receive another that the teenager has been dropped off. On the network’s app, Craft can track a live mapping of the drive.</p><p>“It’s almost overboard but you sit comfortable knowing where your kid is,” Craft said in an interview with the Illinois Answers Project.</p><p>He repeats the same process for another foster teen, who attends school in a different district.</p><p><a href="https://www.hopskipdrive.com/">HopSkipDrive</a> is a transportation network company designed to take students ages 6 and older to and from school, extracurricular activities, and internships. The company works with 600 school districts, nonprofits, and government agencies in 14 states plus Washington, D.C.</p><p>The company has helped schools grapple with a national shortage of bus drivers by tapping into a driver network of independent contractors.</p><p>The bus driver shortage is forcing districts to get creative in finding transportation solutions, including Chicago Public Schools, where officials have had early conversations with HopSkipDrive about the feasibility of bringing the service to Illinois and transporting Chicago students, said Kimberly Jones, executive director of student transportation services for CPS, in an interview with Illinois Answers in November. The state currently requires a school bus permit to transport students, even in passenger cars.</p><p>“We’re building the foundation right now” with HopSkipDrive and the state, she said. “We’re just beginning to have those conversations.”</p><p>
<div class="flourish-embed flourish-chart" data-src="visualisation/16413652"><script src="https://public.flourish.studio/resources/embed.js"></script></div></p><p>Chicago Public Schools started the 2023-24 school year short of roughly 600 bus drivers, about half needed to transport all students. It has <a href="https://www.cps.edu/services-and-supports/transportation-services/">forced the district to prioritize</a> students with disabilities and those experiencing homelessness, which totals to more than 11,700 students who either receive transportation or a monthly stipend, a district spokesperson told Illinois Answers. The district has not been able to provide about 5,500 general, magnet, and selective enrollment students with transportation this academic year.</p><p>School districts across the country are “all fighting for the same driving population,” Jones said at an October Board of Education about the competition to attract new bus drivers.</p><p>CPS has used alternative transportation since 2004 to help fill in the gaps and contracts with eight companies to transport 1,356 students, district officials said. These companies use a variety of vehicles that may require a Commercial Driver’s License or a state-approved school bus driver permit.</p><p>However, HopSkipDrive’s independent contractors, <a href="https://help.hopskipdrive.com/en_us/what-are-the-qualifications-to-becoming-a-caredriver-r1DS0B5QX">called Care Drivers</a>, aren’t required to have an additional license. They drive their personal vehicles and instead undergo a certification process, background and vehicle checks, and must have five years of care-giving experience.</p><p>While companies like HopSkipDrive do not solve the need for licensed school bus drivers that many districts hope to hire, it has helped to provide supplemental support and relief for districts.</p><p>“We are bringing people from the community – caregivers who are parents, former teachers, nurses, nannies – who don’t want to go through all the requirements to drive a school bus and get their CDL license,” said Joanna McFarland, co-founder and CEO of HopSkipDrive. “Maybe they don’t want a full-time job but they are in the community, they are available to help out, and they want flexible ways to make money.”</p><p>“We’re taking people from the community that could never contract directly with a district and providing this network of available drivers who have been highly vetted,” she added.</p><p>Craft, whose foster children attend schools in three districts, has been using HopSkipDrive for several years. His work as a foster parent would look different without the help of the ride-share company, he said.</p><p>“I wouldn’t be able to (foster) the kids I have now if there was no HopSkipDrive,” Craft said. “I would have to take kids based on not their needs, but based on where they go to school and that’s not how you should do that.”</p><h2>How HopSkipDrive fills the gap</h2><p>School districts can determine which student populations the network serves and how, McFarland said, including for students with individualized education plans and McKinney-Vento students.</p><p>For example, an Indianapolis suburb contracted with the ride-share company last year to take a handful of students experiencing homelessness to and from school. Franklin Township Community School Corporation, a district of nearly 11,000 students, has just enough bus drivers to cover all routes but not to transport students who may be temporarily living several miles outside the district, said Todd Livesay, director of transportation for the district.</p><p>“Without a company like HopSkipDrive, you have to go get the kid very early in the morning before all the other routes start,” he said. So a student might be on the bus for over two hours as other students are picked up, or have to wait several hours at school after the other routes are finished.</p><p>HopSkipDrive is “just a godsend because they give (students) a quick ride to and from school. It’s safe,” he said. “… I think about my kids and if my kids were in these situations, would I be comfortable? What would I want them to be doing? And I am comfortable,” he said of HopSkipDrive.</p><p>“It’s better for the student in the long-run.”</p><p>The district pays the company a $19 base fee plus $1.99 per mile, or a $58 minimum, whichever comes first, according to its contract with HopSkipDrive.</p><p>Denver Public Schools, a district with 207 schools, uses HopSkipDrive to transport about 250 students to and from school everyday. The service is available to general education students, those who are experiencing homelessness, and students with disabilities, said Albert Samora, the district’s executive director of transportation. Denver also uses EverDriven, an alternative model that employs drivers, for about 250 students, he said.</p><p>Samora said the district initially used HopSkipDrive and other alternative transportation services for inefficient routes, or routes outside the district for students in foster care or who don’t have permanent housing. But amid the bus driver shortage, the district has turned to these companies for other routes.</p><p>“HopSkipDrive and EverDriven and other contractors have become a side-by-side solution when we don’t have the drivers,” he said. “So now they’ve moved from being a supplemental service to being almost part of our primary service.”</p><p>Over the last several years, he said the district has been working to close the gap by, in part, increasing bus driver wages and offering bonuses. Samora said this has helped reduce the shortage from 100 bus drivers in 2019 to roughly 40 this academic year.</p><p>Samora said the alternative services make up about a third of the district’s $30 million transportation budget. For comparison, Chicago Public Schools has a $146 million transportation budget and spends about $7 million on alternative services for companies to transport over 1,000 students, a district spokesperson said.</p><p>Denver has been using HopSkipDrive since 2021, according to its contract, and currently employs 160 bus drivers, said Tyler Maybee, director of operations. A HopSkipDrive ride costs $2.99 per mile plus a $19 base fee for each ride, according to Denver’s contract with the service, obtained through a public records request.</p><p>Denver Public Schools, with nearly 90,000 students, and Virginia Fairfax County Public Schools, with nearly 180,000 students, are the largest districts that HopSkipDrive serves, McFarland said. CPS, for comparison, has over 320,000 students in the district.</p><h2>A local option</h2><p>While CPS provides CTA Ventra cards for the 5,500 magnet and selective enrollment students and gives a<a href="https://www.cps.edu/media/community-updates/transportation-services-update/"> monthly stipend of up to $500 </a>to eligible diverse learners and students in temporary living situations, the rest of students must find transportation on their own.</p><p>Maria Ugarte’s child does not qualify for district transportation, so she or her husband drive her daughter – and three other children in a carpool – 45 minutes one way to Inter-American Elementary Magnet School in Lakeview, she said.</p><p>Ugarte, who serves on the Local School Council, worries that the lack of transportation, especially for low income families, will impact enrollment at her child’s dual-language school. As an immigrant, she said, it’s important for her children to maintain their heritage.</p><p>She said she’d be hesitant to use HopSkipDrive because she’s not familiar with how drivers are vetted.</p><p>“My daughter is 12. … My kids don’t walk anywhere on their own, so I don’t think I’d be able to put them in a car where I’m not 100% sure that everything has been checked for those drivers,” she said. “… At this moment, I don’t feel comfortable because it’s something so new.”</p><p>CPS parent Ismael El-Amin’s eldest two children also didn’t qualify for transportation because they are in selective enrollment schools and live about 8 and 17 miles away. In 2021, he co-founded a carpool service called <a href="https://www.piggybacknetwork.com/">PiggyBack Networ</a>k that connects parents by matching routes to school or other activities.</p><p>El-Amin said he founded the company because he understands how the lack of reliable transportation can hinder future opportunities. When he was in junior high school, he had to take a CTA bus to football practice and would arrive late. His coach discovered that El-Amin lived nearby and began taking him to practice.</p><p>“That led to being a leader in high school, that led to being recruited to play football in college and just changed the trajectory of my life,” El-Amin said. “I’m sensing how one person’s sacrifice changed my complete trajectory.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/KVvCw8TWH1BHDd9Ehu-71IhkWyQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/D67O56I3FZA7FFI4GE54UFOSOA.jpg" alt="Ismael El-Amin co-founded PiggyBack Network in 2021 as a carpool service for students. The app connects parents with similar routes, and families pay for rides by buying points based on mileage and time. Drivers are screened and families meet each other before carpooling. Victor Hilitski for Illinois Answers Project." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Ismael El-Amin co-founded PiggyBack Network in 2021 as a carpool service for students. The app connects parents with similar routes, and families pay for rides by buying points based on mileage and time. Drivers are screened and families meet each other before carpooling. Victor Hilitski for Illinois Answers Project.</figcaption></figure><p>PiggyBack has already partnered with the YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago to provide rides for<a href="https://www.ymcachicago.org/news-events/ymca-and-piggyback-team-up-to-get-more-kids-to-day-camp/"> some of its day camps last summer</a>, for example, and operates in a handful of cities including Atlanta, Miami, and Boston, he said. CPS has reached out to PiggyBack for information for a potential partnership, both El-Amin and the district said.</p><p>“You may not know each other, you may not even go to the same school, you might overlap and go to a school two blocks away, but PiggyBack is going to say, ‘family A, you all should talk to family B’,” El-Amin said.</p><p>There’s a screening process where families meet before carpooling and drivers undergo a background check.</p><p>To pay for rides, parents buy points based on mileage and time. Depending on peak times, families<a href="https://www.piggybacknetwork.com/pricing-calculator"> can expect to pay a base fee </a>up to $4, between 32 and 75 cents per mile, or up to $5 per hour. The family that requests the ride pays with points and the drivers gain points when they complete rides. PiggyBack keeps a portion of the sale, he said.</p><p>There is no direct payout for drivers, he said, in order to ensure it’s a true carpool. Instead, drivers can use points to pay for rides for their children.</p><p>Jazmine Dillard, a pediatric dentist, learned about PiggyBack from other parents last summer after she found out that her second grade son would no longer qualify for busing. She needs help in the mornings dropping off two of her sons and was able to match with El-Amin, who takes a similar route to his daughter’s school. El-Amin said the stop only adds five minutes to his commute.</p><p>After being matched, they quickly discovered that Dillard’s husband and El-Amin both graduated from Whitney Young High School. Although strangers, that sense of familiarity and understanding of values is what sold Dillard to use PiggyBack, she said.</p><p>“I’m praying that this works for a long period of time because there are very few (transportation) programs dedicated for children,” Dillard said. “… What made me most comfortable was that (PiggyBack) vets their drivers. I don’t want to just put my kid in an Uber with some random person. … I felt very comfortable and reassured once I heard about how they went about their process of finding drivers.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/c7bYIvC_7pVOV0IBVlg8014qqQQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/EY5VXQMOLZAY7MCFZ2M2KKVQL4.jpg" alt="PiggyBack Network co-founder Ismael El-Amin greets Mason, 5, as he meets up with Jazmine Dillard, who uses PiggyBack in the mornings to get Mason and Melvin, 7, to school. The app matched her with El-Amin, who takes a similar route to his daughter’s school and picks up her kids on the way. Oct. 27, 2023. Victor Hilitski for Illinois Answers Project." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>PiggyBack Network co-founder Ismael El-Amin greets Mason, 5, as he meets up with Jazmine Dillard, who uses PiggyBack in the mornings to get Mason and Melvin, 7, to school. The app matched her with El-Amin, who takes a similar route to his daughter’s school and picks up her kids on the way. Oct. 27, 2023. Victor Hilitski for Illinois Answers Project.</figcaption></figure><h2>Could HopSkipDrive operate in Chicago?</h2><p>The main challenge in bringing HopSkipDrive to Chicago starts with the state.</p><p>Currently, Illinois Vehicle Code requires drivers who transport students to obtain a school bus permit, even in passenger vehicles, which can carry up to 10 people. To obtain a permit, a driver must pass a written and driving test, health exam, training course, and a criminal background check, among other requirements.</p><p>A spokesperson for HopSkipDrive told Illinois Answers that these regulations “don’t make sense” for their CareDrivers.</p><p>“In Illinois, the regulations require someone on our platform to follow essentially the same requirements of driving a 12-ton school bus,” according to a statement from the company. “… CareDrivers are driving a few hours a week, driving students just seven to eight trips a week on average, in a traditional sedan vehicle with one to three kids.”</p><p>The company supports a bill<a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocNum=3476&GAID=17&DocTypeID=HB&LegId=148643&SessionID=112"> introduced in the Illinois House last year </a>that would reclassify vehicles that are allowed to transport students and allow the Secretary of State to offer a separate permit for passenger vehicles. State Rep. Jaime Andrade (Democrat, district 40), who introduced HB 3476, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.</p><p>There is precedent for states to change laws to accommodate HopSkipDrive.</p><p>In 2022 in Missouri, for example,<a href="https://www.senate.mo.gov/22info/BTS_Web/Bill.aspx?SessionType=R&BillID=71259862"> legislators changed restrictions</a> to allow vehicles other than school buses to transport students and repealed a requirement that drivers of these vehicles need a school bus driver’s license, among other changes.</p><p>The same year, Colorado’s governor signed legislation that allowed the state’s Public Utilities Commission to regulate HopSkipDrive like other transportation networks. Opponents of the bill, which included competing bus driver companies and advocates for children with disabilities, argued that HopSkipDrive wouldn’t be held to the same safety standards since they are not only overseen by school districts, according to <a href="https://gazette.com/colorado_politics/advocates-for-kids-with-disabilities-say-bill-regulating-rideshare-companies-lacks-safety-provisions/article_7d96fdca-b835-53ec-a0d8-78920400ff9c.html">local media reports</a>.</p><p>Wherever they operate, the ride-share company is also subject to city requirements for transportation network providers. In Chicago, requirements include having signage about 311 call information and providing up-front pricing to customers.</p><p>Given the vastness of Chicago Public Schools, HopSkipDrive may be more financially reasonable and equitable for districts with a smaller student population, said P.S. Sriraj, director of the Urban Transportation Center at the University of Illinois Chicago, in an interview with Illinois Answers.</p><p>But if CPS were to partner with the network, he recommended that district leaders test it on a small scale to fully evaluate how it could be used. The district should thoroughly communicate and make decisions with the input from parents, students and teachers, he added.</p><p>In the meantime, to attract and retain bus drivers to keep up with increasing transportation requests, CPS has increased wages by $5 over the last two years and is planning 15 hiring fairs, Jones said in October. The district is also trying to optimize routes to make sure they’re efficient, and is working with the Secretary of State to reduce the requirements to be a bus driver.</p><p>“We are looking at all variables when it comes to alternative modes of transportation so we’re not just restricted to the school buses,” Jones told the Illinois Answer Project.</p><p>Companies like HopSkipDrive may be a step in that direction.</p><p>“Private companies in the world of student transportation is not new,” McFarland said.</p><p>What has changed, she said, is that students are no longer going to their neighborhood school.</p><p>“There are magnet schools, schools of choice, and a lot more individualized needs. The idea of 70 kids sitting on a school bus route isn’t really reality in a lot of cases,” she said. “And so we need to think about giving districts the tools and the flexibility to solve the problems of this growing and individualized student body in ways that best meet their needs. I think of us as a tool in the district’s toolkit.”</p><p> <p>This <a target="_blank" href="https://illinoisanswers.org/2024/01/16/chicago-public-schools-bus-driver-shortage-solution/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://illinoisanswers.org">Illinois Answers Project</a> and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/illinoisanswers.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-favicon.png?fit=150%2C150&ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"><img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://illinoisanswers.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=18692&ga4=G-3GC466Z1PL" style="width:1px;height:1px;"></p>
</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/23/could-rideshare-help-chicago-public-schools-bus-troubles/Jewél Jackson, Better Government AssociationVictor Hilitski for Illinois Answers Project2024-01-18T04:31:09+00:002024-01-18T04:31:09+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Charter school advocates delivered 2,000 letters to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office on Wednesday, urging the mayor to keep school choice alive, after his hand-picked school board signaled they may try to shift more resources toward neighborhood public schools.</p><p>Charter proponents are concerned about the future of their schools under a new mayor who campaigned on a pledge to boost neighborhood public schools — just as dozens of charters are <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">up for renewal</a> and a city moratorium on closing schools ends next year.</p><p>For roughly two decades, Chicago Public Schools has operated a system in which families can apply to myriad charter, magnet, test-in, or other district-run schools.</p><p>Having options for school was critical, said Myisha Shields, a parent of three former charter school students, during a news conference Wednesday at City Hall.</p><p>“My five babies, my Black babies — they’re gonna go where I choose for them to go, because that’s the choice that I was given,” she said. “I really don’t need Mayor Johnson’s help in choosing anything for my children.”</p><p>Shields, who lives near Marquette Park on Chicago’s South Side, said she has three children who attended charter schools and are now all pursuing nursing degrees.</p><p>She credits Noble Schools for the success of her eldest, who pushed through “severe learning disabilities” to get straight A’s at Alabama A&M University, where she’s a senior. Shields said her other two daughters are in their freshman and sophomore years at the University of Illinois Chicago. Shields said her kids wouldn’t have had the success they’ve enjoyed if they’d gone to traditional public schools.</p><p>“Her self esteem at one point was so low, but now it’s as big as City Hall,” she said of her eldest.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/_U7sF0D4OiiSXi-ziGEIsZPW96o=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/ZRMTMQUACBEDDBKNR7ZNCLQA7E.jpg" alt="Myisha Shields, far right, delivers thousands of letters to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson's office from parents, administrators, and alumni in support of school choice programs on Wednesday." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Myisha Shields, far right, delivers thousands of letters to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson's office from parents, administrators, and alumni in support of school choice programs on Wednesday.</figcaption></figure><p>Noble Schools is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">one of 47 charters up for renewal</a> during the 2023-24 school year. More than half of Chicago’s roughly 51,000 charter school students are enrolled at one of Noble’s 17 campuses across the city.</p><p>“We are calling for Mayor Brandon Johnson and his CPS board to demand a fair charter renewal term that protects school choice,” Shields said “If charters are not treated fairly, please believe: We will be at your door every day. This is not the last time you’ll see this face.”</p><p>In a statement, a spokesperson for the mayor said: “The Johnson administration believes in investing in neighborhood schools so that all of Chicago’s families have the choice to send their children to fully-funded, well-resourced, and celebrated schools in their community. As a former public school teacher, Mayor Johnson knows first-hand the harm that sustained disinvestment has on Chicago’s communities and youth. Furthermore, as the father of three CPS students, the Mayor is personally invested in ensuring the success of Chicago’s public school system.”</p><p>During the renewal process, district officials scrutinize charter schools’ academic performance, financial practices, and compliance with other standards. Chicago Board of Education members vote on the final renewal terms.</p><p>CPS spokeswoman Sylvia Barragan said in a statement that district leadership and the Chicago Board of Education “do not make charter renewal or revocation decisions lightly.”</p><p>The board voted last month on <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">a resolution</a> to move away from school choice and ensure “fully-resourced neighborhood schools, prioritizing schools and communities most harmed by structural racism, past inequitable policies and disinvestment,” according to <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">the resolution</a>.</p><p>It was the first time the board formally stated it wants to move away from its embrace of selective admissions and enrollment policies, because it “reinforces, rather than disrupts, cycles of inequity,” according to <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">the resolution</a>.</p><p>In response to worried charter and school choice advocates, Chicago Board of Education President Jianan Shi <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fqu2hY_aAb0#t=47m53s">said during an</a> Agenda Review Committee meeting on Wednesday that the resolution “is, again, about prioritizing neighborhood schools, creating pathways from K-12 and (helping) schools and neighborhoods farthest from opportunity, so that we are not sorting our children and favoring those with more means.”</p><p>He added that it’s “not directing us to close selective enrollment schools.”</p><p>Even before Johnson took office, former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration started a trend of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/1/25/23571810/chicago-public-schools-charter-renewals/">shorter charter renewal periods.</a> Johnson,<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/14/23640368/chicago-mayor-election-runoff-public-schools-brandon-johnson-teachers-union-paul-vallas"> a former educator and organizer</a> for the teachers union, historically opposed charter expansion and said during<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice"> the mayoral election runoff</a> campaign that charter school expansion “forces competition for resources and ultimately harms all schools.” But he also has said he does <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice">not oppose charter schools.</a></p><p><i>This story was updated after publication to include a comment from the Chicago mayor’s office.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/18/charter-school-advocates-urge-chicago-mayor-johnson-school-choice/Michael GersteinMichael Gerstein for Chalkbeat2024-01-17T23:39:41+00:002024-01-17T23:39:41+00:00<p>Chicago Public Schools is working to improve how schools keep track of electronic devices and other items, in response to an inspector general’s report that found the district had lost more than 77,000 devices.</p><p>The proposed changes — some of which were outlined at a school board committee meeting Wednesday — include disciplining staff for failing to abide by the district’s policy for managing school assets, such as devices, and updating policy language to say that training is “mandatory” for staffers who are responsible for keeping track of devices. The district’s asset management team would also create an annual report about theft and loss of devices, according to the proposed changes.</p><p>Last week, CPS Inspector General Will Fletcher released his annual report which, in part, found that the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/09/chicago-public-schools-inspector-general-finds-waste-fraud/">had marked more than 77,000 devices lost or stolen</a> in the 2021-22 school year. The district has found 12,000 of the missing devices, nearly all inside schools, district officials said.</p><p>Fletcher’s report cited a lack of training and an unreliable tracking system as some reasons for why so many devices were missing or unaccounted for. He also said staff and students were not held accountable for devices. Last year, a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/12/13/23506463/chicago-public-schools-technology-spending-tracking-computers-covid-relief/">Chalkbeat and WBEZ investigation</a> also found that the district didn’t have a structured system for tracking down devices and lacked a clear plan or vision for how to best use the technology in the classroom.</p><p>“The [policy] has been amended to reflect a more accurate description of the current process, eliminate sections of the policy which are obsolete, and overall improve CPS asset and inventory management practices,” said Rolando Hernandez, assistant deputy controller for CPS’ finance office, during Wednesday’s meeting.</p><p>The district’s asset management policy doesn’t just cover technology. It applies to any item that is not real estate, that is purchased by or donated to CPS, is valued at more than $500 but less than $25,000, and has a lifespan of more than a year. The current policy applies to schools, central offices, and network offices, which are responsible for managing their devices.</p><p>Each school and district office should have an “accountable official” who is responsible for keeping track of devices, the existing policy says.</p><p>Other proposed changes include:</p><ul><li>All devices must be entered into CPS’ electronic inventory system once they are delivered – not just purchased – within 30 days.</li><li>Each person designated to track devices within their school or office will be responsible for complying with their annually required inventory and ensuring its accuracy.</li><li>Schools and offices will report potential loss, damage, or theft to the district’s asset management team. That team will share an annual report on such loss or damage to the district’s Risk Management team, the Department of Facilities, and Safety & Security team.</li><li>If a student or staffer transfers to a new school or department, any devices they’ve received from the district will follow them, which their old school or department must log into the district’s asset management system. Once students or staff leave the district, they must return devices and other “assets.”</li><li>Broken computers must be disposed of through a special process created by the Information and Technology department, though that process was not spelled out in the proposed changes. Items that are not computers will be disposed of by the Department of Facilities, including through contracted salvaging companies.</li></ul><p>The board is expected to vote on the proposed changes in March after a month-long public comment period, which is slated to begin Jan. 26.</p><p>Separately, the district is also working on several other changes “to more accurately represent” what devices are in schools, district officials said Wednesday. That includes automating the process of recovering computers, which would involve freezing and sending notifications to devices that would ask students or staff to return them. The district is also considering replacing its current asset management system because of “functionality and data issues” that must be improved.</p><p>On Wednesday, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez disputed Fletcher’s estimate that the missing devices were worth $23 million. Martinez said many of those devices were old, bringing the total cost to about “a tenth” of Fletcher’s figure. However, he added that’s “not an excuse” to explain the lack of tracking at a time when the district added hundreds of thousands of devices to its inventory.</p><p>“It’s been great that now all of our children have access to devices [but] it is easy for us to not prioritize how we get rid of old devices, and it’s not always clear even to staff, and so I just want to call that out,” Martinez said.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/17/chicago-public-schools-tweaks-device-tracking/Reema AminAllison Shelley for EDUimages2024-01-12T18:57:37+00:002024-01-12T19:04:32+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>As a <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2024/01/12/winter-storm-hits-chicago-making-travel-downright-dangerous/">winter storm continues to dump wet, heavy snow</a> on the area, Chicago Public Schools has canceled all district-run after-school programs and sports games and practices for Friday and Saturday.</p><p>The move comes after <a href="https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/are-chicago-public-schools-closed-today-hundreds-of-illinois-schools-closed-due-to-weather/3325525/">hundreds of districts in the area called off classes</a> or switched to virtual learning amid the storm, which also grounded and delayed airplanes at both of Chicago’s airports.</p><p>Parents of CPS students were also notified of the cancellations via robocalls, texts, and emails.</p><p>School is closed Monday, Jan. 15 for Martin Luther King Jr. Day. In <a href="https://www.cps.edu/media/community-updates/2024/january/after-school-canceled-january-12-13/" target="_blank">a news release</a>, district officials said staff and families will be notified this weekend as to whether there will be classes on Tuesday, Jan. 16. Or whether any events scheduled at schools during the Monday holiday will still happen.</p><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">ALERT: Due to inclement weather, all CPS-managed after-school and out-of-school programs are CANCELED for Friday, January 12, and Saturday, January 13. <a href="https://t.co/pqYDhYxw0R">https://t.co/pqYDhYxw0R</a> <a href="https://t.co/7n7MacK5Ja">pic.twitter.com/7n7MacK5Ja</a></p>— CPS - Chicago Public Schools (@ChiPubSchools) <a href="https://twitter.com/ChiPubSchools/status/1745868746881696187?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 12, 2024</a></blockquote><p>Officials said they will consider temperatures, wind chill, snow accumulation, building accessibility, bus transportation, and potential issues with heating systems at schools before deciding to cancel school or extracurricular activities.</p><p>According to the news release, testing to get into selective enrollment schools will continue at the Illinois Institute of Technology this weekend. Families would have scheduled testing dates when they <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/13/23871751/chicago-public-schools-application-elementary-high-school-gocps-charter-magnet-selective/">submitted their GoCPS applications</a> to attend schools outside their neighborhood-assigned one.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/12/chicago-public-schools-cancels-activities-amid-snowstorm/Becky VeveaStacey Rupolo2024-01-09T22:05:09+00:002024-01-09T22:05:09+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools is planning to purchase up to 50 electric school buses to operate its own fleet with a $20 million federal grant from the Environmental Protection Agency.</p><p>The additional money comes as the district continues to struggle to provide students with transportation. The district has not operated its own bus fleet for more than a decade. It contracts with outside vendors to provide bus service and has been <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/chicago-school-district-struggling-to-add-student-bus-transportation/">grappling with a driver shortage</a> since the pandemic hit.</p><p>CPS announced just before winter break that it <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/">would not be adding bus service for general education students</a>, many who attend selective or <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">magnet schools</a>, for the remainder of the year. They <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage/">cut service to those students at the start of the school year</a> in order to ensure students with disabilities, who are legally entitled to transportation, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/29/23850842/chicago-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-stipends/">were being routed</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage/">weren’t riding the bus more than an hour</a>.</p><p>But the federal grant and new buses will not immediately fix those issues. For one, 50 buses “will not be enough to provide service to the entire district,” a district spokesperson said. The process for buying and deploying the electric buses will start on April 1, 2024 and happen over a three-year period, the spokesperson said.</p><p>The Chicago Teachers Union applauded the grant and said the news was a sign of better collaboration between the union, the district, and the mayor, who is a former CTU organizer. The statement issued by the union said the award would “allow CPS to hold private bus vendors accountable for another 140 electric buses that will replace their current diesel-powered fleets.”</p><p>About $81 million is being awarded to private bus vendors that serve Illinois and other states, <a href="https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/biden-harris-administration-announces-least-42-million-awards-clean-school-buses">according to the EPA</a>. First Student Inc. – which operates yellow buses in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin – is getting $39.4 million to purchase 100 electric buses; Student Transportation of America Inc is also in line to receive $12.2 million to purchase 32 buses in Illinois and Wisconsin; and Highland CSB 1 is expected to get $29.4 million to purchase 98 buses in Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.</p><p>A news release from Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office said the goal will be to deploy the new buses in communities “most impacted by poor environmental policies and practices, and historic disinvestment.” Johnson ran <a href="https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/63508047b998ed2c03e7e37d/63e3c03ffccd4ae0bc384f1f_Plan%20for%20Stronger%20School%20Communities.pdf">on a promise</a> to update school facilities to be more environmentally friendly and energy efficient.</p><p>In all, the federal government is <a href="https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1744445117207847043?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet">doling out more than $1 billion</a> to fund electric buses across 280 school districts.</p><p>In Philadelphia, the school district is <a href="https://www.audacy.com/kywnewsradio/news/local/epa-grant-philadelphia-electric-school-buses">in line for $8 million to add 20 electric buses</a> to its fleet, doubling the current 20 it operates. Detroit Public Schools is <a href="https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/biden-harris-administration-announces-least-17-million-awards-clean-school-buses">expected to get nearly $6 million</a> to buy 15 electric buses.</p><p>The move comes as districts nationwide are looking to shift to clean energy buses. Colorado also announced plans last August to <a href="https://coloradosun.com/2023/09/01/colorado-education-electric-school-buses/">expand electric buses in more than a dozen school districts</a> using <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/colorado/2022/8/12/23303098/electric-school-bus-colorado-federal-funding-infrastructure-bill/">state and federal funding</a>. New York state announced in 2022 it wants <a href="https://www.nyserda.ny.gov/All-Programs/Electric-School-Buses">all new school buses to be zero-emissions by 2027</a>.</p><p>The <a href="https://www.epa.gov/cleanschoolbus/clean-school-bus-program-awards">federal Clean School Bus Program</a> also provides rebates to districts that use electric buses. Thirteen school districts in Illinois, most of them downstate, got more than $46 million in those rebates last school year to operate electric buses, according to <a href="https://www.epa.gov/cleanschoolbus/clean-school-bus-program-awards">data from the EPA</a>.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/09/chicago-public-schools-federal-grant-buys-electric-buses/Becky VeveaLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2024-01-03T12:00:00+00:002024-01-03T12:00:03+00:00<p>Chicago’s Board of Education made waves last month when officials revealed a vision to move away from its school choice system and boost neighborhood schools.</p><p>The declaration, included in a <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">resolution</a> the board passed in December, lays out priorities for the district’s five-year strategic plan, which will be finalized this summer. Any resulting changes will depend on feedback from the community, board members said.</p><p>But the board’s new vision immediately sparked misinformation. Here are three things to know about the board’s resolution.</p><h2>Will schools close?</h2><p>No. Not yet, at least.</p><p>The <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">resolution</a> does not say anything about closing schools. State law <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/documents/010500050K34-18.69.htm">put a moratorium on school closures in Chicago</a> until Jan. 15, 2025, <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/102/SB/PDF/10200SB1784ham002.pdf">the same day</a> a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board/">new 21-member, partially-elected school</a> is set to be sworn in. The current seven-member school board, appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson, would not be able to close schools of any type – charters, magnets, or neighborhood schools – until that time.</p><p>School board member Elizabeth Todd-Breland did indicate the board is scrutinizing charter school performance through <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">the usual renewal process</a> and questioned whether poor-performing operators should “continue to exist.”</p><p>But even a recent board decision to revoke a charter agreement with Urban Prep did not ultimately mean those schools closed. First, the district proposed operating the two campuses as district-run schools. But after a court order, the board <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/14/chicago-public-schools-renews-urban-prep/">extended Urban Prep’s charter</a> until June 2024.</p><h2>Will I have to go to my neighborhood school?</h2><p>No. The <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/23-1214-rs3.pdf">resolution</a> does not say anything about requiring families to attend their neighborhood schools.</p><p>The closest it comes to addressing enrollment policies is a bullet point about a “reimagined vision” that includes a “transition away from privatization and admissions/enrollment policies and approaches that further stratification and inequity in CPS and drive student enrollment away from neighborhood schools.”</p><p>Any school-aged child living in Chicago is <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/policies/700/702/702-1/">guaranteed a spot</a> at their zoned neighborhood school. Additionally, <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/policies/600/602/602-2/">board policy</a> amended as recently as last summer, allows families to apply to a myriad of selective, magnet, charter, or other speciality programs that admit students from across the city. Some schools require a test for admission, while others are a straight lottery.</p><p>These policies have not changed, but could after community feedback sessions.</p><p>“There likely will be policies that need to be revised and changed,” Todd-Breland said. “The admissions and enrollment policy is on the table.”</p><p><a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/ara/about-the-ara/ara-comparison-dashboard/">Data show</a>s half of elementary school students attend their zoned neighborhood school and only a quarter of high school students do. These numbers shifted over the course of the past 20 years, when roughly 75% of elementary school students went to their local school and half of high schoolers did.</p><h2>What do parents and students think?</h2><p>It varies greatly.</p><p>Chalkbeat Chicago <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/20/chicago-school-choice-admissions-system/">asked readers for their thoughts on school choice</a> and got nearly 80 responses from families across the city about how they’ve navigated the system. <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/20/how-families-choose-schools-in-chicago/">Five families shared more about how — and why — they chose their schools</a>.</p><p>The wide range of responses could be a bellwether for the kind of debate or disagreement that could emerge during community feedback sessions.</p><p>The Board of Education was awarded a $500,000 federal grant to create socioeconomically diverse schools. The district said it plans to use the money to engage the community on how to draw more families into neighborhood schools. Their application included a goal to reduce the percentage of families attending a school outside of their regions by at least 3%. The district did not answer questions to clarify their definition of region or why 3% was their goal.</p><p>The district is already collecting feedback on the next five-year strategic plan through <a href="https://hanover-research.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_6tW1Sg6xdG0GwHY">an online survey</a> and <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/five-year-plan/community-engagement/">community meetings</a> for the next Educational Facilities Master Plan. Officials have said they will host in-person and online meetings in February to gather feedback on the strategic plan.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2024/01/03/fact-check-chicago-school-choice-resolution/Becky Vevea, Reema AminLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2023-12-20T22:53:13+00:002023-12-22T16:13:23+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>One mother in West Pullman on Chicago’s South Side sends her daughter to a charter school even though there are two neighborhood schools down the street.</p><p>Up in Albany Park, a mother is for the first time confident in her daughter’s neighborhood school after two decades of sending her older children to magnet and test-in programs.</p><p>A high school student attends one of the district’s most coveted high schools — but wants the city to undo the system she used to get there.</p><p>There’s a lot that goes into how families choose a school in Chicago.</p><p>Last week, the city’s school board made waves by announcing they want <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">to move away from that system of choice</a> and build up neighborhood schools, especially in areas that have lacked investment from the city. The board passed a resolution last week stating its intent, but does not call to close any schools or change specific admissions policies.</p><p>Originally established to help desegregate schools, the system has recently earned a reputation for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/how-students-feel-applying-to-high-school-in-chicago/">stressing out students,</a> who are competing for seats at a limited number of sought-after schools, many of which are segregated by race and income.</p><p>Despite that, students have increasingly chosen schools they’re not zoned for. Last school year, 56% of students attended their zoned neighborhood school, or roughly 20 percentage points fewer than in the 2002-03 school year. A quarter of students attended their zoned high school last year, compared to 46% 20 years ago.</p><p>The district also <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/19/23924673/biden-fostering-diverse-schools-federal-education-grant-desegregation-integration/#:~:text=Biden%20admin%20gives%20schools%20%2412%20million%20for%20desegregation%20under%20new%20program%20%2D%20Chalkbeat">won a federal grant</a> in October that they will use to collect community feedback on how they can make neighborhood schools more attractive. In the grant application, Chicago Public Schools said its goal was to reduce the percentage of families attending school outside of their regions by 3%. The district did not answer questions to clarify their definition of region or why 3% was their goal.</p><p>How much the district will try to change the city’s school choice system will depend on feedback from the community, board members said. Already, a mix of reactions have emerged. Some community groups praised the board’s support of neighborhood schools. But former CPS CEO Janice Jackson <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/2023/12/18/24006244/chicago-school-choice-neighborhoods-inequity-black-brown-students-achievement-janice-jackson">wrote in an op-ed to the Chicago Sun-Times</a> that moving away from school choice would ultimately hurt Black and Hispanic children.</p><p>“Trying to do anything in a district that large is going to take a long time if you’re going to do it right,” said Jack Schneider, a professor at University of Massachusetts at Amherst who studies education policy. “It’s going to turn quite slowly and particularly so if your effort is rooted in engaging communities and really listening to them and trying to respond to what you’re hearing.”</p><p>Chalkbeat <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/20/chicago-school-choice-admissions-system/">asked readers for their thoughts on school choice</a> and got nearly 80 responses from families across the city about how they’ve navigated the system. We spoke to some of those families to understand how — and why — they chose their schools.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/kgoSbUP8zzGZgYi2EW2Ii070Q7I=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/I3QKUQWIIRHS3HIVSVOQL7U5BM.JPG" alt="From left to right: Tiffany Harvey walks her dog, Mila, alongside her daughters Isabel Harvey, 21, and Amalia Harvey, 10, as they walk to Haugan Elementary School in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023. Amalia is a fourth grader at Haugan Elementary School." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>From left to right: Tiffany Harvey walks her dog, Mila, alongside her daughters Isabel Harvey, 21, and Amalia Harvey, 10, as they walk to Haugan Elementary School in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023. Amalia is a fourth grader at Haugan Elementary School.</figcaption></figure><h2>Preschool sells mom of four on neighborhood school</h2><p>About 20 years ago, when Tiffany Harvey was deciding where to send her firstborn to school, she kept hearing that aside from some gifted and magnet programs, Chicago’s schools were “terrible.”</p><p>Harvey applied to magnet schools and had her son tested for gifted programs. She also toured a kindergarten classroom at the neighborhood school, Haugan Elementary, a couple blocks away from their Albany Park home. But at the time, Haugan didn’t have before- or after-care programs to accommodate her work schedule, while magnet and gifted programs came with busing. And Haugan’s test scores seemed low to her, she said.</p><p>“I honestly felt like I was a bad parent if I didn’t explore all the options and find the best option,” she said.</p><p>Over the next two decades, Harvey would send her first three children to magnet, gifted and selective enrollment schools outside their neighborhood.</p><p>A few years ago, that changed.