Jan Resseger reports on dramatic changes in Chicago, which has been a Petri dish for corporate school reform for at least two decades. The last mayoral election pitted Paul Vallas, an Uber reformer against Brandon Johnson, a teacher and member of the Chicago Teachers Union. Johnson is now beginning to unravel the damage done by Arne Duncan, Rahm Emanuel, and the business leadership.
Resseger writes:
Right now we are watching in real time as Chicago tries to figure out how to undo the consequences of a catastrophic, two-decades long experiment in marketplace school reform.
Chicago’s Board of Education has voted to implement an important first step in Mayor Brandon Johnson’s proposed school district overhaul: the elimination of student based budgeting.
Mayor Johnson seeks to restore equal opportunity across a school district that has become marked by magnet schools, charter schools, elite and selective public schools, struggling neighborhood schools, and neighborhoods without a a public high school or even a traditional public elementary school.
Johnson has prioritized major changes in the Chicago Public Schools, whose problems became especially obvious in June of 2013, when Mayor Rahm Emanuel closed 50 neighborhood public schools because, as he claimed, they were under-enrolled. Eve Ewing, a University of Chicago sociologist explains that, “80 percent of the students who would be affected were African American… and 87 percent of the schools to be closed were majority black.” (Ghosts in the Schoolyard, p. 54)
Chicago was an early experimenter with school reform. Brandon Johnson, the city’s elected mayor, leads Chicago’s schools as part of the 1994 mayoral governance plan imposed on the public schools by Mayor Richard M. Daley and the Illinois legislature. The Chicago Public Schools adopted universal, districtwide school choice, and the launch in 2004 of Renaissance 2010 (led by Arne Duncan) that involved the authorization of a mass of new charter schools and the subsequent closure of so-called failing neighborhood public chools. Chicago adopted a strategy called “portfolio school reform,” described in a National Education Policy Center brief: “The operational theory behind portfolio districts is based on a stock market metaphor—the stock portfolio under the control of a portfolio manager. If a stock is low-performing, the manager sells it. As a practical matter, this means either closing the school or turning it over to an charter school….”
Then in 2014, Mayor Emanuel added a districtwide funding plan called student based budgeting. In a 2019 report, Roosevelt University professor Stephanie Farmer explained: “Student Based Budgeting fundamentally remade the approach to funding public schools. Student Based Budgeting is akin to a business model of financing public schools because funds are based on student-consumer demand and travel with the student-consumer to the school of their choice. (The plan contrasts with)… the old public good approach to financing public schools that ensured a baseline of education professionals in each school.”
Because it is known that aggregate school test scores correlate primarily with poverty and wealth, it was predicable that student based budgeting would put schools in Chicago’s poorest neighborhoods on a race to the bottom, leading to schools with tragically limited programming for the city’s most vulnerable students and more school closures. Farmer concludes: “Our findings show that Chicago Public Schools’ putatively color-blind Student Based Budgeting reproduces racial inequality by concentrating low budget public schools almost exclusively in Chicago’s Black neighborhoods. The clustering of low budget schools in low-income Black neighborhoods adds another layer of hardship in neighborhoods experiencing distress from depopulation, low incomes, and unaffordable housing.”
In late March of this year, WBEZ’s Sarah Karp reported that the Board of Education voted to launch a new plan to determine how much each school has to spend on teachers and programming: “Chicago Public Schools is officially moving away from a school funding formula that pitted schools against each other as they competed for students… District officials… announced (on March 21, 2024) they are implementing a formula that targets resources for individual schools based on the needs of students, such as socioeconomic status and health. They will abandon student based budgeting—a formula unveiled a decade ago under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel that provided a foundational amount of money based on how many students were enrolled…. Under the needs-based formula, every school will get at least four foundation positions, including an assistant principal, plus core and ‘holistic teachers.’… Schools will then get additional funding based on the opportunity index, which looks at barriers to opportunity including race, socioeconomic status, education, health and community factors.”
While undoing a market-based scheme for school funding and operations is clearly a moral imperative, the challenges appear daunting. Karp continues: “This change was expected as Mayor Brandon Johnson and others have sharply criticized student based budgeting. However, it was unclear how it would play out, especially as the district faces a $391 million deficit for the next school year. The shortfall is the result of federal COVID relief funds running out… District officials offered no information at a Board of Education meeting… on how the district will fill the budget hole.”
In addition to the threat of a serious financial shortfall, another challenge is the outcry from parents who have over the past two decades become a constituency for charter schools, magnet schools and selective high schools. Mayor Johnson has tried to reassure parents: “(L)et me assure people that—whether its a selective enrollment school or magnet school—we will continue to invest in those goals… (A)ll I’m simply saying is that where education is working in particular at our selective enrollment schools and our magnet schools, my position is like any other parents in Chicago: that type of programming should work in all of our schools. And that has not been the case. Neighborhood schools have been attacked, they have been demonized, and they’ve been disinvested in, and Black and brown parents overwhelmingly send their children to those schools. So it’s not just demonizing and disinvesting in Black and brown schools, it’s demonizing and disinvesting in Black and brown people—and not under my administration.”
