Chalkbeat reports that the Chicago school board wants to de-emphasize school choice and reinvigorate neighborhood schools. Chicago has been through a quarter-century of school choice, and leaders believe it’s time for a change.
Chalkbeat says:
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.
The move puts in motion Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign promise to reinvigorate Chicago Public Schools’ neighborhood schools. On the campaign trail, Johnson likened the city’s school choice system to a “Hunger Games scenario” that forces competition for resources and ultimately harms schools, particularly those where students are zoned based on their address.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.”
Some selective enrollment and magnet schools lack the diversity of the city, enrolling larger shares of white and Asian American students, while others remain largely segregated by race and class.
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.”
“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.
The board will scrutinize charter schools carefully when they apply for renewal.
A complicating factor in the board’s action is that the board is about to make a major change from a mayoral-appointed board to an elected board.
The board’s policy priorities come less than a year before Chicago will for the first time elect school board members. 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.
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.

“However, Todd-Breland did signal that the board might move to close charter schools.
“‘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.”
Hurray for Chicago!
But the “anti-racist lessons for students and similarly framed professional development for educators” aspect of it is worrisome. I just hope it’s not in the style of Ibram X. Kendi’s racist anti-racism.
LikeLike
It will almost certainly be Kendi-style anti-racism (and what other styles of anti-racism are there?)
LikeLike
The style that seeks to put an end to racism rather than to sustain racism, like Kendi’s does. The style that understands the essence of DEI (diversity, equity, inclusion) is DIE (division, inequity, exclusion). The style that knows “diversity” and “inclusion” are redundant in the presence of authentic equity.
LikeLike
https://nypost.com/2023/10/18/i-was-a-dei-director-dei-drives-campus-antisemitism/
LikeLike
LikeLike
Antiracism should mean ending systems of racism like the segregation caused by school choice and selective admissions, and when it does, blaming students and educators for having what NCLB Bush called low expectations will be diminished. High stakes testing and professional development cannot overcome a system of racial oppression like school choice. Antiracism is anti charter school-ism. Corporate reformers like to talk about “ending racism.” End segregation, and then we’ll talk.
LikeLike
Also, Ibram X Kendi is not racist.
LikeLike
Kendi’s ideology that some rightly call a religion has no meaning absent the continued existence of racism. Kendi: “Anti-racism is like a tug-of-war.” As such, my racism but beat your racism.
LikeLike
The way I figure, it would be wrong of me to speak for Dr Kendi other than to say I don’t think he’s in any way racist. I’m not Black. I can only speak for myself, an Ashkenazi Jew, and so I offer a possible analogy from a Jewish experience. As UCLA Professor Dov Waxman said to the L.A. Times recently about war protests, “Most Jews support Israel, support Zionism. So the danger of these kinds of protests is even though they’re saying, ‘We’re targeting Zionists,’ it ends up targeting Jews. It ends up leaving many Jews feeling afraid and vulnerable, even if that is not the intention.” (Emphasis mine.) I imagine that Black people are left feeling afraid and vulnerable if antiracists who believe racism still exists and needs to be actively opposed are called racist. It’s like saying one is not permitted to be Black unless one is quiet. Not my place to say so, but I contemplate that that would be unsettling is likely so, even if that is not the intention.
LikeLiked by 1 person
One need not consider whether or not to speak for “Dr. Kendi.” He speaks well for himself. “Whiteness prevents white people from connecting to humanity,” says Kendi, for example. There should be no confusion that he’s targeting the entirety of people he deems White and racist and having no redemptive worth. And then there’s his plainly foolish idea of creating a Department of Anti-racism or some such with persons like himself running it. Georgie Orwell, ah?
One need not be White, Black, an Ashkenazi Jew, or any such to get that such speech is that of a racist inciting anti-white racism hence fostering what I call DIE (division, inequity, exclusion). Kendi’s racist speech acts show a profound lack of understanding of human behavior even at my layperson level. I suspect few will even consider book banning being a competitive response by racists to anti-white racism he and others like have incited.
Not only does he show he’s a racist, Kendi shows he is a willing tool serving those–say, Reed Hastings–who profit from keeping us in states of DIE. Sometimes racists don’t know they are racist and many will readily proclaim, “I’m not racist” when accused of being racist. Some will even embrace anti-racism ideology to prove they’re not racist. If the notion here is that Kendi cannot be racist because he is Black and all that implies, historically, then we need to let go that notion posthaste.
LikeLike
I haven’t followed this but apparently many fear this means that Chicago’s 11 (?) “elite” selective high schools will go non-selective, which would violate a clear campaign promise by Johnson.
Anyone here from Chicago? Is Johnson as disliked as the 20-something-point approval ratings suggest?
LikeLike
It depends on who you talk to. He still has a chance to turn into a decent mayor but he has some growing to do. A lot will depend on the political skills of his team and how well he listens to them as well as other stakeholders. How’s that for mealy mouthed? You can tell I have no clue. I imagine there are powerful forces that would like to take him out. whether he will deserve to fail is in hands.
LikeLike
Choice was always based on the erroneous assumption that the magic market would solve education’s problems, and the private sector would deliver education more efficiently and effectively than public schools. Neither assumption turned out to be true.
Well-funded public schools with resources and professional teachers have no profit motive behind them. They are a public service open to all students. Public schools are the glue that help to bind communities and families together. They are the hub of social life in most communities. Competition does not build better schools, only investment and stability do.
I hope what Chicago is planning spreads to other cities that have gone down the privatization rabbit hole. It creates problems and does not solve them. Privatization depletes public schools and enhances inequity. Other cities should watch and learn from Chicago. Mayor-elect Cherelle Parker of Philadelphia should be taking notes on Chicago’s plan.
LikeLike
Yay for Chicago. Charters …and vouchers are BAD. They serve only the FASCISTS.
LikeLike
Alternate headline: Goodbye Rahm Emanuel, Hello Democracy!
LikeLiked by 1 person
well said!
LikeLike
Do not fear school board elections. Chicago voted in Mayor Johnson. Chicago can elect a school board endorsed by Mayor Johnson.
This is such good news. Makes my day.
LikeLike
Several days later: Let the political fireworks begin….the first one is fired by CPS former CEO, Janice Jackson, who has been and is a champion of choice for Black and brown students. Why do conversations about addressing inequities so quickly turn into conversations about what privileged people will lose? Dr. Jackson is pressing the “you’re gonna lose” button with an incendiary alert — see the op-ed below (no paywall). Her efforts to use policy to drive a choice agenda failed high-need schools, based on results from the accountability system in place during her tenure. Maybe she doesn’t want this to come to light. She may find it easier to stick to advocating for choice for Black and brown families than to own up to the colossal failure of pushing to improve school performance through stingy and mean policies that starved and sanctioned low-performing schools, hitting Black enrollment schools the hardest. It didn’t work. She either can’t see or can’t acknowledge this. It doesn’t help that people with expertise in Chicago won’t touch the issue. They all depend on CPS for work/contracts. Plus they have secured an ideological lock on what is/is not okay to talk about, influenced by business interests and their commitment to the supposed scientific neutrality of quantitative data. It is okay for their work to impose middle class aspirations on reform agendas/conversations. It is not okay to talk about what people who are not middle class need and want for themselves and their schools. It is also not okay to talk about how our middle class beliefs fail the very same schools we like to believe we are working on behalf of, which brings me full-circle back to Dr. Jackson’s op-ed:
https://chicago.suntimes.com/2023/12/18/24006244/chicago-school-choice-neighborhoods-inequity-black-brown-students-achievement-janice-jackson
LikeLike