</p><p>In search of preschool for her fourth child, Harvey applied for the district’s full-day pre-K program and saw that Haugan had seats. She didn’t want to pay for preschool again, and after so many years in Albany Park, she wanted to invest in her neighborhood school as someone who was better-off than some of her neighbors. Her daughter got a seat at Haugan, where 89% of students come from low-income families.</p><p>Some research shows public pre-K programs can “attract a more integrated group of families” to schools, while some districts notice families flee after preschool, said Halley Potter, senior fellow at The Century Foundation, who has studied school segregation.</p><p>Harvey, who had low expectations, found Haugan was “phenomenal,” she said. Her daughter’s teacher was creative and kind. There was a good combination of play-based learning and introduction to academics. Her daughter was meeting kids from all kinds of families. The next year, she enrolled her daughter in a nearby lottery dual-language program, but they missed Haugan. Her daughter returned for second grade and is now in fourth grade.</p><p>“We never looked back,” Harvey said.</p><p>Harvey supports families having the ability to choose a school for their child. However, she wishes more parents would realize that schools can’t be measured by test scores alone, and more-advantaged children, like hers, can flourish alongside peers who are different from them. It’s also easier for parents to get involved at schools that are nearby, she said.</p><p>As district leaders consider how to invigorate neighborhood schools, they should add more services, such as pre-K programs or after care, as ways to draw in more families, she said.</p><p>“I don’t know what the right balance is,” Harvey said. “I do want our neighborhood schools to be celebrated and promoted and have the resources they need, where parents don’t feel like they have to drive across town to find a better option.”</p><h2>A mom who chose a charter school</h2><p>Charity Parker lives a couple of blocks away from two neighborhood schools in West Pullman. But her daughter, Aikira, attends a Chicago International Charter Schools, or CICS, campus that’s a roughly 15-minute walk from their home.</p><p>Parker, who attended Catholic and charter schools growing up in Chicago, said the neighborhood schools close to her — Curtis and Haley — are “poorly funded” and don’t have good test scores. At both neighborhood schools and Aikira’s charter school, more than 90% of students are from low-income families. But CICS is designated as “<a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/school.aspx?source=accountability&Schoolid=15016299025248C">commendable</a>” by the state, the second- highest designation out of five. <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/School.aspx?schoolId=150162990252092">Haley</a> and <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/School.aspx?schoolId=150162990252799">Curtis</a> have lower designations.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/dzKQVEoFZ24AfoOfR5TCGc917cc=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/IFKBY4TDIBEYLG7K7ZAH6QGFYM.JPG" alt="Charity Parker, left, and her daughter Aikira Parker, 8, right, smile as they pose for a portrait together outside of CICS Prairie Chicago International Charter School, where Aikira is a second grader, in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Charity Parker, left, and her daughter Aikira Parker, 8, right, smile as they pose for a portrait together outside of CICS Prairie Chicago International Charter School, where Aikira is a second grader, in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023.</figcaption></figure><p>Aikira is learning more advanced topics than other neighborhood kids Parker knows, she said. She placed fifth in the school’s science fair for a solar panel project, Parker noted.</p><p>“An 8-year-old doing engineering work — I’m not getting that at my local CPS school,” she said.</p><p>Another selling point for Parker, who is Black, is that about one-third of Aikira’s peers are Hispanic, so she’s exposed “to another culture besides her own.” At Curtis and Haley, more than 90% of students are Black, which is common in Chicago’s segregated neighborhoods.</p><p>Parker said all parents should have the right to choose where their children go to school, and the district should never mandate attending neighborhood schools. While Parker loves some things about CICS, she has some issues with the school.</p><p>Aikira “loved” kindergarten at CICS, but the next year, Parker had some disagreements with Aikira’s first -grade teacher over coursework. This year, Parker has some concerns about behavior issues in Aikira’s classroom and has considered transferring her out.</p><p>But other charters are far away, and she doesn’t have a car. Private school is too expensive.</p><p>So, she’ll stay at CICS, she said.</p><p>“I’ll admit there are some things about my daughter’s school that rub me the wrong way, but the education is awesome,” Parker said.</p><h2>Dad sought out selective schools for his son</h2><p>Since kindergarten, Clyde Smith’s son, Kadin, has exclusively attended selective public schools located 5 to 6 miles south of their Bronzeville home.</p><p>Kadin tested into McDade Classical School, a selective enrollment elementary school in Chatham. Then, he tested again in sixth grade and got a seat at an accelerated middle school program located inside Lindblom Math and Science Academy, a selective enrollment high school in West Englewood. Kadin, 16, is now a sophomore at Lindblom.</p><p>The stressful nature of admissions never felt “unhealthy,” Smith said. His son has always been surrounded by peers who aimed for similar programs, so he was used to the competition.</p><p>“It’s always been in the air,” Smith said. “It’s almost like asking a fish, ‘How’s the water?’”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/AZHOno6Hrk71CirzlMJVrJfvhFA=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/C4JASGTIDVFR7O5Q77PUHN5G5U.jpg" alt="Kadin Smith, left, stands with his father, Clyde Smith, at their Bronzeville home." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Kadin Smith, left, stands with his father, Clyde Smith, at their Bronzeville home.</figcaption></figure><p>A simpler option might have been to attend his neighborhood school where he’s guaranteed a seat: Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts. District officials closed Dyett in 2015, but the school was revived in 2016 after protests and <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2015/08/31/fight-over-dyett-high-school">a hunger strike</a> that Mayor Brandon Johnson participated in as an activist.</p><p>The district hosted a press conference in October at Dyett about the school’s rising graduation rates, and officials noted that the school’s 86% graduation rate had surpassed the citywide average.</p><p>Smith said he “understood the activism” that brought back Dyett, but it wasn’t enough to win him over.</p><p>“The test scores, the classes offered, the colleges they get accepted into overall, to me, doesn’t lay proof that that’s the strongest academic environment like some of these selective enrollment schools are,” Smith said.</p><p>Smith complimented the district’s desire to boost neighborhood schools, adding that segregation and “racial inequities” have left many schools under-resourced. Neighborhood schools need “strong teachers,” challenging courses, and more internship opportunities, he said.</p><p>Paul Hill, an architect of the idea that districts should create a mix of school options for parents, said the district could risk driving away parents like Smith.</p><p>“If the district is really serious about working hard on the neighborhood schools and trying to figure out what would keep people in them… that’s responsible,” said Hill, the founder of the Center for Reinventing Public Education. “On the other hand, if they really attack the schools of choice that probably will drive down enrollment.”</p><p>Smith agrees. After all, if Kadin didn’t get into a selective enrollment high school, he and his wife would have sent him to private school.</p><h2>Mom is daunted by high school admissions</h2><p>Laura Irons loves Logan Square and their neighborhood school, where her 7-year-old daughter is in first grade. But the thought of choosing a high school is so daunting, the family is considering leaving Chicago by the time their daughter finishes eighth grade.</p><p>Irons’ daughter passed up a seat at a magnet school to attend her zoned school, Brentano Math and Science Academy, because the family liked walking to school and didn’t want their daughter to lose friends.</p><p>“Being nearby the school, I think, has tremendous social-emotional benefits,” Irons said.</p><p>For the future, her family would consider the neighborhood high school. But other parents tell Irons it’s dangerous, with lots of fights and nearby shootings. Irons doesn’t know whether to believe them.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/qrROmfWk9tzIBa5SPRsMZ00mRY4=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/EXWPG3WR2NE5TAGW6FAO3F63HE.jpg" alt="Laura Irons, far right, poses for a photo with her husband and two children at the Logan Square Blue Line stop." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Laura Irons, far right, poses for a photo with her husband and two children at the Logan Square Blue Line stop.</figcaption></figure><p>Irons worries about the impact of the competitive application process on her daughter. Through friends and community Facebook groups, Irons hears about kids being “so tremendously stressed out” by the application process. She hates that some schools are considered good or bad without any clarity about why.</p><p>“I don’t like [the idea of] making such a big decision at such a young age,” Irons said. “It feels like the college process, which is hard already in itself.”</p><p>Even though Irons and her husband love city life, they’re leaning toward leaving unless there is more clarity and transparency around how the choice system works, she said. And she doesn’t know where to find accurate information.</p><p>“I do value choice in certain situations so I’m not anti-choice,” Irons said. “I think the system that we have, though — to sound so cliche — it’s just a broken, very opaque system. I wonder if kids would even be stressed if the parents weren’t so stressed.”</p><h2>Selective enrollment student sees problems with the system</h2><p>One of Tess Lacy’s earliest memories of discussing school choice was in fourth grade. Her physical education teacher told her class, “I want you to go to good high schools,” Tess recalled.</p><p>Comments like that were common throughout Tess’s elementary and middle school years. Teachers talked often about applying to sought-after high schools. Many of her friends felt they’d fail their parents if they didn’t get into those schools. While her own parents didn’t care where she went, the stress around Tess conditioned her to focus on selective enrollment schools, she said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/QMuquFpxtvga1xOPvpxp4b0JroQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/VOQOQWDWERGYRDLF5SZWCO2DTE.JPG" alt="Tess Lacy poses for a portrait in front of George B. Swift Elementary School, which she used to attend, in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023. Lacy is currently a sophomore at Jones College Prep. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Tess Lacy poses for a portrait in front of George B. Swift Elementary School, which she used to attend, in Chicago on Dec. 18, 2023. Lacy is currently a sophomore at Jones College Prep. </figcaption></figure><p>She took the High School Admissions Test and got into her top-ranking: Jones College Prep in the South Loop.</p><p>Now, three years later, Tess wants to see the selective enrollment system abolished.</p><p>Selective enrollment schools tend to have more resources, not just from the district, but also from <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/private-fundraising-in-chicago-public-schools-who-wins-and-who-loses/826af08e-ccac-4ee9-84b7-03f07d46cca2">families who can fundraise, sometimes millions of dollars</a>, Tess noted.</p><p>“If you intentionally, institutionally, structurally create schools that have more resources, parents with more resources will send their kids there,” Tess said. “I feel like a lot of people are able to realize that’s not normal, but there’s a lot of people who would rather forget about the tens of thousands of students who don’t have that privilege.”</p><p>Tess doesn’t regret attending Jones, where she finally feels accepted as a transgender young woman and has made friends from all over the city. She enjoys doing technical work for the school’s drama department.</p><p>But her decision to attend Jones now feels like it was influenced by everyone around her. She regrets not ranking Edgewater’s Senn High School higher. Senn was not her zoned high school, but is a neighborhood school closer to home that has a good arts program — one of Tess’s interests.</p><p>She would encourage eighth grade students to “really, truly think about what they as a student want.”</p><p>“Now I look back, and I see how my decision was so not my own decision,” Tess said.</p><p><i><b>Correction:</b></i><i> This story orignally stated that McDade Classical School was a gifted program. McDade is another type of selective enrollment elementary school in Chicago.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/20/how-families-choose-schools-in-chicago/Reema AminLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2023-12-21T22:54:15+00:002023-12-21T23:15:42+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago Public Schools won’t provide busing to general education students for the rest of the school year, officials said Thursday.</p><p>In a letter to parents, the district said a driver shortage persists and is preventing it from providing busing to general education students — largely those in magnet and selective enrollment programs. The district will continue to provide free CTA cards, valued at $35, to those roughly 5,500 families; about one-third of those children are using the passes, according to a CPS spokesperson.</p><p>“We fully understand how frustrating this news will be for many of our families, and sincerely empathize with the challenges and inconvenience that this situation has caused,” the letter said.</p><p>The update comes after the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">announced in late September</a> that it couldn’t provide busing to general education students this semester but would share an update with families before winter break regarding the second half of the school year. In November, the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/chicago-school-district-struggling-to-add-student-bus-transportation/">cast doubt</a> that it would be able to expand bus service this year. </p><p>Citing a driver shortage, the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">announced in late July</a> that it would limit busing to students with disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs, call for transportation, as well as students who are homeless. Both student groups are legally entitled to transportation — and the district is on state watch to improve commute times for students with disabilities.</p><p>The district left open the possibility that general education students could get busing later in the year.</p><p>The district is currently busing 8,133 students with disabilities and another 146 students who are homeless, according to a CPS spokesperson.</p><p>Thursday’s busing update comes a week after the school board <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">passed a resolution</a> saying it wants to bolster neighborhood schools and move away from a system of choice where families travel outside their neighborhood for school. Asked if the district’s desire to move away from school choice informed their decision to sever busing for general education students, a spokesperson said the district is following state law and board policy by prioritizing students with disabilities for transportation.</p><p>Parents of children in selective enrollment and magnet programs have repeatedly shared frustrations with the Board of Education about the difficulties they’ve faced without busing to schools that are far from their homes, including difficulties balancing the school commute with their work schedules. Some parents have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">transferred their children</a> to other schools.</p><p>Aria Haque, a sixth grader at Keller Regional Gifted Center in Mt. Greenwood, lives 20 miles from her school, and transferred to her neighborhood school after “so many hurdles and almost no time” to figure out the commute, Haque told the board at its meeting earlier this month. Her new school, however, was teaching material she said she’d learned two years ago.</p><p>Haque decided to re-enroll at Keller “even with the killer commute.” Her father now drives Aria and another Keller student whose family doesn’t have a car and lives 15 miles away from the school.</p><p>“That has been our routine ever since: An hour-and-a-half on the road for me, which isn’t bad, but over three hours for my dad, which is horrible,” Haque said.</p><p>Natasha Haque, Aria’s mother, said she’s been advocating <a href="https://cpsparentsforbuses.softr.app/">with a group of parents</a> to get busing reinstated for general education students in magnet and selective enrollment schools. She worries that students from low-income families at Aria’s school, Keller, will lose out on the chance to attend a great school. Roughly a third of Keller’s students were from low-income families last year.</p><p>“If the message to families is: ‘You cannot rely on us to transport your child to a selective enrollment school,’ it’s the lower income families that will be the first to say, ‘Yeah, I cannot afford to take my child to school. I cannot quit my job,’” Natasha Haque said Thursday after the letter to parents was sent out.</p><p>Limited busing has also helped the district comply with a state corrective action plan to keep commutes under an hour each way for students with disabilities. Last school year, about 3,000 students with disabilities <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez/">were on routes longer than an hour.</a> As of October, the district was busing an average of 7 students with disabilities per route, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/">a Chalkbeat analysis found.</a></p><p>Commute times had improved this year as the district has limited busing, but have worsened in recent months: In August, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage/">47 students with disabilities were on routes longer than an hour</a>; that’s grown to 111 students as of Thursday, a slight dip from late November, according to the district.</p><p>CPS said another 115 students with disabilities are in the process of getting bus routes. The district has received 4,649 requests since the start of the school year, close to 900 more requests than last year. It is also continuing to hold job fairs to hire more bus drivers.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/Reema Amin, Becky VeveaLaura McDermott for Chalkbeat2023-12-21T22:45:44+00:002023-12-21T22:45:44+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>This year brought big shifts for education in Chicago and Illinois. As schools continued to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/7/23823241/chicago-teachers-first-day-school-new-year-2023/">return to normal</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/20/23882691/pandemic-learning-loss-academic-recovery-noble-chicago-middle-school/">recover from the COVID pandemic’s impact on learning</a>, the city <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/4/23670272/chicago-mayor-2023-election-day-brandon-johnson-paul-vallas-runoff-schools-education-teachers-union/">elected a new mayor</a> who <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/5/23784871/chicago-board-of-education-mayor-brandon-johnson-jianan-shi-elizabeth-todd-breland/#:~:text=Chicago%20Mayor%20Brandon%20Johnson%20announced,by%20former%20Mayor%20Lori%20Lightfoot.">appointed a new school board</a>.</p><p>Schools <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/27/23935304/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-trauma-support-group-social-emotional-brighton-park/">grappled with a wave of migrants</a>, who <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants/">partly helped stave off continued enrollment declines</a>, and the district entered a third straight year of transportation troubles.</p><p>As we approach the end of 2023 and look ahead to 2024, here are six of the biggest education stories we covered this past year:</p><h2>New leadership to shape a new era</h2><p>If the 2023 education beat had a theme, it might be leadership transitions. The state of Illinois got a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/1/31/23579773/tony-sanders-next-illinois-state-superintendent-of-education/">new superintendent in Tony Sanders</a> and Chicago got <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/12/23680850/brandon-johnson-chicago-mayor-teachers-union-progressive-win-democratic-party-education/">a new mayor</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/5/23784871/chicago-board-of-education-mayor-brandon-johnson-jianan-shi-elizabeth-todd-breland/#:~:text=Chicago%20Mayor%20Brandon%20Johnson%20announced,by%20former%20Mayor%20Lori%20Lightfoot.">a new school board</a>.</p><p>When Brandon Johnson, a former public school teacher, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/14/23640368/chicago-mayor-election-runoff-public-schools-brandon-johnson-teachers-union-paul-vallas">union organizer</a>, and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/6/23672993/chicago-mayor-brandon-johnson-q-and-a-public-education-schools/">public school parent</a>, made it into the runoff in February, he unexpectedly dashed incumbent <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/16/23602985/chicago-mayor-election-public-schools-mayoral-control-lori-lightfoot-teachers-union/">Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s hopes for a second term</a>. He <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/28/23619348/chicago-mayoral-election-results-2023-lightfoot-vallas-garcia-johnson-early-voting/#:~:text=Chicago's%20next%20mayor%20will%20either,than%2050%25%20of%20the%20vote.">would face Paul Vallas</a>, a former CPS CEO who made a career as an education consultant and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/27/23614124/chicago-mayor-race-paul-vallas-chicago-public-schools-kam-buckner-brandon-johnson/">“fixer” turning around urban school districts</a>.</p><p>Johnson’s victory over Vallas reflected, in part, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/4/12/23680850/brandon-johnson-chicago-mayor-teachers-union-progressive-win-democratic-party-education/">ongoing shifts in local and national education policy</a>. By July, he <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/5/23784871/chicago-board-of-education-mayor-brandon-johnson-jianan-shi-elizabeth-todd-breland/#:~:text=Chicago%20Mayor%20Brandon%20Johnson%20announced,by%20former%20Mayor%20Lori%20Lightfoot.">replaced six of seven school board members</a> — a common act of new mayors — with more public school parents, community activists, and the leader of the parent group Raise Your Hand. The new board has already signaled some significant policy shifts, including <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">moving away from a system of school choice</a> and redoubling efforts to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union/">boost neighborhood schools</a>.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>Chicagoans <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/4/23711633/chicago-school-board-of-education-elections-faq-guide/">will soon elect school board members</a>, though state <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/09/lawmakers-disagree-on-chicagos-elected-school-board-transition/">lawmakers are still working out the details</a> of how that will happen. Before the legislature wrapped up its veto session, they did appear to agree on how the city would be divided into 20 districts after <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23942298/chicago-elected-school-board-map-districts-illinois-lawmakers/">releasing their third draft of a district map</a>.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/BqfE6JaJ4O9_dfoGdEoBE6cepGg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/PCQF3VN55JGKNOXZN53A2MT4YM.jpg" alt="Teresa Przybyslawski, an interventionist at Chicago’s Brunson Elementary School, works with a student on multiplication and division using flashcards. Przybyslawski, a former classroom teacher, took on the interventionist role this school year to help catch up struggling students." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Teresa Przybyslawski, an interventionist at Chicago’s Brunson Elementary School, works with a student on multiplication and division using flashcards. Przybyslawski, a former classroom teacher, took on the interventionist role this school year to help catch up struggling students.</figcaption></figure><h2>COVID recovery money fuels interventionists, tutors</h2><p>Federal <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/12/21/22847296/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-funding-accountability/">COVID recovery money</a> is dwindling and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871838/schools-funding-cliff-federal-covid-relief-esser-money-budget-cuts/">set to run out in 2024</a>. But districts across the country have <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2022/12/19/23517691/schools-esser-covid-spending-stimulus-money-federal/">continued to spend millions</a> on everything from <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/17/23795007/paper-online-tutoring-often-fails-students/">tutoring</a> to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/9/28/22690530/summer-school-in-chicago-revamped-missing-data-learning-recovery/">summer school</a> to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/2/11/22927568/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-american-rescue-plan-spending/">existing staff</a>. In Chicago, more than $2 billion in Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds have already been spent.</p><p>After months of questions and public records requests, Chalkbeat found a complicated picture of summer school spending in Chicago in February of this year. Many schools reported strong success in offering students robust programs, but <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/17/23603531/chicago-public-schools-summer-school-enrollment-attendance-covid-pandemic-recovery/">tracking participation and attendance proved difficult</a>. Data obtained six months after an initial request showed repeat sign ups or unusually high enrollments, raising questions about accuracy.</p><p>Chicago also continues to spend a large amount of its federal funds on existing staff, including a cadre of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/25/23729023/chicago-public-schools-academic-interventionist-covid-learning-recovery/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20has%20turned,one%20or%20in%20small%20groups.">academic interventionists</a>. These are mostly classroom teachers already on the district’s payroll who were <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/25/23729023/chicago-public-schools-academic-interventionist-covid-learning-recovery/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20has%20turned,one%20or%20in%20small%20groups.">tapped to help struggling students catch up</a>. The district also spent $25 million to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/18/23875659/chicago-public-schools-cps-tutor-corps-esser-covid-relief/">create a Tutor Corps</a> to support students who may have gaps in their learning from when schools switched to virtual learning during the pandemic.</p><p>But the district is not only spending its money on staff. It also used <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/11/23301458/chicago-public-schools-federal-covid-relief-esser-vendors/">some of the money to pay vendors</a> to help <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/31/23663499/chicago-public-schools-skyline-curriculum-covid-recovery/">develop a new $135 universal curriculum bank</a> known as Skyline. In partnership with WBEZ, Chalkbeat took a closer look at how Skyline is being implemented and what teachers think of it.</p><p>Outside of Chicago, one south suburban school district is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/4/23819296/federal-covid-relief-dolton-riverdale-hybrid-technology/">moving ahead with an uncommon technology plan</a> to keep hybrid learning at the ready.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>Chicago is planning to spend <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/#:~:text=The%20district%20has%20received%20%242.8,current%20budget%20is%20%249.4%20billion.">the final $300 million of the $2.8 billion it got</a> in the 2024-25 school year and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/14/illinois-education-funding-state-federal-funding/">Illinois’ education budget could see some belt-tightening</a> as districts set about spending roughly $1.9 billion of the $7 billion.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/MCIRfcJkqthsxC4jRk39WTLgrYo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/KCOLFQO7WNH7DDSDAB5HQEKZYE.jpg" alt="Migrant support group at Brighton Park Elementary in 2023 in Chicago, Illinois. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Migrant support group at Brighton Park Elementary in 2023 in Chicago, Illinois. </figcaption></figure><h2>Schools see influx of migrant students</h2><p>Chicago has seen an estimated 4,000 migrant students coming to the city from the southern border, most of them via bus from Texas. Among the many people stepping up to help families, especially children, adjust to a new country are teachers. During summer, we featured a few teachers volunteering at a south side police station to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/27/23935304/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-trauma-support-group-social-emotional-brighton-park/">help refugee youth navigate a new language, a new culture, and in the fall, new schools</a>. We also spent time at <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/27/23935304/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-trauma-support-group-social-emotional-brighton-park/">one school trying to help newcomer students navigate trauma</a>.</p><p>Amid back-to-school season, it was not clear if schools would be ready to welcome waves of newcomers. A <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/8/16/23833661/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-bilingual-resources-2023/">Chalkbeat analysis of staffing data</a> obtained through records requests found the number of bilingual teachers had declined in recent years, but teachers with endorsements to teach in a bilingual program had grown.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>Chicago continues to struggle to manage the influx of new arrivals, which has slowed in recent weeks. Plans to construct temporary tents in two locations have been put on ice. But the city instituted a 60-day limit on how long people can stay in temporary shelters just before Thanksgiving. However, migrant students <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/27/chicago-60-day-shelter-limit-impact-on-migrant-students/">do have a right to remain in the same school and receive transportation</a> if they’re forced to move. (<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/migrant-students-rights-en-espanol/">Leer en español</a>.)</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/8GZfz3j77wgkeU0JiwO7ICVziOE=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/3G4P4HQT6JD6RKLNJ5FOWU2NNQ.jpg" alt="Joshua Long is the new Chicago Public School District district's department leader for students with disabilities on Mon., Dec. 11, 2023." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Joshua Long is the new Chicago Public School District district's department leader for students with disabilities on Mon., Dec. 11, 2023.</figcaption></figure><h2>Special education sees shakeup</h2><p>Chicago Public Schools has struggled to provide services to students with disabilities for several years and the COVID pandemic only exacerbated the issue.</p><p>In June, Chalkbeat obtained documents that found the district was <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/7/23751880/illinois-chicago-restraint-seclusion-timeout-students-with-disabilities/#:~:text=Chicago%20Public%20Schools%20has%20put,Board%20of%20Education%20has%20found.">violating state law on the use of restraint, timeout, and seclusion in school</a>. Two days later, the top official overseeing the department that serves students with disabilities <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/9/23755560/chicago-special-education-department-ousted-restraint-seclusion-violation/">stepped down</a>.</p><p>After that departure and after Johnson appointed a new school board, the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/15/23875844/chicago-search-special-education-chief-2023/">asked the public for input</a> in hiring a new special education chief. In December, officials announced it had found a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/chicago-new-chief-for-students-with-disabilities/">new special education leader from among its own ranks</a>. Joshua Long, the longtime principal of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/25/23890046/chicago-public-schools-specialty-programs-students-with-disabilities-job-training/">a school for students with disabilities</a>, was approved by the school board and will start his new role in January.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>Long inherits a troubled department that remains under state watch for use of restraint, timeout, and seclusion in school. It also continues to face challenges providing students with disabilities with transportation, which they’re entitled to under federal law. Last year, hundreds of students with disabilities <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez/">were on the bus for longer than 90 minutes</a> each way, but that has declined significantly. Just over 100 were <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/">riding the bus longer than an hour,</a> as of the end of November.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/3heLThGnjXLcc8nJyUUWwnbwZkc=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/Y44JPJOZMBCQRE4JF3YGPXPQRQ.jpg" alt="School bus at the front of North-Grand High School in Chicago. Photo by Stacey Rupolo/Chalkbeat �May, 2019 photo�" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>School bus at the front of North-Grand High School in Chicago. Photo by Stacey Rupolo/Chalkbeat �May, 2019 photo�</figcaption></figure><h2>Transportation troubles continue</h2><p>Amid state oversight, Chicago Public Schools announced in late July it would <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage/">only provide bus transportation to homeless students and those with disabilities</a>. Both groups are entitled to transportation under federal law.</p><p>Citing a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/10/12/22716984/illinois-bus-driver-shortage-reopening-diverseleaners-chicago-public-schools/">bus driver shortage</a>, district officials also offered families of students with disabilities and those in temporary housing a $500/month stipend to cover their own transportation, which nearly 4,000 families have taken as of late November. But those <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/26/23891220/chicago-bus-service-transportation-stipend/">payments were initially delayed and the first checks weren’t mailed until late September</a>.</p><p>By late September, district officials also confirmed that general education students attending schools outside their neighborhood, most of them selective or magnet options, would <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">not get busing for the rest of the semester</a>, leaving some <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">parents grasping for help or switching schools</a>.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>CPS officials <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/21/no-busing-for-general-education-students-in-chicago/" target="_blank">announced this week that the district would not provide busing to general education students</a> for the rest of this school year. At a <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/chicago-school-district-struggling-to-add-student-bus-transportation/">City Council meeting last month,</a> officials outlined possible solutions for next school year, including having students picked up at a regional site rather than their home and working with schools to adjust bell schedules.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/PzGhuuUjujLHTwlaAEsfWtoOvKg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/4SX47VAHKZHSHIZVHFFN6A5VBY.jpg" alt="A Haugan Elementary classroom on Thursday, August 4, 2022 Chicago. | Christian K. Lee for Chalkbeat" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>A Haugan Elementary classroom on Thursday, August 4, 2022 Chicago. | Christian K. Lee for Chalkbeat</figcaption></figure><h2>Preschool expansion goes statewide</h2><p>Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/1/9/23547307/free-preschool-college-tuition-illinois-governor-jb-pritzker/">promising to expand preschool</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/1/4/23539445/pritzker-early-education-child-care-budget-illinois-families/">make child care more accessible</a> in his second term. He said he hopes to make Illinois one of the best states to raise a family.</p><p>A <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/11/6/21106154/nationally-known-early-childhood-supporter-j-b-pritzker-will-be-illinois-next-governor/">longtime supporter of early childhood education</a>, Pritzker’s push to boost the sector in his first term <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/2/20/21106864/illinois-governor-j-b-pritzker-plows-100-million-more-into-early-ed-but-no-universal-preschool-this/">started off with a $100 million increase in 2019</a>, but got sidelined by the COVID pandemic. Now, he’s making moves with a plan to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/15/23600277/illinois-pritzker-2024-budget-early-childhood-education-child-care/">increase early childhood by $250 million</a> over the next four years and the creation of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/24/23930916/illinois-governor-jb-pritzker-early-childhood-new-agency/">a standalone agency</a> to bring together programs that are now housed across three separate departments. He also signed a bill requiring school districts to get up to speed by <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/5/23/23735131/illinois-schools-full-day-kindergarten-early-childhood-education/">offering full-day kindergarten by 2027</a>.</p><p>Chicago started <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/8/2/21105443/mayor-rahm-emanuel-is-on-a-high-speed-timeline-for-his-universal-pre-k-rollout/">rolling out universal preschool for all 4-year-olds in 2018</a>, when then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel made it a re-election promise before bowing out of the 2019 mayoral election. Now, full-day preschool is a reality in every neighborhood, officials say, and enrollment figures from this fall show pre-K helped, in part, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants/">stabilize enrollment in CPS</a>.</p><p><b>What’s to come in 2024? </b>The governor typically gives a speech and releases a budget in early February. It’s likely he’ll continue increasing early education funding, but also could begin to detail the shape and scope of the new early childhood agency.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/20/chicago-education-stories-that-defined-2023/Becky Vevea2023-12-12T18:45:13+00:002023-12-19T15:30:11+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chicago school leaders want to move away from the district’s system of school choice — in which families apply to a myriad of charter, magnet, test-in, or other district-run programs — according to a resolution the Board of Education will vote on this week.</p><p>The move puts in motion Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign promise to reinvigorate Chicago Public Schools’ neighborhood schools. On the campaign trail, Johnson <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice/">likened the city’s school choice system</a> to a “Hunger Games scenario” that forces competition for resources and ultimately harms schools, particularly those where students are zoned based on their address.</p><p>District leaders’ goals include ensuring “fully-resourced neighborhood schools, prioritizing schools and communities most harmed by structural racism, past inequitable policies and disinvestment,” the resolution, which was released Tuesday, said.</p><p>The board wants to pursue that policy goal — and several others — as part of the district’s five-year strategic plan, which will be finalized this summer. In an interview with reporters on Tuesday, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez, Board President Jianan Shi, and Board Vice President Elizabeth Todd-Breland declined to specify changes or say how far they want to move away from the choice system. That’s because they want to collect community feedback on how far the district should go, which would be outlined in a final five-year strategic plan this summer, they said.</p><p>The board is expected to vote Thursday on the resolution, which doesn’t create or get rid of any policies; rather, it formalizes and publicizes the district’s goals.</p><p>The district wants to “transition away from privatization and admissions/enrollment policies and approaches that further stratification and inequity in CPS and drive student enrollment away from neighborhood schools,” the resolution says.</p><p>This marks the first time the board has formally stated it wants to move away from selective admissions and enrollment policies. It says the school choice system, as it exists today, “reinforces, rather than disrupts, cycles of inequity” and must be replaced with “anti-racist processes and initiatives that eliminate all forms of racial oppression.”</p><p>Some selective enrollment and magnet schools <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/after-desegregation-ends-at-chicagos-top-schools-more-racial-isolation/65ea8586-dd2b-4947-ad77-f0a68b35020c">lack the diversity of the city</a>, enrolling larger shares of white and Asian American students, while others remain largely segregated by race and class.</p><p>Martinez said it is painful to hear of students traveling far distances to attend school, or when parents ask if they should get their 4-year-old child tested for gifted programs. He said he can “scream as loud as I can” about all that he believes neighborhood schools can offer to families versus highly sought-after magnet or selective enrollment schools — but “it’s not going to be enough.”</p><p>“We see this as an opportunity to, again, build trust, because I want to keep calling that out — that is a huge challenge for us,” Martinez said.</p><p>Any number of big changes could be on the horizon, Todd-Breland said.</p><p>“There likely will be policies that need to be revised and changed, so the admissions and enrollment policy is on the table as something that through this process of engagement, likely there will be some changes to it,” Todd-Breland said.</p><p>Todd-Breland and Shi said they’ve heard many pleas from the community to overhaul the choice system. The board’s goal to move away from school choice is framed in the resolution as a response to the district’s ongoing challenges, such as budget deficits and academic disparities between students citywide and Black and Hispanic students, students with disabilities, those who are homeless, and children learning English as a new language.</p><p>District leaders imagine prioritizing neighborhood schools to receive more resources and programming. Martinez said universal preschool is one example of an initiative that can draw families into a school.</p><p>The system of school choice in Chicago grew over many decades.</p><p><a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jRSiXkMlVacHajO3QZnvHS_-LflxNJWzwAl5RALKFz8/edit#gid=2087677001">Data shows</a> around 56% of elementary school students attended their zoned neighborhood school last school year and 23% of high school students did. Twenty years ago, during the 2002-03 school year, 74% of students attended their zoned elementary school and 46% of high schoolers did.</p><p>Many of the district’s most popular magnet and selective schools were created in the 1980s and 90s under a court-ordered federal desegregation consent decree that officially ended in 2009. In the 2000s, then-Mayor Richard M. Daley opened 100 new schools under an initiative <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/renaissance-2010-launched-to-create-100-new-schools/">known as Renaissance 2010</a>. Most of those schools did not have neighborhood attendance boundaries and many were charter schools run by third-parties.</p><p>The expansion of school options also contributed to the mass <a href="https://interactive.wbez.org/generation-school-closings/">closure or shakeup of nearly 200 schools</a>, including <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/25/23806124/chicago-school-closings-2013-henson-elementary">50 schools in 2013</a>. <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest/">Enrollment has further declined</a> since then, but under state law, the district cannot close schools until 2025. Officials would not say if the five-year plan would eventually include closing schools and emphasized their plans to engage communities.</p><p>However, Todd-Breland did signal that the board might move to close charter schools.</p><p>“If you are a privately-managed school, taking public dollars from our taxpayers that would otherwise go to the other schools that we know need to be invested in because they haven’t [been] for years, and you are not performing at a level that we find to be a high quality educational experience for young people, then why do you continue to exist in this system?” she said.</p><p>Nearly half of the charter schools authorized by the Chicago Board of Education <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">are up for renewal this year</a> and dozens more will be next year. If a charter is not renewed, it most likely would close, though operators can appeal to the state.</p><p>The previous administration, under the leadership of former CPS CEO Janice Jackson, also tried to reinvigorate <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/7/18/21105375/the-tension-between-chicago-enrollment-declines-and-new-schools/">underenrolled neighborhood schools</a>. In 2018, the district <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/10/4/21105899/chicago-schools-chief-urges-principals-to-apply-for-enrollment-boosting-programs/">offered</a> <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/3/19/21107103/these-32-chicago-schools-to-split-32-million-for-new-stem-arts-and-international-baccalaureate-progr/">additional funding</a> for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2018/9/20/21105745/how-chicago-schools-are-using-cool-classes-like-aviation-and-game-design-to-repopulate-neighborhood/">specialty programs</a> to local schools looking to attract more students.</p><p>Though the current system has long been criticized for <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/how-students-feel-applying-to-high-school-in-chicago/">stressing out students and families</a> as they compete for spots at the most sought-after schools, many families value having options outside of their assigned neighborhood school. Student admissions to gifted programs rely on a test, while admissions to selective enrollment high schools are based in part on the High School Admissions Test and previous school performance.</p><p>The board’s policy priorities come less than a year before Chicago will for the first time <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/09/lawmakers-disagree-on-chicagos-elected-school-board-transition/">elect school board members.</a> State law currently says 10 members will be elected and the mayor is to appoint another 11. That shift is one reason the board is focused on getting a lot of community feedback on their vision, so new board members “understand this is the direction that the district is moving in,” Shi said.</p><p>Political shifts, such as this transition to an elected school board, could upend what the current board wants to do, said Jack Schneider, an education policy expert and professor at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.</p><p>“The last thing you want is to put all of this effort into something like promoting neighborhood public schools and then have a massive change in the composition of the board that then leads to a 180 in priorities,” Schneider said.</p><p>The resolution also highlights several other policy goals under the district’s next strategic plan, including creating more community schools over the next five years. These schools provide wraparound services to students and families, another priority for Johnson. It also includes adding staff, ensuring culturally relevant, anti-racist lessons for students and similarly framed professional development for educators, and prioritizing collecting feedback from students and the community.</p><p>The board also wants to ask the community’s help in creating plans for “previously closed and currently ‘underutilized’ schools,” the resolution says.</p><p>Read the full resolution on page 21 of the board’s agenda <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/documents/december_14_2023_public_agenda_to_post.pdf">posted online</a>.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/Reema Amin, Becky VeveaChristian K. Lee for Chalkbeat2023-12-14T22:36:49+00:002023-12-19T15:29:17+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Forced by a court order, the Chicago Board of Education voted Thursday to extend charter school contracts run by embattled Urban Prep Charter Academy.</p><p>The board approved an extension until June 2024 for the network’s Bronzeville and Englewood campuses.