Shout-Out For Education: Who Went, & How'd It Go?
Did you go, and how did it go? Were there really 30,000 kids there? Was it hot, or tense, or happy, or what?
Tell us your most vivid moment. We need the details.
Our school was one of the last to leave (probably because we were only about 8 minutes away), but the trip to the buses in the south parking lot was frustrating. One rent a cop tells you one thing, a real cop tells you another thing, another guy in an orange shirt tells you another thing, then a cop tells you another thing....
It was probably particularly frustrating for us because we had 9 classes and over 200 kids/teacher/chaperones/gullible parents--so we had 8 buses. There also was a marching band somewhere on the path back to the buses, and grass we couldn't, then could walk on, etc, etc...
Other than the frustration of the post-rally departure, it was uneventful. As to whether the students got anything out of it...probably a small percentage; most of them looked at it as a warm, sunny day out of the classroom where they could sneak a text message or two to the person sitting three seats down from them. They could scream without getting in trouble, they didn't have to think about anything too strenuous...
So to summarize...relatively stress free until departure. Not much substance that pertained to the kids, a few nice moments here and there...I can't wait for the sequel...
P.S. I don't think there were 30,000 people there, I'd probably put it somewhere between 12 - 20,000 (I'm not expert).
And one of the worst because if you were to assess what the kids learned from it, you would find they learned very little. And what did this show cost the CPS? They scheduled 400 buses. Why should the legislature give the city more money for education when they are wasting the money they've already been given?
Some of the adults were no help, either. The snacks were meant to stay on the buses for after the event. Read the memo, people. And teachers actually ENCOURAGING "the wave" and the screaming that accompanied it, while someone was speaking on the stage??? Incredibly disrespectful.
We (teachers and staff) did not want to go but were told it was mandated.
Our students were well behaved but not all were. Lote of cell phones, head phones, screaming, yelling obscenities.
And traffic was awful.
There is $$$ for this!
I estimated about 12-15 thousand there.
Was there more to the event than that? Yes, I was impressed by the students who sang, performed poetry, or made speeches about the effects of violence and fiscal neglect. That was genuinely moving.
But it’s difficult to get too excited about Arne Duncan and Mayor Daley, crying poverty while literally standing in the middle of a huge stadium, paid for with $370 million of taxpayer money. There always seems to be a way to fund the real priorities in Chicago. Multiracial, multigenerational stage scenes aside, Chicago is pretty bald about leaving poor communities and their schools out while funding everything from Millenium Park to dozens of charter start-ups.
I could keep going about how ironic it was to see Jesse Jackson slapping Arne Duncan’s back just a couple of days before Harper and Orr are closed, about how, of all the students who gave speeches, every single one conformed to the mayors story-line. No hint of the dissent that has motivated student protestors at Engelwood, Senn and Austin to name but a few. But in my mind, one fact, says it all—despite literally dozens of speakers and performers including a cross-section of the CPS bureaucracy, not a single teacher spoke or even went to the stage. I guess we’re not part of the Chicago schools story-line.
It was pretty gross. People kept saying 30,000, but I saw 6,000-8,000 for most of the show and with latecomers, it may have pushed 10,000. We were told to sit anywhere because someone else was sat in our section, which our kids were fine with, but then an hour later when that section's ticket holders came, they were very aggressive toward our students.
This was symptomatic of the day--our kids were prepped to interact with other students and found that the stadium was as segregated as our fine city.
Then we got all of the "it's the downstate legislators' fault" line from the speakers, who seemed to have been given talking points. The speaker from Simeon was awesome, but the others were just parroting.
Then Duncan was introduced as "a great champion of education".
We just had eight of us best teachers cut yesterday, so it was like a big **** you to our school and staff.
There wasn't much of a connection for the students as to why were actually there. In fact on the bus going back to school, the students asked that very question. The big screen should have stated things the kids could do to help - either anti guns or funding.
Maybe that was the problem - two huge issues and the issues ran each other for the focus of the event.
But - it was a nice treat and pleasant well arranged event; my kids enjoyed the trip ... they just didn't get the target message.
Next winter remember the Snow Job you got yesterday .
-- alexander
I thought CPS, Jackson, and Daley painted a picture of a non-functioning state government. But there are real, very real disagreements on where to get the money from in the General Assembly. When there isn't enough money it is hard to get agreement. The CPS has its hand out every year, to be honest people outside of Chicago are tired of that story line.
If we use the CPS estimate of $10 per student for transportation (stated in Tribune article), add $4 for food per student, and another $1 for security per student if there were 15,000 we get a cost figure of $225,000. I would bet I am underestimating the costs, but none the less I would say the event was not worth the cost of four teachers.
Questions: If these were high school students, why weren't they in school? Didn't they have final exams to take? Why is it that Daley and Duncan allow students to miss time out of the classroom for that crap, but then yell when students show up at Board meetings to actually take part in the civic process? Thank God my kid's school wasn't involved. I would have kept her at home. Big waste of time, and a wonderful way to exploit children. Way to go, Daley!
The goal wasn't to entertain the kids, I beleive the goal was to make a point. With a lot of bodies. Sometimes you just gotta sit there for the day and take one for the team. Sadly, it probably won't make a difference. I just wish that someone could figure out how to show the people with the money that something different needs to happen.
So it's okay with you that the kids are used as pawns in a game between politicians?
It was the day after finals at my school, and honestly there wasn't much for students to do. I wouldn't have minded students attending, but I know of only a handful that went. (Apparently, the principal notified Central Office that we would not need buses.)
But it does rather gall me that students were encouraged to be docile as lambs and not think for themselves. Surely if a student had asked some hard-hitting questions, s/he would have been escorted out. Or questioned the truthfulness of the mayor's narrative? Or, Heaven forfend, question how money is already spent in CPS?
Granted it's anecdotal and unscientific, but not one teacher has written in here to say the event was a valuable civics lesson for students. That sure makes it look like a mere publicity stunt.
Therefore, if students did not know, it can't simply be blamed on the venue. In closing, I thought that the students were extremely well behaved throughout the stadium (in spite of participating in the wave). I also didn't witness any fights or conflicts of any kind amongst the children (or adults). Also, I would like to think that CPS found a generous donor to offset the cost of this event. I'm almost willing to bet that it was not funded through school funds.


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