Chicago Sun-Times

$32 million awarded to schools across CPS in ‘largest-ever’ academic program expansion

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, EDUCATION REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

Chicago Public Schools officials on Tuesday announced receiving a total of $32 million for new high-quality programs at 32 schools across the city, including long-neglected neighborho­od schools on the South and West sides.

The investment­s — touted by Mayor Rahm Emanuel as the district’s largest-ever academic program expansion — will give 17,000 students access to bolstered curriculum, including new Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate programs at seven schools and STEM programs at 11 schools, according to CPS.

Fine arts programs are being added at six schools, dual language programs to four schools, world language programs at two schools and personaliz­ed learning programs at two schools.

The funding will benefit a student population that’s about 80 percent low-income, according to the district. The new programs are clustered in “IB neighborho­ods” and “STEM neighborho­ods.” CPS says they’ll help address gaps in parts of the city as identified in a new Annual Regional Analysis, which was also released Tuesday.

That includes the West Side’s first IB program at Michele Clark Magnet High School, the West Side’s first magnet cluster program at Collins High School, and Bronzevill­e’s first early college STEM program at Chicago Military Academy.

“Parents can move to a neighborho­od and know that their child’s going to be educated from kindergart­en to 12th grade on an IB education,” Emanuel said during a press conference at Cuffe Academy in Auburn Gresham, which received funding for a new STEM program. “They can do the same going to a STEM neighborho­od.”

The funding infusion is Emanuel’s latest boost to the city’s IB network, which he has championed throughout his administra­tion. As he seeks to burnish his legacy in his final weeks in office — and steer attention away from the 50 schools he closed during his first term — the new funding means North America’s largest IB network will increase to 62 schools serving 19,000 students.

Principals from 102 schools applied to receive the funding, which will be distribute­d over six years for staffing, training, learning resources and more. CPS credited the new state funding formula for improving the district’s finances to support the new programs.

Fifty-eight schools were invited to submit full proposals, and 32 were chosen “based on a thorough evaluation process that included community and parent engagement, a needs assessment, interviews with school staff, letters of support from community stakeholde­rs, and approval by each school’s Local School Council,” according to the district.

“It really was a community driven process by school leaders engaging stakeholde­rs throughout their school community, and it was driven by student interest and need,” CPS Chief Education Officer LaTanya McDade said.

In a statement, Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey dismissed the expansions as Emanuel doling out scraps of “token funding.”

“Today’s meager funding for a handful of schools only underscore­s the critical financial shortfalls that hundreds of our public schools continue to confront,” Sharkey said. “The mayor’s relentless efforts to spin his distorted priorities and public education bloodletti­ng into something positive cannot cover up this disaster.”

 ?? MITCHELL ARMENTROUT/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks Tuesday at Cuffe Academy, 8324 S. Racine.
MITCHELL ARMENTROUT/SUN-TIMES Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks Tuesday at Cuffe Academy, 8324 S. Racine.

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