Although school choice plans like Chicago’s were originally premised on the idea of providing more choices for those who have few, in her profound book, Ghosts in the Schoolyard, Eve Ewing explains that families in Chicago do not have equal access in today’s school system based on school choice: “While choosing the best option from a menu of possibilities is appealing in theory, researchers have documented that in practice the ‘choice’ model often leaves black families at a disadvantage. Black parents’ ability to truly choose may be hindered by limited access to transportation, information, and time, leaving them on the losing end of a supposedly fair marketplace.” (Ghosts in the Schoolyard, p. 23) Families dealing with poverty and its challenges are more likely to select a neighborhood school within walking distance of their home.
Mayor Johnson and his school board are facing a fraught political battle in the midst of severe budget challenges. Chicago school reform has exacerbated inequality. The families whose children remain in traditional neighborhood schools that have been undermined by school choice and student based budgeting have watched their their schools lose staff and programs their children need. At the same time, families who have benefited from charter schools, magnet schools and selective-enrollment high schools have now become strong supporters of the programs they have come to take for granted.
Mayor Johnson has been very clear, however, about what the past two decades of portfolio school reform, school choice and student based budgeting have meant for Chicago: “What has happened in the city of Chicago is selective enrollment schools go after students who perform academically on paper. It’s a very narrow view of education. Let’s also ensure that other areas of need are also highlighted and lifted up. That’s arts, our humanities, technology, trades… It’s not like we’re asking for anything radical. We’re talking about social workers, counselors, class sizes that are manageable. We’re talking about full wraparound services for treatment for families who are experiencing the degree of trauma that exists in this city.”

As an aside, as a high school teacher in New York, I remember the enormous blowback from students, teachers and parents about market fundamentalist corporate reform. State head of education at the time, John king, did not consult teachers and other community groups in order to resolve issues. Instead, he contacted everyone in the business community. Through the current novel I’m teaching, I’m teaching it through the lens of the effects of market fundamentalist policies affecting middle- and working class people. Kids are loving it.
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Yossarian, John King keeps failing up. After his disastrous stint as State Commissioner in NY, he was appointed to succeed Arne Duncan as Secretary of Ed. Then Ed Trust. Now, chancellor of the SUNY system. Now on the short list at Harvard. At least he won’t have to worry about plagiarism issues since he has no record of scholarship.
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Why does incompetence get promoted as such? What happened to the merit of ‘meritocracy’?
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Marylanders don’t like him either. I think he only got about 2% of the vote when he ran for Governor.
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I do love that snark, Diane!
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No scholarship is win for “reformers”such as King appointed to higher education. He won’t need to worry about a billionaire donor getting him fired for plagiarism.
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The portfolio model of education is a misapplication of business practice applied to a public service. It caused tremendous disruption and displacement of poor families. Market based strategies create winners and losers. The losers in this model were the poor students and the public schools. The winners were the developers that used school closures to move the poor out of areas near the central business district and replace them with profit generating white families that bought homes in the newly renovated properties.
If done well, the program will be more equitable for poor students who have many needs. If they can develop positive approaches that will support the whole student and reach out to families, it should result in better outcomes. When school districts work with families, programs are more likely to be successful and have a longer, positive impact on students and communities.
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Retired Teacher,
You are suggesting community schools, which has nothing in common with the portfolio model. In the portfolio model, schools are treated like stocks. Get rid of the bad ones, hold on to the good ones.
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We need to forget test based accountability, but not forget the students with low scores. Students may possess many talents that cannot be demonstrated through reading and math scores. We need to start investing in students and provide an array of programs that may benefit them. A lot of people have discounted the work of Howard Gardner. It’s popular to bash him and Lucy Calkins in right wing circles.
What I saw in my career was plenty of students with talents that cannot be measured through scores on reading and math. If we nurture their talents in the arts or trades, they will become productive citizens irrespective of test scores. Graduation from high school matters a lot more than scores on a bubble test.
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I wonder what Simone Biles scored. Or Michael Phelps. Or Streisand.
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Beautifully said, Diane!!! Yes, we need cosmologists AND cosmetologists, not some ridiculous Common Corey one-size-fits-all curriculum. That’s just idiotic, and anyone who supports such a thing (I’m looking at you, Fordham Institute and Gates Foundation) is just a clueless (and dangerous) buffoon stomping through the flower garden of U.S. education in his or her big, unlaced, deformy boots.
