Chicago Sun-Times

CPS TO RECOMMEND JENNER, OGDEN MERGER

- BYLAURENFI­TZPATRICK Education Reporter Email: lfitzpatri­ck@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ bylaurenfi­tz

Top Chicago Public Schools officials are backing the merger of two North Side elementary schools at either end of the economic spectrum, they informed community members in a letterMond­ay.

Two years after their principals ls raised the possibilit­y, the heavilyy

olle white Ogden Internatio­nal School of Chicago, 24 W. Walton, and the e predominan­tly black Edward Jenner Elementary Academy of the Arts, 1119 N. Cleveland, are now set to be consolidat­ed as of the 20182019 school year, pending approval by the Chicago Board of Education.

Ogden, where only one in four students is considered poor, is nearing capacity and expected to keep growing, needing more space. Jenner, where nearly every one of its 244 students comesfroma­homethat’s below the poverty level, has watched its enrollment drop. CPS projects that the combined school would have a poverty rate of about 35 percent. White studentswo­uld still constitute a plurality, at about 34 percent, followed by black students at 32 percent.

“CPS has never done anything like this,” said Janice Jackson, CPS’ chief education officer. “I really believe that it’s the right decision for the district. While it may be complex in the beginning, 10 years from now, people are all going to be taking credit for this …

“We have tomerge two communitie­s together, and we don’t take that lightly, but I do know our students are going to rise to the occasion and that everyone in the community will end up better off as a result of being in a diverse environmen­t that’s high performing and that has the support that it needs for the children to be successful.”

The Board of Education would vote on the proposed merger by February. State lawrequire­s district leaders to announce any plans to close or consolidat­e schools by Dec. 1.

Announcing the decision now affords time to build a “concrete transition plan that really answers of f th the questionst­i thatth t community members still have,” she said, about, how the school’s grades might be divided up or its three campuses managed. “There’s a lot that still has to get worked out.”

It’s also not yet clear what the school would be called or which school’s model would become the curriculum, though supporters favor the benefits of Ogden’s internatio­nal baccalaure­ate program.

The steering committee made up of neighbors, clergy and communitym­embers fromboth schools has called the proposal “a win- win for both schools.”

Jenner has been in danger of closing because of underenrol­lment — district leaders came close to shuttering it during the 2013 mass closings.

Randall Blakey, a North Side pastor and co- chair of the Jenner/ Ogden Steering Committee, called the decision “an about face to the separate but unequal education that hasbeenapa­rt of the city ofChicago’s paradigm.”

He said a long education campaign funded by a grant has brought families initially wary of merging diverse cultures together to support the proposal.

“A number of people have concerns, some of which even disagree with the reason why or the overall plan itself but that was to be expected. Anytime you have something that is racially charged, it is going to bring out those sentiments across the board,” Blakey said. “Now we get down to the nitty gritty and begin to hash out what it’ll look like.”

 ?? | JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Ogden Internatio­nal School, 24W. Walton.
| JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Ogden Internatio­nal School, 24W. Walton.

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