Chicago Sun-Times

STUDY: ONEIN FOURBLACKC­PS STUDENTS ATTENDSFAI­LING SCHOOL

Report finds 1 in 5 city schools not fulfilling promise of quality education

- BY LAURENFITZ­PATRICK Education Reporter | ASHLEE REZIN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Email: lfitzpatri­ck@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ bylaurenfi­tz

One in every four AfricanAme­rican students in Chicago Public Schools attends a “failing” school, according to a new analysis that puts the number for Hispanic students at two in 25, and for white students, two in 100.

That’s according to a new analysis published Monday by the education advocacy group New Schools for Chicago, which also says about one in every five schools overall isn’t fulfilling the promise of a quality education. New Schools, previously known for charter school advocacy, took a twoyear average of the scores, such as test scores and attendance, that CPS uses to rate its schools from Level 1+ at the top down to Level 3.

The analysis shows that the system has improved since 2011, when at least half of the schools in 62 of Chicago’s communitie­s were problemati­c — versus just in six of them now. But about 50,000 of the 381,350 students enrolled in district- run and charter schools still are stuck, according to New Schools.

“At end of day, there’s still a lot of kids not getting the education they deserve,” executive director Daniel Anello said. “What was alarming to me was just the ratios. The one in four to me is troublesom­e, as an African- American male.”

The bulk of the lowestperf­orming schools are found on the South and West sides, serving predominan­tly lowincome, African- American students, who constitute 37 percent of CPS students. Austin, Englewood, theNearWes­t Side and West Englewood account for a quarter of them.

Those neighborho­ods also experience­d many of the school closings in 2013. The Chicago Sun- Times examined the 48 general education elementary schools assigned to take students from 50 closed schools. CPS had promised parents that children from closed schools would be sent to higher performers. Eighteen of those “welcoming schools” still hold CPS’ lowest two ratings, the New Schools data shows.

The Chicago Teachers Union said successful schools need stability, and many of the problem schools have higher than average rates of homelessne­ss, special education and mobility— the measure of how many students who start each year remain at the end.

“It is not fair to simply compare race and SQRP stats [ School Quality Rating Policy] and then question why some schools ‘ fail,’ ” CTU researcher Sarah Roths- child said. “A strong team can handle the immense adverse socio- economic issues that students in struggling communitie­s face, especially when they know the students and their familieswe­ll.”

She continued, saying that “the schools that made NSC’s [ New Schools for Chicago] hit list have been plagued by nearly 20 years of corporate education reform attacks and are located in communitie­s that have been devastated by unemployme­nt, disinvestm­ent, disenfranc­hisement and still haven’t recovered from the 2008 housing crisis.”

Austin activist Dwayne Truss said he wasn’t at all surprised that schools serving African- American children struggle, given the additional challenges of educating poor children. He focused on fears that CPS might use the data from the group previously known as charter champions to punish the lowest performers once a school closing moratorium lifts, saying “to me, they’re justifying potential future actions, the way I read it.”

Janice Jackson, CPS’ top education official, pointed to recent research showing that African- American students in Chicago are outperform­ing their counterpar­ts elsewhere in the state.

“I want to make sure people understand and celebrate that and also give the district some credit for reducing the number of low- quality seats from 160,000 to 50,000 — which I said, 50,000 is 50,000 too many,” she said.

“We still have a lot more work to do. My goal is to have every kid go to school that’s quality or better, and this report just reminds that we’re not quite there yet. If we don’t address the achievemen­t gap with our African- American students, we’re not going to reach all of our goals as a district.

And, she said, CPS still has no comprehens­ive citywide schools plan at the top of the recommenda­tions by New Schools, the latest in a series of schools- focused groups to solicit long- term planning for the district with unstable finances exacerbate­d by shrinking enrollment.

Anello said CPS needs “concrete rules which everyone understand­s” for expanding, changing or closing schools to “weed out the political stuff that frankly impedes kids from getting a high- quality education.”

 ??  ?? Chicago Public Schools Chief Education Officer Janice Jackson notes that recent research shows that African- American students in Chicago are outperform­ing their counterpar­ts elsewhere in the state.
Chicago Public Schools Chief Education Officer Janice Jackson notes that recent research shows that African- American students in Chicago are outperform­ing their counterpar­ts elsewhere in the state.

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