OK. And now I have to share a Barbara Streisand story. It comes from the autobiography, called Audition, by the great casting director Michael Shurtleff. So, one day Shurtleff is sitting with a director, munching on sandwiches, and putting up with the required open-call auditions that every show, under equity rules, has to hold. He admits that they are barely paying any attention to the people coming on and off the stage. So, a young woman comes out on the stage and she grabs their attention because she is wearing a mink coat and carrying a tall, three-legged stool. She sits the stool down, steps in front of it, hooks her thumbs under the top of the mink on both sides, and throws it to the ground. Underneath, she is wearing a skimpy bikini. Then she looks at them, takes a wad of bubblegum out of her mouth and sticks it under the top of the stool. Then she sits back on the stool and opens her mouth and sings with a voice that, according to Shurtleff, was powerful enough to blow the doors open at the back of the auditorium.
Barbara was and is the greatest.
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That’s a good one!
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Resseger cites Eve Ewing and Ghosts in the Schoolyard. It is required reading alongside Dr. Ravitch’s Death and Life of the Great American School System and Reign of Error.
Ewing’s book is compelling poetry, ethnographic research, history, educational critique, and story all wrapped into one beautiful essay (don’t want to call it text).
She poses “What a school means” and why these schools matter so much and the “Dueling Realities” of public / neighborhood voice vs. the officials’ words.
Ewing lets the words of community participants, the officials, parents, and students tell the story – with her participant-observer insight scattered about in just the right places.
And, she hints at the perfect storm of 2001’s education accountability reform, racism in urban development, and protecting neighborhood all of which begat privatization and neo-liberalism – and what has proven to be a cautionary tale for 2017 to present – and a storm playing out in suburbs and rhetoric statewide across the country.
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Nice review!
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If your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail...
In other words, different problems require different solutions (or tools).
Changing the dispersion of funds won’t undo the systemic INEQUALITY, required for the few to rule the many. Changing the wording of the tax and transfer process won’t end the foundational PREJUDICE of selective worthiness, fueled by TEST SCORES. A wraparound school band-aid, doesn’t end the social wounds, that have yet to be ended by schooling. Whether it’s called “Cost Per Pupil” or “Student Based Budgeting“, the money still lands in private pockets. Time wise, schooling and prejudice, run along. Waiting for schooling to end prejudice, is like expecting an editor to give a bad review to a book he-she edited…
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Schooling alone will never undo prejudice, and attending college does not automatically ensure entry to the middle class. However, acknowledging that reform has failed to address inequity is a step in a better direction.
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Yes, RT. Exactly.
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RT: ”Schooling alone will never undo prejudice, . . . “ True. However, is there EVER “schooling alone”?
That is, if education is understood as a dynamic if both formal and informal thing that occurs and that can have its influence decades later, there is a (probably uncharted) interaction between different environments, home, family, friends, school, etc.
My guess is that the resistance to public schooling about the history of racism, for instance, is that same potential kind of education (school to home) as being rejected out of hand by racist parents. (Just a guess, though. Pardon me while I calm the snakes growing out of my head.)
I think just “going to school,” where different people from different backgrounds mix (with a truly qualified set of teachers) is just the beginning of getting what a public education is about.
BTW, I received the latest GATES Foundation blurb that says that . . . WOW, mathematics education has an emotional component. I, for one, am glad to be told that. CBK
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true
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Diane: Speaking of failing upwards, not to mention misfits, I saw that Rob Emanuel is presently working as the ambassador to Japan. CBK
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Addendum to Rob Emanuel as ambassador to Japan . . . Like “Christian Nationalism,” I’m still trying to wrap my head around the phrasing (she said, squinting all the while, as her head blew up). CBK
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I think you meant RAHM Emanuel, not Rob
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Hello Diane: Yes, “RAHM.“ Thank you, and I stand corrected. (Not that I want to think about him any further.)
But from what I remember about him and the shutting-down-schools thing, his being an ambassador to anything is just more of the upside-down barking-dog universe we now live in. CBK
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RAHM has lots of connections, eg Obama. The worst thing he did as mayor was to close 50 schools at one fell swoop. The other worst thing he did was to refuse to release a video of a 16-year-old kid who was shot and killed by police. They said he was threatening them. After the election, when the video came out, it was clear that he was running away.
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Diane: I had an episode of “cognitive dissonance” just seeing “Rahm” and “Ambassador” in the same sentence. CBK
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Understandable
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Same. And what gets me is that after all the damage he did, he gets this breathtakingly cushy job, funded by U.S. taxpayers–a gorgeous residence, free; lavish state dinners, free; transportation, free; a substantial salary (180K?). And you are paying for it.
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Bob . . . Rahm . . . some kind of “in the loop” thing. Once you’re in, you’re in. CBK
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Ambassador to Japan. Wow. Talk about a nice gig. And for what? Destroying schools while achieving ZERO improvement? Quite a job there, Rahmy.
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