</p><p>The extension comes more than a year after the board voted not to renew the contracts, with plans to take over those schools. The board’s decision <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/10/24/23421713/chicago-public-schools-urban-prep-charter-academy-for-young-men-revoke/">was based on allegations</a> that Urban Prep mismanaged finances and failed to comply with special education laws, as well as allegations that the school’s founder, Tim King, <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2022/8/3/23290651/tim-king-urban-prep-academies-cps-charter-public-school-investigation">sexually abused a now-former student.</a> King has denied those allegations.</p><p>Urban Prep appealed the board’s decision to state education officials, who sided with CPS. The charter network then filed a lawsuit in Cook County Circuit Court alleging that their agreement couldn’t be revoked because of the state’s moratorium on closing schools until 2025. In July, the <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2023/07/26/judge-rules-cps-cannot-take-over-urban-prep-campuses-after-rejecting-charter-renewal" target="_blank">court ruled</a> in Urban Prep’s favor.</p><p>“That is why we are here — to be in compliance with the court’s order even as it may be contrary to previous actions by the board,” Board Vice President Elizabeth Todd-Breland said last week at a meeting to review the board’s agenda.</p><p>CPS has <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2023/12/06/cps-board-vote-charter-renewal-urban-prep-academies-despite-ongoing-litigation">appealed the court’s decision</a>.</p><p>Mayor Brandon Johnson, who currently appoints the school board, is <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/">critical of the charter sector,</a> but he has also stressed that he doesn’t oppose charter schools. The board r<a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/12/chicago-public-schools-moves-away-from-school-choice/">ecently passed a resolution</a> signaling that it wants to boost neighborhood schools and move away from the district’s school choice system, which families use to apply to magnets, charters, and test-in schools and other programs.</p><p>Several teachers and families from other charter networks have pleaded with the board to renew their contracts over the past several months, including on Thursday. Christian Feaman, director of district advocacy for Illinois Network of Charter Schools, suggested the board’s new resolution attempts to “claw back the basic rights” of school choice for “Black and brown families.”</p><p>The resolution — which doesn’t create or get rid of any current policies or schools — isn’t intended to signal a closing of all charter schools, Todd-Breland said Thursday. Rather, the board wants to “hold charters accountable to the promise that was made at their founding,” she said.</p><p>The Urban Prep agreement approved Thursday comes with more than a dozen conditions, including cooperation in district investigations and complying with financial oversight. Those conditions are generally the same that Urban Prep has had to follow in the past, most of which Urban Prep has not attempted to comply with, said Zabrina Evans, executive director of the district’s Office of Innovation and Incubation in the Office of Portfolio Management, last week.</p><p>In remarks to the board Thursday, Dennis Lacewell, chief academic officer at Urban Prep, said the district is spreading “lies and propaganda” about the charter failing to meet nearly all the requirements CPS has asked of it. Lacewell said Urban Prep has complied with eight of ten previous conditions and submitted evidence to the district.</p><p>Separately, a few public speakers raised concerns about the board’s resolution, specifically saying the board shouldn’t be moving to close any selective enrollment or gifted schools. Todd-Breland emphasized that there is no current plan to close any schools.</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/14/chicago-public-schools-renews-urban-prep/Reema Amin2023-12-11T11:00:00+00:002023-12-12T00:29:44+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Chloe Athanasiou was rippling with nervous energy. It was Oct. 11 and they — and 28,000 of their eighth grade peers — were about to take Chicago Public Schools’ High School Admissions Test, or HSAT.</p><p>“Everybody’s so nervous. Either everybody’s really quiet or screaming their heads off,” Chloe said. “I was one of the people who was screaming their heads off to try to feel better. It actually worked, strangely.”</p><p>The test would be a crucial factor in determining the next stage in their lives: where they will go to high school.</p><p>In Chicago, every eighth grade student is guaranteed a spot at their local neighborhood school, but according to data from previous years, about 70% of high schoolers attend schools outside their neighborhood.</p><p>What was once an effort to desegregate Chicago Public Schools has turned into a fiercely competitive process to get a seat at top-performing, well-resourced high schools. Admissions decisions are still based on a <a href="http://cpstiers.opencityapps.org/">“tier system,”</a> which assigns every student’s address in the city a “tier” based on the socioeconomics and educational attainment of people living in the census tract and admits a mix of students living in different tiers.</p><p>Applicants spend months attending open houses, researching schools, and ranking them in order of preference. Next, they take the HSAT. When their scores come back a few weeks later, students have a chance to re-rank their school choices — a new twist added this year.</p><p>Then, everybody waits — until May, when admissions offers are made.</p><p>The whole process, as eighth grader Elias Gray put it, causes “mostly anxiety and fear.”</p><p>CPS made some changes to this year’s test meant to help alleviate stress, said Sara McPhee, executive director of the CPS Office of Access & Enrollment. After feedback from families, for example, the HSAT was shortened to one hour instead of two-and-a-half and reduced from four sections to two.</p><p>But the anxiety is deep-seated because what’s at stake, these students say, are their futures.</p><p>Chalkbeat followed four eighth graders from different parts of the city and different types of schools through this year’s enrollment process – which came with some changes and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/11/23912938/chicago-schools-high-school-admissions-hsat-technical-problems/">a test day glitch</a>. Here’s what it’s like to go through Chicago’s high school enrollment process.</p><h2>High school is one key to unlocking dreams</h2><p>Many students begin thinking about where to apply to high school well before eighth grade.</p><p>That’s partly because students’ grades in seventh grade factor into admission at the city’s selective enrollment schools. The other half of a student’s overall score is based on their HSAT results.</p><p>Students try to prepare however they can, including by shelling out for private tutoring – even though CPS warns that it has seen no correlation between test preparation and acceptance rates.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/D9VeN9FifscE0xNz52Il7h_kHL0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SAWYYTKIMFCH3PVZVQR3SQOUYU.jpg" alt="Katherine Athanasiou (left) and Chloe Athanasiou (right). Chloe is in eighth grade in Chicago Public Schools and hopes to one day help to repair some of the flaws in the youth mental health system." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Katherine Athanasiou (left) and Chloe Athanasiou (right). Chloe is in eighth grade in Chicago Public Schools and hopes to one day help to repair some of the flaws in the youth mental health system.</figcaption></figure><p><br/></p><p>Chloe Athanasiou wants to be a therapist when they grow up. In their own personal experiences with therapists, Chloe has seen many ways that mental health treatment for young people, especially queer youth, needs to be improved.</p><p>That is why Chloe hopes to attend a high school that offers an Advanced Placement Psychology course, something available at the city’s top selective enrollment high schools.</p><p>In order to make that hope a reality, Chloe began preparing for the admissions process in the spring, but it’s been in the back of their mind for years.</p><p>“You start thinking about it in sixth grade a lot, because you’re like, ‘Okay, next year is the year that I have to get all As,’” said Chloe. “And then in seventh grade, you’re like, ‘Okay, [now] I have to get all As. So how am I going to do that? How am I gonna accomplish that with the amount of homework and the different really big projects?’”</p><p>To prepare, Chloe did test prep courses, took practice tests, and participated in a Test Anxiety group offered through their school. Despite all of the preparation, said Chloe, the anxiety and stress remained.</p><p>“Logically, I know that really all that’s at stake is the next four years of my life. But mentally, it turns into this gigantic thing,” said Chloe. “It turns into a bigger thing than it actually is because of peer pressure and parent [pressure] just evoking a lot of anxiety.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/zP9t6doy6kAkeTM4xcreBND1Pb0=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/ZJ4PQO2CWNDCLPLH2YT7O2JMCQ.jpg" alt="Nicole Watson (left) and Daniel Watson (right), a CPS eighth grader who is applying to career-focused high school programs. Daniel said he leaned on art techniques to help manage his stress during the enrollment process." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Nicole Watson (left) and Daniel Watson (right), a CPS eighth grader who is applying to career-focused high school programs. Daniel said he leaned on art techniques to help manage his stress during the enrollment process.</figcaption></figure><p><br/></p><p>Art helped Daniel Watson ease some of the pressure of going through the admissions process, but his interests in science and technology are driving his and his family’s choices about high school.</p><p>His mother, Nicole Watson, began looking into Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs at local high schools as a strategy to counter the high competition of selective enrollment high schools.</p><p>“It’s just another way of potentially having my child at a high-performing school,” she said. “I’m looking at all of the options because I think we all know that selective enrollment schools only have so many seats.”</p><p>For admission to high school in the 2022-23 school year, 6,239 students ranked Lane Tech, which has about 1,200 seats for incoming freshmen, as their top choice school.</p><p>Whitney Young and Jones high schools were the second and third most frequently ranked as student’s top choices, with over 3,400 students ranking them as their first choices.</p><p>Nicole Watson wants to give her son more options, but as a social worker she worries about the kids who don’t have “parents or community that’s invested in their education and don’t have access to programming that can make up and fill in those gaps.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/xYz3zfKjT_DogG8KqBfOXkjwzCs=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SYNBV42PQFHJFGI5DSW2BIZE6A.jpg" alt="Shayna Gray (left) and Elias Gray (right) outside of Kellogg Elementary in Beverly on Chicago’s South Side. Elias is eyeing high schools with strong STEM programs, but the application process has him thinking even further into the future." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Shayna Gray (left) and Elias Gray (right) outside of Kellogg Elementary in Beverly on Chicago’s South Side. Elias is eyeing high schools with strong STEM programs, but the application process has him thinking even further into the future.</figcaption></figure><p><br/></p><p>Eighth grader Elias Gray let out a long sigh and shook his head before describing his feelings about the impending HSAT last month.</p><p>“This test basically decides the next course of your life in education,” he said.</p><p>His mother, Shanya Gray, admitted to feeling just as nervous. A few days before the test, she took the day off from work just to help her son study and try to ease the anxiety for both of them.</p><p>“This whole thing is very new to me, because I didn’t grow up in the US. I grew up in the Caribbean,” said Shanya Gray. “So I’m learning as I go along, learning about this process here in the U.S., and there are, even now, some things I wish I knew a year ago.”</p><p>She was surprised that there was not more preparation for the test built into the CPS curriculum. She ended up paying for tutoring and a test prep workshop to help her son prepare, but she’s keenly aware of the fact that such preparation isn’t available to everyone.</p><p>Elias says he wishes there was more preparation and support from CPS and within the classroom in the form of practice tests and lesson plans specifically targeting the HSAT.</p><p>While Elias is hoping to attend a school that can best support his interests in engineering, his goal is simply to attend “an actually good school.”</p><p>This whole process, he says, forces students to look forward, even beyond high school, and consider how the choices they make now will have a significant impact on where they go to college and their entire future.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/GCoOOJysQmsfca0DNmrmRQxPJJY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/NN56EKFN2JEUVDE6OONETDSLKU.jpg" alt="Selah Zayas (left) hopes to follow in her mother Andrea Zayas’ (right) footsteps and attend her alma mater: Lane Tech College Prep.
" height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Selah Zayas (left) hopes to follow in her mother Andrea Zayas’ (right) footsteps and attend her alma mater: Lane Tech College Prep.
</figcaption></figure><p><br/></p><p>Selah Zayas looked on as her grandmother evaluated her little brother’s vital signs this summer. He had started having difficulty breathing and Selah’s grandmother is a nurse. Watching her jump into action, she saw how important that kind of knowledge can be, and she wants to help people in the same way some day.</p><p>Following in the family’s footsteps is kind of a thing in the Zayas family. All of Selah’s siblings attend the same public charter school where her mother teaches fifth grade, and Selah’s sights for high school are set on Lane Tech, which her mother attended.</p><p>After her older brother went through the high school enrollment process last year, Selah went in with eyes wide open. Plus, her school has a High School Placement Manager who prepares students for high school and the enrollment process.</p><p>Even so, Selah and her mother had some concerns.</p><p>Selah learned some of the foundational math skills tested on the HSAT when schools were fumbling with virtual learning during the pandemic. Studies show that students have had <a href="https://www.gse.harvard.edu/ideas/news/23/05/new-data-show-how-pandemic-affected-learning-across-whole-communities">significant and lingering learning loss</a> due to the pandemic, and as a teacher, Selah’s mom, Andrea Zayas, has seen some of these impacts first-hand.</p><p>This, she said, is part of what makes the enrollment process inequitable.</p><p>“I feel like this system is unfair,” she said. “It’s one test, one day. It’s an hour of their life to determine the high school that will lead to their college.”</p><p>In addition, Selah learned math at her dual-language school entirely in Spanish, and while CPS offers the opportunity to take the HSAT in Spanish, Selah feels she is stronger at reading in English. So she opted to take the test in English.</p><p>These concerns compounded the pressure, said Selah, because the stakes are so high.</p><p>It’s about “who I’m trusting to take the next four years of my life at school [and who] will help guide me,” she said.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/Q01LRCqt-aZbhJnYd4gQSyae_KU=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/XBT6TUZV6ZCQPF7MWAZFDCT3WQ.jpg" alt="Chicago Public Schools canceled and rescheduled the High School Admissions Test after technical problems caused problems on the original date all eighth graders were scheduled to take the exam. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Chicago Public Schools canceled and rescheduled the High School Admissions Test after technical problems caused problems on the original date all eighth graders were scheduled to take the exam. </figcaption></figure><h2>Glitch adds to test day stress</h2><p>On HSAT test day, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/11/23912938/chicago-schools-high-school-admissions-hsat-technical-problems/">the test that 20,000 eighth graders had spent months worrying about malfunctioned</a>. Some students had been able to complete the test before the system crashed, others had completed half, some had never even been able to log in.</p><p>Meanwhile, at schools across the city, cell phones were buzzing as eighth graders texted friends about what was going on – discussing questions they remembered from the test, telling friends what to expect, and maybe freaking out a little bit.</p><p>CPS decided to reschedule the test, allowing those who finished the chance to keep their scores from this session or retake it at a later date.</p><p>Before scheduling a retest date, CPS worked with the vendor to make sure the test wouldn’t crash again. The <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/18/23923067/chicago-hsat-admissions-high-school-test-selective-enrollment/">new testing dates were finally set</a> for Oct. 24 and 25.</p><h3><b>Chloe</b></h3><p>“I thought the stress would be totally gone, the stress of actually counting down the days until the test,” said Chloe Athanasiou the day after the initial test. “It’s not gone, it’s still there, because nobody knows what’s going on.”</p><p>Although Chloe was able to finish the test before the system crashed, their mother was incredibly frustrated by the technical issue.</p><p>“It really feels like a nightmare. The kids who are in tier four and have supportive parents and have resources, their parents are going to be able to navigate this in one way or another,” said Katherine Athanasiou.</p><p>Families with means, she said, might leave CPS altogether, “and then it’s just inequity upon inequity upon inequity.”</p><h3><b>Daniel</b></h3><p>Daniel completed the reading section on Oct. 11 and finished the test “with one minute to spare” when he retook it on the 25th. Knowing he had cut it so close made it more stressful as he awaited his scores</p><p>He had more anxiety leading up to the retake than he’d had for the initial test, he said, because there was less information available about when the test would be rescheduled. So he didn’t know how to schedule his studying time.</p><h3><b>Elias</b></h3><p>When Elias Gray sat down on Oct. 11 to take the test, he said all “the questions were in Spanish, and there were numbers all over the screen.”</p><p>After hearing the district would cancel and reschedule the exam, Elias felt “shock and relief at the same time.”</p><p>No one at his school was able to finish the test, he said. The principal shut down the test once malfunctions started. Knowing that kids at other schools were able to finish the test, Elias felt that the whole testing situation this year was compromised.</p><p>“That was unfair because kids at our school are friends with kids at other schools and they might use the answers there to try to [do better] on the test,” he said.</p><h3><b>Selah</b></h3><p>At Selah’s charter school, students were able to complete the reading section, but when they came back from break, the test was no longer working.</p><p>The whole situation had her feeling “a little bit salty,” she said.</p><p>For her, there had been more surprises than just the technical difficulties. While she had signed up to take the test in English, she found out on test day that students taking the test in Spanish were allowed to use a dictionary.</p><p>Knowing that, she said, might have changed her mind about taking the test in Spanish.</p><p>In addition, Selah was particularly put off by the timer that pops up in the corner of the screen as a warning that time was almost up.</p><p>“It was very stressful to have to keep seeing that,” she said. “I kept checking in, seeing how much time I have left.”</p><p>In the end though, Selah was mostly relieved to have more time to study and go into the test with a little more knowledge about what it would look like.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/EsRr77dmJt8V1dQtxg-TLcFmpxM=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/5LPEBVGJW5AXLPI7D2N7RDNAGE.JPG" alt="Selah Zayas is currently in eighth grade at a public charter school where their mother teaches. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Selah Zayas is currently in eighth grade at a public charter school where their mother teaches. </figcaption></figure><h2>After scores come back, reality sets in</h2><p>After HSAT scores were released just before the Thanksgiving holiday, families had a week to re-rank their school choices if they wanted to. McPhee said people are encouraged to rank by their preference, not by where they think they have the best chance of getting in.</p><p>Many seats go to students who have ranked a school second or third, she said. “The seats aren’t gone because we filled them up with the kids who put them first.”</p><p>“If school A is your dream, always put your dream at the top of the list.”</p><p>But McPhee, a mother of two CPS students herself, hopes families will consider their neighborhood schools and realize that there are more than just a few good options for their soon-to-be high school students.</p><h3><b>Chloe</b></h3><p>After watching Chloe waiting for their scores and seeing the stress this process has caused, Katherine Athanasiou can only think of two words to describe the process: “developmentally inappropriate.”</p><p>“You think these kids can handle so much,” she said. “Now you turn around and you’re like … ‘they are just brand-new teenagers.’”</p><p>Despite Chloe’s high scores, the Athanasious have begun an application process for a local private school just to keep their options open. Both were disappointed by the way CPS handled the system malfunction in October.</p><p>“I really believe in public education, and I’m still hopeful that it will work out – we’ll get into either the top choice or the second choice,” said Katherine Athanasiou. “But I also want to think about a place where the application process sees a child for not just test scores and grades but for all of the things that make the child who they are.”</p><p>Chloe feels pretty good about their chances at one of their top choices and excited that their friends received similar scores so they might attend the same selective enrollment school together.</p><p>Chloe switched schools in the middle of elementary school and it made a significant difference in their mental health and happiness.</p><p>“It really makes you see that school environments can be really different,” said Chloe. “You have to find the one that’s right for you and that’s not so easy to do.”</p><h3><b>Daniel</b></h3><p>Daniel’s test scores – in the 90th percentile – were almost exactly what his mother expected. She feels that gives him a good chance at getting into some of the selective enrollment schools on his list.</p><p>They evaluated last year’s <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_eEs8Xym5IbwVa2_UmifCMM33k95i2SW/view">cutoff scores</a> for each school and decided to re-rank his top three schools, believing he had the best chance to get into Brooks or Lindblom – both selective enrollment schools on the South Side.</p><p>While they wait for offers to be made in the spring, she plans to help her son prepare for the Algebra Exit Exam. If he passes, he’ll be able to take geometry as a freshman.</p><p>But Daniel’s mom also hopes for broader improvements for all public schools.</p><p>“The fact that there are selective enrollment schools shows us CPS knows how to create high-performing schools,” she said. “There needs to be some more equity, so that we have high-performing neighborhood schools.”</p><h3><b>Elias</b></h3><p>While waiting for his scores to come in, Elias went to a second open house at Gwendolyn Brooks High School, a selective enrollment school in the Pullman neighborhood. The first visit was with his class earlier in the year. This time he was impressed, and it prompted him to re-rank his top school choices – his number one is now Brooks.</p><p>Now he’s nervous again. He did well on the test, but the few Bs he got in seventh grade brought his overall score to only a little bit above last year’s cutoff score for Brooks.</p><p>He’s trying not to think about what-ifs. Instead he’s reflecting on the process so far and thinking about where he can improve. He’s already thinking about how his experience with the high school enrollment process might prepare him for four years down the line when he’s applying to college.</p><h3><b>Selah</b></h3><p>When Selah’s scores came in at slightly above average, she was crushed. She had expected to do better.</p><p>Her dreams of attending one of the top selective enrollment schools in the city suddenly felt out of reach and she decided to readjust her rankings during the re-ranking period. She began to think her best option might be the charter school her brother attends where sibling preference guarantees her a seat.</p><p>Her mother, on the other hand, was baffled. The scores, she said, were inconsistent with her daughter’s grades and how she performed on other standardized tests throughout the year. It made her rethink everything. Is the school not adequately preparing her children? Was there a problem with the test? Did she miss something?</p><p>This isn’t the first admissions rodeo for Andrea Zayas and it likely won’t be the last. Her eldest son went through the process last year and did not get an offer at his top choice school.</p><p>“That was a disappointment for him and it wasn’t just one day; that disappointment lingers, you know?” she said. “I really feel like it impacts how they see themselves.”</p><p>Zayas has two younger children as well – a second grader and a sixth grader – and after seeing the ways this process has impacted her two older children, she isn’t sure if it’s worth it to put her youngest two children through it too.</p><p>Her focus now is making sure her daughter understands that “a person is not one thing.”</p><p>“A person is many things all at once and there are different strengths” she said. “What is that famous quote? If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree it will spend its whole life believing it’s stupid.”</p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/how-students-feel-applying-to-high-school-in-chicago/Crystal PaulCrystal Paul for Chalkbeat2023-12-11T20:31:00+00:002023-12-11T23:05:20+00:00<p>Joshua Long, currently the principal of Southside Occupational Academy High School, <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/15/23875844/chicago-search-special-education-chief-2023/" target="_blank">has been selected to lead</a> Chicago Public Schools’ beleaguered special education department, according to district officials.</p><p>The department — known as the Office of Diverse Learners Supports and Services — serves nearly 52,000 students with disabilities and has been <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/9/23755560/chicago-special-education-department-ousted-restraint-seclusion-violation/">without a chief since June. </a>That’s when Stephanie Jones stepped down amid fallout from Chicago’s violations related to the use of restraint and timeout of students. The department <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2021/8/3/22602388/iep-plans-chicago-special-education-students-disability-expired-covid/">has also struggled in recent years </a>to ensure <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/10/17/23407561/students-disabilities-iep-special-education-covid-learning-recovery/">students with disabilities are getting services</a> they’re legally entitled to under federal law.</p><p>Long <a href="https://www.southsideacademycps.org/m/news/show_news.jsp?REC_ID=886910&id=0">sent a letter to families</a> whose children attend Southside this morning announcing “with mixed emotions” that he accepted the role and would start after winter break, pending confirmation by the school board this Thursday.</p><p>“I am excited to continue working for students with disabilities and look forward to new opportunities to engage with all stakeholders as we move to positively impact each student’s experience in every school,” he wrote.</p><p>Ben Felton, chief talent officer at Chicago Public Schools, said the district used an external search firm and input from city officials, local advocates, educators, and other staff in its search for a new department head.</p><p>“We approached this differently than we had in the past given how critical this role is to CPS and how deeply invested many of our stakeholders are in special education and in this position,” said Felton.</p><p>Representatives from Access Living, the city’s Office of People with Disabilities, district principals, the Dyslexia Collaborative, and the Chicago Teachers Union were among the community groups that had a conversation with finalists and provided feedback, Felton said.</p><p>CEO Pedro Martinez made the final recommendation; the school board, which meets on Thursday, must approve the appointment.</p><p>Long would be inheriting a department beset with problems. The district is under state watch on multiple issues, including <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/">providing timely transportation</a> to students with disabilities and for how it physically restrains students in the classroom.</p><p>Long has been the principal of Southside since 2010, according to his <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshua-long-33565a6b/">LinkedIn profile.</a> In 2019, he won the <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/4/4/21107846/how-job-training-leadership-won-a-south-side-principal-a-golden-apple-award/">prestigious statewide Golden Apple Award for Excellence</a> in Leadership.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/fUJZoYneDadowQpFfufZVgoeCds=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/HP7SJXWTVNGMFBAKRQHG4RLTQI.jpg" alt="Joshua Long, second from left, speaks with Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson in Sept., 2023 in Chicago, Ill." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Joshua Long, second from left, speaks with Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson in Sept., 2023 in Chicago, Ill.</figcaption></figure><p>Before that, Long worked in various positions, including as a speech pathologist in a dozen schools, he <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2019/4/4/21107846/how-job-training-leadership-won-a-south-side-principal-a-golden-apple-award/">told Chalkbeat</a> in 2019. At the time, when Chalkbeat asked Long how the district should help students with disabilities, Long said he saw classes that “were not being run effectively” and weren’t “as rigorous” as other schools he’d been in. With that in mind, Long said “that the biggest thing is establishing equity for all students no matter which school or neighborhood they are in.”</p><p>Some district leaders have known Long for years. Board of Education member Mary Fahey Hughes, a longtime advocate for students with disabilities, sent her son to Southside. During <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/25/23890046/chicago-public-schools-specialty-programs-students-with-disabilities-job-training/">a school visit</a> with Mayor Brandon Johnson in September, Hughes praised the school and its model, which is designed to help those with more challenging disabilities transition into the real world.</p><p>“The thing I love about this place is there is so much respect for students where they’re at,” she told Chalkbeat at the time.</p><p>Long was a proponent of <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2020/11/5/21551282/covid-19-leaves-future-uncertain-for-young-adults-with-disabilities-in-chicago-and-illinois/">changing the timeline for when students with disabilities could transition out of public schools</a>. Previously, under state law, some students with disabilities could receive services until the day before their 22nd birthday. <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=40&GAID=16&GA=102&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=127851&SessionID=110#top">In 2021</a>, state law changed to allow students who turn 22 during the school year to remain eligible for services through the end of that year.</p><p>Long has also advocated for improving funding and availability of services for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities once they graduate from CPS. In an interview with Chalkbeat during the September school visit with Johnson, Long said the state has a yearslong waiting list for people with more challenging disabilities who want to access state-funded adult services, such as for community-based living or day services, that are meant to provide people with more independence. One of his former students accessed such services eight years after she graduated from Southside, he said.</p><p>“Our students do best through routine and through daily interactions,” Long said. “Now, she sat home for eight years and likely lost a lot of skills that she learned here with us.”</p><p>Long’s appointment comes after the district leaders <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/25/23890046/chicago-public-schools-specialty-programs-students-with-disabilities-job-training/">signaled this fall</a> that they were interested in expanding the school model Long oversaw. Southside is one of a handful of so-called specialty schools that focus on teaching students with intellectual and developmental disabilities about work and life skills. Southside, for example, has classes that teach students how to work in retail, food service, and auto mechanics. Unlike most schools, the district assigns students to these schools.</p><p>The district is under state watch regarding multiple issues for how it supports students with disabilities. Last year, the state launched a corrective action plan requiring the district to cap bus <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez/">commute times for students with disabilities</a> to 60 minutes each way. About 3,000 students with disabilities exceeded that limit at the start of last school year, according to the district.</p><p>Under state watch, those travel times have vastly improved this year, after the district decided to stop busing general education students, largely those in magnet and selective enrollment programs. In September, the state launched a new corrective action plan to ensure the district is providing transportation to all students of disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs, call for bus service.</p><p>This spring, documents obtained by Chalkbeat revealed <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/6/7/23751880/illinois-chicago-restraint-seclusion-timeout-students-with-disabilities/"> the district had been under state watch for failing to follow state law on physical restraint and timeout for students.</a> The state board said that Chicago was not notifying parents of incidents, staff and faculty were not trained in how to properly restrain and seclude students, and untrained staff were using outlawed methods of restraint.</p><p>The state board named Jones for failing in her role as a designated official to look into restraint and timeout incidents. In that role, she was required to maintain copies of incidents, be notified of incidents that occurred during the school day, and receive documents of physical restraint and timeout incidents that went on for a long time.</p><p>Prior to Jones’s time as chair, the district’s department responsible for supporting students with disabilities had been in trouble with the state before.<a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/wbez-investigation-cps-secretly-overhauled-special-education-at-students-expense/2f6907ea-6ad2-4557-9a03-7da60710f8f9"> A 2017 investigation WBEZ found </a>Chicago Public Schools secretly overhauled the special education department in 2016, resulting in students losing access to vital services. The State Board of Education placed the district under a corrective action plan in 2018, which lasted until 2022. During the 2022-23 school year, the state placed Chicago under a general supervision plan to continue to watch how the district handles special education services.</p><p>Now, Long could play a key role in ensuring that the department is delivering services to students with disabilities, monitoring physical restraint and timeout incidents, and helping students catch up after the coronavirus pandemic disrupted education.</p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org.</i></a></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org.</i></a></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/11/chicago-new-chief-for-students-with-disabilities/Samantha Smylie, Reema Amin, Becky VeveaImage courtesy of Chicago Public Schools2023-12-07T20:36:30+00:002023-12-07T22:12:22+00:00<p><i>Data analysis by Thomas Wilburn.</i></p><p><i>Sign up for Chalkbeat Chicago’s </i><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/newsletters/subscribe/" target="_blank"><i>free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the latest education news.</i></p><p>Four months after Chicago Public Schools significantly cut back bus service to meet the needs of children with disabilities, new data indicates hundreds of routes are carrying fewer than 10 students.</p><p>New data obtained by Chalkbeat Chicago details more than 1,000 bus routes for 7,350 students with disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs, require transportation services. It offers a glimpse into how the district is attempting to shorten bus travel times for these students, as required by the state under a corrective action plan issued last year.</p><p>The bus routes included in the data are carrying students to 540 different schools.</p><p>The data was captured on Oct. 23 and filed by CPS with the state just before Thanksgiving, as part of the corrective action plan. It outlines the number of students with IEPs per route, their schools, pick-up times, and the third-party company that operates each route.</p><p>However, the data does not include students who have 504 plans — another type of legal document for students with disabilities — or homeless students, who are also entitled to transportation. District officials said the routes may include those students. One week before the data was captured, the district said it had routed a total of 8,105 students.</p><p>Chalkbeat’s analysis of the route data for 7,350 students with IEPs found:</p><ul><li>There are an average 6.9 students with IEPs per route</li><li>785 of the more than 1,000 routes have 10 or fewer children with IEPs</li><li>59 routes — or 5.4% — transport one child with an IEP</li><li>The maximum number of students with an IEP per route is 26</li></ul><p>The data does not clarify what sized buses travel on each route, how many routes include adult paraprofessionals who are assigned to assist students who have IEPs, how many other children who do not have IEPs might ride on the route, or how many empty seats there are on each bus route.</p><p>The new information raises questions about how students with IEPs are assigned to schools — often far from where they live — rather than provided services at schools in their communities. It also comes as parents of students <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">whose bus service was cut earlier this year</a> continue to put pressure on the district to provide transportation to their students, most of whom attend magnet and selective enrollment schools.</p><p>District officials continue to cite a national bus driver shortage as the core reason for its transportation troubles. CPS currently has 715 of the roughly 1,300 drivers it needs, officials said.</p><p>“This is an evolving non-stagnant situation with new requests and availability,” a district spokesperson said in an email.</p><p>Advocates for students with disabilities cautioned that the data does not necessarily mean there’s room on school buses for more students. Students with disabilities are legally owed transportation under federal law, and adding general education students to their existing routes “muddies the waters” of those legal rights, said Miriam Bhimani, a CPS parent and advocate whose complaint placed the district under state watch regarding transportation rights for students with IEPs.</p><h2>CPS has struggled to provide bus transportation</h2><p>The scope of busing provided by CPS has contracted significantly in recent years. As recently as 2019, the district budgeted $120 million to bus nearly 20,000 students, according to budget documents. This fiscal year, the district planned to budget $146 million as it pared down the number of students it was serving.</p><p>Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, CPS has been struggling to provide reliable bus transportation. Last year, about <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez/">3,000 CPS students with disabilities</a> were on routes longer than an hour. The state put the district under corrective action last year to reduce ride times to less than an hour, which Illinois <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Documents/pupil-transp-faq.pdf">requires districts to “make every effort” to do.</a></p><p>In July, officials announced CPS <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage/">would only bus students with disabilities and those who are homeless</a> — groups legally entitled to transportation — and offered CTA passes to about 5,500 general education students and their parents. They also offered families of students with disabilities and those in temporary housing up to $500 in monthly stipends to cover their own transportation costs.</p><p>In October, district officials said about 8,100 students, most of whom have IEPs, were routed for busing to and from school. Another 3,948 families of students with disabilities opted to take the monthly reimbursements, CPS officials told the state in a letter dated Nov. 17.</p><p>Chicago is not alone in struggling with a shortage of bus drivers. U-46, Illinois’s second largest school district, has also experienced a driver shortage affecting students with disabilities, <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/elgin-courier-news/ct-ecn-u-46-bus-drivers-contract-st-1022-20231020-sh73ogx7bffvznmcnbi4eitdmi-story.html">the Courier-News reported</a> last month, but a U-46 spokesperson said it is currently providing busing to about 22,000 students.</p><p>After reiterating its bus driver shortage, CPS officials wrote in the Nov. 17 letter that it “paused providing transportation to families of general education students in magnet or selective enrollment programs” this year “in an effort to ensure” all students whose IEPs require transportation “are routed in a timely manner, and every effort is made to prevent students from riding longer than sixty minutes.”</p><p>After bus service was <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">cut for general education students,</a> district officials reported in late September a vast improvement in commute times for students with disabilities, with 47 children on rides longer than an hour. But those travel times have since worsened: As of last week, 116 students with disabilities were on routes longer than an hour, according to a CPS presentation to City Council members.</p><p>As recently as last week, district officials cast doubt on whether they would offer transportation to general education students.</p><p>But families of general education students in magnet and selective enrollment programs continue to show up at Chicago school board meetings to advocate for busing.</p><p>At a Wednesday meeting, a student from Kenwood Academic Academic Center said he and his brother used to take the bus to school together. This year, however, his brother takes a paratransit vehicle that doesn’t have other students on it and “wishes he wasn’t alone in the car.”</p><p>That student directed a question to transportation officials and board members at the meeting: “Why are they not routing as many students as possible into empty seats?”</p><p>But it’s not that simple, according to some advocates for students with disabilities. Adding many more students to existing routes could again worsen travel times for some students with disabilities, who have a federally protected right to transportation.</p><h2>Adding students to routes isn’t simple</h2><p>Advocates for students with disabilities said the data from October raises questions about how students with disabilities are assigned to schools — sometimes far outside their communities. Some of these children, advocates noted, are traveling far distances to therapeutic day schools, which provide more specialized instruction.</p><p>An example is Soaring Eagle Academy in suburban Lombard, located roughly 21 miles west of the downtown, where eight CPS students arrive each morning using three different bus routes, the data shows.</p><p>Terri Smith-Roback, a CPS parent who co-filed complaints with the state regarding transportation rights for students with disabilities, said she’s worried about long and “inefficient” rides for students traveling to therapeutic day schools. She’s heard from parents of these children who are riding the bus more than two hours each way and knows of one instance where a large yellow bus was transporting six kids to one of the schools.</p><p>District officials said some routes have fewer students “due to distance, medical equipment, and/or required bus aides that will require less students in the vehicle.” They also said that many routes use smaller vehicles, which have less space than a traditional yellow school bus.</p><p>About one-third of the more than 1000 routes detailed in the data are paratransit, which are usually smaller vehicles that provide individualized routes for students with disabilities, district officials told the state in a letter obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Bhimani said the data highlights a larger problem with how the district assigns students with disabilities to schools. All students have the right to attend their assigned neighborhood school. But students with disabilities are often assigned to schools outside of their communities that the district believes can better serve their needs, as laid out in their IEPs, Bhimani said.</p><p>“The student assignment decision we’re making in the district is to say students with disabilities are actually not owed services at their zoned school, and we will place them wherever we think those services should be offered inside the district,” Bhimani said.</p><p>Instead, Bhimani said, the district should create more services for students in schools closer to where they live so that they don’t have to travel far.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/07/chicago-bus-routes-for-students-with-disabilities/Reema Amin2023-12-05T11:00:00+00:002023-12-05T16:43:03+00:00<p>Most Chicago Public Schools students take five years or longer to finish college, according to a new report from the <a href="https://toandthrough.uchicago.edu/">To&Through Project</a> at the <a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/">UChicago Consortium on School Research</a>.</p><p>The report — titled “<a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/publications/the-four-years-fallacy?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=The%20Four%20Years%20Fallacy%3A%20Four-Year%20vs.%20Six-Year%20Bachelor%E2%80%99s%20Degree%20Completion%20Rates&utm_campaign=Four-Year%20Vs.%20Six-Year%20Completion%20Blast" target="_blank">The Four Years Fallacy</a>” — analyzed CPS students who graduated in 2015 and enrolled in college the following year. It found 30% finished their degree in four years, but when looking at college completion rates within six years, the rate climbs to 50%.</p><p>Most students — roughly 67% — finished their degree in five years, after one or two extra semesters, while 12% took longer. About 15% finished in four years, exactly eight terms, and 4% finished early.</p><p>Jenny Nagaoka, deputy director of the UChicago Consortium and senior advisor for the To&Through Project, said college graduation rates are most commonly reported by the federal government and higher education institutions as six-year rates, but that’s not how students and families think about college when they’re applying.</p><p>“The problem is that we call them four-year colleges,” Nagaoka said. “If I’m on a two-hour flight, and if it arrives three hours later and that’s considered on time, I’m going to be pretty unhappy.”</p><p>The report did not look at the reasons why students took longer, and the authors said there are many valid reasons students take more time. However, the report points out that taking longer than four years to complete a degree can create financial burdens, including more student debt, and can delay the start of one’s career and earnings.</p><p>When looking at a student’s race and gender, disparities in college completion emerge.</p><p>Young Black men are least likely to finish their degree in either four or six years, followed by young Black women and young Latino men. Young white and Asian American women have the highest college completion rates, followed by their male counterparts, according to the report.</p><p>“We’re seeing a lot more first-generation college students, a lot more low-income students, and we’re seeing more students who are going to college are racially diverse,” Nagoaka said. “What colleges need to do to make sure that students are successful has changed considerably.”</p><p>Brian Harris, Director of College Pathways with Chicago Public Schools, said it’s important not to “negatively stigmatize taking six years to finish college.”</p><p>“Our focus is on our students’ success in general as opposed to doing it within a specific amount of time,” Harris said.</p><p>CPS has a curriculum for all sixth through 12th grade students to help them think about their future careers and how to navigate college applications and enrollment, as well as prepare them academically to be successful in college classes, Harris said.</p><p>But once they’re on a college campus, that extra guidance and help can fade away.</p><p>“So much of persistence and completion is connected to the type of support they get on the college level,” Harris said.</p><p>He pointed out that the district has had a partnership with more than a dozen local universities and colleges since 2014 aimed at collaborating on the question of how best to support CPS students.