Chicago Sun-Times

ALDERMAN BACKS PLAN TO MOVE ELITE SCHOOL INTO ELEMENTARY’S BUILDING

- BY LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K Education Reporter

Decatur Classical School, a elite K- 6th school that’s long complained of outgrowing its Far North Side facility, could move into a large building currently occupied by Field Elementary School by September 2017.

Ald. Joe Moore ( 49th) champions the plan, according to Decatur’s principal and expansion committee chair, who sent a letter Tuesday to the school’s parents. And CPS has “tentativel­y blessed” it, chairman Tim McCaffrey said, pending the outcome of community meetings.

“Eugene Field Elementary School is large enough to accommodat­e a K- 8 school, with two classes at each grade, and also has available space for administra­tive offices, Diversifie­d Learners, science labs and dedicated music and art instructio­n,” the letter read. “In addition, Eugene Field has a gymnasium, a cafeteria, an auditorium and an outdoor playground.

“We recognize that this move would represent a change for Eugene Field School, its neighborin­g schools and the residents of the 49th Ward, and we respect the process they will now go through as they discuss this potential change.”

Decatur’s current facility, 7030 N. Sacramento Avenue, was designed for small children in grades K- 2, and there isn’t room to have two classes of each grade — let alone to expand to grades 7 and 8, McCaffrey said.

“Our library at Decatur is also the music teacher’s office, the counselor’s office, the Latin teacher’s office,” McCaffrey said. The children who study a year or two above their typical grade level have to find another school to attend for seventh and eighth grade and are not guaranteed places in academic centers at elite high schools.

School officials have said that puts enormous pressure on its fifth and sixth grades to score perfect applicatio­ns.

The proposal would keep Field’s current students in grades 5 through 8 in place until they graduate, and then children who start at nearby New Field would be rerouted after fourth grade to nearby Kilmer Elementary School, McCaffrey said.

Field serves about 200 children, nearly all of whom are considered low- income, and just laid off several teachers. Decatur has almost 300, only 12 percent of whom are considered low- income.

Moore wrote on his website that the number of children in Rogers Park is shrinking overall so much that Field won’t long be sustainabl­e.

CPS can’t replace a school without undergoing a legal process that includes public hearings and Board of Education approval. A district spokeswoma­n didn’t immediatel­y comment.

Decatur’s Local School Council hosts a meeting Thursday evening at 7 p. m. at 7030 N. Sacramento. And Moore has scheduled his own community meeting on Aug. 30 also at 7 p. m. at Sullivan High School, 6631 N Bosworth Ave.

 ??  ?? Ald. Joe Moore
Ald. Joe Moore

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