</p><p>“We talk about financial aid, we talk about admissions policies, we talk about student affairs policies,” Harris said. “We have a pretty open line of communication with higher ed institutions in hopes that we get feedback on: How can we best prepare students for success at your institution?”</p><p>“And on the flip side, here’s what we’re hearing from our students in higher ed institutions. This is what our students need in order to be successful at your institution,” he said.</p><p>Harris noted that the data in the report looks at the Class of 2015 and said district officials anticipate seeing improved four-year and six-year college completion rates in the coming years.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/05/chicago-college-completion-takes-longer-than-four-years/Becky VeveaBob Krist2023-12-01T18:51:50+00:002023-12-01T18:51:50+00:00<p>Dismissal time at many high schools is often a crowded scene, with school buses and parents jockeying for parking and kids spilling out in every direction.</p><p>But at Frederick Douglass Academy High School, 543 N. Waller Ave. in Austin, just <a href="https://www.cps.edu/schools/schoolprofiles/douglass-hs">33 students emerge from the school</a> when classes wrap at 3 p.m. A student body that’s roughly the size of a single English class roams the campus briefly before heading home.</p><p>“This is so boring. There is nobody in here,” one student said after leaving Douglass on a recent school day.</p><p>At one point a beacon of academic excellence and point of pride for West Siders, Douglass’ low enrollment is now unsurprising to students and neighbors, they said. It’s indicative of the disinvestment West Side residents have suffered for generations, which has led to an exodus of local kids going elsewhere for school.</p><p>During the 2007-08 school year — when <a href="http://austintalks.org/2017/03/douglass-hs-likely-to-close-unless-at-least-100-new-students-enroll/">Douglass converted from a middle school to a high school</a> — there were 561 students, Chicago Public Schools <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/district-data/demographics/#a_20th-day-membership-report">historic enrollment data</a> shows. By the 2015-16 school year, enrollment dropped to 234 students, a nearly 60 percent decrease.</p><p>Since 2007, enrollment at Douglass has dropped about 94 percent.</p><p>The only community member or parent on Douglass’ Local School Council is Catherine Jones, leaving six open seats for parent representatives and one for community members.</p><p>Jones, an Austin resident, has watched the school’s enrollment diminish but said she would not stop advocating for the school’s improvement as it falls into decline from a lack of students and needed repairs.</p><p>“These kids deserve a good school, and it feels as if nobody hears us,” she said. “I won’t stop fighting for it.”</p><p>Chicago Public Schools said Douglass is not in jeopardy of closing, and efforts are underway to boost under-enrolled schools.</p><p>Douglass Principal Michael Durr did not respond to repeated requests for comment, nor did other staff and faculty at the school.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/N2coDtgv_kxN2NqIVT1kl7DF3To=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/J4LDSJJPAJF2XHOPYOFC2FQ55Q.jpg" alt="Front entrance to Frederick Douglass Academy High School in Austin. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Front entrance to Frederick Douglass Academy High School in Austin. </figcaption></figure><h2>Ongoing fallout of Chicago’s closed schools</h2><p>Statistically, the low enrollment means Douglass has some of the highest per-pupil spending in the district.</p><p>The high school is spending just over $68,000 per student compared to the district average of $18,287, statistics from the <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/district.aspx?source=environment&source2=sber&Districtid=15016299025">Illinois State Board of Education</a> show.</p><p>Douglass’ spending per student is up 20 percent this year, according to the state.</p><p>The only CPS school to spend more on a per-student basis is Simpson Academy High School for Young Women, a small alternative high school on the Near West Side. Simpson Academy has 27 students and spends over $94,000 per student, state records show.</p><p>Though graduation rates are up in recent years, the increase in funding hasn’t led to the expansion or creation of certain advantageous programs for students, such as STEM classes and extracurricular activities, said Hal Woods, chief of policy for education nonprofit Kids First Chicago.</p><p>The school’s lack of resources, plus the decline in the city’s Black population, have led to fewer students attending neighborhood schools, according to neighbors and statistics.</p><p>Fifty-eight percent of West Side high school students attended school <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/ara/west-side-region/choice/">outside of the district’s West Side region</a> in the 2022-23 school year, according to the Chicago Public School’s Annual Regional Analysis.</p><p>Of those leaving the West Side for high school, the majority head to the Far Northwest Side and Near West Side, according to the CPS regional analysis.</p><p>Bradley Johnson, chief community officer for youth development group BUILD Inc., said many of the problems with Douglass extend to inequalities the West Side has faced for decades. These include drug arrests, the savings and loan crisis of the ‘90s that lost billions for bank customers, the 2008 financial crash, and the closure of 50 schools in 2013 under Mayor Rahm Emanuel.</p><p><a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/cps-board-votes-to-close-50-schools/e7a8922a-8cc3-4ca9-b861-b9c1000928d8">Four of the closed schools were in Austin</a>, including Key Elementary, just across from Douglass. <a href="http://austintalks.org/2018/02/cps-sells-former-key-elementary-building-to-private-christian-school/">CPS sold the building in 2018</a> to The Field School, a private Christian institution.</p><p>Emanuel justified the closings by saying under-enrolled, low-performing and crumbling schools did not best serve kids.</p><p><a href="https://graphics.suntimes.com/education/2023/chicagos-50-closed-schools/">A WBEZ-Sun-Times investigation</a> showed the closures largely did not deliver on its promises that <a href="https://graphics.suntimes.com/education/2023/chicagos-50-closed-schools/kids/">students would be better off elsewhere</a>, <a href="https://graphics.suntimes.com/education/2023/chicagos-50-closed-schools/welcoming-schools/">their new schools would be improved</a>, and <a href="https://graphics.suntimes.com/education/2023/chicagos-50-closed-schools/buildings">their old school buildings would be overhauled</a>.</p><p>A Chalkbeat investigation showed that <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/08/03/chicago-closed-50-schools-10-years-ago-whats-happened-since-then/">roughly one-third of the students who attended closed schools transferred out of CPS entirely</a>. Those families who left CPS after their schools closed dried up pipelines for local high schools. Families and advocates worried the school closures would exacerbate <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/behind-sale-of-closed-schools-a-legacy-of-segregation/">displacement and disinvestment in segregated Black neighborhoods</a>.</p><p>An Austin native, Johnson said access to local resources begins to decline after elementary school, and high school recruitment is lacking due to the absence of things such as advanced placement classes and afterschool programs like sports or music.</p><p>“You have vastly different outcomes in life and in your education based on your ZIP code. They aren’t recruiting because of their reputation as a school without resources,” he said. “Equitable access to resources is the key, and this is a citywide issue.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/CvcFVHNBu1ynvpa2VXJGEY5FnvY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/3EQ7MGKAGJC5NNL2SIFRXCJVOU.jpg" alt="Banner of Frederick Douglass Academy High School. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Banner of Frederick Douglass Academy High School. </figcaption></figure><p>If attendance at Douglass doesn’t improve, Jones and others fear that the school could be forced to close, a prospect that has<a href="http://austintalks.org/2017/03/douglass-hs-likely-to-close-unless-at-least-100-new-students-enroll/"> concerned parents at the school since at least 2017</a>.</p><p>Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th), whose ward includes Douglass, acknowledged the lack of students as a problem but said closing the school would only exacerbate the situation and further remove resources from the neighborhood.</p><p>“Closing schools is never good for the community. Doing so would only further disrupt the education of the students,” he said.</p><p>Asked about the low attendance of the school, a CPS spokesperson said the district would abide by the moratorium on closing public schools, a state mandate that expires in January 2025.</p><p>“We would avoid speculation on hypothetical future closures that have not been proposed and are not up for consideration by the Board [of Education],” the spokesperson said.</p><p>CPS is increasing the Equity Grant program from $50 million in this year to $55 million next year to stabilize funding for smaller and under-enrolled schools, mostly on the South and West sides.</p><p>The district also plans to update its Opportunity Index, a formula used by CPS to identify barriers to success such as race, income, education, health, and other factors when making certain funding and staff allocation decisions, the spokesperson said.</p><p>“By applying the updated Opportunity Index to allocate additional teacher positions, instructional coaches, counselors and other staff positions, the District can ensure that the families who are most impacted by inequity have additional support to create strong, vibrant and healthy school communities,” the CPS representative said.</p><p>The issues that have led to the situation at Douglass have unfolded for years. It will take a long-term strategy to fix it, Woods said.</p><p>“This is not a problem you can’t solve in one year,” Woods said. “The schools are still dealing with the fallout of the school closures a decade ago. CPS should listen to the broader community for what their needs are.”</p><p><i>This </i><a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/11/30/why-does-this-west-side-high-school-only-have-33-students/" target="_blank"><i>story</i></a><i> was originally published by </i><a href="http://blockclubchicago.org/"><i>Block Club Chicago</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/12/01/why-does-this-west-side-high-school-have-only-33-students/Trey ArlineCourtesy of Trey Arline/ Block Club Chicago2023-11-30T19:15:00+00:002023-11-30T19:15:00+00:00<p>Every school day at 10:30 a.m., two dozen middle schoolers shuffle into a classroom at Warren Elementary on Chicago’s far south side. One by one, they boot up a Chromebook at their desks.</p><p>Fourteen miles north, another nine students log in from their classroom at STEM Magnet Academy just west of downtown.</p><p>They are all taking the same course: Middle School Algebra with Raluca Borbath, who teaches virtually.</p><p>On a recent November morning, Borbath shared her screen to begin Lesson 13: Introduction to Two-Variable Inequalities. The students, who log in through Google Meet, dove into a problem about making bracelets with two different kinds of beads — one kind cost $1 and the other cost $2.</p><p>The class spent the next hour solving and graphing: 2x+y ≥ 10.</p><p>Classes like Borbath’s, in which middle school students learn algebra partly online, have been critical to Chicago Public Schools’ efforts to reduce long-standing inequities in access to the course, which is seen as a gateway to better high schools, better colleges, and ultimately, better careers.</p><p>Put simply: Mastering algebra in middle school can give kids an advantage for the rest of their educational trajectory. But in Chicago, access to the course before high school has long been inequitable.</p><p>Schools without algebra in the middle grades have been largely located in predominantly Black and lower income neighborhoods on the south and west sides. For students who do take algebra in eighth grade, <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/District.aspx?source=trends&source2=eighthgraderspassingalgebrai&Districtid=15016299025">state data</a> shows white and Asian American students in Chicago Public Schools are more than twice as likely to pass than Black and Latino students.</p><p>But the district says it is trying to address the inequity and has found some success.</p><p>In addition to the <a href="https://www.cps.edu/schools/virtual-academy/">Virtual Academy</a>, which was created during the COVID-19 pandemic and has <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQ1n21aXc7o0eeGGztacTDGaEmCGV3fMtu46y6b4GY-yR1XaEGiefbHl12q1G-qScT5D4rGqzPyFHtb/pub">offered middle school algebra</a> for the past two years, the district also partners with three local universities to get more middle school teachers certified to teach the course.</p><p>Data obtained by Chalkbeat shows:</p><ul><li>Over the last decade, the number of CPS elementary and middle schools offering algebra grew from 209 to 366.</li><li>The number of middle grade teachers with algebra credentials increased in the past two years from 428 to 489.</li><li>A decade ago, roughly 10% of the city’s eighth graders took the district’s <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kbyhVZLn8kP-3KBd1w5wj72axoostMSpXi7S1vWhUZo/preview">Algebra Exit Exam</a>. Last May, nearly 25% did.</li><li>There are still 85 district-run schools and 35 charters where no students took the Algebra Exit Exam last year.</li></ul><p>Other cities have tried expanding middle school algebra with varying success. In New York City, then-Mayor Bill de Blasio <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2015/11/5/21104769/as-de-blasio-aims-for-algebra-in-every-middle-school-can-he-avoid-these-common-pitfalls/">promised in 2015 to get algebra in every middle school and saw r</a>ates of students taking and passing the course go up. But that district’s focus has shifted back to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newyork/2023/11/10/high-school-algebra-curriculum-mandate-divides-teachers/#:~:text=An%20initiative%20called%20%E2%80%9CAlgebra%20For,about%20equity%20and%20math%20instruction.">improving freshmen algebra</a>. Similarly, the state of California recently considered recommending all <a href="https://edsource.org/2022/california-revises-new-math-framework-to-keep-backlash-at-bay/669010">eighth graders take algebra</a>, but decided to leave the decision to local school districts.</p><p>Corey Morrison, director of mathematics at Chicago Public Schools, said the district is focused on equity, not a one-size-fits-all approach.</p><p>“It’s algebra choice for all,” Morrison said. “We want to get to a place where every eighth grader has a choice and can choose – as much as an eighth grader can without their parents making them.”</p><h2>Algebra skills ‘build from the bottom up’</h2><p>Algebra has long been a core requirement for high school freshmen in Chicago and the rest of the country. But for decades, it’s also been offered to advanced middle school students. Those who took it early would be on a fast track to taking calculus senior year, giving them a leg up on college applications and a strong foundation once enrolled in university.</p><p>“If you’re spending three years on your mandatory classes, you only have one more year to look for AP classes, or dual credit classes, or anything else that you want to do,” said Borbath, the teacher of the hybrid class. By taking algebra early, students are able to free up their high school schedules.</p><p>But in Chicago, data shows stark disparities in who has historically had access to algebra in middle school. Chalkbeat Chicago obtained and analyzed the number of students who took and passed the district’s Algebra Exit Exam. The <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kbyhVZLn8kP-3KBd1w5wj72axoostMSpXi7S1vWhUZo/preview">two-hour test, </a>taken at the end of each school year, consists of 34 multiple choice questions and six short answer problems. Students who pass can move on to geometry.</p><p>Ten years ago, roughly 200 of the district’s 500-plus schools serving middle schoolers had students who took the exam. Now, more than 350 do.</p><p>At Warren, no students took the district’s Algebra Exit Exam in 2018, data shows.</p><p>The small school sits in the heart of Chicago’s Pill Hill neighborhood, a South Side enclave once home to many doctors and pharmacists who lived in the spacious homes down the street from the nearby hospital. It <a href="https://www.cps.edu/schools/schoolprofiles/610218">serves 271 students</a>; 99% are Black and 80% come from low-income families.</p><p>STEM Magnet Academy, which shares a section of Borbath’s algebra class with Warren, is in the city’s more affluent West Loop and serves <a href="https://www.cps.edu/schools/schoolprofiles/stem">403 students</a>; 38% are Black, 34% are Asian American, 18% are Latino, and 6% are white. About 43% come from low-income families. In 2018, 14 students at STEM Magnet took the Algebra Exit Exam and 7 passed. But no students have taken it since then.</p><p>Borbath also teaches a morning section of algebra to middle school students at three other predominantly Black south and west side schools — Daley, Sumner, and Brown — all of which had no students taking the Algebra Exit Exam as recently as 2019, according to data obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Morrison said the pandemic was terrible in a lot of ways, but the way the district is using the Virtual Academy to close gaps in access to algebra is a “silver lining.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/x3_LjojwXYjkFaob6ObEQeK4ec8=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/OFG5RWV4ERFUBE4OZXS2Z5T4LA.jpg" alt="Students at Brentano Elementary in Logan Square work on graphing equations during an algebra class." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Students at Brentano Elementary in Logan Square work on graphing equations during an algebra class.</figcaption></figure><p>At Brentano Elementary in Logan Square, no students were taking the Algebra Exit Exam in 2018, district data show. Seth Lavin became principal nine years ago and said adding the course took time and planning.</p><p>“The wrong way to do this is just to change your eighth grade course and say, ‘Now we do algebra,’” Lavin said. “The right way to do it is to build from the bottom up so that the kids can be ready for it.”</p><p>Lavin said Brentano teachers led the effort to rework how math was taught in order to offer the course.</p><p>“This required, for us, changing what sixth graders were doing, and then changing what seventh graders were doing before, eventually, we could change what eighth graders were doing,” Lavin said.</p><p>Now, all eighth graders take algebra in school, Lavin said. And starting last year, Brentano started offering a before-school algebra course to any interested seventh grader.</p><p>Lavin said he’s able to pay one of Brentano’s teachers to teach the early morning algebra using federal COVID recovery money. Once that money runs out, the offering could be at risk.</p><h2>Staffing middle school algebra can be a complicated equation</h2><p>There are logistical and budget hurdles to overcome in order to offer algebra to middle schoolers, Lavin said.</p><p>“A teacher in your building has to have an algebra certification, or a high school math endorsement,” he said. “That requires some groundwork.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/c2Rujhz-uiROvEBOZ7qungZ2Jjg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/OLP6HMUNTVHIZD43LT4RTRYQHY.jpg" alt="Teacher Martin Lenthe teaches algebra to seventh grade students at Brentano Elementary before the regular school day begins." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Teacher Martin Lenthe teaches algebra to seventh grade students at Brentano Elementary before the regular school day begins.</figcaption></figure><p>Chicago Public Schools launched an effort <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2004_04/04-0428-PR35.pdf">20 years ago</a>, known as the <a href="https://www.ams.org/notices/201007/rtx100700865p.pdf">Chicago Algebra Initiative, to boost the number of middle school students taking algebra.</a> In partnership with three local universities, the <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2020_05/20-0527-EX2.pdf">school board pays tuition</a> for up to 90 middle school teachers to earn a credential to teach algebra each year.</p><p>Morrison, with the district, said the goal is to eventually have at least one certified teacher in every school, but the math hasn’t always worked out.</p><p>“How do you pull a handful of kids out to give them a robust algebra course when there’s only one eighth grade teacher?” Morrison said.</p><p>For the past couple of years, the Virtual Academy has been able to step in to serve those schools.</p><p>Last school year, 777 middle schoolers across 120 schools took the virtual course and this school year, the number climbed to 1,140 middle school students across 142 schools, according to the district. Roughly 300 take the class during the school day and 800 take it before or after school.</p><p>Morrison said the virtual courses are also showing teachers and administrators that offering in-person algebra is possible.</p><p>“It changes the mindset of teachers and administrators,” he said. “There are enough students in your school, in your community, where we can work towards putting an in-person course in your building, because that’s the ultimate goal.”</p><p>District data obtained by Chalkbeat shows that 489 teachers working at 287 schools have an active credential to teach algebra to middle school students. That’s up slightly from 2020 when 428 teachers at 248 schools had them. A district spokesperson said data on algebra credentials was not available prior to 2020.</p><p>Warren is hoping to offer in-person algebra next school year. Veteran teacher Tracey Kidd is working toward getting credentialed through the <a href="https://mathematics.uchicago.edu/about/outreach/sesame-program/the-cps-algebra-initiative/">University of Chicago</a> as part of the <a href="https://www.ams.org/notices/201007/rtx100700865p.pdf">Chicago Algebra Initiative</a>. Last school year, she was the teacher in the room where middle schoolers logged into virtual algebra.</p><p>“It’s kind of hard to do (algebra) virtually sometimes, because kids, they wander off a little,” she said. “But if you’re in the room with them, then they’re gonna focus more, and they get that one on one attention from you.”</p><p>Kidd currently teaches intermediate math and knows many students are ready to handle the rigor of algebra.</p><h2>Younger students get a jump start in algebra</h2><p>In Sandra Shorter’s classroom at Warren, a group of sixth grade students are starting pre-algebra with the goal of taking algebra next school year as seventh graders.</p><p>“We’re doing ratios, unit rates, and then we’re gonna graph them and write them as equations,” Shorter explained.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ouWon533l20HCXCi8h0NC_M-SDA=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/KVC6NBCAIJACJPN37JD7Q3VBRQ.jpg" alt="A classroom wall at Warren Elementary helps middle schoolers at all levels prepare for success in algebra." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>A classroom wall at Warren Elementary helps middle schoolers at all levels prepare for success in algebra.</figcaption></figure><p>Morrison, with the district, said algebra is not just for certain students who want to be scientists or engineers. It teaches important skills such as problem-solving and critical thinking.</p><p>“Math is for everybody. But do you need to get on the accelerated track in eighth grade? Not necessarily,” Morrison said. “Do you still need to learn algebra? Yes.”</p><p>Algebra is a graduation requirement in CPS, but the stakes for taking it before high school can feel high.</p><p>Last week, 13- and 14-year-olds across Chicago found out their scores on the district’s <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/18/23923067/chicago-hsat-admissions-high-school-test-selective-enrollment/">High School Admissions Test</a> — a one-hour exam that partly determines whether they can go to the city’s top high schools. Though the content of the test is not public, many parents and students say taking algebra in middle school gives students a leg up.</p><p>“It will help us with a test to get into high school,” said Brentano student Liam Dolik. “That is something that’s so huge in eighth graders’ life, especially in Chicago. It’s not the best but we have to do it so we might as well prepare for it.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/0uRjZTtxW8Tj-RXCOSZrx-lJ7xw=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/T3OJ5XYX4BAWHJL6SH2K6OECGU.jpg" alt="Teacher Martin Lenthe helps a seventh grade student with algebra at Brentano Elementary before the regular school day begins." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Teacher Martin Lenthe helps a seventh grade student with algebra at Brentano Elementary before the regular school day begins.</figcaption></figure><p>Dolik is one of nearly 30 seventh graders who come to school at 7:45 a.m. every weekday to take algebra. They spread out across nine tables as the morning sun streams through the towering windows in classroom 306.</p><p>Lavin said all seventh graders were offered the option to take algebra before school, and about half of them decided to do it. But Lavin wrestles with whether the morning section for seventh graders is creating a new inequity.</p><p>“Sometimes there’s this temptation to go ahead instead of going deeper,” Lavin said. “At the same time, our kids are in the CPS reality where everybody’s trying to figure out how to get as high a score as they can in the high school admissions test.”</p><p>At the end of the day, Brentano is still a neighborhood public school in a diverse neighborhood, offering advanced math to everybody, Lavin said. “That’s increasing equity in the district.”</p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/30/chicago-expands-access-to-middle-school-algebra/Becky VeveaBecky Vevea2023-11-29T19:50:01+00:002023-11-29T20:37:30+00:00<p><i>Esta historia fue traducida por Claudia Hernández de la Revista Borderless. Suscríbase al boletín de Borderless </i><a href="https://protect-usb.mimecast.com/s/K5siC0Aj2LilD59cw4AvN?domain=borderlessmag.org/"><i>aquí.</i></a></p><p>Los educadores y defensores de Chicago están preocupados por cómo el nuevo límite de 60 días del alcalde Brandon Johnson de las estadías en refugios para familias migrantes afectará la asistencia y la estabilidad de los estudiantes migrantes.</p><p>La nueva regla llega en un momento en que la ciudad ha tenido problemas para albergar a los migrantes. Más de 22,000 personas han llegado desde la frontera sur desde agosto del <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/texas-new-arrivals/home/Dashboard.html">2022</a>, muchas de ellas huyendo de la agitación económica y política en los países de Centroamérica y Sudamérica. Los funcionarios de la ciudad y el estado han prometido aumentar los esfuerzos para ayudar a las familias a reasentarse y encontrar una vivienda más permanente, un compromiso que se da justo cuando un programa de asistencia para el alquiler operado por el estado ya no se aplicará a los inmigrantes recién llegados que ingresan a los refugios, <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/11/17/what-does-the-citys-new-60-day-shelter-limit-mean-for-migrants-in-chicago/">Block Club Chicago informó.</a></p><p>Unas 50 familias ya han recibido los avisos, y otras 3,000 los recibirán el 4 de diciembre.</p><p>Los defensores dijeron que perder el refugio podría significar más ausencias entre los estudiantes migrantes que no tienen hogar, formalmente conocidos como estudiantes que viven en situaciones de vivienda temporal. Esa designación incluye a los niños en refugios, que viven con otra familia o que viven en un lugar público. A partir del 31 de octubre, las tasas de asistencia promedio este año escolar para los estudiantes sin hogar son 5 puntos porcentuales más bajas que sus compañeros con vivienda permanente, según datos de las Escuelas Públicas de Chicago compartidos con la Coalición de Chicago para las Personas sin Hogar.</p><p>La estabilidad escolar está relacionada con el éxito académico. Un <a href="https://nche.ed.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/chron-absent.pdf">estudio del 2015</a> que examinó a estudiantes de la ciudad de Nueva York encontró que los niños que se cambiaron de escuela tenían más probabilidades de ausentarse crónicamente o perder al menos el 10% de sus días escolares. Los estudiantes crónicamente ausentes que también se encontraban sin hogar tenían tres veces más probabilidades de repetir el mismo grado que los estudiantes sin hogar que faltaron menos de cinco días a la escuela, encontró el informe.</p><p>“Estamos hablando de niños que han estado aquí durante dos meses, que han entrado en una rutina, tal vez han hecho algunos amigos, tienen una sensación de control finalmente, donde pueden obtener dos comidas calientes al día, estamos hablando de enviar a esas familias de regreso al lugar de su llegada en autobús”, dijo Gabriel Páez, un maestro bilingüe en el West Side, sobre la nueva regla del alcalde.</p><p>Sesenta días es un “tiempo muy corto” para encontrar vivienda, especialmente para los recién llegados con barreras lingüísticas que están lidiando con casos de asilo o que aún no han sido autorizados a trabajar, dijo Patricia Nix-Hodes, directora del Proyecto de Ley de la Coalición de Chicago para las Personas sin Hogar.</p><p>Si las familias no tienen una vivienda permanente en puerta, pueden regresar a la “zona de aterrizaje”, el área del centro de la ciudad donde la mayoría de los autobuses dejan por primera vez a los recién llegados, y pueden solicitar una nueva ubicación en un refugio. Las familias pueden permanecer en su refugio bajo “circunstancias atenuantes”, como un problema médico, si hay frío extremo o si han obtenido un contrato de arrendamiento con una fecha de mudanza que comienza más tarde de cuando deben abandonar el refugio, dijo la oficina del alcalde.</p><p>Un portavoz del alcalde declinó hacer comentarios. En un comunicado, un portavoz del distrito dijo que está trabajando con la ciudad y las escuelas para “garantizar que los estudiantes recién llegados, la mayoría considerados estudiantes en situaciones de vivienda temporal (STLS), puedan tener acceso a una educación de Pre-K-12 dentro de nuestro sistema que ofrece los servicios adecuados, incluidos los servicios para aprender inglés”.</p><p>Los niños sin hogar tienen ciertos derechos consagrados en la<a href="https://nche.ed.gov/legislation/mckinney-vento/"> ley federal</a> destinados a mantener su estabilidad en la escuela, incluida la capacidad de permanecer en la escuela a la que han estado asistiendo.</p><p>Aquí hay tres derechos educativos que las familias que viven en viviendas temporales deben conocer a medida que entra en vigencia la nueva regla de refugio de la ciudad:</p><h2>Los estudiantes sin hogar tienen derecho a permanecer en la misma escuela</h2><p>Los estudiantes que viven en refugios temporales y que se han inscrito en la escuela local o en una escuela cercana tienen derecho a permanecer en la misma escuela, incluso si se ven obligados a abandonar el refugio después de 60 días.</p><p>Esto es cierto para cualquier estudiante que se quede sin hogar. La ley federal protege su derecho a permanecer en su llamada “escuela de origen”.</p><p>Al igual que cualquier otro estudiante de las Escuelas Públicas de Chicago, los estudiantes sin hogar pueden inscribirse en la escuela local del vecindario en su nueva comunidad simplemente entrando. Además, como cualquier otro estudiante, pueden aplicar a escuelas selectivas o magneto, pero la fecha límite para aplicar a estas escuelas para el próximo año académico ha pasado.</p><p>Los estudiantes migrantes también pueden ser referidos por otras agencias de la ciudad, como el Departamento de Servicios Familiares y de Apoyo, para recibir ayuda para la inscripción de la oficina central del distrito, incluso en el Centro de Bienvenida Piloto de la ciudad en Clemente High School en el West Side.</p><p>En ese caso, el distrito inscribirá a los estudiantes en función del lugar donde viven, las necesidades de los estudiantes, como los servicios del idioma inglés, y “la capacidad y los recursos existentes en la escuela”. Si hay problemas de espacio en una escuela, el distrito “puede ayudar con una asignación escolar alternativa”, dijo un portavoz.</p><p>Una vez que 20 o más estudiantes con el mismo idioma nativo se inscriben en una escuela, la ley estatal requiere que inicien un programa de Educación Bilingüe de Transición. Dichos programas requieren instrucción tanto en inglés como en el idioma nativo, como el español.</p><p>El distrito ha presupuestado $15 millones para contratar más maestros bilingües, coordinadores de programas bilingües y “otros recursos para apoyar a los estudiantes de inglés”, dijo un portavoz.</p><h2>Los estudiantes sin hogar tienen derecho a transporte</h2><p>Los estudiantes sin hogar también tienen derecho a recibir transporte a la escuela, incluso si se mudan. Y, de <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/policies/700/702/702-5/">acuerdo con las pautas de CPS,</a> su escuela debe informar al estudiante y a los padres sobre los servicios de transporte. Si un estudiante encuentra una vivienda permanente, todavía tiene derecho a transporte hasta el final del año escolar.</p><p>De acuerdo con las pautas de CPS, los estudiantes sin hogar que necesitan transporte deben recibir una tarjeta CTA dentro de los tres días posteriores a la solicitud. Los niños de preescolar a sexto grado pueden recibir una tarjeta adicional para que uno de sus padres pueda acompañarlos en el transporte público.</p><h2>Los estudiantes sin hogar no necesitan papeleo para inscribirse</h2><p>Las escuelas deben inscribir a los estudiantes que no tienen hogar, incluso si no tienen los registros que normalmente se necesitan para inscribirse, como la vacunación o los registros escolares anteriores, prueba de tutela o prueba de residencia, según el distrito.</p><p>Es posible que las familias que huyen de la violencia doméstica o la agitación política no hayan traído documentos importantes, dijo Nix-Hodes.</p><p>Depende de la escuela identificar “sensiblemente” que una familia que busca inscribirse no tiene hogar sin violar su privacidad, agregó Nix-Hodes.</p><p><i>Reema Amin es una reportera que cubre las Escuelas Públicas de Chicago para Chalkbeat Chicago. Ponte en contacto con Reema en </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/migrant-students-rights-en-espanol/Reema AminChristian K. Lee2023-11-29T03:16:15+00:002023-11-29T03:16:15+00:00<p>Chicago Public Schools officials expressed doubt Tuesday that they will be able to provide busing to general education students for the rest of this school year.</p><p>“It’s very difficult to make a pivot within midyear to be able to add transportation now,” Charles Mayfield, the district’s chief operating officer, said during a hearing of the City Council’s Committee on Education and Child Development.</p><p>Mayfield’s comments come as the school district is still working to shorten bus rides for more than 100 students with disabilities to comply with state law.</p><p>In response to questions from aldermen about the state of student transportation, district officials cited a shortage of drivers as the core reason they’ve limited bus service so far this year to students with disabilities whose individualized education programs require transportation and those who are living in temporary housing. Both groups are legally entitled to receive bus rides to school.</p><p>About 5,500 general education students who were previously eligible for bus transportation were not offered busing this year — mostly those who attend magnet and selective-enrollment schools. The district is instead offering those families CTA passes, including a companion pass for a parent or guardian. Many parents have complained about the change, with some saying it’s hard to meet their work obligations and get their kids to school. It has led some families to <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/">transfer children out of their schools.</a></p><p>The district had already announced that it <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/">wouldn’t be able to expand busing</a> to general education students for the rest of this semester. Officials have promised an update on transportation in December, before the new semester begins.</p><p>As of mid-October, the district said it had created bus routes for about 8,100 students, mostly children with disabilities.</p><p>Mayfield told aldermen that the district has now hired 715 drivers, compared with about 680 in July — meaning it has 54% of the drivers it needs. That’s only a small increase, he said, even though the district has held dozens of hiring fairs and worked with its bus vendors to increase hourly driver pay rates by $5 since last year.</p><p>“We just haven’t seen much traction with being able to build that pipeline back for drivers,” he said.</p><p>Officials added that the number of students with disabilities has grown by about 20% from last year, and the district is regularly receiving new transportation requests.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools has been under state watch since last November for failing to get students with disabilities on bus rides shorter than an hour each way. Last year, the district reported that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez">3,000 students were on rides longer than an hour</a>, with 365 on rides lasting more than 90 minutes each way.</p><p>This year, with transportation for general-education students sharply limited, the district has touted an improvement in travel times for students with disabilities. As of Monday, 116 students with disabilities were commuting more than an hour to school, according to Mayfield’s presentation. That is, however, an increase from August, when <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage">47 students with disabilities</a> were on routes longer than one hour.</p><p>The state opened another investigation in September after advocates and parents complained that students with disabilities whose individualized education programs include transportation are being denied their federal right to a “free appropriate public education.”</p><p>The complaint alleges “widespread … delays and denials” across CPS and an “unnecessary administrative burden,” because families have to request transportation even after they’ve already been deemed eligible, according to a copy of the complaint obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Looking ahead to next year, Mayfield said the district will be discussing various strategies to make bus transportation “more efficient.” The options could include creating regional bus pickup sites and adjusting school start and dismissal times. He emphasized that those decisions would be made in collaboration with unions.</p><p>“Candidly, there will be some decisions that will need to be made, because we’re not seeing that driver population come back,” Mayfield said.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org" target="_blank"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/29/chicago-school-district-struggling-to-add-student-bus-transportation/Reema AminStacey Rupolo2023-11-20T20:13:53+00:002023-11-20T20:13:53+00:00<p>Chicago’s system that allows families to apply for magnet and selective enrollment schools — often outside their neighborhoods — traces back decades. It was initially seen as a tool for desegregation.</p><p>But, in recent years, many of those schools have <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/top-chicago-schools-less-diverse-10-years-after-order-to-desegregate-ends/038a1e46-ddf4-418b-8b59-698b8d177fa3">since been criticized</a> for enrolling a larger share of white and Asian American students, even though those students make up a minority of the district, compared to their Black and Hispanic peers.</p><p>In addition, the emergence of charter schools in the late 1990s presented families with options outside of their local district-run school.</p><p>More recently, officials have seen Chicago’s school choice system as a way to offer families more choices, allowing them to enroll their children in a school they like, instead of being tied to a neighborhood school that may not have the resources they’re seeking.</p><p>Still, the admissions process, accessed through an application called GoCPS, has built a reputation for being confusing, cumbersome, and stressful.</p><p>Since his election earlier this year, Mayor Brandon Johnson has expressed a desire to boost investments into neighborhood schools, so families don’t feel like they need to leave their communities to get a good education for their children.</p><p>We want to know from Chicago Public Schools families: What has been your experience with the city’s school choice system? Tell us <a href="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeLc9EmIO44bm8WAD11EDq4YVD5PDgjum_OkA378JWkeJ24cg/viewform?usp=sf_link" target="_blank">here</a> or in the short survey below. (We will not use your answers or your name in our reporting without your permission.)</p><p><iframe src="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeLc9EmIO44bm8WAD11EDq4YVD5PDgjum_OkA378JWkeJ24cg/viewform?embedded=true" width="550" height="2100" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0">Loading…</iframe></p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/20/chicago-school-choice-admissions-system/Reema AminStacey Rupolo2023-11-16T23:31:00+00:002023-11-17T00:09:36+00:00<p>Imagine the following scenario: A high school senior in Chicago has a 3.5 GPA and a score of 1200 on the SATs. They’ve been accepted to highly selective Princeton University, University of Illinois at Chicago, and a local city college.</p><p>Which school might they choose?</p><p>More often than not, a student in that situation will lean toward the school that’s an “undermatch,” meaning a school with lower grades and SAT scores in its admissions criteria and where average scores of incoming freshman were lower than what the student earned, according to <a href="https://urbanlabs.uchicago.edu/attachments/77f5836c09a2aa83656f737f612abaeaae025350/store/d6140375d3764c40bccbb643533afd52fc1729c7ca9d38278794a5f662bc/Best+Fit+Executive+Summary+Final.pdf" target="_blank">a new study</a> by the Inclusive Economy Lab at the University of Chicago. And that could make them more likely to drop out.</p><p>Researchers looked at Chicago Public Schools’ class of 2018 using a variety of data points, including district data and other sources. Of the students who attended college, 62% had enrolled in an undermatch school.</p><p>Students at an undermatch school were more likely to drop out: 69% of such students made it to the second year of college, while the same was true for 77% of students at a “match” or “overmatch” school — with criteria that called for the same or higher grades and SAT scores and where average scores of incoming freshman matched or were higher than the student had earned, according to the study.</p><p>Staying and earning a college degree can lead to an overall healthier life, according to a review of literature by Healthy People 2030, a federal government-led project that tracks health data. A college education can mean better salary-earning potential and better access to quality housing.</p><p>Students who enrolled at an undermatch were more likely to be English language learners, students with disabilities, those who are homeless, as well as white and Hispanic students. Students who didn’t fill out or complete their federal financial aid forms also more often chose an undermatch school. Students at these schools, however, were less likely to be Black or Asian American.</p><p>The financial cost of college was a big reason students have leaned toward schools that are an undermatch, in lieu of attending more selective schools or out-of-state choices, researchers found in interviews with students who currently attend City Colleges of Chicago. Students said it’s cheaper to attend a two-year city college or a local, less selective four-year school, and they don’t want to incur any debt, said Shantá Robinson, senior research director at Inclusive Economy Lab.</p><p>“We always say young people should think about these things and they are,” Robinson said, “and on the other hand, because financial fit is the first thing they’re looking at, other things that are critically important to young people — thriving in higher education institutions and persisting and graduating — are being overlooked.”</p><p>The study also found:</p><ul><li>81% of the class of 2018 had intended to go to college, but only 57% enrolled in college within one year of graduation. Just 43% returned to college for a second academic year.</li><li>Students with higher GPAs and test scores were more likely to submit more college applications to schools that were a match.</li><li>At colleges where net out-of-pocket cost was estimated to be $6,000 annually or less, 62% of students persisted to the second year. That persistence rate grew at pricier colleges: 89% of students stayed at schools where the net cost was estimated at more than $20,000.</li><li>Students at match and overmatch schools enrolled in schools that cost an average of roughly $1,200 less a year compared to other schools they also applied to. But for students at undermatch schools, that difference was an average of nearly $3,500 – which researchers said is one sign that cost was a factor for where these students ended up enrolling.</li></ul><p>A <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/12/23914495/chicago-public-schools-college-enrollment-completion-graduation/#:~:text=60.8%25%20of%20CPS%20students%20who,college%20upon%20graduation%20in%202022.">recent study</a> found that more Chicago Public Schools students are pursuing college, with far more earning certificates from two-year colleges.</p><p>CPS provides college and career competency lessons through its Skyline curriculum for grades 6-12, said Mary Ann Fergus, a spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools. Schools also encourage students to earn early college credentials — which about half of the class of 2023 did — which Fergus noted can help reduce the cost of college.</p><p>The researchers at the Inclusive Economy Lab at the University of Chicago found that overall the more selective the school, the more likely students would stick around. But at every type of school, including two-year colleges, those who were undermatching were less likely to stay.</p><p>Even though cost seemed to be a driving factor for where students enrolled, researchers found that students at colleges with higher net out-of-pocket costs were more likely to stay for their second year. Researchers don’t know why but guessed that pricier schools might have more resources on campus to support students’ needs, such as in academics.</p><p>An inclusive culture may also be a big factor in keeping students in college, the study suggests. For example, about 78% of Black students who attended a historically Black college or university, or HBCU, made it to their second year of college, compared to 67.3% of Black students who attended non-HBCUs. The New York Times found last year that several HBCUs are <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/11/us/hbcu-enrollment-black-students.html">seeing their schools become top choices</a> for more Black students. However, the same was not true for Hispanic students attending Hispanic-serving institutions, or HSIs. About 85% of these students persisted to their second year of college at non-HSIs, compared to about 68% of Hispanic students at HSIs.</p><p>The study’s authors made several recommendations, including teaching students at an earlier age about their options for college so that they can make a financial plan, such as applying for scholarships earlier on or understanding how to fill out a FAFSA form. Having that conversation “when your child gets an award letter” is too late, Robinson said, especially if the conversation is that the family does not have enough money to contribute.</p><p>“That’s not to offer a sense of pessimism to these young people. It is a level-setting,” Robinson said, noting that families need to look ahead to the final year of high school. “It is a very real world, ‘This is what we’re working with as a family. Now how can we move past this? How can we work together to make sure you get where you want to be by senior year?’”</p><p><i>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </i><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><i>ramin@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/16/chicago-students-enrollment-undermatch-schools-study/Reema AminBob Krist2023-11-14T19:35:49+00:002023-11-15T16:16:47+00:00<p>A little over three years ago, Eva Villalobos was searching for a public school for her four daughters, two of whom she had recently adopted in March 2020.</p><p>She wanted a school that would provide the mental health and academic support her new daughters needed. Then she discovered <a href="https://www.stgallschool.com/">St. Gall School</a> on the city’s Southwest side. It had everything she was looking for: small class sizes, before- and after-school child care, and social emotional support.</p><p>The price tag for the Catholic school was steep — Villalobos said it cost her almost $20,000 a year for all four children. But her oldest daughter received funding from Illinois’ tax-credit scholarship, Invest in Kids, to bring the price down to about $10,000 a year.</p><p>Next school year, however, Villalobos’ children — and more than 9,000 other Illinois students who received tuition support this year through Invest in Kids — will no longer benefit from the state-sponsored financial help.</p><p>That’s because Illinois lawmakers are letting the tax-credit scholarship program lapse on Dec. 31. Students who already receive the tax credit scholarship will have their tuition paid for through the end of this school year.</p><p>Illinois’ move comes at a time when <a href="https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikemcshane/2021/07/12/school-choice-keeps-winning/?sh=39d2432e6a97">more than a dozen states</a> across the country have created new private school choice programs or expanded existing ones.</p><p>Neighboring red states, such as Iowa and Indiana, have recently made <a href="https://in.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/10/23718448/school-choice-voucher-expansion-indiana-education-policy-public-funding">nearly all of their students</a> eligible for private school choice programs, which give families public dollars to pay for private educational options. Wisconsin, which has a Democratic governor and a Republican-dominated legislature, increased the dollar amount of its school <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2023/06/20/gov-tony-evers-signs-voucher-payment-increase-into-law/70338332007/">vouchers over the summer</a>.</p><p>But in Illinois, state lawmakers <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=4194&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=150798">did not pass a bill </a>during the fall veto session to extend the program despite a last-minute push from families and advocacy groups. Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker struck a neutral position that frustrated both sides — underscoring the shifting political winds in a state that has become more blue since the program passed six years ago.</p><p>Invest in Kids allows individuals or corporations to donate to scholarship-granting organizations that then distribute money to students from low-income families who need help paying tuition for private schools. Donors get a tax credit worth 75 cents for every dollar donated, up to $1 million. The state capped donations at $100 million and credits at $75 million — limits that were never hit, according to state data.</p><p>Michael Petrilli, president of the right-leaning Fordham Institute, said Illinois is likely the first state to kill an existing private school choice program without court intervention.</p><p>“It’s very hard to take government benefits away from people, especially when they are sympathetic individuals, especially low-income parents trying to do right by their kids,” Petrilli noted.</p><p>But opponents of private school choice programs applauded Illinois lawmakers for not extending the program when the veto session closed last Thursday evening.</p><p>Dan Montgomery, president of the Illinois Federation of Teachers, one of the state’s largest teachers unions, said in a press release that “there is a nationwide push to divert public dollars from our public schools through vouchers or voucher-like programs like tax credit scholarships and education savings accounts.”</p><p>He praised Illinois lawmakers who “chose to put our public schools first.”</p><p>For Villalobos, the end of the program likely means taking her children out of a school where they are thriving.</p><p>“We would be forced to try to find different ways to still be able to support them because they need all this additional help,” she said, noting that she doesn’t see how paying for private school would be feasible. “It just won’t happen.”</p><h2>How politics shifted during Invest in Kids’ existence</h2><p>Last week, Villalobos and other families and supporters of Invest in Kids filled the halls of the state capitol in Springfield for the final days of the fall veto session. Wearing blue shirts that read “Save My Scholarship,” they pushed state lawmakers to call a bill, <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=4194&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=150798">HB 4149</a>, that would extend the program until 2029 with some new limitations around donations.</p><p>But Illinois Speaker of the House Emanuel “Chris” Welch never called the bill for a vote.</p><p>The moment stood in stark contrast to 2017, when Republicans and Democrats were engaged in a tense, drawn-out battle over how to pay for public education. A budget impasse had stretched for two years.</p><p>At the time, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner favored the idea of tax-credit scholarships and said he <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/school-vouchers-for-broad-swath-of-families-on-the-table-in-school-funding-fight/1369cf38-a929-460f-b82c-8eb9b45fb3f6">was “hopeful” a compromise deal</a> would include such a program. Democratic leaders — all of whom are no longer in office — <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/school-vouchers-for-broad-swath-of-families-on-the-table-in-school-funding-fight/1369cf38-a929-460f-b82c-8eb9b45fb3f6">wanted a compromise</a> to end the stalemate and better fund public schools. Behind the scenes, they <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/emanuel-open-to-discussing-voucher-like-school-choice-program-emails-show/57124379-12b7-4fd2-a1ee-af41d06b56f3">were open to including a tax-credit scholarship</a>.</p><p><a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/100/PDF/100-0465.pdf">Invest in Kids</a> emerged from the closed-door negotiations that finally broke the impasse.</p><p>State lawmakers agreed in 2021 to extend the program for a year, with the backing of trade unions that supported additional money for the creation of private vocational schools. Those unions <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/2023/11/4/23942617/why-four-trade-unions-support-invest-kids-act-scholarships-tax-credits-james-sweeney">offered their support</a> again this year.</p><p>Some advocates, who hoped for another extension, became concerned in the spring when Brandon Johnson, a former middle school teacher and organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/12/23680850/brandon-johnson-chicago-mayor-teachers-union-progressive-win-democratic-party-education#:~:text=Brandon%20Johnson%2C%2047%2C%20clinched%20victory,if%20not%20all%2C%20previous%20mayors.">became mayor of Chicago</a>. Johnson beat Democrat Paul Vallas, a former CEO of Chicago Public Schools, who <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/2/27/23614124/chicago-mayor-race-paul-vallas-chicago-public-schools-kam-buckner-brandon-johnson/">favored school vouchers and charter schools</a>.</p><p>“His victory surprised a lot of people,” said Greg Richmond, superintendent of the Archdiocese of Chicago Catholic Schools. “I had a friend who works in the political arena, he called me two days after the mayoral election and he said, ‘I hope I’m wrong, but I’m just letting you know the scholarship program is now dead.’”</p><p>The perception was that “elected officials would want to be on the right side of the CTU,” he added.</p><p>Still, in October, <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/politics/ct-illinois-legislature-veto-session-review-20231022-tr4oq4lmrbhbnnh266g5e6c2e4-story.html">Pritzker said he would sign a bill if lawmakers sent it to him</a>. A spokesperson from the governor’s office told Chalkbeat Chicago in late October, “he won’t veto something that passed with a majority supporting it.”</p><p>Republican lawmakers urged Welch to bring the bill to a vote on the House floor last week and expressed deep frustration that he didn’t do so.</p><p>Rep. William Hauter, a Republican representing a district in central Illinois between Peoria and Springfield, mocked his colleagues from the floor Thursday. “I stand to just congratulate the majority power party who has stood firmly against the Invest in Kids program.”</p><p>He called Democrats’ commitment to kill the program “breathtaking.”</p><p>In a veto session, a bill requires three-fifths vote to pass. Cassie Creswell, executive director and president of Illinois Families for Public Schools, a public education advocacy group, said Welch might not have wanted to call the bill because it didn’t have enough support from Democratic lawmakers.</p><p>“He does not want to call bills that are going to divide his caucus,” she said.</p><h2>Opponents celebrate ‘historic win’</h2><p>When the veto session ended on Thursday, opponents cheered the end of Invest in Kids. They said the program lacked transparency and accountability when it came to reporting who received public dollars, and it gave public money to religious schools that discriminate against LGBTQ students.</p><p>Public schools have to report academic and disciplinary data to the Illinois State Board of Education, which is included annually in the state’s report card. Similar data for Invest in Kids is not available, though students enrolled in private schools with the help of a tax-credit scholarship <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Pages/testinvestinkidsact.aspx#:~:text=2022%2D2023%20Archived%20Information">are required to take state standardized tests</a>.</p><p>“We do not know test scores. We don’t know graduation rates. We don’t know discipline information. We don’t know who attends,” said Creswell. “We don’t know how anyone spent $250 million they got over these last five years. So no transparency and no oversight.”</p><p>The Illinois Department of Revenue has issued an annual report on Invest in Kids for the past five years. But much of the individual school level data is suppressed because of student privacy laws. Aggregate data collected in the most recent annual report showed 56% of students supported by tax-credit scholarships last school year were white, 32% were Hispanic or Latino, 20% were Black, and 12.5% identified as other.</p><p>Roughly two-thirds were from families whose income was below 185% of the federal poverty line — or $49,025 for a family of four in the 2022-23 school year.</p><p>Rep. Angelica Guerrero-Cuellar, a Democrat and the lead sponsor of HB 4149, said she hopes to bring new legislation in the spring.</p><p>Guerrero-Cuellar, who represents neighborhoods on the city’s southwest side and west suburbs, said more than 400 students in her district use the tax-credit scholarship to attend private schools.</p><p>“This is a critical and needed program for a lot of people,” she said. “We have food deserts, health deserts, and educational deserts.”</p><p>But some supporters of the program think a last-minute save is unlikely after lawmakers declined to act last spring and then again in the veto session.</p><p>Anthony Holter, president of Empower Illinois, one of the largest scholarship-granting organizations for the program, said he doesn’t know how “feasible it is and whether the conditions in the spring would be any different.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/KImdifTX_ND0iET3lMmoSJqG70c=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/USPQ6GCPLFCRRLKRD6K4UDAGWM.jpg" alt="Parents and students hold signs inside the Illinois State Capitol building as they rally in support of the state's tax-credit scholarship program. The tax-credit scholarship is set to sunset at the end of 2023 after lawmakers didn't act." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Parents and students hold signs inside the Illinois State Capitol building as they rally in support of the state's tax-credit scholarship program. The tax-credit scholarship is set to sunset at the end of 2023 after lawmakers didn't act.</figcaption></figure><h2>Supporters worry about the future for scholarship students</h2><p>Some supporters of Invest in Kids worry about the long term-effects on students and schools when the tax-credit scholarship program ends.</p><p>Tracy Smith, a mother of twin boys whose tuition is supported with the help of a tax-credit scholarship, said that without an extension, private schools could close and teachers could be laid off from their jobs. She also said that ending Invest in Kids would take away families’ right to choose a school that is right for their kids.</p><p>“You’re going to have an influx of more students going into a system that they don’t want to be a part of,” said Smith. “If they don’t extend the program, you’re taking away their choice.”</p><p>Richmond, superintendent of schools for the Archdiocese of Chicago, said some Catholic schools could face closure without the scholarship program.</p><p>“Some of our schools have 50 kids on scholarship or more,” he said. “When a school loses that number of students then the school’s future is also at risk. It’s not just the 50 students whose education is at risk.”</p><p>Some donors have already reached out about helping students stay in their schools, he said.</p><p>Christine Boyd, principal of St. Mary of the Lake and St. Thomas of Canterbury Catholic schools on the North Side of Chicago, said the vast majority of the schools’ 300 students were on scholarship. Most of the students are African immigrants who speak two languages at home, she said, and the school has a “robust” program for English language learners.</p><p>The loss of the scholarship program “will be very devastating to our community and to the school,” Boyd said.</p><p>Roni Facen, principal at St. Francis de Sales High School on the city’s Southeast Side, said that she has 55 students who are a part of Invest in Kids. She said some of the students won’t be able to continue attending the school.</p><p>The school is located in a predominantly Black and Latino neighborhood and many families are low-income, she said. Facen said that the school gives a scholarship to all students to help them attend.</p><p>“I’m gonna do everything I know how to do to keep my babies here. But it doesn’t mean that it’s going to be an easy fight,” said Facen.</p><p>Villalobos, the mother of four, was angry when lawmakers waited until the last minute to make a decision on the scholarship and disappointed that the program was not extended.</p><p>“There’s so many unforeseen things that happen in life. No matter how financially stable or healthy you are, things can change in the blink of an eye,” said Villalobos. “This is such a wonderful cushion to have for hard times.”</p><p>Now she’s trying to figure out her next step. She wants to keep her daughters at St. Gall, which offers before- and after-school care and social-emotional and academic support. But now that Invest in Kids is ending, she doesn’t know what she’ll do.</p><p><i>Becky Vevea contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </i><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><i>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><i>Cara Fitzpatrick is a story editor at Chalkbeat. Contact Cara at </i><a href="mailto:cfitzpatrick@chalkbeat.org"><i>cfitzpatrick@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/14/illinois-laws-voucher-scholarship-private-schools-end/Samantha Smylie, Cara FitzpatrickSammie Smylie / Chalkbeat2023-07-25T10:00:00+00:002023-11-03T15:33:11+00:00<p><i>Sign up for </i><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><i>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</i></a><i> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy.</i></p><p>Demetrius Hobson’s voice piped through the loudspeaker into every classroom at Matthew Henson Elementary School on Chicago’s West Side.</p><p>It was just before 3:45 p.m. on June 19, 2013. In a few minutes, the bell would ring to dismiss classes on the last day of the school year at Chicago Public Schools.</p><p>Hobson had arrived the previous year, fresh out of Harvard’s principal leadership program, with endless energy and new ideas. He had been ready to transform the 250-student school that served mostly Black students from low income families in North Lawndale and was “gearing up for the long run.”</p><p>Now, he had to do something no principal wants to do.</p><p>“Good afternoon, Matthew Henson Elementary School, and congratulations,” Hobson intoned. “This is our final few minutes as a school.”</p><p>That day would mark <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/cps-board-votes-to-close-50-schools/e7a8922a-8cc3-4ca9-b861-b9c1000928d8">the largest mass closure of public schools in the nation’s history</a>, as Henson and 49 other Chicago schools shut their doors for good. Some 17,000 students and 1,500 staff would scatter to schools across the city. Many others would leave the district altogether.</p><p>The promise made at the time by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel was that the students would go to better schools, and the district would save money by offloading expensive-to-maintain aging buildings.</p><p>“I know this is incredibly difficult, but I firmly believe the most important thing we can do as a city is provide the next generation with a brighter future,” he <a href="https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/mayor/press_room/press_releases/2013/may_2013/statement_from_mayoremanuelontodayschicagoboardofeducationvote.html">said in a statement</a> after the school board voted on the closures. “I am confident that … our children will succeed.”</p><p>The moment capped months of raucous <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/school-transitions/school-actions/">public hearings</a>, <a href="https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2013-05-14-ct-met-ctu-school-closings-march-20130514-story.html">days-long marches</a>, <a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20130520/downtown/cps-closings-union-march-against-plan-converges-on-daley-plaza/">downtown protests</a>, and even <a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2013/03/27/175524955/in-chicago-dozens-arrested-as-they-protest-school-closures">arrests of activists</a> who demanded Emanuel and his hand-picked school board reverse course.</p><p>On that June day, as Hobson and others said good-bye to their schools, questions hung in the air: What would happen to neighborhoods being disrupted? Would buildings get new life or fall into disrepair? Would Emanuel’s promise of better futures for students come to fruition?</p><p>Henson security guard Kelvyn Cockrell was not as confident as the mayor.</p><p>“I just hope and pray that somehow this works,” he said, standing outside the school’s main office on the last day of school.</p><p>Nearby, Mia Bonds, then a soft-spoken eighth grader and the valedictorian of her class, helped a teacher pack up a box.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/NpmR-28Yx4DP0g3DHtPueySKVV4=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/LLFJJ3CAWFDQRMSLT7J6572X6U.jpg" alt="Boxes are stacked inside of a classroom on June 19, 2013, the last day of school at Matthew Henson Elementary in North Lawndale. It was one of 50 schools shuttered under what would become the largest mass closure of public schools in U.S. history." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Boxes are stacked inside of a classroom on June 19, 2013, the last day of school at Matthew Henson Elementary in North Lawndale. It was one of 50 schools shuttered under what would become the largest mass closure of public schools in U.S. history.</figcaption></figure><p>She would be moving on from Henson anyway, heading to Whitney Young High School, one of the district’s top test-in high schools. But for her brother, then a second grader, the closure would mean being reassigned to Hughes Elementary a few blocks west.</p><p>“I don’t think it’s fair,” Bonds said at the time. “I want people to remember that Henson was not just a school — it was like a family.”</p><p>Before the bell rang at Henson for the last time, Hobson searched for words of comfort as he spoke to the students over the intercom:</p><p>“I want you to remember that education is the key to unlock the golden door to freedom,” he told them. “And I want you to know that every day at Matthew Henson Elementary School, education is liberation.”</p><h2>A principal and his students ‘find community somewhere else’</h2><p>About a week after the last day of classes, Hobson says he got a phone call from a district official telling him the school was about to be officially mothballed.</p><p>“Get to the school, get your things,” Hobson recalled the official saying. “We need to lock the doors and turn in your keys.”</p><p>Henson was one of 46 buildings that would be emptied out. Desks, chairs, books, bulletin boards, and everything else would be moved out — taken to other schools, warehoused, sold, or simply thrown away.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools would pay an Ohio-based logistics company to manage all the stuff from the shuttered buildings — a <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/cost-to-empty-out-closed-schools-doubles/fdca693f-8c85-4692-b402-44d178939541">contract that would eventually double</a> from $8.9 million to $18.9 million. Years later, metal desks, solid wood chairs, and other relics from the school closings <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/furniture-from-closed-cps-schools-ends-up-in-surprising-places/0bfdea64-4317-4167-8db5-9ea308ff1a26">would end up for sale on Craigslist</a>.</p><p>The three-story, mint green and tan brick building once called Henson would be put up for sale the following year.</p><p>After his school closed, Hobson needed a break. At the time, he didn’t want to walk into another school building and start over again. He told his wife, ‘If I go back into another school, it’s going to be a school I start.’”</p><p>But near the end of that summer, Hobson said, Chicago Public Schools called again: Would he mind stepping in as interim principal at another school?</p><p>He was still on district payroll, so he took the job in Woodlawn. But midyear, Hobson was asked to go to Earle Elementary in Englewood, a school that had been designated as a welcoming school for Goodlow Elementary, another closed school.</p><p>In some of the buildings that welcomed displaced students in the fall of 2013, the <a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/publications/school-closings-chicago-staff-and-student-experiences-and-academic-outcomes">transition was tough and sometimes even chaotic</a>.</p><p>“They took two low-performing schools and put them together,” said Darlene O’Banner, a grandmother of four children at Goodlow and later Earle. “They were setting us up for failure.”</p><p>The shuffling of students was a monumental task for the district. Officials spent millions of dollars on additional staff, new iPads, and building repairs at roughly 50 schools designated to welcoming students from closed buildings. But instead, some of the students scattered. Just over three-quarters of students attended the welcoming schools that were designated to take them in. The rest fanned out to 200 other schools across the city, <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/closing-schools-diaspora/32d8158c-e379-4ebd-8c56-13609855b2aa">WBEZ reported</a> at the time.</p><p>Hobson’s time at Earle turned out to be brief: He had gotten a job offer to open a new school. In San Francisco.</p><p>So Hobson and his wife packed up and moved West, where he would become the founding principal of a new public middle school named after that city’s first Black mayor, Willie L. Brown.</p><p>Many of those impacted by the closures also moved away. Data obtained by Chalkbeat showed that roughly a third of the students who attended closed schools transferred out of CPS. Some families and advocates said the loss of an anchor institution, like a school, would lead to more <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/behind-sale-of-closed-schools-a-legacy-of-segregation/">displacement and disinvestment in the segregated Black neighborhoods</a>, not less.</p><p>Bonds started freshman year at Whitney Young, one of the city’s top high schools that accept students based on their test scores and where they live. It was far more diverse and less segregated than Henson, which served mostly Black children from low-income families. The year Bonds enrolled, the student body at Whitney Young was 30% white, 24% Black, 27% Latino, and 15% Asian American.</p><p>“I feel like I needed to be in a more diverse type of schooling,” she said. “I saw Whitney as an escape. So I was there early, leaving late.”</p><p>Her brother enrolled in third grade at Hughes, the school where Henson students were assigned. It was closer to their apartment, Bonds said, but they “just liked Henson better.”</p><p>“Once you close schools down like that, people have to find that community somewhere else and adapt,” she added. “In this situation we were forced to, it wasn’t like a choice.”</p><h2>Vacant school buildings and new starts in and outside Chicago</h2><p>By 2017, Henson’s building still sat vacant. The windows were boarded up. Litter blew across the cracked blacktop. The marquee outside the front door was blank, no longer emblazoned with the school’s name.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ubAPVw_0Fq4VZ_BjLkx7GAT-fHo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/U35IT23YKNCLDNOAEXS2PPAVLQ.jpg" alt="The marquee outside of Henson Elementary in North Lawndale is now blank. The school has sat vacant and boarded up since 2013, despite interest from a nonprofit housing developer." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The marquee outside of Henson Elementary in North Lawndale is now blank. The school has sat vacant and boarded up since 2013, despite interest from a nonprofit housing developer.</figcaption></figure><p>The district had managed to sell only a handful of the shuttered schools — most on the north side — to <a href="https://chicagoreader.com/news-politics/cps-closed-stewart-elementary-school-in-2013-now-its-a-luxury-apartment-building/">luxury housing developers</a> or <a href="https://chicago.curbed.com/2018/2/21/17036394/andersonville-trumbull-school-waldorf">private schools</a>. They repurposed a few as district offices or transferred them to other city agencies and put the remaining 30 <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/17-350014-SALE-OF-REAL-ESTATE-2013-CLOSED-SCHOOLS-FINAL.pdf">out to bid</a> for a second time.</p><p>In May 2018, the Board of Education <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2018_08/18-0822-OP1.pdf">had an interested buyer</a> for Henson’s property, which sits across six parcels. The <a href="http://srhac.org/">Single Room Housing Assistance Corporation</a> offered $55,000 and put forward a plan to convert the school into 80 mini-studio apartments for low-income people, including veterans, single mothers, and people with disabilities.</p><p>There were a lot of similar proposals — and dreams — for the <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/vacant-school-buildings-litter-chicago-neighborhoods-after-mass-school-closings/40a00d49-d09d-456a-8ece-938539b8aa45">vacant buildings left behind</a> in the wake of the historic closings. <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/10/5/23389610/chicago-vacant-closed-school-affordable-apartments-humboldt-park">A “teacher’s village” with a mix of housing and retail</a>. <a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20160204/near-west-side/closed-dett-elementary-school-could-become-womens-center-artist-incubator/">A women’s center and artist incubator</a>. <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2023/01/18/a-closed-englewood-school-could-become-a-resource-center-for-formerly-incarcerated-neighbors/">A community center for formerly incarcerated people</a>. <a href="https://blockclubchicago.org/2021/02/02/closed-earle-elementary-school-could-become-affordable-housing-complex-with-park-other-amenities-in-west-englewood/">Affordable housing for seniors</a>.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/UhYYrfFqFXzJXtcsA1W7eyS2pbQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/HF6R766Q4RCJ5F5E5VDD2NHYN4.jpg" alt="Calhoun Elementary, one of 50 schools that Chicago Public Schools closed in 2013, is still vacant." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Calhoun Elementary, one of 50 schools that Chicago Public Schools closed in 2013, is still vacant.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/dzIaK7-pDlbxy3Cx79wteuYCgGs=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/G2DYSM3VFZE2NOMLS2IBQCDWKI.jpg" alt="The old Genevieve Melody Elementary building at 412 S Keeler Ave. sits vacant. Windows are broken and inside classrooms, there is graffiti on the walls. The building was mothballed in 2013 when Melody relocated to Delano Elementary, 3937 W Wilcox St., which was closed. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The old Genevieve Melody Elementary building at 412 S Keeler Ave. sits vacant. Windows are broken and inside classrooms, there is graffiti on the walls. The building was mothballed in 2013 when Melody relocated to Delano Elementary, 3937 W Wilcox St., which was closed. </figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/GoA4XVAszFXgcjnpKTjfp20XVrI=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/TVIWXN7TVZFS3L5MEM2O4EU2DA.jpg" alt="The old Delano Elementary in West Garfield Park became the new Melody Elementary in 2013. It was one of about a dozen closures in which Chicago Public Schools relocated students from the school staying open to the building of a school being shut down. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The old Delano Elementary in West Garfield Park became the new Melody Elementary in 2013. It was one of about a dozen closures in which Chicago Public Schools relocated students from the school staying open to the building of a school being shut down. </figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/6AlnKTJO-oaG-pprYRxvV9HeNbg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/AEHRJDAOWFFEBNVZX7UFRND53I.jpg" alt="The old Charles Earle Elementary building, 6121 S. Hermitage, closed in 2013. A Wisconsin-based developer purchased the building in 2017 for $200,000 with plans to convert it into affordable housing for seniors. It remains vacant." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The old Charles Earle Elementary building, 6121 S. Hermitage, closed in 2013. A Wisconsin-based developer purchased the building in 2017 for $200,000 with plans to convert it into affordable housing for seniors. It remains vacant.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/KW8xzOyvvPNrAVNEPXmprbbWJCE=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/QQM5W7IPHZE3ZBE7TWSDYGQH5A.jpg" alt="The front entrance of the old Charles Earle Elementary building, 6121 S. Hermitage. In 2021, the new owner announced plans to convert the building into affordable housing for seniors." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The front entrance of the old Charles Earle Elementary building, 6121 S. Hermitage. In 2021, the new owner announced plans to convert the building into affordable housing for seniors.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/la6jg9JM_LQdTsZC0VzdKZ5SjVE=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/GJR7LFHNPZDITHLQFEMKLOCRTQ.jpg" alt="The playground at the former Arna Bontemps Elementary, 1241 W 58th St., which closed in 2013, is overgrown and scribbled with graffiti." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The playground at the former Arna Bontemps Elementary, 1241 W 58th St., which closed in 2013, is overgrown and scribbled with graffiti.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ZTQ9AmUijOrXLUROEliEjtpZnZU=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/2MGGCFOK65FL3HDLN26NSZRB3A.jpg" alt="A message is spraypainted on the side of the former Arna Bontemps Elementary school, 1241 W 58th St., which closed in 2013." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>A message is spraypainted on the side of the former Arna Bontemps Elementary school, 1241 W 58th St., which closed in 2013.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/_0XUSnFEmnz2GX0BRMG29rAdYY8=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/RL5BIMFXPNG4FJKVS7TAJHS6CQ.jpg" alt="The old Laura S. Ward Elementary building at 410 N. Monticello Ave. in Garfield Park was closed in 2013. The school relocated to 646 N Lawndale Ave. in Humboldt Park and took over the old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary building." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The old Laura S. Ward Elementary building at 410 N. Monticello Ave. in Garfield Park was closed in 2013. The school relocated to 646 N Lawndale Ave. in Humboldt Park and took over the old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary building.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/IR-8PY5N0ogMW9n-aomCVkkhFEQ=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/SBPZES7X7JACRJOPCCFUAEQ6DI.jpg" alt="Students play on the playground of the old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary, 646 N Lawndale Ave., in Humboldt Park closed in 2013. It is now home to Laura S. Ward Elementary." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Students play on the playground of the old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary, 646 N Lawndale Ave., in Humboldt Park closed in 2013. It is now home to Laura S. Ward Elementary.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/vcUvzLI7FlgBjHAYz5eeRf0KZRo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/L25SAFMSCRGUBB53RMGYVS7V3A.jpg" alt="The old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary, 646 N Lawndale Ave., in Humboldt Park closed in 2013 and is now Laura S. Ward Elementary." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The old Martin A. Ryerson Elementary, 646 N Lawndale Ave., in Humboldt Park closed in 2013 and is now Laura S. Ward Elementary.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/pNUPaJ5CI2ovAoYxljRaib_2HYg=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/NCKMIKNZ6FETDCBJLIMWE2OVXQ.jpg" alt="The playground is locked and overgrown at the old Genevieve Melody Elementary building at 412 S Keeler Ave. The building was mothballed in 2013 when Melody relocated to the old Delano Elementary, 3937 W Wilcox St." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The playground is locked and overgrown at the old Genevieve Melody Elementary building at 412 S Keeler Ave. The building was mothballed in 2013 when Melody relocated to the old Delano Elementary, 3937 W Wilcox St.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/eNb0X9Olwd4xFhIAM4T8mJ9sN-s=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/CIHRVR2WKVF2TKCXV4DX3FFZHA.jpg" alt="Faraday Elementary School, 3250 W Monroe St., used to be Garfield Park Elementary. In 2013, Chicago Public Schools shut down Garfield Park and relocated Faraday to this building, merging the students from both into one school." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Faraday Elementary School, 3250 W Monroe St., used to be Garfield Park Elementary. In 2013, Chicago Public Schools shut down Garfield Park and relocated Faraday to this building, merging the students from both into one school.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/Cdli5FAcVqZJGHvudbz6IAak76c=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/Q5QEPXVMDZE3VKR5NTKAVSQ3KI.jpg" alt="The basketball court next to Henson Elementary, 1326 S. Avers Ave., in North Lawndale is empty on a hot June day 10 years since the school closed in 2013." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The basketball court next to Henson Elementary, 1326 S. Avers Ave., in North Lawndale is empty on a hot June day 10 years since the school closed in 2013.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/MRhltDs0BOnaF41tpe7sFoe8h6w=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/7XEGMTROZ5EFHCQRZIJ2CNHVCM.jpg" alt="The marquee at Nathan Goldblatt Elementary School, 4257 W. Adams St., in West Garfield Park still has notes on it from the last time it served students in 2013." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The marquee at Nathan Goldblatt Elementary School, 4257 W. Adams St., in West Garfield Park still has notes on it from the last time it served students in 2013.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/UlHWgX9jgajT7caKk-jYcsSQM3M=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/O27VGHBVMJC3RDE4NZQF4OQCPY.jpg" alt="The gate around Nathan Goldblatt Elementary, 4257 W Adams St., in West Garfield Park is locked. The school has gotten little to no interest from buyers when Chicago Public Schools has put it up for sale." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The gate around Nathan Goldblatt Elementary, 4257 W Adams St., in West Garfield Park is locked. The school has gotten little to no interest from buyers when Chicago Public Schools has put it up for sale.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/m0krYgwP576K3D0bynus48wjRUY=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/FJNORO5OLBAVHKJ4OT56M4YRX4.jpg" alt="The site of the former William King Elementary, 740 S. Campbell Ave., is now home to 30 single-family, new construction homes built in 2020. The property was sold to a developer in 2017 for $1.5 million at a time when the Chicago Board of Education was approving multiple bids on vacant closed schools." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The site of the former William King Elementary, 740 S. Campbell Ave., is now home to 30 single-family, new construction homes built in 2020. The property was sold to a developer in 2017 for $1.5 million at a time when the Chicago Board of Education was approving multiple bids on vacant closed schools.</figcaption></figure><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/GKG5pbU02P3B3U3iYSpjMN-zQeI=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/CCV7C6OGZVFUBJ724XSIWLQ5FU.jpg" alt="The former Dett Elementary building, 2306 W. Maypole Ave., sits vacant on Chicago’s West Side. Dett’s building closed and the school relocated to Herbert Elementary, 2131 W Monroe St., in 2013 when the Chicago Board of Education shuttered 50 schools. Despite plans to convert it into a women’s center, the property still sits vacant. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The former Dett Elementary building, 2306 W. Maypole Ave., sits vacant on Chicago’s West Side. Dett’s building closed and the school relocated to Herbert Elementary, 2131 W Monroe St., in 2013 when the Chicago Board of Education shuttered 50 schools. Despite plans to convert it into a women’s center, the property still sits vacant. </figcaption></figure><p>Hobson, in the meantime, was trying to bring a new school to life nearly 2,000 miles away.</p><p>He was “working day and night” to recruit students for a new STEM middle school in San Francisco, hiring staff, applying for grants, and designing curriculum with the district leadership.</p><p>But in late 2018, Hobson returned home to Chicago once the school opened. He remembers thinking: “‘Maybe I should just start over? Go back to the classroom. See what that feels like.”</p><p>Bonds, who had graduated from Whitney Young in 2017, became the first in her immediate family to go to college.</p><p>“A lot of people urged me to go. They said I needed to leave the west side of Chicago,” she said. “Every college I applied to I got accepted.”</p><p>She chose Northern Illinois University. “Nearby, but far enough away.”</p><p>Her brother finished elementary school at Hughes and enrolled at a Noble charter high school.</p><p>Data obtained by Chalkbeat show 59 percent of second graders from closed schools, like Bonds’ brother, are still enrolled across the district. It’s one of the cohorts of closed school kids who remained enrolled at slightly higher rates than comparison schools that were also on a list of 129 schools being considered for closure in 2012-13, but were ultimately spared.</p><p>But the closures had thrown other students off course.</p><p>A <a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/sites/default/files/2018-10/School%20Closings%20in%20Chicago-May2018-Consortium.pdf">2018 study</a> by the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research found that students impacted by the closures had academic outcomes that were “neutral at best, and negative in some instances.” For example, students from closed schools initially had lower reading and math scores. Reading scores recovered, but the gap in math scores persisted.</p><p>The school district had promised <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2012/11/26/cps-announces-five-year-moratorium">a five-year moratorium</a> on school closings after 2013. When it ended in 2018, CPS closed four high schools in Englewood. But in exchange, it built <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/new-75-million-high-school-officially-proposed-for-englewood/c9c84b83-98f0-4c4f-937d-fc7def8cd7c8">a new state-of-the-art STEM high school</a>.</p><p>Still, Chicagoans questioned if the district would return to <a href="https://interactive.wbez.org/generation-school-closings/">an annual cycle of closing a handful of schools every year</a>, as it did prior to the 50 closures.</p><h2>How school closings were decided remains ‘hurtful’</h2><p>On a hot June day this year, exactly 10 years and three days since the last day of school in 2013, the entrance to Henson was still blocked by boards on which someone had painted a mural.</p><p>It read: “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/6t2WCW_MpEGIDgaMIST_lqyqmI4=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/JOEBRKCBRNGVTLWZMALX4UQGOI.jpg" alt="The front entrance of Henson Elementary in North Lawndale is boarded up, but painted with a colorful mural. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The front entrance of Henson Elementary in North Lawndale is boarded up, but painted with a colorful mural. </figcaption></figure><p>A City of Chicago Empowerment Zone sign, with Mayor Richard M. Daley’s name on it, hung above the mural. A weathered and crumpled piece of yellow paper from the Department of Water Management was stapled to the side, asking the owner to contact them within 10 days so workers could access the water meter and avoid a shutoff.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools still owns the building. There have been no micro-studios for veterans, single mothers, or disabled people.</p><p>The sale approved by the school board to the Single Room Housing Assistance Corporation never went through. Former alderman Michael Scott Jr. held it in the City Council’s Committee on Housing five years ago.</p><p>The blacktop where an inflatable bounce house stood on the last day of school was cracked and faded. Near a side entrance, a few men in their thirties were sitting on buckets, smoking. One swept broken glass off the ground and into a garbage can.</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/ov0sdNFpJ4SOLxW3M9ui9DxKHpU=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/6UY5N7QCHZFBZDOXLYJRN525JU.jpg" alt="The blacktop behind Henson Elementary in North Lawndale where students used to play. A last day of school celebration was held here on June 19, 2013, before it was shut down by the school district." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>The blacktop behind Henson Elementary in North Lawndale where students used to play. A last day of school celebration was held here on June 19, 2013, before it was shut down by the school district.</figcaption></figure><p>Hobson has driven by Henson’s building a few times. One time before the pandemic, he remembers turning the corner to see Henson’s green and tan building.</p><p>“I was surprised to see how disheveled the building, the environment was,” Hobson said. “You could see vestiges of night parties, you know, bottles, and food bags, and everything just kind of collected on the stairs.”</p><p>The story is the same for many vacant schools. Approvals have stalled and some projects have languished as they wait for financing.</p><p>Hobson is back in the classroom now, teaching middle school social studies at an elementary school on the West Side closer to downtown than Henson was. It’s also named William Brown STEM Elementary, but after a different William Brown than the school he started in San Francisco.</p><p>It’s harder to know where the 252 students who were at Henson are today. One Henson student featured in <a href="https://graphics.suntimes.com/education/2023/chicagos-50-closed-schools/kids/">a WBEZ/Chicago Sun-Times series</a> said after fourth grade when the closure happened, he went to three different elementary schools and three different high schools in Chicago and the suburbs before getting his high school diploma at an alternative school.</p><p>Data provided by the district did not break down outcomes by school.</p><p>But data obtained separately by Chalkbeat Chicago shows that about 60 percent of Henson’s kindergarten through second grade students — those still likely to be enrolled — were at district schools during the 2022-23 school year.</p><p>Of all the students who attended schools that closed in 2013, fewer graduated and more dropped out when compared to the rest of the district. But these outcomes were similar to schools that were also on the chopping block in 2013, raising questions about whether the closures resulted in a better education for students.</p><p>Hobson said he still occasionally thinks about what it would’ve been like to “be a fly on the wall” in the rooms where the school closings decisions were made.</p><p>“Now that we can see on the other side, based on the data, there was no real transformation for the children,” Hobson said.</p><p>“What we were told and what actually happened are two different realities.”</p><p>As for Bonds, she moved back home to North Lawndale this summer after finishing her master’s degree at NIU. Her family is still in the same apartment about six blocks from Henson. She’s working for After School Matters this summer, as she has for the past several years. And next year, she’s doing <a href="https://cychicago.com/">City Year</a>, an Americorps program that stations full-time mentors in high-need schools.</p><p>Looking back now, Bonds said the historic mass school closings weren’t “the end of the world.” People adapted. But it still felt like “a numbers game” that made communities like hers feel “powerless to a system.”</p><p>“It wasn’t like it was super detrimental,” Bonds said. “It was just hurtful.”</p><p>Her little brother is now entering his senior year at the same Noble campus he started at and is on track to graduate, she said.</p><p>Most Chicago students enrolled today have not experienced their public schools closing down for good. The kindergarten students of 2013 are set to graduate in 2025 — the same year<b> </b>state legislators <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?GA=102&DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=2908&GAID=16&SessionID=110&LegID=131805#:~:text=Creates%20the%20Chicago%20Board%20of,prior%20to%20January%2015%2C%202025.">have given the city’s school board permission</a> to close schools again.</p><p><i>Mila Koumpilova and Samantha Smylie contributed reporting.</i></p><p><i>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </i><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><i>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</i></a><i>.</i></p><p><aside id="WoPHAP" class="sidebar"><h2 id="HFal9J">ABOUT THIS STORY</h2><p id="CyVIWM">I first met Demetrius Hobson and Mia Bonds at Henson Elementary on June 19, 2013, when I spent the day at the campus as a reporter for <a href="https://www.wbez.org/">WBEZ, Chicago’s NPR station</a>.</p><p id="YYWG4u">I was the age Mia is now. Just starting out in my career. Like many others, Chicago’s 50 school closings impacted my life in ways I’m not sure I realized until many years later. It shaped how I think about my work as a journalist and the responsibility I have to those who share their stories with me. It changed how I think about systems and structures. </p><p id="zSegAB">In the years that followed, I stopped covering education and became a city politics reporter. I got married. I had two kids. Yet every time the name of someone I met or interviewed or the name of one of the closed schools came across my radar, my eyes and ears would perk up. Although I no longer covered education, I kept track of what was happening to the shuttered schools. I often updated a spreadsheet not thinking it would ever lead to anything. (Spoiler: <a href="https://interactive.wbez.org/generation-school-closings/">It did</a>.) </p><p id="tFEmCB">In thinking about how to mark the 10-year anniversary of this moment, in my current role as Chalkbeat’s Chicago bureau chief, I went back to my old files and re-listened to much of what flowed in and out of my tape recorder that year. I thought a lot about where all the students, parents, teachers, and activists were now. (<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/15/23724506/brandon-johnson-chicago-mayor-inauguration-2023">One got elected mayor</a>.) I reconnected with some. I talked to new people. I revisited past research. I filed multiple information requests. </p><p id="pc8JfV">I went back to Henson on a hot day in June, exactly 10 years and 3 days since that last day. I cried. And then, I wrote. </p><p id="6ARhlP">This story does not have all the answers. No story does. It seeks — once again — to add information to the public conversation around an important policy issue and to elevate the stories of those most impacted. As Mia said to me in our recent conversation: “The story is the people.” </p><p id="J7cDdt"></p></aside></p><p><br/></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/7/25/23806124/chicago-school-closings-2013-henson-elementary/Becky Vevea2023-11-01T12:00:00+00:002023-11-01T12:00:00+00:00<p>“What happens if our school isn’t renewed?” </p><p>Claudia Rodriguez read aloud that question, which was submitted from an audience of more than 100 parents gathered inside Noble School’s UIC College Prep’s gymnasium in mid-October.</p><p>Rodriguez, the chief of public affairs at Noble Schools, answered confidently: Non-renewal isn’t really something we’re worried about.</p><p>Noble opened one of the first charter schools in Chicago in 1999, when the concept of privately managed public charter schools was brand new. Since then, Noble has <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2019_01/19-0123-EX9.pdf">expanded to 17 campuses</a>, and the Chicago Board of Education has renewed Noble’s <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2019_01/19-0123-EX9.pdf">charter agreement four times</a>. </p><p>Noble is one of a record 47 charter schools up for renewal in the 2023-24 school year. In all, about 27,600 students are enrolled at these campuses — more than half of the roughly 51,000 students enrolled in charters this year. </p><p>The high-stakes renewal process, which scrutinizes charter schools’ academic performance, financial practices, and operational compliance among other factors, comes at a pivotal time, as Chicago’s political landscape is shifting under a new mayor and looming school board elections. Charter communities wonder what it could all mean for their schools.</p><p>There’s been a trend toward <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/1/25/23571810/chicago-public-schools-charter-renewals">shorter charter renewals</a> that began under former Mayor Lori Lightfoot. In January 2020, the school board renewed seven charter operators for terms of five or more years. But in the years since, only two have received a renewal of five or more years, according to Chicago Board of Education records. </p><p>Lightfoot’s successor, Mayor Brandon Johnson, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/14/23640368/chicago-mayor-election-runoff-public-schools-brandon-johnson-teachers-union-paul-vallas">a former educator and organizer</a> for the teachers union, has historically opposed charter expansion. During <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice">the mayoral election run-off</a>, Johnson said that charter school expansion<strong> </strong>“forces competition for resources and ultimately harms all schools.” </p><p>But he has also stressed he <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/17/23645427/chicago-mayoral-election-runoff-vallas-johnson-charters-school-choice">does not oppose charter schools</a> — and he is strongly against closing schools, which is what could happen if a charter is not renewed. There’s also <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/documents/010500050K34-18.69.htm">a state-imposed moratorium on school closings</a> in Chicago until 2025. The mayor’s office did not respond to Chalkbeat’s requests for comment.</p><p>An important limit on charter schools’ footprint is already in place for the next several months. In the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2019/11/18/21109233/budgets-school-ratings-charter-schools-side-agreements-to-chicago-teachers-contract-reach-for-big-ch">2019 contract agreement</a> between Lightoot’s administration and the CTU, the district extended an <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2019/11/6/21109178/under-the-radar-chicago-teachers-contract-rolls-forward-limits-on-charter-schools">agreement from 2016</a> to have a net zero increase in the number of charter schools until the contract expires in June 2024.</p><p>Johnson’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/5/23784871/chicago-board-of-education-mayor-brandon-johnson-jianan-shi-elizabeth-todd-breland">recently appointed school board</a> will manage the charter renewal process alongside the CPS Office of Incubation and Innovation. Board President Jianan Shi is a former teacher who has taught at a district-run school in Chicago and a charter school in Boston. Before joining the board, he served as executive director of Raise Your Hand for Illinois Public Education, which has previously gotten funding from the Chicago Teachers Union Foundation.</p><p>CTU President Stacy Davis Gates believes the way the district handles charters altogether needs to change significantly. She wants more oversight of budgeting at charters and more-equitable engagement of parents and staff.</p><p>“The renewal process has to reflect the realities that we’re dealing with. There has been financial mismanagement, there is bloated administrative pay, there is a blind eye to culturally relevant curriculum and practices within the school community,” she said. “Now what do we do about it?”</p><p>In a statement, a district spokesperson said CPS is “committed to working with charter leaders and listening to members of our school communities to ensure we make the best possible decisions for our students.”</p><p>Nevertheless, charter school administrators, teachers, and parents are keeping a close eye on this year’s renewal process for a hint of what the future holds for the charter sector. </p><p>“I think renewal is very important in January,” said Andrew Broy, president of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools. “I think that will be a first signal from this board about what they think about charter public schools.” </p><h2>The ‘renewal hamster wheel’ can impact classrooms</h2><p>During the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/1/25/23571810/chicago-public-schools-charter-renewals">renewal process last school year</a>, 11 of 13 charters up for renewal were granted terms lasting three years or less. In 2022, six of the seven charters up for renewal were given terms of three years or less. </p><p>Parents and staff in charter school communities have different views about what the renewal process can mean for charters. </p><p>Although Noble staff are confident about their renewal, Rodriguez said the possibility they and other charters might get a shorter contract is a concern.</p><p>“From a staffing point, it takes a lot of energy,” she said. “From our parents’ [perspective], the uncertainty and instability that that could cause if we’re always thinking in renewal mode.”</p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/WS7evPoIFkJtDRf8RkmBfTbfJjk=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/44Y6HSSFANGZPOJ4IAPWBZOFFY.jpg" alt="Claudia Rodriguez, left, the chief of public affairs for Noble Schools, is in charge of running the renewal process for the charter school network this year." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Claudia Rodriguez, left, the chief of public affairs for Noble Schools, is in charge of running the renewal process for the charter school network this year.</figcaption></figure><p>The heavy lift, Rodriguez said, is due to the large amount of paperwork required and the amount of data the school has to collect. In addition, Rodriguez — who runs the renewal process — said since the process requires reporting on different aspects of the school’s academic, operational, and financial performance, she has to pull in staff and educators from other departments to get the information she needs. </p><p>That, she says, “does take time and resources away from the work that we could be putting back into managing our schools and supporting our students.” </p><p>“Having to be in a renewal hamster wheel is not the best option for everybody,” Rodriguez said.</p><p>Stephen Palmerin, principal at Horizon Science Academy Southwest, feels roughly the same way. </p><p>His charter received just a two-year renewal last January, due to concerns about its suspension numbers compared to those of neighboring district schools, as well as the underperformance of elementary students with disabilities. </p><p>The K-12 school, which serves about 760 students, is working to reduce suspensions by 50 percent each year before its charter is up for renewal again in 2025. But Palmerin said it’s not entirely fair that Horizon Science’s stats are being compared to both elementary and high schools, since traditionally, <a href="https://learningpolicyinstitute.org/product/crdc-school-suspension-report">elementary schools have lower suspension rates</a> than middle and high schools. </p><p>And apart from his concerns about why his school got a relatively short renewal, Palmerin called the renewal process “so time consuming.” </p><p>“I wish people would keep the students at the forefront of all decision making,” he said. </p><p>But for some parents, the renewal process serves as a way to make sure their children’s schools hold up their end of the bargain. </p><p>Blaire Flowers, a parent liaison for education non-profit Kids First Chicago, which specifically supports Black and Latino families, said when her children were at Plato Learning Academy, a contract school, and North Lawndale College Prep, a charter, renewal season was when the schools would begin to “get themselves together.”</p><p>Plato is run by a different principal than when Flowers’ children attended three years ago. But at the time, she said, there was no Parent Advisory Council, which is meant to give parents a voice at schools that receive federal Title I funds for students from low-income backgrounds. </p><p>When renewal time came, the school established a PAC and began having meetings, created more programming, and held more enrichment events for students, such as a book fair and a Christmas gym shoe drive, she said.</p><p>“That’s when they were really doing what they were supposed to,” she said. </p><p>Plato received a two-year renewal term in January. Dating back to 2017, the district has given the school relatively low ratings for its financial status and student performance on standardized tests. </p><p>Hal Woods, the executive director of the Office of Innovation and Incubation from 2018 to 2020, said he advocated for more regular check-ins with schools to ensure they were staying on track and to make renewal time “a non-event.” </p><p>Giving shorter-term renewals to charter schools that aren’t in compliance is one way the board can show schools that they “mean business” and encourage them to do better, Woods said. But with school assessment data often coming in at renewal time, he felt like his office was playing catch up and addressing issues after they’d already taken a toll. </p><p>“I just want to make sure that CPS [is] providing better and more real time information to my old department so these things can be corrected in real time,” said Woods, who is now chief of policy at Kids First Chicago. </p><p>Palmerin said there is some concern among his staff about the Johnson administration’s sentiments about charters. </p><p>“I have no choice but to remain hopeful, because thinking that our days are numbered here, that’s going to affect our work,” he said. “I just know that if we’re committed to the work that we’re doing, let’s not give them an excuse but to give us a maximum renewal.”</p><h2>Closing charters could be unlikely under moratorium</h2><p>By law, a charter school must be given notice that they’re failing academically, operationally, or financially. And they must be given time to resolve the issues before officials can revoke a charter agreement and close the school. </p><p>The school can also appeal the decision to the Illinois State Board of Education and if successful, it can still operate under state management in Chicago. If that fails, they can appeal in court. That was the course <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/chicagos-all-boys-charter-school-can-stay-open-as-lawsuit-fighting-its-closure-continues-appellate-court-rules/174f41d8-5c5d-4fcb-8e73-c0d7222eb5f5">recently taken by Urban Prep</a> after CPS ended its charter; the state voted to uphold the district’s decision. </p><p>After a challenge in court, a Cook County Judge ruled that CPS could not <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/chicagos-urban-prep-school-for-boys-wins-right-to-remain-open-this-fall/7f952d91-379c-4044-831c-1b214f6a6697">“close, consolidate, or phase-out Urban Prep”</a> until after the school closing moratorium expires in 2025.</p><p>Woods said he doubts that there will be any charter closings in the coming years, given the legal requirements and the appeal process. But more importantly, Woods said, “it’s very very hard to close a school … because every school is a community.”</p><p>At the same time, Woods said that charter expansion is also unlikely given the <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2022/02/19/kids-first-chicago-ceo-what-s-behind-drop-enrollment-cps">decline in school-aged children in the city over the past decade</a>.</p><p>Flowers said charter schools have served her family well. Her daughter takes three buses to her school each day because Flowers wants her to take advantage of the Phoenix Pact college scholarship option available through North Lawndale. </p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/tENgR6JlT8dDWaF4SnBkzdvvtgo=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/Z4NMHCOHRBEEFAUAYYQCMZ5MAU.jpg" alt="Blaire Flowers’ three oldest children, pictured above, attended North Lawndale College Prep and Plato Learning Academy, both charter schools. Flowers hopes Mayor Brandon Johnson will “trim the fact” from the charter sector." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Blaire Flowers’ three oldest children, pictured above, attended North Lawndale College Prep and Plato Learning Academy, both charter schools. Flowers hopes Mayor Brandon Johnson will “trim the fact” from the charter sector.</figcaption></figure><p>Nevertheless, Flowers said she does hope that the Johnson administration will “trim the fat” from the charter sector. </p><p>“Some of these charter schools are not really helping the community like they once were,” she said. </p><p>There is quite a bit of variation in student outcomes among Chicago’s charter high schools, according to <a href="https://consortium.uchicago.edu/publications/chicago%E2%80%99s-charter-high-schools-organizational-features-enrollment-school-transfers-and">a 2017 study by the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research</a>, one of the first studies to evaluate Chicago charters according to metrics beyond test scores. The study considered school organization and policies, the incoming skills and characteristics of enrolled students, school transfers, and student performance. </p><p>“The single most important takeaway from the study was how much variation there is within the charter sector,” said Julia A. Gwynne, the senior research scientist on the study. “There’s a little bit of a tendency for people to see the charter sector as being sort of monolithic all one way or all another way. And we just didn’t find that to be true.” </p><p>With the uncertainty about what a new mayor and new school board will do, Rodriguez said Noble representatives are attending more board meetings and encouraging parents and staff to speak at them to provide “a holistic view of what Noble does in the community and how we support our overall community in Chicago.”</p><p>Despite the challenges of the renewal process, Rodriguez said she doesn’t necessarily think the process needs to change. But she does believe that all schools, including traditional public schools who might not be serving students well, should go through that process.</p><p>Gates, CTU’s president, said she’s hopeful the education backgrounds of the mayor and new school board will play a role in how the district handles charters going forward. She thinks that the charter renewal process needs to be overhauled to make sure teachers and families have a voice.</p><p>Self-proclaimed “charter school mom” Myisha Shields is working to have her voice heard — she spoke at a school board meeting in August and attended Noble’s parent meeting earlier this month. She has had three children graduate from Noble charter schools, and two are current Noble students. </p><p>“It’s almost like charters have to prove a point just to stay open. We have to work harder. We have to work our kids harder to prove that these should be an option in the city of Chicago,” she said. “I just wish they would stop making it so hard. It’s so unfair.”</p><p>Regardless of how the process changes or stays the same in the coming years, Myisha Shields has one request for everyone involved. </p><p>“Just listen to us,” said Shields. “Our kids deserve a great education.”</p><p>The Chicago Board of Education is expected to vote on the renewal agreements for the 47 charter schools in January.</p><p><em>Correction: Nov. 1, 2023: This story has been updated with the correct spelling of Julia A. Gwynne’s name. It has also been updated to clarify Plato Learning Academy is a contract school, not a charter. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/11/1/23940860/chicago-charter-schools-brandon-johnson-school-board-education-contracts-academic-financial/Crystal Paul2023-10-31T19:01:51+00:002023-10-31T19:01:51+00:00<p>A greater share of Chicago Public Schools students graduated last school year than in 2022, reaching a new record, officials announced Tuesday. </p><p>The graduation rate of 84% — representing students who graduated in four years — was 1.1 percentage points higher than the graduation rate for the Class of 2022, when <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/10/24/23421421/chicago-public-schools-graduation-rates-freshman-on-track-nations-report-card">82.9% of high school students graduated</a> on time. The dropout rate for the Class of 2023 was slightly higher at 9.4% than it was for the Class of 2022, which saw 8.9% of students drop out between freshman year and graduation.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools’ five-year graduation rate for the Class of 2022 — which includes students who take extra time to finish their diploma either at a traditional or alternative school — was 85.6%, 1.6 percentage points higher than for the class of 2021 when it was 84%.</p><p>District officials announced the numbers with fanfare at Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts, with CPS CEO Pedro Martinez flanked by Mayor Brandon Johnson and joined virtually by U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona. </p><p>Martinez said the rising graduation rate was a sign that the district is continuing to recover from the pandemic, reminding the audience that the students in the Class of 2023 were freshmen as the pandemic started in 2020, followed by two school years of remote and hybrid learning. </p><p>“When you think about their last year, their senior year, was probably their most normal year, I want you to take these results and put them in that context,” Martinez said. </p><p>Cardona described the graduation rates as “promising signs for the future of education in Chicago.” He highlighted the district’s use of federal COVID relief dollars, which CPS has put toward several purposes, including covering teacher salaries and hiring more instructional staff. </p><p>The announcement came one day after Illinois state education officials released statewide data, including graduation rates that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/30/23935677/illinois-2023-test-scores-absenteeism-enrollment">had also increased</a> across Illinois. (The state and Chicago Public Schools calculate graduation rates differently, so Chalkbeat is unable to provide direct comparisons.) </p><p>Chicago’s graduation rate has steadily increased over time, hitting <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/10/24/23421421/chicago-public-schools-graduation-rates-freshman-on-track-nations-report-card">a record high</a> in 2022 even as students have faced academic challenges connected to the pandemic. Tuesday’s announcement comes on the heels of another report that found a rising share of CPS students are <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/12/23914495/chicago-public-schools-college-enrollment-completion-graduation">enrolling in college</a>.</p><p>Racial disparities among graduates still remain, though they are narrowing. Graduation rates increased for Black, Hispanic and Asian American students, while dropping slightly for white students — by .4 percentage points — compared to the Class of 2022. Rates also dropped for multiracial students by 5.7 percentage points.</p><p>Nearly 75% of Black boys graduated in four years, up from roughly 65% five years ago, according to district data. </p><p>Despite higher graduation rates, SAT scores dipped for the Class of 2023, to an average composite score of 914. The average score for the Class of 2022 was 927, according to district data. Separately, the district also saw slightly fewer ninth graders — 88.7% — who were on track to graduate by 2026. That’s compared to 88.8% of the class that’s one year older than them. </p><p>As the pandemic set in, the district <a href="https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/25048034/10312023_ReemaAmin_Walter_H._Dyett_HS_01.jpg">relaxed some grading policies,</a> as did <a href="https://ny.chalkbeat.org/2020/10/26/21535489/nyc-grades-during-pandemic">other school systems</a> across the nation — raising questions about how such policies may have contributed to CPS’s rising graduation rates. Martinez argued that an increase in students completing college-level credits was a sign students were held to a high standard. Just under half of the Class of 2023 earned early college credits, a 5% increase from 2022, according to the district.</p><p>One of those students is Zaid Orduño, who said at Tuesday’s press conference that he took college-level courses at Daley College during his time at Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy, through the district’s Early College Program. His classes at Daley included English, math, sociology, and psychology, and he ultimately earned an associate’s degree alongside his high school diploma. </p><p>Taking those classes, he said, inspired him to pass up his original plan of joining his family’s construction business and instead pursue a civil engineering degree at Illinois Tech, he said. </p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/Q4XZLrqNJ7b6LjnxQa8geMJw6ec=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/IGOVGU2I3BDD3PZX55MIGUYU5Q.jpg" alt="A wall at Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts is dedicated to remembering a hunger strike held in 2015 to demand for the reopening of Dyett, which was closed at the time." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>A wall at Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts is dedicated to remembering a hunger strike held in 2015 to demand for the reopening of Dyett, which was closed at the time.</figcaption></figure><p>Dyett, located in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side, saw its graduation rate tick up by more than 3 percentage points, to 86%. Johnson noted how far the school had come since he and other community members participated in a <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2020/8/17/21372534/dyett-high-school-hunger-strikers-five-year-anniversary">highly publicized hunger strike</a> in 2015 to demand that Dyett, then shuttered, reopen. He also recognized fellow hunger striker Ald. Jeanette Taylor, who now represents the neighborhood nearby in City Council and serves as the chair of the Committee on Education and Child Development.</p><p>“A hunger striker can turn into a mayor and an alderman, and more importantly, a hunger strike can lead to the success that we are experiencing with our students right here at Dyett High School,” Johnson said. </p><p>He also used the moment to once again advocate for<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union"> expanding the Sustainable Community Schools</a> Initiative that Dyett and 19 other schools are a part of. The program partners schools with a nonprofit that provides wraparound services for students and families.</p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/31/23940755/chicago-public-schools-graduation-rates-class-of-2023/Reema Amin2023-10-25T21:59:31+00:002023-10-25T21:59:31+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Chicago Public Schools is expecting a $391 million budget shortfall next year as federal COVID relief money runs out, officials said Wednesday. </p><p>The district has received $2.8 billion in COVID relief since the onset of the pandemic. The last $300 million of that will be spent in 2025, according to Mike Sitkowski, chief budget officer for CPS, who shared the figures during a Board of Education meeting.<em> </em>The current budget is $9.4 billion<em>.</em> Next year’s budget starts July 1, 2024 and will cover the 2024-25 school year. </p><p>By law, the school district must balance its budget, Sitkowski noted. That means district officials will either have to cut expenses or find a way to boost revenue. Board President Jianan Shi called for the latter. </p><p>“Our district needs more revenue, and this is a moment for all of us at every level to stand up and advocate for our teachers, our students, our families, for this board to advocate for more revenue at the state, local, and federal levels,” Shi said after the presentation.</p><p>The financial update comes as the City Council holds budget hearings for the city’s next budget, which is due by the end of the year but is typically finalized by Thanksgiving. The district’s budget operates on a different timeline, more closely matching the school year. The district will also hold budget community roundtables for the public throughout November. (Dates can be found <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/five-year-plan/community-engagement/">here.</a>) </p><p>Districts across the nation have been bracing for financial challenges as their pandemic relief dollars run out. Chicago officials have directed their relief dollars toward employee salaries, hiring more instructional staff and creating several new programs. About $670 million of federal relief was included in this year’s budget — representing about 7% of the current budget set to end June 30, 2024. </p><p>Asked on previous occasions about what CPS will do once the federal money runs out, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez has said district officials plan to <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar">ask the state for more support.</a> </p><p>The $391 million deficit is the result of complicated collection of revenues and costs the district is projecting for next year: First, the district will have a $670 million hole in next year’s budget due to the loss of federal pandemic aid, according to Sitkowski’s presentation. That gap will be partially filled by the last bit of federal relief — about $300 million. However, the district is also expecting $123 million more in expenses it says it can’t control, including for teacher pension costs, debt service, health care costs, and inflation, Sitkowski said.</p><p>Those costs will be partially offset by rising revenues of $102 million, which include $23 million more from the state, as well as some rising tax collections, and more state support for pensions, according to Sitkowski.</p><p>The projections shared on Wednesday seem to outpace what a previous analysis warned of. A report issued under former Mayor Lori Lightfoot warned of a <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/11/3/23439557/chicago-public-schools-elected-school-board-financial-entanglements">potential $628 million deficit by 2026 and </a>predicted a neutral outlook for 2025. The report also noted that as the city has shifted more costs onto the district, it could shoulder more expenses as the board goes from mayoral control to an elected body. </p><p>District officials have been ratcheting up pressure for more money from state officials. This school year, CPS is projected to see a $23 million increase in state funding, for a total of about $1.77 billion this school year. </p><p>But on Wednesday, Sitkowski said that if the state fully funded districts under the Evidence-Based Funding Formula, CPS would have an additional $1.1 billion in funding.</p><p>Last month, the board highlighted the need for <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/28/23895264/chicago-schools-repairs-buildings-facilities-plan-career-technical-education-classrooms">$3.1 billion to address critical repairs</a> at school facilities over the next five years. </p><p>Sitkowski said direct funding at the school level has also increased by $1 billion since fiscal year 2019, even as enrollment dipped. More than 2,300 teachers were hired in that time, including classroom teachers, interventionists, and educators for the arts and physical education, he noted. </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </em><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><em>ramin@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/25/23932514/chicago-public-schools-budget-deficit-covid-relief-dollars-fiscal-cliff/Reema AminMax Lubbers / Chalkbeat2023-10-19T00:49:30+00:002023-10-19T00:49:30+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Chicago teachers are urging state education officials to help the city’s public schools with an influx of migrant students, many of whom lack basic needs such as clothing, medical care, and housing. </p><p>Teachers told board members on Wednesday during the state board’s monthly meeting that Chicago schools are struggling to meet the needs of newly arrived school-age migrants. Some teachers said classrooms have become overcrowded, schools don’t have enough bilingual educators, and many students need access to bilingual social workers or school counselors for social-emotional support. </p><p>Diane Castro, a bilingual preschool teacher at Lorca Elementary School, said the 3- and 4-year-old students she works with have endured so much and need more than her school can provide. </p><p>“Our students are … doubled and tripled up in apartment buildings,” said Castro. “The children are in clothes that are too small and shoes that are too big. Our children have not had proper medical or dental care.” </p><p>More than 18,500 migrants have come to Chicago since August 2022, according to city officials, though it’s not clear exactly how many are school-aged. Chicago Public Schools officials have pointed to climbing numbers of students identified as English learners and those living in temporary living situations as an estimate for how many newcomers are now in CPS. </p><p>The teachers’ push for help comes as city and state officials are calling on the federal government to come through with additional funding and support. </p><p>During the spring legislative session, state lawmakers <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=02822&GAID=17&GA=103&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=147949&SessionID=112">filed a bill to help support migrant students</a> by requiring the state board to create New Arrival Student Grants for schools. But the bill didn’t move past the rules committee. </p><p>In late September, Gov. J. B. Pritzker <a href="https://ltgov.illinois.gov/news/press-release.27078.html">announced $41.5 million</a> for Illinois cities seeing an influx of newcomers. Chicago got more than $30 million of that money. But in early October, Pritzker <a href="https://news.wttw.com/2023/10/03/jb-pritzker-urges-joe-biden-intervene-untenable-pace-migrants-arriving-illinois">made a plea to President Joe Biden</a> for support, calling the pace of new arrivals “untenable” for Chicago and Illinois. </p><p>A <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/16/23833661/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-bilingual-resources-2023">Chalkbeat Chicago analysis of staffing data</a> over the summer found a decline in the number of designated bilingual teachers in recent years, but an uptick in teachers with bilingual or English as a Second Language endorsements. The analysis also found that the ratio of staff with bilingual credentials or titles to students was increasing as more English learners have enrolled. </p><p>Syvelia Pittman, a teacher at Nash Elementary School on the city’s West Side, has seen that play out on the ground. She told the state board Wednesday that her school serves about 50 newcomers, increasing the school’s enrollment in preschool to third grade. However, the school does not have any bilingual educators and teachers often use Google translate to speak to students. </p><p>Pittman asked the state board to provide schools with additional funding to hire more teachers and provide current teachers with support to obtain a certificate in bilingual education. </p><p>In addition to the increased need for bilingual educators, teachers said students are coming to schools without their basic needs being met. </p><p>Gabriel Paez, a bilingual educator at Cameron Elementary School in the West Humboldt Park Neighborhood and Bilingual Education Committee chair for the Chicago Teachers Union, said some students lack shoes and clothes and need access to vaccination to attend school. With Chicago’s harsh winter around the corner, students will need warmer clothes, winter coats, and housing.</p><p>“We have 20 newcomers in each grade level who arrive daily and in worsening conditions. Many of my students arrive stripped of their basic needs,” said Paez. “Medication, clothes, shoes, socks, medical attention, housing, and mental health, are all falling on already overburdened and understaffed schools.” </p><p>Paez urged the state board to provide winter supplies, emergency housing assistance, and first aid kits along with bilingual social workers and counselors. </p><p>Paez also asked the board to give students who are migrants an exception from the state’s English-only exams such as the Illinois Assessment of Readiness because it would be “damaging and retraumatizing” to students who do not understand the language.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools’ <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants">enrollment increased by 1,000 students</a> for the first time in more than a decade this year. District data shows more than 7,800 additional students were classified as English learners this year compared to last year. Normally, the annual increase is by an average of 3,000 English learners.</p><p>The number of students identified as living in temporary housing also increased compared to last year. Migrant students are considered Students in Temporary Living Situations, or STLS, and guaranteed admission to local public schools despite not having a permanent address. </p><p>On the 20th day of the school year, when the district took its official enrollment count, a spokesperson <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants">cautioned against attributing the bump</a> to “any one group of students.” Earlier in July, a <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/city-hall/2023/6/29/23778894/chicago-migrants-cps-school-enrollment-numbers-increase">top mayoral aide suggested</a> to the Chicago Sun-Times that newcomer students would reverse CPS enrollment declines. </p><p>The Illinois State Board of Education will make a budget recommendation to Pritzker before his State of the State and budget address which typically happens in February.</p><p><em>Reema Amin contributed to this report.</em></p><p><em>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </em><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><em>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p><p><em>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </em><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><em>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/18/23923354/illinois-state-board-chicago-educators-migrants/Samantha SmylieBecky Vevea / Chalkbeat2023-10-18T21:50:45+00:002023-10-18T21:50:45+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/how-i-teach"><em>Chalkbeat’s free monthly newsletter How I Teach</em></a><em> to get inspiration, news, and advice for — and from — educators. </em></p><p>When Maureen Delgado walked into her first classroom at Clinton Elementary in 1999 to teach middle school English and Social Studies, it was virtually empty — no textbooks, no pens, nothing. </p><p>“If I hadn’t had experience previously teaching, I probably would have really struggled,” Delgado said. “But that’s also one of the things that I think about when I hire new teachers: How can I support them? How can I make sure that they have what they need?”</p><p>Delgado is now the principal at Clinton, a kindergarten through eighth grade school in Chicago’s West Ridge neighborhood on the city’s north side. It’s a role she took on in 2016 after several years as the school’s assistant principal. </p><p>This month, Delgado and a handful of Chicago Public Schools principals are <a href="https://thefundchicago.org/principalpridechi-2/">being featured on Chicago Transit Authority buses and trains</a> as part of Principal Appreciation Month. District officials said she was chosen for creating an inclusive environment for Clinton’s immigrant and refugee population. </p><p>Delgado spoke with Chalkbeat Chicago about how she leads one of the city’s largest elementary schools, serving more than 1,000 students, 90 percent of whom are from low-income households and 62 percent of whom are English learners. </p><p><em>This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.</em></p><h3>What made you want to be a principal?</h3><p>I think if you were to ask me, back when I was doing my undergrad work, I would say I just wanted to be a teacher, and that’s all I wanted to do. But through my experiences here, I found myself being pushed into leadership roles, such as a grade-level instructional team leader. I think one of the things that really propelled me, though, was I realized that the opportunities and structures I had set up in my classroom were not necessarily the same across the school. I thought I could do more good as a school leader in order to support all of our learners.</p><h3>Tell me a little bit about your own experience with school growing up and how it affects your work today.</h3><p>My own experience in school is kind of embedded in working in this neighborhood. My father was an immigrant from the Middle East. My mother was a second-generation American. School was always important. I was the first person in my family to go to college. There were no ifs, ands, or buts in our family. You were going to get a college degree. It was always ingrained in us that school is important, that we’re here in this country being given the opportunity to better ourselves. My father felt that education was really the driver to seek a better life, and he was a proponent of making sure that that happened for his family. </p><p>I always wanted to be a teacher. I tortured my family, my cousins by playing school on the weekends. I had a chalkboard that I was given as a birthday gift. I just was always really drawn to education and drawn to helping kids and to helping students learn. When I was attending school at nearby Rogers Elementary, I spent a lot of time volunteering in younger grades like kindergarten and first grade. I’d spend my lunch periods or other free periods helping out in those classrooms. In high school, there was a child development class and we had a preschool in our high school, where I would volunteer. At Clinton, I feel like I found my niche and I found the perfect community to do that in.</p><h3>Chicago has seen a big influx of migrant students. How is your school helping newcomer students?</h3><p>One of the things that has drawn me to this community and has helped me stay here is being a child of an immigrant myself. My family comes from the Middle East and my aunts’ education stopped at what would be the equivalent of third or fourth grade. They never felt like they could go into their children’s school. So they relied on my mother who was English-speaking to be able to advocate for my cousins because they just never felt welcome in the school and they felt that that barrier would hinder them. </p><p>West Ridge and Rogers Park is a very diverse part of the city and it’s been diverse for years. Clinton is right off of Devon Avenue, which is known as Little India. We’ve had a lot of Asian families from Pakistan and India, but we also have a lot of different families from the Middle East. When I was teaching, we would get a lot of families from Eastern Europe, especially Kosovo, Bosnia, when there was a civil war there. We’ve always been welcoming different immigrants and different refugees from around the world. </p><p>We’ve continued to do that at Clinton. What has been a little bit more challenging this year is that we’ve had over 115 kids that have enrolled as newcomers since the beginning of the school year. We do have a lot of support in place, but it’s just been very fast. And while about a quarter of them are Spanish speaking, there’s another quarter that are Arabic speaking. We also have students that speak Rohingya, Burmese, Somali. We have 45 different languages spoken here. Our issues have been, ‘How do we support this huge influx that we’ve gotten?’ Because we’re also expecting more. </p><p>Over the last few years, our teachers have gotten English as a Second Language endorsements. About 95% of our teachers have their ESL endorsements. One of the things we focused on, particularly last year, was doing a professional learning community with those teachers. We have our English Language Program teachers who work as coaches and so they go in and support teachers.</p><p>We also have a lot of teachers that speak another language. Whenever we have parent meetings or one-on-one meetings about a student’s progress, we make sure that if we don’t have somebody on staff who speaks that language, we utilize the language line [a hotline we can call to get a translator]. So that helps us strengthen that home-to-school connection.</p><h3>What’s the best advice you’ve ever received and how have you put it into action? </h3><p>I think the best advice I’ve ever received is to really listen. One of the things that I’ve had to do as an administrator is really to listen to my community, our school community, and kind of hear what we’re struggling with and being able to have people express their concerns or question things. That has really helped to guide where we’re headed as a school and to guide our new instructional shifts and our focus is just really being able to listen to the community. </p><p>I think a lot of times people are always thinking about how to respond to something or about how they’re gonna get their point across. But I think for me, just really taking the time to listen and process what I’ve been told. </p><h3>How has your school worked to support students’ mental health?</h3><p>One of the things that we’ve always offered here is a partnership with Asian Human Services, now known as <a href="https://mytrellus.org/">Trellus</a>, so we’ve always been able to offer counseling within the school day, which I think really helps some parents become more comfortable with the idea [of counseling] because they trust the school. </p><p>Thankfully, the district has given us a second counselor. That has been phenomenal for our school. We have a rainbows group that’s meeting about loss. We have a positive minds group that’s talking about self esteem and really growth mindset. We have a wellness group that’s talking about wellness, holistically, not just physical wellness, but also mental health. We have different “lunch bunches” where kids are able to meet and have lunch with the counselor and talk about things very organically. </p><p>In addition, our counselors are supporting our teachers, with programs such as <a href="https://www.secondstep.org/">Second Step</a> and <a href="https://calmclassroom.com/">Calm Classroom</a>. We’re also working on restorative practices within our school. </p><p>All of that has helped to make parents more comfortable so that when we have students who do require some additional support, they trust us. We also do workshops on mental health with our Parent Advisory Council.</p><h3>How do you take care of yourself when you’re not at work?</h3><p>If you ask my family, they’ll say I’m never not at work. Even if I’m not physically in the building, my mind is constantly thinking about school. But I think the way I take care of myself is really spending time with family and friends and taking care of my own mental health. Sometimes it’s getting a massage, sometimes it’s reading, sometimes it’s vegging out on Netflix. </p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/X27tk8yK8kfPY87U-c09xhzPn3I=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/5XWVZE36GVBQTORHUKO23SGKWA.jpg" alt="Principal Maureen Delgado reads to a student at Clinton Elementary, where she’s served as principal since 2016 and has worked since 1999. " height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Principal Maureen Delgado reads to a student at Clinton Elementary, where she’s served as principal since 2016 and has worked since 1999. </figcaption></figure><h3>How does it feel to have pictures of yourself on Chicago Transit Authority buses and trains?</h3><p>I haven’t physically seen one yet, but I know one of my clinicians did. I will say, I am really committed to this school and this community. I am really proud of the work that we’re doing. And I’m very proud of the teachers, our students, our staff, and our parents. Whatever I can do to share that I’m more than willing to do it. </p><p>My father passed away a few years ago and I was telling my mom about it and I said, ‘You know what, I think he would have been proud of me.’ And she goes, ‘Yes, he would be so proud of you.’ On a personal level, it’s kind of nice to know that I’m being recognized. But in terms of the school, I’m happy that we’re being recognized. Our goal is to be the best neighborhood school in the city of Chicago, and I think we’re on our way to doing that.</p><p><em>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at bvevea@chalkbeat.org. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/18/23923018/how-i-teach-chicago-public-schools-maureen-delgado-clinton-elementary-migrants/Becky Vevea2023-10-18T21:27:08+00:002023-10-18T21:27:08+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Chicago Public Schools announced a new testing schedule Wednesday for the High School Admissions Test, which was canceled last week after technical problems. </p><p>District students will take the test next week, on either Oct. 24 or Oct. 25. The district will assign one of those dates to each eighth grader’s school, according to a CPS letter to families. Students taking the exam in Spanish, Arabic, Polish, Urdu, or simplified Chinese will test on Nov. 1. </p><p>Non-CPS students — whose testing window last weekend <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/12/23915032/chicago-public-schools-high-school-admissions-test-gocps-cancellation">was canceled</a> — can take the exam on Oct. 28, Oct. 29, or Nov. 5 at Lane Tech or Lindblom high schools, the district said. These students <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1R_s_2r2JsL7y7buPiz4W2ur-EPCOq3cotk9cyEO70cc/edit">must sign up</a> for an exam date in GoCPS, the city’s admissions application system, by 9 a.m. Oct. 23. </p><p>The exam will not be the same one as was planned for last week, and students who were able to access the test will not see the same questions, officials said. </p><p>Students who were able to complete the exam will be allowed to retake the test, and their new score will be used for admissions even if it’s the lower of both tests, officials said. Students who don’t want to retake the exam must opt out by filing out <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1S3bxWrf8P9zvAdo2LWSjV-e1VOG4YHKL/view">this form</a> and returning it to their school by Oct. 23. However, due to last week’s glitches, district officials “strongly recommend that students take advantage of this opportunity” to retake the exam, they said in the letter to families. </p><p>CPS’ roughly 24,000 eighth graders were set to take<a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EI-WQsT_27xdZc0wAnQtvj1fFZPFKXYE/view"> the HSAT</a> in school on Oct. 11. The exam is part of <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871751/chicago-public-schools-application-elementary-high-school-gocps-charter-magnet-selective">admissions requirements</a> for selective enrollment high schools and for enrollment at <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1tgzw8jT09Qx1u60GC_CPsO69ZqYkDzpe/view">some schools</a> outside of their neighborhood boundaries. </p><p>But on test day, a technical problem broke out with the testing vendor, Riverside Associates, LLC, officials said. The company later discovered that backlogged servers caused the problem, according to an <a href="https://www.cps.edu/gocps/high-school/hs-admissions-test-23-24/">FAQ on the district’s website.</a> Students were unable to log into the testing platform, and the company’s help desk could not be reached, educators told Chalkbeat. District officials instructed principals to stop exam administration for students who were unable to log in. </p><p>The district later <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/12/23915032/chicago-public-schools-high-school-admissions-test-gocps-cancellation">canceled the exam</a> for non-CPS students, who were scheduled to take it Oct. 14 and 15. </p><p>The company fixed the problem by “adding server capacity” and testing the system to ensure that it works, the FAQ said.</p><p>Students’ HSAT scores help determine which selective high schools they might be admitted.<em><strong> </strong></em>This year, students must <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871751/chicago-public-schools-application-elementary-high-school-gocps-charter-magnet-selective">submit their top choices</a> in the district’s admissions system — GoCPS — by Nov. 9, a month earlier than usual. Students were originally allowed to re-rank their choices by Nov. 22, but given the rescheduled HSAT, district officials have extended the re-rank deadline to Dec. 1.</p><p>After last week’s glitches, the district plans to be “very cautious” about the new testing plan and is “putting some strategies in place” to eliminate potential issues, said CPS Chief Education Officer Bogdana Chkoumbova during a Wednesday Board of Education meeting to review the agenda for an upcoming full board meeting. Neither she nor district officials immediately elaborated on what extra steps they’ve taken to ensure the test will resume smoothly. </p><p>In the online FAQ, the district said that its team has “reviewed results of vendor testing to confirm preparedness for resuming the HS Admissions Test program.”</p><p>During the board meeting Wednesday, Chkoumbova apologized to families for the glitches and said she was “a little bit disappointed” by the problems, given that the district’s aim was to reduce anxiety for students. The district had shortened the test length this year to an hour, from a previous 2 ½ hours, and had offered it for the first time in Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin, Urdu, and Polish.</p><p>“Our team went into the testing session with a lot of assurances,” Chkoumbova said. “We did triple check everything, but the platform failed.” </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/18/23923067/chicago-hsat-admissions-high-school-test-selective-enrollment/Reema AminFG Trade / Getty Images2023-10-17T23:14:01+00:002023-10-17T23:14:01+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Shortly after Aimee Orta’s daughter started kindergarten in Chicago Public Schools in 2019, the 5-year-old would come home upset and complain about headaches and stomach pain. </p><p>The complaints seemed to stem from the little girl’s frustrations with school. After realizing that her daughter might be a struggling reader, Orta decided to get an outside evaluation. The results found that the kindergartener was having trouble matching letters to sounds.</p><p>But it would take two more years for Orta’s daughter to be formally diagnosed with dyslexia, her mom says, and for her school on the North West side to provide the academic services she needed. By then, she was in second grade. </p><p>Orta said she saw how it impacted her daughter’s social-emotional health. </p><p>“She just felt like she wasn’t capable of anything, because when you can’t read you can’t consume any of the other curriculum,” said Orta. “So she’s struggling in math. She’s struggling in science. She’s struggling in social studies.”</p><p>The fight to get her daughter the services she needs drove Orta to become an advocate with the CPS Family Dyslexia Collaborative. The group is pushing the district and the state to adopt evidence-based reading instruction in the classroom and to improve interventions for struggling readers and those with dyslexia. </p><p>The issue of how to improve literacy instruction has taken on new urgency across the country, as districts grapple with students who fell behind during the pandemic. On the Illinois Assessment of Readiness taken in spring 2023, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar">25.9% of Chicago students from third to eighth grade who took the exam met or exceeded</a> the standard in English language arts. But for students with disabilities, the percentage dropped to 4.2%. </p><p>In recent years, <a href="https://www.edweek.org/teaching-learning/which-states-have-passed-science-of-reading-laws-whats-in-them/2022/07">many states have started to revamp</a> how reading is taught by getting rid of a now-debunked reading method called <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/22/us/reading-teaching-curriculum-phonics.html">“balanced literacy,” a reading philosophy that believes reading is a natural process</a>, and turning to evidence-based reading instruction.</p><p>Illinois has also taken steps to change literacy instruction with <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?GAID=17&GA=103&DocNum=2243&DocTypeID=SB&SessionID=112&LegID=147129&SpecSess=&Session=">the passage of a law</a> that requires the Illinois State Board of Education to create a literacy plan by Jan. 31, 2024. In June, the state board released <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/23/23771962/llinois-literacy-plan-reading-phonics-writing#:~:text=The%20literacy%20plan%20provides%20schools,students'%20age%20and%20grade%20level.">an initial draft of the plan</a>, which says universal screening for literacy skills is essential and aspiring teachers need to be trained in the science of reading.</p><p>However, because the draft plan does not mandate districts to change how reading is taught in classrooms, literacy advocates worry that it is not enough to push schools to get rid of balanced literacy. </p><p>The state board plans to release a second draft of <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Documents/Illinois-State-Literacy-Plan-Draft.pdf">the literacy plan</a> during the board’s monthly meeting on Oct. 18. The board also said that it will update the state’s <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Documents/Dyslexia-Handbook.pdf">dyslexia handbook this fall </a>— a document that helps parents, educators, school administration understand what dyslexia is and how to support students. The handbook was last updated in 2019.</p><p>Parents like Orta and advocates like Jessica Handy, executive director of Stand for Children Illinois and a key author of the literacy bill, say the state’s literacy draft plan needs more work to address the needs of struggling readers and those with dyslexia. Having a strong reading curriculum and evidence-based instruction is good for all readers, Handy said, but students with dyslexia need more support in a classroom setting.</p><p>“Students with dyslexia deserve early identification and support instead of waiting for them to fail,” Handy said. </p><h2>Advocate fight to change Illinois’ literacy instruction</h2><p>In early 2022, the <a href="https://www.ilearlyliteracy.org/">Illinois Early Literacy Coalition</a> — a group of literacy advocates across the state — pushed legislation to mandate evidence-based reading instruction in all Illinois school districts. The so-called <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=3900&GAID=16&GA=102&DocTypeID=SB&LegID=138986&SessionID=110">“Right to Read”</a> Act required the state board to create literacy grants, change teacher licensure tests for elementary school teachers, and develop professional development opportunities for current teachers. The proposed law came at a time when the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/10/29/22751381/pandemic-illinois-student-test-scores-assessments-sat-english-math">state’s 2021 test scores</a> found that young students had lost ground in English language arts and math. </p><p>Many education advocates supported the bill, but critics said it did not address the needs of English language learners — a student group that makes up 14% of the state’s student enrollment. Despite negotiations, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/4/12/23022481/llinois-legislature-spring-bills-education-covid-teacher-shortage-mental-health">the bill did not pass</a>. </p><p>But a year later, at the start of 2023, parts of the “Right to Read” Act appeared in several pieces of legislation in the state House and Senate. The group of bills —<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/2/24/23613534/illinois-spring-session-budgets-early-education-mental-health-literacy-migrant-students"> referred to by advocates as the “Literacy and Justice for All”</a> package — would have required the state to create a literacy plan, design a rubric for school districts to score their reading curriculum, create professional development opportunities for current teachers, and require aspiring teachers to take courses in evidence-based literacy instruction in teacher prep programs. </p><p>Literacy advocates also fought for <a href="https://ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocTypeID=HB&DocNum=1124&GAID=17&SessionID=112&LegID=143139">a bill</a> that would have required public schools to screen all students in kindergarten through second grade for dyslexia. </p><p><a href="https://improvingliteracy.org/state-of-dyslexia">Illinois is one of several states</a> that does not require schools to screen children. Some school districts across the nation have implemented universal screeners for young learners. A spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools said the i-Ready exam, an assessment for all kindergarten through second grade students, has a dyslexia screener.</p><p>But despite the push to mandate better reading instruction, train teachers on evidence-based practices, and screen students for dyslexia early, state lawmakers only passed <a href="https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/fulltext.asp?Name=103-0402">SB 2243</a>. which required the state to create a literacy plan. </p><p>The draft plan, which was released in June before the law was signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, provides a roadmap for educators to teach reading to students from birth to 12th grade using research-based reading strategies. The draft plan also tells educators how to adjust their instruction to meet the needs of students with disabilities and English language learners. </p><p>The plan does outline how state leaders, school districts, and educators should work with students with disabilities, which would include students with dyslexia. But the Illinois Early Literacy Coalition, <a href="https://stand.org/illinois/our-stories/category/early-childhood-literacy/">in a letter to the state board in June</a>, said students with dyslexia deserve their own section and more than “a passing reference” to the dyslexia handbook.</p><p> “We know that many students who struggle to read do not have dyslexia and we have strongly supported a plan that is comprehensive and inclusive,” the coalition wrote in its letter. “At the same time, a plan that does not include any specific discussion about students with dyslexia is not inclusive.”</p><h2>Aspiring teachers need training on phonics</h2><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/3Fo2LXkyCeqLaYZBZBYOdOe2AJk=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/S6AVTN6AINEZ5HADUJU44HJRKY.jpg" alt="Aimee Orta, a mother of two Chicago Public Schools students who have dyslexia." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Aimee Orta, a mother of two Chicago Public Schools students who have dyslexia.</figcaption></figure><p>By the spring of 2021, Orta’s daughter was in the second half of first grade and had an Individualized Education Program, or IEP, that required her to get more reading instruction inside her classroom throughout the day.</p><p>But Orta soon realized it was not enough. Her daughter needed time outside of her general education classroom to focus on reading strategies. Orta had to push her daughter’s general education teacher and school administration for more help.</p><p>“When teachers tell parents, ‘oh, it’ll eventually click’ or ‘we need to wait and see,’ or ‘it’ll be fine.’ When we hear that, we start to doubt our instincts,” said Orta.</p><p>A spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools said the district has developed its Skyline English language arts curriculum using evidence-based reading strategies and plans to roll out more curricular support for schools this year. The district announced the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2019/5/17/21108172/chicago-teachers-to-get-new-resources-as-district-announces-135-million-two-year-curriculum-overhaul">curriculum in May 2019</a> and <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/6/17/22538834/cps-new-curriculum-skyline-135-million-mcdade-jackson-culturally-relevant">started rolling it</a> out at schools in 2021. Many, but not all schools <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/31/23663499/chicago-public-schools-skyline-curriculum-covid-recovery">have adopted </a>the curriculum. </p><p>Requiring evidence-based reading practices is just one part of the solution, advocates and experts say. Better teaching preparation in reading instruction is also needed.</p><p>The state board’s draft literacy plan addresses that by suggesting that teacher preparation programs should help aspiring elementary school teachers learn about the science behind reading, understand national and state standards for reading for each grade level, find strategies to help students learn how to read, and use assessments to find where students are struggling to read.</p><p>The draft literacy plan also recommends that state leaders work with teacher preparation programs to ensure that curriculum aligns with evidence-based reading practice. </p><p>Some evidence shows teacher preparation programs across the nation are still largely teaching future elementary school teachers balanced literacy reading strategies and curriculum, according to a June report from the <a href="https://www.nctq.org/dmsView/Teacher_Prep_Review_Strengthening_Elementary_Reading_Instruction">National Center for Teacher Quality — a nonprofit organization evaluating teacher prep programs.</a> </p><p>The report reviewed <a href="https://www.nctq.org/dmsView/Illinois_Profile_-_TeacherPrepReviewReading">16 teacher prep programs in Illinois</a>; of those, eight programs did not spend any course time on helping preservice teachers to teach reading to struggling readers. Nine of Illinois’ teacher prep programs received an F grade. Only two universities, Illinois College and Olivet Nazarene University, received an A+. </p><p>However, higher education leaders have criticized the report for grading schools on course material without reaching out to teacher prep programs. The council had to change the grade of at least 24 schools in the nation. <a href="https://in.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/3/23819392/ball-state-nctq-science-of-reading-report-grade-update-literacy-instruction-indiana-teachers">Ball State University in Indiana went from a F grade to an A. </a></p><p>Heather Peske, president of NCTQ, said Illinois has too many children who are not reading at grade level and better teacher preparation can change that reality for all students.</p><p>“We shouldn’t depend on the families of children who have dyslexia to advocate for their children to be taught aligned to the science and the research,” said Peske. “We need teachers who understand the science of reading, understand the research, and who know how to serve students who have dyslexia.”</p><p>Peske noted that <a href="https://co.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/12/23758576/colorado-teacher-preparation-program-reading-report-top-state-university-northern-colorado">Colorado</a> and <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/18/23799124/mississippi-miracle-test-scores-naep-early-literacy-grade-retention-reading-phonics">Mississippi</a> have teacher preparation programs using the science of reading in their curriculum and students have seen a boost in their reading scores.</p><h2>Literacy advocates look to the future</h2><p>One year after Orta’s daughter was diagnosed with dyslexia, Orta noticed her catching up to peers. In addition to getting more support at school, she received after-school tutoring and went to a summer school program that focused on reading. </p><p>Now, as a fourth grader, the girl is reading just shy of her grade level and enjoys reading for pleasure despite the effort it takes. </p><p>Orta has used the lessons learned in her daughter’s journey to help her younger son. She noticed that he struggled to read as well and quickly sought an outside evaluation. He was diagnosed immediately with dyslexia and given an IEP by the end of kindergarten in the spring of 2022. </p><p>Orta’s son, now in second grade, has been making progress in reading faster and his social-emotional health is strong. </p><p>The state literacy plan recommends, but doesn’t mandate, that schools use universal screeners to help teachers intervene early if a student needs support. Research shows students who receive interventions in first and second grade are twice as likely to make gains in reading than a student who receives support in third grades, according to<a href="https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2017-13234-001"> a report in the Journal of Educational Psychology</a>. </p><p>Orta still wants the state to mandate research-based, structured phonics instruction in school. She also wants educators, school clinicians and administrators to learn about the signs of dyslexia to help kids early.</p><p>The state’s draft plan is a good start, Orta and other advocates say, but more needs to be done. </p><p><em>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </em><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><em>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/17/23921698/illinois-chicago-literacy-dyslexia-reading/Samantha Smylie2023-10-13T18:14:26+00:002023-10-13T18:14:26+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy.</em> </p><p>Mónica Meléndez spent the first half of the last school year driving her three kids at least an hour each way to Inter-American Magnet School in Lake View.</p><p>She felt she had no choice after the district said it would not provide transportation at the beginning of the year for two of her children. </p><p>By the time all her kids got bus service in the second semester, Meléndez was exhausted — especially on days she spent another hour driving to work.</p><p>So shortly after Chicago Public Schools <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage">announced this summer</a> that it <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted">wouldn’t provide busing to about 5,500 eligible general education students</a>, largely those in gifted and magnet programs, Meléndez and her husband pulled their two youngest children out of the school. It was a wrenching decision: The Spanish dual language school felt perfect for the couple, who are originally from Puerto Rico and want their children to be bilingual. </p><p>Meléndez recalls telling her husband: “Sweetie, I can’t do this anymore.” Their oldest, a seventh grader, now takes a CTA bus two hours each way. </p><p>The family’s decision illustrates one way Chicago’s school bus crisis could impact enrollment and the socioeconomic and racial diversity of the city’s magnet and gifted programs. Many of these schools were created under a <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1980/09/25/us-chicago-reach-pact-on-desegregation/2dba8ecc-0e64-4428-9e3f-088d520e14b3/">federal desegregation consent decree</a>, but have been criticized for <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/top-chicago-schools-less-diverse-10-years-after-order-to-desegregate-ends/038a1e46-ddf4-418b-8b59-698b8d177fa3">lacking diversity and enrolling larger shares of white and Asian American students</a> since federal oversight <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/federal-judge-ends-chicago-schools-desegregation-decree/">ended in 2009</a>. As working-class families find it difficult or impossible to take their children far distances to school, the absence of a transportation option could segregate the schools even more. </p><p>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. </p><p>Inter-American is already seeing the impact and some families have left. </p><p>“I would be really worried about what this change would mean for the demographics for these schools and for the goals of magnet schools in Chicago more generally,” said Halley Potter, an expert on school integration policy and a senior fellow at The Century Foundation. </p><h2>Parents share transportation challenges</h2><p>Citing a severe driver shortage, Chicago Public Schools announced in late July that it would limit bus transportation this year to students with disabilities and those who are homeless, both groups which are legally required to receive transportation. The district <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/29/23850842/chicago-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-stipends">is currently under state watch</a> to make sure it’s meeting those legal requirements. </p><p>The district said it has pursued several solutions to hire more drivers, including boosting driver pay rates by $2 – to $22 to $27 an hour – and hosting hiring fairs. But as of late last month, the district still had only half the number of drivers on hand and announced that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted">busing would not be extended</a> to more families for the rest of the semester. The district offered CTA cards to the 5,500 children who lost busing, but as of late last month, just about 1,600 took that option. </p><p>In a statement, CPS spokesperson Samantha Hart said the district is “acutely aware” of the challenges families are facing with longer commutes. </p><p>“We are committed to continuing to work with our vendors, City partners and our families to identify solutions and ensure every eligible student has safe, secure, and reliable transportation to and from school,” Hart said. </p><p>The transportation crisis has already had a small impact on enrollment at Inter-American, where nearly half of the school’s 641 students come from low-income families. Fifty-three families were eligible for transportation at the school. As of Oct. 2, six children have transferred out of the school due to the lack of transportation, according to the district.</p><p>At least two more children transferred out after Oct. 2 because of transportation issues, said Maria Ugarte, chair of Inter-American’s Local School Council. Ugarte has also heard from many parents who are considering leaving, and she wonders how lack of busing will impact next year’s enrollment. </p><p>At a meeting last month with the school’s principal, one parent said he wasn’t sure how much longer he could keep up the commute to school. A mother shared that her commute involves taking the CTA with her three children, including a 2-year-old, every morning and evening— and doing that daily is becoming stressful. </p><p>Alexis Luna, who lives in Belmont Cragin, splits dropoff and pickup responsibilities for her third grade daughter with the girl’s father. But her daughter may have to miss school on days that the girl’s father is out of town for work, since Luna’s work schedule is inflexible and she can’t take days off. </p><p>Luna “lost everything” when her business closed during the pandemic, so she cannot afford to miss work or quit. She said she is struggling to pay for the increased gas costs. </p><p>For Rocio Meza, the lack of transportation means she can’t search for a job this year as she handles the hourlong pickup and dropoff each way at Inter-American for her 12-year-old daughter. She’s also responsible for driving her older son with disabilities to doctor’s appointments on some mornings, which sometimes makes one of the children late.</p><p>She and her husband have discussed transferring their daughter out of Inter-American – two other schools are within a few blocks of their house – but the family loves the school. </p><p>”Do I really want to do this and give up the education and experience she’s getting at Inter-American to go to another school?” Meza said.</p><p>Some attempts to find solutions at the school level haven’t come to fruition.</p><p>The school’s principal, Juan Carlos Zayas, launched a voluntary task force with parents to look for ways to ease the transportation issue. Ideas included a rideshare app and hiring a bus company on their own, according to recordings of the meetings. Both options would likely be too costly for parents, task force members said. For example, one parent found a company that would charge $158 per child this month — if the bus was full with just a couple of stops.</p><p>The district granted the school $157,000 in funding to host before- and after-school programs to accommodate more flexible pickup and dropoff times. The principal recently surveyed families for their interest and expects programming to start Oct. 23, a district spokesperson said. </p><p>Last month, Luna tried to distribute a survey to arrange carpooling for interested parents. The survey asked for information such as where their child’s old bus stop was and how many children they had. Zayas emailed Luna and several other parents that the “attempt to collect personal information” was a “clear violation” of district policy and that it was circulated to teachers without his knowledge. </p><p>District officials pointed to <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/cps-policy-rules/board-rules/chapter-6/6-18/">a CPS policy</a> that prevents anyone from circulating ads, subscription lists, meeting invitations, books, maps, articles, or other political or commercial materials among school employees or students without approval from the principal or other district officials. </p><p>Still, some parents are trying to figure out carpool arrangements, Luna said. </p><h2>Transportation woes could decrease diversity in magnet programs</h2><p>During CPS board meetings, parents at magnet and gifted programs have said they are worried that the lack of transportation will most greatly impact children whose parents don’t have flexible work schedules to take young children on lengthy transit commutes or the money and time to drive them. That could force less-resourced families to transfer out of magnet programs or gifted programs or choose not to apply for them for next school year. </p><p>Once seen as a solution to the city’s segregated schools, the city’s magnet, gifted, and selective enrollment programs have been criticized for failing to achieve their diversity goals. A <a href="https://www.wbez.org/stories/top-chicago-schools-less-diverse-10-years-after-order-to-desegregate-ends/038a1e46-ddf4-418b-8b59-698b8d177fa3">2019 WBEZ analysis</a> found that just 20% of these schools met the definition of racial diversity embedded in a now-lifted court order for Chicago to integrate its schools.</p><p>CPS uses a lottery for enrollment in magnet programs like Inter-American. Seats are offered based on the socioeconomic status of the neighborhood a student lives in. Sometimes priority is given to siblings or to students living close to the school. </p><p>Inter-American lacks racial diversity — 85% of its students this year are Hispanic, and 10% are white, according to district data. However, the school is more socioeconomically diverse, with 47% of its students coming from low-income families, still far below the district’s average of about 71%. </p><p>During one of the task force meetings, one parent expressed concern that working-class families would leave, and more local families from the surrounding affluent Lake View neighborhood would get seats — changing the face of the school. </p><p>At the same time, less transportation for magnet and gifted families could mean more students enrolling in their neighborhood schools. Bolstering neighborhood schools is a priority for Mayor Brandon Johnson. </p><p>After pulling her daughter and son out of Inter-American, Meléndez enrolled them in her local neighborhood school, Canty Elementary. There, about half of the students are Hispanic, 44% are white, and about 2% are each Black and Asian American. Just over 43% come from low-income households. </p><p>Her daughters like the school so far, Meléndez said. Canty, which is not a dual-language school like Inter-American, is just a five-minute drive away from home. But the outcome of their story is likely not the norm: In a city as segregated as Chicago, more integrated neighborhood schools like Canty are a rarity. </p><p>Potter, from The Century Foundation, said Chicago Public Schools has done “really important work” in finding ways to spur diversity in selective and magnet schools. The district’s lotteries that try to enroll students from different socioeconomic backgrounds often result in more racial diversity, too, she said. </p><p>But, Potter said, “without transportation support, a lot of that can fall apart.”</p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/13/23916124/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-magnet-gifted-inter-american/Reema Amin2023-10-12T21:52:35+00:002023-10-12T21:52:35+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Chicago Public Schools is canceling this weekend’s High School Admissions Test for students who are not currently enrolled in the district but are planning to apply for the city’s selective and magnet high schools. </p><p>District officials cited ongoing technical difficulties with the vendor’s testing platform. </p><p>The cancellation comes after similar issues <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/10/11/23912938/chicago-schools-high-school-admissions-hsat-technical-problems">forced the district to pause testing Wednesday</a>, when all CPS’ roughly 24,000 eighth graders were supposed to take the exam in school. </p><p> “We are working now to reschedule all students who were scheduled to test this weekend and will share updates to families as soon as possible,” district spokesperson Samantha Hart said in a statement. </p><p>The district said it is working with the vendor, Riverside Assessments, LLC, to solve the technical problems and to provide new testing dates “for students who were impacted by the vendor’s technical issues.” </p><p>In July, the Board of Education authorized a $1.2 million no-bid contract with Riverside, in part to provide testing materials for the HSAT. </p><p>The vendor’s <a href="https://riversideinsights.com/">website</a> Thursday included a note that it was aware schools in several regions were unable to log in or complete testing and that a team is “working around the clock to resolve this issue.”</p><p><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871751/chicago-public-schools-application-elementary-high-school-gocps-charter-magnet-selective">Applications for next school year are currently due Nov. 9</a>. In previous years, CPS has extended the deadline. </p><p>The glitches Wednesday prevented students from logging into the testing platform to take the exam, school leaders told Chalkbeat. Some students at one North Side school also encountered some Spanish words on their exam and needed teachers to translate, according to an administrator. </p><p><em>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </em><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><em>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/12/23915032/chicago-public-schools-high-school-admissions-test-gocps-cancellation/Becky Vevea, Reema Amin2023-10-12T18:25:42+00:002023-10-12T16:41:41+00:00<p>A rising share of Chicago Public Schools students enrolled in college in recent years, and far more are earning degrees or certificates at two-year colleges. </p><p>That’s according to a study released Thursday by the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research and the To & Through Project, which tracks college enrollment. Additionally, the study found that more Chicago students than ever are projected to pursue and complete college over the next decade. </p><p>The study’s findings run counter to national trends of <a href="https://apnews.com/article/skipping-college-student-loans-trade-jobs-efc1f6d6067ab770f6e512b3f7719cc0">sagging college enrollment</a> during the pandemic; <a href="https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/researchcenter/viz/CTEE_Fall2022_Report/CTEEFalldashboard">nationwide enrollment in two- and four-year colleges</a> fell by .6% from 2021 to 2022, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Many young people across the nation are questioning whether higher education is worth the cost, said Jenny Nagaoka, one of the study’s authors and deputy director of the Consortium on School Research. </p><p>Higher education is “tremendously expensive, student debt is a huge issue [and] ultimately for a lot of students they’re unclear if the payoffs will be there,” Nagaoka said. “But CPS students are still going to college. They’re still seeing there’s value in it.”</p><p>Research shows that a college education can lead to better salary-earning potential, provide better access to high-quality housing, and contribute to better overall health, according to a review of literature by <a href="https://health.gov/healthypeople/priority-areas/social-determinants-health/literature-summaries/enrollment-higher-education">Healthy People 2030</a>, a federal government-led project that tracks health data. </p><p>“We are hearing so much discouraging news about achievement in our schools right now, and this is not to say that’s not real, but I think it’s really important to note that at the same time, we’re actually also seeing increases in attainment,” Nagaoka said.</p><p>The study used a measure called the Post-Secondary Attainment Index, or PAI, to project college enrollment and completion based on current high school graduation and college enrollment and completion rates. Researchers calculated graduation rates slightly differently from the district, which is why they’ve come up with an 84-percent graduation rate for 2022 versus 82.9% reported by CPS. (The authors emphasized that the index is not meant to be a prediction; rather, it is a “starting place” to understand how to improve current patterns.)</p><p>This year the index is 30%, meaning that if CPS graduation and college enrollment and completion rates remained the same over the next decade, 30 out of 100 current ninth graders would earn a college credential by the time they are 25, researchers project. That is a 2.4 percentage point increase over last year and the highest rate on record since researchers began calculating this index in 2013. At that time, the index was 23%. </p><p>This year’s ninth graders were in middle school when the pandemic shuttered school buildings.</p><p>Nagaoka said they’re “cautiously optimistic” that these trends won’t reverse in the future, since this year’s record-setting data reflects students who were in high school and college during the pandemic. </p><p>But the study also found significant racial disparities within the data. For example, 66% percent of Asian American women would earn a college credential over the next decade according to the PAI, but just 13.6% of Black men would do the same. </p><p>During an event Thursday announcing the study’s findings, CPS Chief Education Officer Bogdana Chkoumbova acknowledged that the district has more to do to close racial disparities. </p><p>“With these groups, especially at the high school level, we’ve learned that one of the most impactful ways we can provide support is by establishing partnerships that will provide mentorship and guidance to the students throughout their high school experience,” she said.</p><p>The researchers also studied college enrollment data from 2022 and college completion data from 2021, based on data that was available. Some highlights included:</p><ul><li>60.8% of CPS students who graduated in 2022 immediately enrolled in two-year or four-year colleges, 1.5 percentage points higher than the class of 2021. </li><li>There are stark racial disparities in who pursued college upon graduation in 2022. For example, nearly 80% of white women immediately enrolled in college upon graduation, while just 45% of Black male students did the same. </li><li>Just over 53% of English learners immediately pursued college after graduating last year, compared with 68% of former English learners. </li><li>For the class of 2015, nearly 56% of students who immediately enrolled in a four-year college and roughly one-third of students who immediately enrolled in a two-year college eventually earned a bachelor’s or associate degree, or earned a certificate by 2021. </li><li>For those who did not immediately enroll in college in 2015, roughly 3% earned a bachelor’s degree within six years. Another 5% completed an associate degree or certificate. While those rates are on the rise, they are 1.7 percentage points smaller than similar completion rates for the class of 2009. </li><li>The percentage of students who earned some sort of college credential after enrolling in four-year schools dipped by .6% between the graduating classes of 2014 and 2015. </li></ul><p>Chkoumbova attributed the gains to various efforts across district schools to keep students interested in school and prepared for the future, including more career and technical education and dual-credit programs. She also pointed to the district’s work on how it disciplines students. Rather than suspending students, schools are using restorative practices to keep them connected and in class.</p><p>A district spokesperson pointed to a host of other programs, such as a new pilot initiative that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/29/23776883/chicago-schools-nonprofits-help-disconnected-youth">aims to re-engage young people</a> who are no longer in school or working. The spokesperson also pointed to efforts to get students interested in college and staying there. That includes the Direct Admissions Initiative, which tells seniors whether they can get into a select list of colleges, and another program that provides students with support and mentorship in the two years after they graduate from high school. </p><p>Nagaoka also highlighted the increase of 5.6 percentage points in the two-year college completion rate for class of 2015 graduates, the largest increase by far over at least the past six years. </p><p>That increase, researchers and Chkoumbova noted, coincides with the onset of Chicago’s STAR Scholarship, which former Mayor Rahm Emanuel <a href="https://abc7chicago.com/cps-grads-high-school-graduates-chicago-public-schools/332144/">announced in the fall of 2014</a> and offers free tuition to City Colleges for any CPS student with at least a 3.0 grade point average by high school graduation. </p><p>Chicago’s college enrollment rates beat national figures for high-poverty schools by about 11 percentage points, researchers found. Nagaoka attributed this in part to efforts by counselors, nonprofits, and others who work in schools to ensure students know about their college options. </p><p>More specifically, <a href="https://www.cps.edu/academics/graduation-requirements/">CPS requires students to create a post-secondary plan</a>, or “evidence of a plan for life beyond high school,” in order to graduate from high school. That requirement forces students to have a conversation about what’s next, she said.</p><p>Ninety-seven percent of seniors in the class of 2022 submitted a post-secondary plan, a district spokesperson said.</p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/12/23914495/chicago-public-schools-college-enrollment-completion-graduation/Reema Amin2023-10-11T21:43:28+00:002023-10-11T16:15:22+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy.</em></p><p>Chicago Public Schools paused the High School Admissions Test that was underway Wednesday morning due to technical problems on the testing platform, officials told principals. </p><p>“For any students currently testing successfully, they can continue and complete,” Peter Leonard, executive director of student assessment for CPS, wrote in an email to principals. “In any other case, schools should stop testing today.”</p><p>Students <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EI-WQsT_27xdZc0wAnQtvj1fFZPFKXYE/view">take the HSAT</a> as part of <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/13/23871751/chicago-public-schools-application-elementary-high-school-gocps-charter-magnet-selective">admissions requirements</a> for the city’s selective-enrollment high schools and to enroll at <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1tgzw8jT09Qx1u60GC_CPsO69ZqYkDzpe/view">some schools</a> outside of their neighborhood boundaries. On Wednesday all eighth graders were set to take the exam on computers in school. This year’s exam was set to last an hour instead of the previous 2½ hours. CPS made the change in order to “reduce anxiety for students” and increase accessibility, a spokesperson said last month. </p><p>In his note, Leonard said students who finish the test today can use their scores as they apply for high schools in GoCPS. For students who couldn’t finish, the district will share alternative testing dates “as soon as possible,” Leonard wrote. </p><p>District spokesperson Samantha Hart said in a statement that the district is working with the testing vendor to resolve the technical problems. They don’t expect any changes to this weekend’s scheduled HSAT testing for non-CPS students, Hart said. </p><p>“We recognize the stress many students and families experience when it comes to admissions testing,” Hart wrote.</p><p>The district authorized a $1.2 million no-bid contract over the summer with Riverside Assessments LLC to provide test materials for high school admissions and other placements, including gifted programs. </p><p>At one North Side school, students received error messages as they tried to log in to the testing platform, even after refreshing the page, according to an administrator at the school, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press. The school’s testing coordinator tried to call a help desk for the testing vendor but got a busy signal. </p><p>Similar problems cropped up at Brentano Elementary Math and Science Academy in Logan Square, said the school’s principal, Seth Lavin.</p><p>“They came in anxious and focused, and then they sat down, and for about an hour and a half, proctors tried to log kids into the test and they could not — and nobody knew what was going on,” Lavin said. </p><p>By the time CPS notified schools at 10:30 a.m. that it would pause the test, a handful of students were able to complete the exam at both Brentano and the North Side school. </p><p>Other students at the North Side school were finally able to log in by that time, the administrator said. But there were other issues. Some students saw words in Spanish pop up and had to ask teachers to translate, the administrator said. This is the first year the test is being offered in Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin, Urdu, and Polish.</p><p>The North Side administrator called the glitches a “gross oversight” by the district, and said that it should have ensured that the system could handle tens of thousands of students taking the exam on the same day. CPS enrolled nearly 24,000 eighth graders this year, district data shows. </p><p>The administrator said all students — not just those who weren’t able to complete the exam — should be allowed to retake the test, since the process was so stressful. Students were already “very anxious” about the HSAT, this person said. </p><p>Asked about the testing issues at an unrelated press conference Wednesday, Mayor Brandon Johnson said the public school system should “not reject the hopes and aspirations and desires” of families — Black families, in particular.</p><p>“The ultimate desire is to actually build a school system that no matter where you are in the city of Chicago, that you have access to a high quality education,” he said. “I’m committed to doing just that.”</p><p>Lavin, who has criticized the district’s selective-enrollment system for being inequitable, said Wednesday’s problems underscore that the admissions system “is so fragile and arbitrary.” The exam accounts for 50% of the admissions rubric for selective-enrollment high schools. </p><p>“Kids who are 13 years old should not have a 60-minute experience that decides so much about the next four years of their life,” Lavin said. </p><p>He added, “If we are going to let some kids into some high schools and not let some kids into some high schools, we have to find a better way to do it than this.” </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </em><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><em>ramin@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/11/23912938/chicago-schools-high-school-admissions-hsat-technical-problems/Reema Amin2023-10-04T02:59:03+00:002023-10-04T02:59:03+00:00<p>People hoping to run for Chicago’s elected school board in the November 2024 election may have limited time to campaign as Illinois lawmakers are still working on a map defining the areas board members will represent. </p><p>It’s unclear when state lawmakers will approve that map. The state set an <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/26/23738680/chicago-elected-school-board-map-deadline-illinois-legislature">April 1, 2024</a>, deadline for completing it, after blowing through a July 1 deadline. Meanwhile, preparations for other local and state elections have already begun, with incumbents and challengers kicking off their campaigns for the primary in March 2024 and general election in November. Chicago’s school board elections are nonpartisan.</p><p>The Senate Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board is now reviving the conversation about the board map after being mum throughout the summer, and held its first public hearing on Tuesday evening. </p><p>The transition to an elected board will be a major shift for the Chicago Board of Education, which has been under mayoral control since 1995.</p><p>Eli Brottman, a political consultant who testified at the hearing, noted the lack of transparency from the committee about the school board map and asked the committee to hold off on approving one during the General Assembly’s fall veto session, which starts in late October. </p><p>“In order for the public to give quality feedback, they need to know what the timeline of this process is, so that they can provide that feedback in a manner that it can be received and implemented by this body,” said Brottman. </p><p>Valerie Leonard, of Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, was among those who urged the committee to move faster so that potential candidates have enough time to campaign. </p><p>“I really do see the urgency for people running now, because these are large districts,” said Leonard, whose group <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1p6oaDMbREAJXzekNERRgdtLgJrHMySk&ll=41.834070779557194%2C-87.7320335&z=10">created a proposed map</a>. “You really want to get out there and meet the voters, and you want to know where the boundaries are. So I would urge you to pass this during the veto session.”</p><p>One commenter asked the committee to consider another big change to school board practices: paying members for their time. Compensation is “a critical piece to allowing true representation of our elected board,” said Corrina Demma, who is a part of Educators for Excellence, a nonprofit group that advocates for teachers’ voice in education policy.</p><p>In 2021, Gov. J.B. Pritzker <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">signed legislation that established</a> a 21-member school board for Chicago that will ultimately have all elected seats. Chicagoans will get a chance to vote for 10 members on Nov. 5, 2024, while the mayor will appoint the remaining 10 members and a board president. In November 2026, the 11 appointed seats will be up for election. By 2027, the board will be fully elected.</p><p>The newly constituted school board will be<strong> </strong>one of the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">the largest in the country.</a> New York City’s school board has 23 members, who are appointed by the mayor and other city officials. In Los Angeles, there are <a href="https://www.lausd.org/boe#calendar73805/20231003/month">seven elected school board members</a>. Across the country, school boards typically have <a href="https://www.usnews.com/education/k12/articles/the-school-board-explained">three to 15 members</a>.</p><p>The creation of Chicago’s elected school board map has hit many roadblocks. In May, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/6/23713837/chicago-elected-school-board-map-illinois-elections">lawmakers released</a> a <a href="https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Fn8x0LQOHPQP962ycjJTMBNNYGO98MA&ll=41.8339988009568%2C-87.731885&z=10">draft map</a> that proposed seven majority-white districts, seven majority-Black districts, and six majority-Latino districts. But that proposal drew criticism from advocacy groups that have put forward their own maps.</p><p>For the past year, some advocates have called on state lawmakers to draw a map reflective of the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/5/23672184/chicago-elected-school-board-public-hearings-illinois-lawmakers-diversity">city’s public school student enrollment, not the city’s overall population</a>. The city is 33% white, 29% Black, and about 29% Latino, according to <a href="https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/chicagocityillinois">U.S. Census Bureau data from 2022</a>. Chicago Public Schools’ student population, meanwhile, is 46.9% Latino and 35% Black, while white students make up 11.1%, according to <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/stats-facts/">enrollment numbers from last month</a>. </p><p>According to a 2022 survey by the <a href="https://www.iasb.com/IASB/media/General/SchoolBoardMemberFacts.pdf">Illinois Association of School Boards</a>, school boards across the state are 80% white, 10% Black, 1.2% Latino, and 0.6% Asian. <a href="https://www.illinoisreportcard.com/state.aspx?stateid=IL&source=studentcharacteristics&source2=studentdemographics">Enrollment data shows</a> that the state’s student population is 46% white, 17% Black, 27% Latino, and 5% Asian.</p><p>The Senate<a href="https://www.ilsenateredistricting.com/chicago-school-board"> plans to have another online public hearing</a> next Thursday, Oct. 12 at 5 p.m. </p><p><em><strong>Correction: </strong>Oct. 4, 2023:<strong> </strong>New York City’s school board has 23 members. A previous edition of this story said it had 15 members. </em></p><p><em>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </em><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><em>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/10/3/23902545/illinois-hearing-chicago-school-board-map-election-2024/Samantha Smylie2023-09-29T02:30:03+00:002023-09-29T02:30:03+00:00<p>Chicago Public Schools facilities need $3.1 billion in “critical” repairs that must be addressed in the next five years, according to a district plan released Thursday.</p><p>The cost is part of a total of $14.4 billion in updates that the district identified in its <a href="https://www.cps.edu/sites/five-year-plan/educational-facilities-master-plan/">Facilities Master Plan</a>, which CPS is required by state law to produce every five years. </p><p>“In a district as large as ours, and with a building portfolio as old as ours, this is the investment it would take to repair and modernize each and every one of our current facilities and give our students the learning environment we know they deserve,” CEO Pedro Martinez wrote in the plan’s introduction. </p><p>The $3.1 billion in costs identified as the most urgent work includes repairs to windows, roofs, masonry, and heating and cooling systems. Another $5.5 billion would go toward repairs in the next six to 10 years, according to the facilities plan. Beyond that, the district wants money to build labs “to support STEM education,” accommodations for students with disabilities, new auditoriums, new fields for sports, and classrooms “outfitted” for career and technical education — programming that Martinez <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/19/23311772/chicago-public-schools-career-technical-education-cte">wants to expand</a>, according to the plan. </p><p>The district released the plan during Thursday’s Board of Education meeting, which was held in the auditorium of Austin Career and College Academy High School on the West Side and drew at least 200 observers. The changed location was the board’s attempt to address the longstanding criticism that the meetings, which are typically held during the day downtown, are inaccessible for many families and teachers who work during the day. (The last meeting held outside of district headquarters was in 2019, according to a district spokesperson.) </p><p>District officials said this summer that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/13/23759818/chicago-public-schools-fy24-budget-education">they had budgeted $155 million for facilities</a> projects this fiscal year — roughly $600 million less than the previous year — and planned to ask for more capital funding this year. </p><p>Martinez used the plan to make another plea for more funding and “partnerships” from the city, state, and federal government. Martinez plans to press the state for more money as a way to address costs once COVID relief dollars run out in 2024. </p><p>“This plan will take coalitions and partnerships with our fellow officials at the city, state, and federal levels,” he wrote in his introduction to the plan. “It will take administrators, teachers, parents, students, and advocates pushing for the changes we need.”</p><p>Martinez said the facilities plan is a “critical” early part of its process to create a five-year strategic plan for CPS. That plan — which will build on Martinez’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/24/23320648/chicago-public-schools-pedro-martinez-blueprint-pandemic-recovery">three-year blueprint</a> released last year to help the district recover from the pandemic — will be finalized next summer. </p><p>The district will also launch an advisory team that would make recommendations to Martinez on how to narrow academic disparities of Black students compared to their peers. Those recommendations would also inform a “Black Student Success Plan” and be part of the strategic plan, according to CPS.</p><p>Some advocates, however, immediately rejected that idea Thursday night. They had previously pressed officials to create a Board of Education committee that focused on Black student achievement. </p><p>“To have a strategic plan is not enough to say, ‘Oh, we hear you,’” said Valerie Leonard, a longtime West Side education advocate and the co-founder of Illinois African Americans For Equitable Redistricting. “I want to know that you see me; I want to know there is some action. At what point will Black children be prioritized?”</p><p>District officials are asking for community feedback as they develop the strategic plan. The public meetings to gather that input will be on:</p><ul><li>6-7:30 p.m. October 17 at Kelvyn Park High School, 4343 W. Wrightwood Ave. </li><li>6 - 7:30 p.m. October 18 at Westinghouse College Prep, 3223 W. Franklin Blvd. </li><li>10 a.m. - noon October 21, virtual meeting </li><li>6 - 7 p.m. October 23, Little Village high school campus, 3120 S. Kostner Ave. </li><li>6 - 7:30 p.m. Julian High School, 10330 S. Elizabeth St. </li></ul><p>Those wishing to attend should <a href="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfeMreNhJF_PoAnm3Xa1lxe_fCFxcbdYvLOofgxXAfie2uE1A/viewform">register here</a>. </p><p>The facilities plan includes information like enrollment trends to highlight the district’s needs. District officials offered more analysis Thursday of enrollment this year.</p><h2>Chicago Public Schools enrollment grows by nearly 1,200</h2><p>Preliminary data on the 20th day of school — when district officials tally up students for the year — indicated that enrollment, at just over 322,500 students, is essentially flat compared to last year, <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants">Chalkbeat reported last week</a>. On Thursday, officials revealed that 323,291 students were enrolled, or nearly 1,200 more students than last year. </p><p>It’s the first time since 2011 that the district’s enrollment has not dipped. Since that year, enrollment declines were driven by several factors, including population changes and dipping birth rates. Last year’s decline cost CPS’ title as the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">nation’s third largest school district.</a> </p><p>The small enrollment bump was due to fewer students leaving and more new students, including a 7% increase in preschool students, officials said. Additionally, the number of students living in temporary housing increased by 47%, which could be one sign of an increase in migrant students who are living in shelters or other temporary circumstances. </p><p>The district does not track students’ immigration status. But another sign that the population of newly enrolled migrant students is growing is the increasing number of English language learners. About 7,800 more English learners enrolled this year than last year, officials said. CPS typically enrolls an average of 3,000 new English learners a year. </p><p>English language learners now make up nearly a quarter of the district’s students, up from 22% last year, according to Chalkbeat’s analysis. </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23895264/chicago-schools-repairs-buildings-facilities-plan-career-technical-education-classrooms/Reema Amin2023-09-28T11:00:00+00:002023-09-28T11:00:00+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Youth organizer Maria Paula Degillo used to <a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20140416/loop/cps-students-urge-curbs-on-suspensions-expulsions-during-downtown-march/">protest in downtown Chicago</a> against the high rates of suspensions and expulsions for students of color. </p><p>Now, she collaborates with Chicago Public Schools to create safe school environments without harsh discipline and over policing. </p><p>Today, Degillo, with the group Voices of Youth in Chicago Education, is joining the district’s Chief of Safety and Security Jadine Chou at a City Club of Chicago event to highlight the partnership forged between the district and community organizations over the course of the last decade to improve school safety. </p><p>The event comes as Chicago says it has made significant progress disrupting the school-to-prison pipeline. Suspensions have plummeted from nearly 50,000 in 2013-14 to less than 10,000 in 2021-22. And the number of police officers on campus has been <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/16/23308391/chicago-public-schools-police-school-resource-officers-restorative-justice-whole-school-safety-plan">more than cut in half</a>. </p><p>What’s more, new research <a href="https://educationlab.uchicago.edu/projects/restorative-practices/">released by the University of Chicago Education Lab</a> earlier this month found student arrests dropped at schools where restorative practices were implemented and students said they felt a stronger sense of safety and belonging. </p><p>Degillo, Chou, and others who have been working on this issue for more than a decade say Chicago’s approach to school safety could be a blueprint for other schools across the country. </p><p>“When we talk about safety in schools,” Degillo said, “it’s about young people and their parents being able to be at the decision making table so that they can decide what they feel makes them safe.”</p><h2>Chicago makes slow shift to restorative discipline </h2><p>Chicago’s work to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline started years before national debates around school safety and the presence of police in schools heated up in 2020. </p><p>When Chou took the job as safety and security chief 12 years ago, she said she was the first person not from the police department to fill the role. </p><p>“It was not easy at first,” she said. “I think a lot of people were stuck in that same paradigm that, you know, if we go to restorative practices, bad things will happen.”</p><p>Early in her tenure, the school board approved several <a href="https://www.chicagoreporter.com/cps-releases-student-code-conduct-revisions/">changes to the student code of conduct</a> that activists, such as Degillo, pushed: limiting the use of automatic suspensions and redefining what behaviors deserved out-of-school punishment. And the state of Illinois <a href="https://voyceproject.org/initiatives/campaign-common-sense-discipline/sb100/">passed legislation</a>, at the urging of groups like VOYCE, to limit the use of suspensions and expulsions in public schools. </p><p>During the 2013-14 school year, 22 Chicago high schools and 34 elementary schools began implementing restorative practices focused on building relationships and conflict resolution. </p><p>Researchers at the University of Chicago Education Lab studied what happened in the years that followed. In <a href="https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w31675/w31675.pdf">a report issued earlier this month</a>, they found that suspensions declined at schools that implemented restorative justice, student arrests in-school fell by 35%, and out-of-school arrests dropped by 15%. </p><p>Anjali Adukia, an assistant professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy and one of the report’s authors, said changing how schools approach student discipline doesn’t happen overnight. </p><p>She recalled talking to a teacher who saw restorative practices as “fluffy duffy stuff” that was going to take up too much time. But after trying some of the strategies, the approach made their job easier. That teacher is now a restorative practices coach, Adukia said. </p><p>Chou, with CPS, said the research confirmed what she felt she already knew: This was actually working. It also “refutes the myth” that restorative practices lead to “no consequences” and everything being “out of control.” </p><p>“The research actually shows that you do good both by keeping children in the classroom through these restorative practices,” Chou said. “And in fact, the climate is calmer.” </p><h2>Removing police from schools is just one piece of the puzzle</h2><p>In addition to its work to reduce suspensions and expulsions, Degillo’s organization Voices of Youth in Chicago Education, or VOYCE, was <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2020/6/19/21297339/while-other-school-districts-cut-ties-with-police-chicago-still-organizing">on the forefront of the movement</a> to remove police officers from schools.</p><p>This was before a 2019 <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2019/5/31/21108240/by-next-school-year-federal-police-monitor-expects-chicago-to-revamp-school-police-program">federal consent decree</a> over the city’s police department pushed the district to rethink the role of police in schools and before the racial unrest in 2020 after the police killing of George Floyd. </p><p>Around that time, the district began to collaborate with community organizations, including VOYCE, on an effort known as <a href="https://www.cps.edu/services-and-supports/student-safety-and-security/whole-school-safety-plans/">Whole School Safety</a>. The approach also gave local school councils the ability to vote on whether or not to keep school-based police officers, commonly referred to as SROs. </p><p>An initial wave of schools removed police in 2020, but the <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/16/23308391/chicago-public-schools-police-school-resource-officers-restorative-justice-whole-school-safety-plan">momentum has slowed</a> more recently, with just two schools voting to remove officers last school year. </p><p>In June, the school board <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/28/23777534/chicago-public-schools-police-contract-whole-school-safety">approved a $10.3 million contract with the police department</a> to station 57 officers at roughly 40 high schools that have voted to keep them. It’s a fraction of the 140 stationed at district-run high schools in 2019, which cost roughly $33 million that year. </p><p>Chicago initially faced some criticism for pushing the decision about whether to keep police in schools down to local communities. But the ground-up approach may prove to be more sustainable, Chou said, noting other districts who removed police in 2020 only to return them more recently. </p><p>That was the case in Denver, where the school board <a href="https://co.chalkbeat.org/2020/6/11/21288866/denver-school-board-votes-remove-police-from-schools">voted in 2020 to phase out police from schools</a> only to <a href="https://co.chalkbeat.org/2023/6/15/23763041/police-denver-schools-sros-return-board-vote-school-safety-east-high-shooting">reverse that decision in a divided vote</a> this past June after a <a href="https://co.chalkbeat.org/2023/3/22/23651918/east-high-school-shooting-denver">shooting in March</a> at one of the district’s high schools. </p><p>Although Degillo said VOYCE would still like to see police removed from schools altogether, she said allowing communities to decide is just as important. </p><p>“The goal is to create a process in which people are not relying on knee-jerk reactions to safety, “ Degillo said. “There’s so much more to school safety. The goal is to create that safe, healthy, equitable learning environment.”</p><p><em>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </em><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><em>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/28/23893084/chicago-public-schools-discipline-sros-police-restorative-justice/Becky Vevea2023-09-27T19:41:03+00:002023-09-27T19:41:03+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Chicago Public Schools won’t provide busing to general education students for the rest of the semester, officials said Tuesday. </p><p>District officials informed families of the decision Tuesday morning, said Charles Mayfield, CPS’ chief operating officer. </p><p>“We really wanted to give parents an early notice to let them know that you don’t have to come back and keep asking and hoping,” Mayfield said. </p><p>Mayfield said district officials will re-evaluate the decision in December before winter break and update families then on the state of transportation service.</p><p>Blaming a driver shortage, CPS <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage">has restricted bus transportation</a> this year to students with disabilities and those who are living in temporary housing, groups that are legally entitled to transportation. District officials say they have just 681 drivers — similar to figures last month and half of what they need, Mayfield said. </p><p>At the start of the school year, Mayfield said the district would try to provide busing to more children if it could hire more drivers, but the needle hasn’t moved on new hires since August. </p><p>“We’re continuing to do more outreach,” Mayfield said.</p><p>Over the past year, the district has hosted roughly two dozen hiring fairs, raised driver pay rates by $2, to $22 to $27 an hour, and added more bus companies in an effort to ease the driver shortage, officials said. Mayfield said it may be too soon to try new strategies, given that boosting hiring can take a while, and some of the steps, such as increasing pay, went into effect only recently. </p><p>The limited bus routes have enraged many families of general education students who have relied on busing in the past, including those in magnet and gifted programs, and they have <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/24/23844980/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-routes-driver-shortage">expressed their concerns at Board of Education meetings.</a> These families are eligible for free CTA cards, including a companion pass for parents. But of the roughly 5,500 children who are eligible, just under 1,600 have used that option, Mayfield said. (The district mistakenly said in July that 8,000 students were eligible.) </p><p>Some parents of young children have said they can’t send their kids alone on buses or trains and also can’t accompany their children because of their work schedules.</p><p>Alexis Luna said the lack of transportation could force her to keep her third-grade daughter out of school occasionally. Because of Luna’s inflexible work schedule, the girl’s father usually drives her to Inter-American Elementary Magnet School in Wrigleyville in the morning, about 45 minutes from her Belmont Cragin home. Luna typically picks her up. </p><p>But if her father has to travel out of town for work, Luna won’t be able to cover the morning drop-off. In that case, Luna said, “I will have to put her in day care, and she’s probably going to have to miss school.”</p><p>Tuesday’s decision comes in the middle of the district’s school application season, during which families apply for gifted and magnet programs. The application period ends in November. </p><p>Last year, bus transportation was available to any eligible student. But the district has struggled since 2021 to provide timely and reliable service. For example, thousands of students with disabilities last year <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez">had commutes longer than an hour</a> — a problem the district has nearly eliminated this year as it has restricted bus service. </p><p>Currently, the district is providing bus service to 7,300 students who have disabilities or live in temporary housing. It has also offered stipends to families of these students who prefer other modes of transportation. The first round of those are <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lbKvWwVVXkSLuGiBPFUm1ptBP7CsfRfgohQB-d0dV8A/edit?usp=sharing">expected to be mailed out this week</a>. </p><p>As of last Friday, 324 students with disabilities were waiting for routes, Mayfield said, adding that new requests continue to come in. </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at </em><a href="mailto:ramin@chalkbeat.org"><em>ramin@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/27/23892966/chicago-public-schools-bus-transportation-students-with-disabilities-homeless-magnet-gifted/Reema AminRick Elkins / Getty Images2023-09-26T18:24:55+00:002023-09-26T18:24:55+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy. </em></p><p>Some Chicago parents will be able to pick up a monthly transportation stipend at their child’s school by the end of this week — a month after the school year started, according to the district.</p><p>The stipends — offered to students with disabilities who have bus service in their Individualized Education Program and those in temporary living situations — will be mailed to schools via the postal service this week, officials said. </p><p>This first round of checks will cover August and the maximum stipend is $225, according to the district. Parents will have to pick up the stipend at their child’s school during school hours at the end of each month.</p><p>The district <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage">encouraged parents over the summer </a>to take transportation stipends up to $500 a month amid a national school bus driver shortage. As of Sept. 21, Over 3,200 families have accepted the district’s monthly stipend, a spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools said. All of those families will receive a check this week.</p><p>The delay in mailing out stipends is another part of the district’s ongoing struggle to support families who have students with disabilities and those experiencing homelessness who need transportation.</p><p>“We will continue to explore every viable option to increase our transportation options and will continue to ensure every student has safe, secure, and reliable transportation to and from school,” said the spokesperson.</p><p>As of last Thursday, the district said it had provided bus service to 7,351 students, with an average travel time of 28 minutes. </p><p>But last week, the district said it had only 681 drivers out of 1,300 bus drivers needed to provide transportation. At the same time, 324 students were waiting for bus services. About 170 requests were received within the last week and the district plans to begin services for 144 students this week. </p><p>Parents have been concerned about long bus travel times to and from school <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/21/23840209/chicago-public-schools-first-day-2023-enrollment-migrant-students-transportation">since the beginning of the school year</a>. Last year, some students were on bus routes <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/24/23320764/chicago-public-schools-transportation-problems-bus-driver-pedro-martinez">that were longer than an hour</a> — with 365 students with disabilities on rides longer than 90 minutes. </p><p>The Illinois State Board of Education <a href="https://www.isbe.net/Documents/pupil-transp-faq.pdf">encourages school districts to limit bus service to less than an hour.</a> Chicago Public Schools has been under state watch since last November for failing to do so. </p><p>As of Sept. 21, the district said 62 students had travel times longer than 60 minutes, but none are on routes lasting more than 90 minutes. </p><p>The state opened another investigation in September after a complaint from advocates and parents alleging that students with disabilities whose Individualized Education Programs include transportation are being denied a “free appropriate public education,” which they are entitled to by federal law. </p><p>The complaint alleges “widespread … delays and denials” across CPS and an “unnecessary administrative burden” because families have to request transportation even after they’ve already been deemed eligible, according to a copy of the complaint obtained by Chalkbeat.</p><p>Chicago Public Schools has struggled to provide bus service to students<a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/10/27/22749735/chicago-bus-driver-shortage-reopening-public-schools"> since 2021</a>, when all students returned to school buildings after pandemic closures. The district has cited the national bus driver shortage as the main reason it has not been able to provide transportation to students and for long bus routes. </p><p>This year, the district decided to <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23814936/chicago-public-schools-no-bus-service-driver-shortage">prioritize bus service for students with disabilities and those experiencing homelessness</a> — both groups are entitled to transportation under federal law. This leaves out thousands of students who attend the district’s selective and magnet schools, which has garnered pushback from parents. </p><p><em><strong>Correction:</strong> Sept. 28, 2023: This article has been updated to reflect that Chicago Public Schools plans to send transportation stipends of up to $500 to families. The amount changes depending on the number of school days that students are in attendance. For the month of August, it will be up to $225. </em></p><p><em>Becky Vevea contributed to this report.</em></p><p><em>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </em><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><em>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/26/23891220/chicago-bus-service-transportation-stipend/Samantha Smylie2023-09-25T22:33:55+00:002023-09-25T22:33:55+00:00<p>Chicago Public Schools said Monday that last year’s kindergarten, first, and second grade students made promising progress in reading, according to data from a new test now used in most district elementary schools. </p><p>Officials touted reading growth on a new test called i-Ready, which students took at the beginning, middle, and end of the 2022-23 school year. According to a press release, about 40% of kindergarten through second grade students were at or above grade level in reading by May, up from just 9% in September. </p><p>The district also noted that Black and Latino students’ scores improved on the exam. The percentage of Black students scoring at or above grade level went from 5% to 32% by the end of the year. The percentage of Latino students at or above grade level went from 5% at the start of the school year to 32% by year’s end.</p><p>However, CPS did not provide the data by school and did not release any information about how the city’s youngest learners were doing in math. </p><p>Ernest Williams, principal of Ellington Elementary School, said tests such as i-Ready are different from standardized tests administered by the state. These diagnostic tests are designed as a tool for teachers and school leaders to monitor how a student is doing in real time so they can adjust teaching practice or provide extra help. </p><p>“It gives us data on which students need urgent intervention, which students are almost there, and which students are on track,” said Williams. “It gives teachers recommendations on how to push the students further.” </p><p>Bogdana Chkoumbova, chief education officer of Chicago Public Schools, on Monday attributed some of the increases in literacy scores to the district’s investment in expanding Skyline curriculum to 400 schools, professional development for educators, diagnostic tests, and expanding the district’s <a href="https://www.cps.edu/campaigns/tutor-corps/">Tutor Corps</a> to 200 elementary schools to help students between kindergarten and fifth grade. </p><p>The district also highlighted an initiative funded by federal COVID recovery money to create “literacy-rich environments,” with colorful rugs, comfortable chairs, technology, and new books at 90 schools. Students at those schools were also given packs of books to take home twice a year. Officials said 50 more schools will be added to that program this year. </p><p>At Ellington, teachers and interventionists are able to look at the i-Ready data alongside other classroom tests and pull students into small groups based on their scores, Williams said.</p><p>On Monday, Chicago Public Schools officials toured Ellington, where they visited two classrooms to see how teachers were teaching students how to read. </p><p>In one kindergarten classroom, three teachers sat with three separate groups of students. One group practiced reading out loud. Another spent time matching letters and drawing pictures. And another group created sentences with cards labeled with pictures and words. </p><p>State and local school officials have been concerned about students backsliding in reading and math after the coronavirus pandemic disrupted education in 2020. Since 2021, results on <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/10/23/23417098/naep-nations-report-card-chicago-public-schools-math-reading-scores">national</a> and <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/6/16/23170206/chicago-public-school-illinois-assessment-readiness-spring-preliminary-scores-pandemic-fallout">state</a> assessments showed significant drops in student test scores. Chicago Public Schools announced last week that <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar">more students met state math and reading standards</a>, but the metrics still lagged pre-pandemic levels. </p><p>CEO Pedro Martinez said Monday afternoon at the press conference that proficiency in reading is important for students to be successful in their academic careers and throughout their lives. </p><p>“Our ultimate goal is for students to be literate by third grade,” said Martinez. “Proficiency by third grade is essential for being ready for high school, graduating from CPS, being prepared to succeed in college, career, and community.”</p><h2>Chicago’s standardized tests shift post-pandemic</h2><p>The district previously used the Northwest Evaluation Administration’s Measures of Academic Progress in second through eighth grade and a mix of other assessments for kindergarten, first, and second grade students. In 2021, the district <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/28/22598976/chicago-will-drop-nwea-map-adopt-skyline-curriculum-testing-amid-questions-about-covid-academic-loss">announced it would no longer use MAP</a> to monitor student growth and measure school performance. And in April 2022, the school board <a href="https://www.cpsboe.org/content/actions/2022_04/22-0427-PR3.pdf">approved a three-year, $6.75 million contract</a> with Curriculum Associates, the company that makes the i-Ready test. </p><p>Now, most kindergarten through second grade students take <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dK2EJ5ThpsrU3SbVz_BfBM9Xxh4xG3V3CO8es0kItgo/preview">i-Ready</a> and most third through eighth grade students take a similar test known as <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KRYgPpv3RtadIlWf_3Dr3vouQ893-eK-1IDtruL0-0c/preview">Star360</a>. </p><p>Not all schools are required to take the i-Ready, but according to data obtained by Chalkbeat earlier this year, 424 of the district’s 500-plus elementary schools used the assessment during the 2022-23 school year. </p><p>Given the recent switch, it’s difficult to compare how Chicago’s youngest students are doing compared to before the pandemic. A national report on i-Ready scores released last fall <a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/14/23351806/iready-test-data-pandemic-reading-middle-school-math">indicated young readers were struggling</a>. </p><p>According to data from the NWEA MAP test in 2019 — the last time CPS published results from that test to its <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/district-data/metrics/assessment-reports/">public data page</a> — 56% of the district’s second graders were at or above the national average in reading.</p><p>Data from the i-Ready beginning and middle of the year tests obtained by Chalkbeat in March did not break down data by grade level, but overall district numbers indicated growth between the beginning and middle of the year.</p><p>In a presentation given to principals around the same time, district officials said Chicago’s middle-of-the-year scores tracked closely with other urban districts, with roughly 53% of kindergarten students at or above grade level for reading, 33% of first graders, and 37% of second graders. All three groups saw double-digit growth in reading from the beginning of the year. </p><p>Chicago Public Schools is moving away from using these types of tests to rate and measure school performance. During the pandemic, the district paused and eventually scrapped a <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/24/23693295/chicago-public-schools-school-accountability-policy">controversial school quality rating policy</a> that partly relied on NWEA MAP scores. </p><p>Last April, the school board <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/4/26/23699911/chicago-public-schools-school-improvement-policy-board">approved a new system for measuring school performance</a> that will no longer assign a numerical rating to schools. Instead, parents and the public will get a dashboard with a variety of metrics to explore — including state test scores, attendance, graduation rates, college enrollment, and a host of other information about curriculum and the student experience on campus. </p><p><a href="mailto:mkoumpilova@chalkbeat.org"><em>Mila Koumpilova</em></a><em> contributed reporting.</em></p><p><em>Becky Vevea is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Chicago. Contact Becky at </em><a href="mailto:bvevea@chalkbeat.org"><em>bvevea@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p><p><em>Samantha Smylie is the state education reporter for Chalkbeat Chicago, covering school districts across the state, legislation, special education, and the state board of education. Contact Samantha at </em><a href="mailto:ssmylie@chalkbeat.org"><em>ssmylie@chalkbeat.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/25/23890072/chicago-public-schools-iready-test-scores-literacy-kindergarten-first-second-grade/Becky Vevea, Samantha Smylie2023-09-25T22:20:04+00:002023-09-25T22:20:04+00:00<p>Mary Fahey Hughes, a member of Chicago’s Board of Education, went into mom mode Monday during a tour of her son’s former South Side school, which provides work and life skills training to older students with disabilities.</p><p>Standing to the side of a horticulture classroom at <a href="https://www.southsideacademycps.org/">Southside Occupational Academy High School</a>, Hughes smiled as she snapped photos of Aidan next to Mayor Brandon Johnson, who was also on the tour. Aidan has come far from when he was diagnosed with autism as a child — and Hughes was unsure what his future would look like, she said. </p><p>She credits the Englewood school — from which Aidan graduated in June — with giving him the confidence to chat up the mayor and show off his alma mater. </p><p>“He just gained so much independence,” Hughes said in a hallway at Southside. “The thing I love about this place is there is so much respect for students where they’re at.”</p><p>Chicago Public Schools officials are considering expanding the model at Southside and a handful of other so-called specialty schools, which are meant to help students with more challenging disabilities transition into the real world, Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez said Monday. </p><p>Monday’s tour was the district’s opportunity to show off the model to Johnson and a slew of other city and district officials. If the district decides to grow the program, it would need to lobby the state for more funding, Martinez said.</p><p>“We’re having the conversation internally about, how do we look at these programs, build on their strengths and potentially expand them,” Martinez said. </p><p>The district has seven specialty schools that together enroll about 1,800 students with mild to moderate cognitive disabilities, said Sylvia Barragan, a spokesperson for Chicago Public Schools. Three schools are early childhood programs that serve younger students with disabilities. The remaining four — including Southside — are for older students and have a focus on vocational and life skills. </p><p>Unlike traditional high schools, the district assigns students to these schools, Barragan said. </p><p>Some students with disabilities who look for work after graduation may benefit more from going through a specialty program first, Martinez said. He believes the need is enough to warrant doubling the number of specialty schools. </p><p>Other districts, <a href="https://ny.chalkbeat.org/2019/12/18/21055529/why-students-with-disabilities-are-going-to-school-in-classrooms-that-look-like-staples-and-cvs">such as New York City, have similar programs</a> where students with disabilities learn vocational skills. </p><p>These programs, however, have drawn some criticism for segregating students with disabilities, instead of allowing students to build skills next to peers who don’t have a diagnosed disability. </p><p>Southside Principal Joshua Long <a href="https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/10/19/chicago-special-education-transition-schools-215728/">has said</a> his school model allows students to have the specialized attention they need. </p><p>At Southside, nearly 88% of students came from low-income families last year. Asked if schools like Southside limit students to low-paying jobs, Hughes said the programs hone skills that these young adults may otherwise miss out on, potentially leaving them stuck at home without work. Hughes noted that the schools serve students with a variety of strengths, and some graduates go on to community college. </p><p>“The problem is that a lot of jobs are low-paying, despite the amount of work that needs to get done,” Hughes said. </p><p>High school students can attend <a href="https://www.vaughnhs.org/">Vaughn Occupational High School</a> and <a href="https://www.northsidelearningcenter.org/">Northside Learning Center High School</a>, both on the Northwest Side. Southside, in Englewood, and <a href="https://www.raygrahamtrainingcenter.com/">Ray Graham Training Center</a>, in the South Loop, serve students who have met graduation requirements but still need “transition supports and services,” as determined by the team that creates their Individualized Education Program, according to the district. At these two schools, students are typically ages 18-22. </p><p>At Southside, where 360 students enrolled last year, students learn about various potential jobs and responsibilities they will need in the real world. Most students are exposed to every class, and some do internships, such as with the Museum of Science and Industry, said Kristen Dimas, a teacher at the school. </p><p>Long led the mayor and other officials through several different rooms that simulate a different career or life responsibility. Among the classrooms they saw were a horticulture class, a mock grocery store, a broadcast studio with a green screen, a garage where students learn to wash cars, and a café — complete with a bakery display case.</p><p>A group of students stopped by the horticulture room to ask if they had laundry. They would eventually go to the laundry room, where they learn how to wash clothes but also learn a mental checklist on basic hygiene. </p><p>“Smell your armpits. Do they smell fresh?” said a laminated list in the laundry room. “If not, put on deodorant.” </p><p>In a supply room, where a laminated document listed rules for folding a T-shirt, a student carefully practiced folding. Long gently asked her to get the mayor’s T-shirt size, but the student was shy. The mayor, who used to be a teacher, ultimately revealed he’s an extra large. </p><figure><img src="https://www.chalkbeat.org/resizer/saYMRLdpcYzpp6lgMBlvuRv05yE=/1440x960/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/civicnewscompany/U3S7OVNC4VF3VMZS4T4A3BLGKA.jpg" alt="Mayor Brandon Johnson watches a student practice folding a T-shirt at Southside Occupational Academy High School in Englewood." height="960" width="1440"/><figcaption>Mayor Brandon Johnson watches a student practice folding a T-shirt at Southside Occupational Academy High School in Englewood.</figcaption></figure><p>“But here’s the thing — you don’t have to tell everybody that,” he said to the student, who laughed and handed him a T-shirt.</p><p>The café and laundry classes are favorites of 18-year-old Josiah Hall, who enrolled at Southside in August. He especially enjoys spending time with the teachers, he said. He hopes to attend a four-year university, such as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.</p><p>The school works to help students understand the career options that are right for them and to reach those goals, Long said.</p><p>For Aidan, Hughes’ son, that path has led to a new transition <a href="https://colleges.ccc.edu/after-22/">program for adults age 18 and older at Daley College.</a> He’s also taking EMT classes and dreams one day of being a firefighter like his father. </p><p><strong>Correction: </strong><em>Sept. 26, 2023: A previous version of this story said the program at Daley College is for people age 22 and older. It is for people age 18 and older. </em></p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/25/23890046/chicago-public-schools-specialty-programs-students-with-disabilities-job-training/Reema Amin2023-09-22T20:00:42+00:002023-09-22T20:00:42+00:00<p>Interested in having a say in choosing your community school’s principal, greenlighting the school’s budget, and local curriculum priorities?</p><p>Run to be <a href="https://www.cps.edu/globalassets/cps-pages/about-cps/local-school-councils-lscs/lsc-elections/2024/2024-lsc-election-guide-english.pdf">a member</a> of your local school council. And bring a friend, too.</p><p>That was the message Thursday night to hundreds of parents, community members, and teachers who signed on for a crash course on what local school councils do and how to become a member.</p><p>Starting Oct. 16, people can file paperwork to become a candidate in next April’s LSC elections. Applications are due Feb. 8, 2024. Despite numerous vacancies, during the 2022-23 school year a record number of more than 6,000 candidates applied to become LSC members, according to CPS.</p><p>After last year’s election, more than 1,400 seats for LSCs across the city of Chicago remained open, according to an analysis by <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board">Chalkbeat</a>. This year, Chicago Public Schools is trying to get ahead of the curve and provide as much information — and encouragement — as possible to parents and community members who might be interested in having a louder voice in how their child’s school is run.</p><p>“Serving on an LSC is one of the most important, most impactful ways you can make a difference in your school,” said Kishasha Williams-Ford, director of LSC relations, during the virtual meeting.</p><p>With 374 vacant seats, the majority are up for grabs, according to <a href="https://schoolinfo.cps.edu/Map-LSCMembers/">a map</a> of current local school council members from CPS. That includes open seats all across Chicago — from the South and West Sides to the North Side.</p><p>Next November, voters will also elect 10 members to the Chicago Board of Education as Chicago moves to a <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/30/22602068/illinois-governor-approves-elected-chicago-school-board">21-member school board</a> that will eventually be <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/5/6/23713837/chicago-elected-school-board-map-illinois-elections">fully elected</a>.</p><p>One of the most important jobs for LSCs is agreeing on who will lead the school: Members have a voice in determining local schools’ next principal. They also vote on budget priorities and curriculum decisions that aren’t determined by the school district.</p><p>CPS officials reminded attendees of these powers and responsibilities during the virtual meeting Thursday, encouraging everyone with an interest to run and to persuade their friends to do the same after the heavy slate of <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/18/23311741/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-elections-vacancy-elected-school-board">vacancies </a>in 2022, mostly on Chicago’s majority <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/27/23810521/chicago-public-schools-local-school-councils-lscs-parents-access-raise-your-hand">Black and Latino</a> South and West sides.</p><p>CPS CEO <a href="https://www.cps.edu/about/leadership/chief-executive-officer/">Pedro Martinez</a> lauded parent and community involvement in local schools as being instrumental to recent student performance improvements. More Chicago students <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar">met state math and reading standards</a> this year, but <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/19/23880833/chicago-public-schools-2023-test-scores-reading-math-state-standards-iar">a majority</a> of schools are still falling short of where they were pre-pandemic.</p><p>“The results are promising, why? Because we’re investing in our schools,” Martinez said Thursday night. “We can’t do this work without you. It is your voice, being connected at the local school level … that’s going to continue to make our district stronger.”</p><p>In a prepared video statement that aired during the Zoom meeting, Mayor Brandon Johnson praised the people willing to take the time to be on their local school councils and encouraged more to run in the next election.</p><p>“We need your voices and ideas to ensure our students receive the highest quality education and have every opportunity for success,” Johnson said.</p><p>Every two years, local school districts elect LSC members made up of parents, students, CPS staff, and community members. In order to become a member, people have to fill out an application form, meet the basic qualification criteria. Parent members must have a student enrolled at the school. Community members must live in the <a href="https://data.cityofchicago.org/Education/CPS-elementary-school-attendance-boundaries/u959-tya7">school’s attendance boundaries</a>. Student members must be enrolled and teachers must work at the school they wish to represent.</p><p>Traditional LSCs are made up of the principal, six parent representatives, two community members, two teachers, one representative of non-teacher staff, three students for high schools, and one student for schools serving up to eighth grade. All positions — other than the one-year student terms — are for two years. </p><p>There are no term limits, so students, parents, and community members can run as many times as they want, as long as they still meet the basic qualifications. Anyone who has a child at the school or lives in the school’s attendance boundary can vote in the elections, including undocumented people.</p><p>Elections take place April 10, 2024 for elementary schools and April 11, 2024 for high schools.</p><p>Clarke Burnett, an eighth grade student at Skinner West Elementary School in the West Loop and a member of the school’s LSC, encouraged fellow students to run.</p><p>“If you’re passionate about your opinions about your school and have ideas … no matter what, your thoughts will be heard on the LSC,” Clarke said. “Whatever you have to say, it’ll be heard in some sort of way.”</p><p><em>Michael Gerstein is a freelance writer based in Chicago.</em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/22/23886028/chicago-public-schools-local-school-council-elections-2024/Michael Gerstein2023-09-20T02:26:40+00:002023-09-20T02:26:40+00:00<p><em>Sign up for </em><a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/newsletters/subscribe"><em>Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter</em></a><em> to keep up with the city’s public school system and statewide education policy.</em> </p><p>Enrollment in Chicago Public Schools is flat for the first time in more than a decade, according to preliminary data obtained by Chalkbeat. </p><p>New preliminary numbers for this school year show just over 322,500 students are registered at CPS schools. The data represents enrollment as of the end of the day Monday, the 20th day of the school year, when the district traditionally takes its official count. On the 20th day of last school year, 322,106 students were enrolled according to official data. </p><p>CPS enrollment has been in decline for 12 years, so this year’s shift is significant. </p><p>In the past decade, the district’s student body shrunk by 20%, with the district seeing multiple year-over-year declines of roughly 10,000 students. The dramatic contraction began after the 2011-12 school year, which was the last year CPS saw a bump in enrollment, from 402,681 to 404,151 students. Last year, Chicago <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2022/9/28/23377565/chicago-school-enrollment-miami-dade-third-largest">lost its standing as the nation’s third largest district</a>. </p><p>Enrollment now appears to be leveling off in Chicago. In the past year, the city has welcomed thousands of migrant families from the southern border and in July, a top mayoral aide suggested that newcomers were <a href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/city-hall/2023/6/29/23778894/chicago-migrants-cps-school-enrollment-numbers-increase">boosting enrollment in schools.</a> </p><p>A district spokesperson, however, said enrollment changes are due to multiple reasons and cautioned against attributing the shifts to “any one group of students.” </p><p>“We will offer more analysis and context to our enrollment figures later this month,” CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said in a statement. “We are honored and privileged to serve each and every student.” </p><p>It’s too early to tell if this is the start of a new trend, said Elaine Allensworth, who studies education policy and is Lewis-Sebring Director of the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research. </p><p>“If it’s just a one-time pause in the trends of declining enrollment, it might not have a big overall long-term effect, but it’s really just hard to say right now since we don’t know what will happen in the future,” Allensworth said. </p><p>Thinning enrollment was driven by factors such as <a href="https://observablehq.com/@fgregg/chicago-births-2009-2020">dipping birth rates</a> and other population changes. With the onset of the pandemic, districts across the country enrolled fewer students, with more than 33,000 students falling off Chicago’s rolls since the fall of 2020. </p><p><a href="https://www.chalkbeat.org/2022/8/1/23283631/covid-small-schools-enrollment-drop-chicago-new-york-los-angeles-drop-cities">Shrinking schools</a> have left CPS officials and mayors to contend with how to best fund classrooms, especially as student needs grew during the pandemic. Enrollment has long been a determining factor for how much state and federal money a district gets. Mayor Brandon Johnson has been an outspoken critic of tying enrollment to funding, but past mayors have funded schools within CPS based on how many kids they serve.</p><p>Even with fewer students, the district’s budget has grown to $9.4 billion. That’s roughly flat compared to last year’s budget, but up from a decade ago when it hovered around $6 billion. A new state funding formula and a wave of pandemic recovery money have helped offset enrollment declines. Though state money is increasing, the district has <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/9/23826279/chicago-schools-funding-enrollment-state-board">recently seen fewer dollars than expected</a> due to lower enrollment and increased property wealth.</p><p>According to preliminary enrollment data analyzed by Chalkbeat, there are 5,767 more students learning English as a new language this school year than last year. That’s a sizable jump: CPS has historically enrolled an average of 3,000 new English learners annually, a district spokesperson said.</p><p>CPS officials said they do not track immigration status of students. They have pointed to the growth in English language learners as one sign of newcomers, but emphasized that not all English language learners are newcomers. </p><p>The district enrolls migrant students in three ways. First, like any student, migrant children can enroll directly at schools. They can also make an appointment at the city’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/17/23797844/chicago-public-schools-migrant-families-welcome-center">new welcome center</a> housed inside Roberto Clemente Community Academy High School on the West Side. </p><p>Finally, enrollment teams are going to families’ homes, after receiving information from the city’s Department of Family and Support Services about those in need of help who can’t make it to the welcome center, said Karime Asaf, chief of the district’s Office of Language and Cultural Education. </p><p>Schools across the district have historically struggled to meet state regulations for <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/8/16/23833661/chicago-public-schools-migrant-students-bilingual-resources-2023">providing proper support for English learners.</a> When finding a school with the right program for English learners, officials try to stay within a two-mile radius of the child’s home, Asaf said. </p><p>Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, which provides extra support for kids and families at a handful of Southwest Side schools as part of the district’s <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/7/31/23811427/chicago-public-schools-sustainable-community-schools-teachers-union">sustainable community schools</a> initiative, said they’ve noticed an increase in migrant families among the parents they serve who don’t have stable housing. </p><p>Last year, the organization placed a case manager part-time at a high school in Back of the Yards that needed extra help with parents as they enrolled more migrant students, said Sara Reschly, deputy director of the group’s community services division. </p><p>At Brighton Park Elementary School, case manager Lupe Fernandez said newcomer families currently have very basic needs, such as undergarments and help navigating the CTA. The school is planning to create a free “closet” where families can pick up things they need for free.</p><p>“If there are schools that have those strong community partnerships, you know, like that would be a place to start because then you can wrap services around the whole family,” Reschly said. </p><p>Asaf, with the district, said they are processing more school transfers among newcomers as those families find new homes or more permanent housing.</p><p>Preliminary data analyzed by Chalkbeat show this school year, nearly a quarter of Chicago Public Schools students are learning English as a new language — a figure that trumps other large districts. For example, 14% of students in New York City public schools, the nation’s largest district, were English learners last school year.</p><p>The preliminary data signals the continuation of <a href="https://chicago.chalkbeat.org/2023/9/6/23862087/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-poverty-low-income-gentrification">another trend over the past decade</a>: a decline in the share of students from low-income households. Preliminary data indicate that number is 67%, down from 73% last school year. </p><p><em>Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org. </em></p>https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2023/9/19/23881541/chicago-public-schools-enrollment-2023-increase-migrants/Reema AminJamie Kelter Davis for Chalkbeat