Current Issue

Adolescent Literacy

A raft of past programs have failed to substantially improve the reading skills of middle grade and high school students. CPS is trying once again, as part of a federal project that aims to help teens learn how to analyze complex non-fiction.

Lorraine Forte

June 09, 2010

Nationally, the small schools movement is pretty much dead. Turnarounds and charters are the focus now. In Chicago and elsewhere, the tens of millions poured into small schools by the Gates Foundation and other funders has dried up.

April 06, 2010

Principal Coralia Barraza is deeply committed to her school, Orozco Fine Arts & Sciences Elementary in Pilsen. Parents, community leaders and teachers praise her leadership. Since she took the helm at Orozco, test scores have improved.

But the work of running a high-poverty school has taken its toll, and Barraza plans to retire soon. That’s not surprising, after eight years on a job in which she’s expected to function as a CEO, instructional leader, and—out of necessity, given the scarcity of district resources—fundraiser.

January 19, 2010

During the week in which we finished this issue of Catalyst In Depth, Mayor Richard M. Daley went on record promising more chapters in Renaissance 2010. Meanwhile, teachers, principals, parents and students awaited the announcement of this year’s list of schools slated for closure or turnaround.

October 16, 2009

As a writer and editor, I have a rule: Avoid the use of catch-phrases, clichés and jargon in articles whenever possible. Readers are better served by vivid illustration—with anecdotes, data, telling details or colorful quotes—than by overused or vague expressions.

September 30, 2009

Three Chicago neighborhoods are taking the first steps toward potential replication of the Harlem Children’s Zone, the highly-praised program that provides education and social support to poor children and families in Central Harlem.

Representatives from social service agencies in Chicago Lawn, Logan Square and Woodlawn will travel to New York City in the coming weeks to attend a multi-day conference and a ‘practitioner’s institute’ for organizations that are interested in launching Promise Neighborhoods, an initiative of the Obama Administration modeled on the Children’s Zone.

September 03, 2009

Mentoring to curb student shootings, tougher criteria to become a teacher and data, data, data are some highlights from Schools CEO Ron Huberman’s speech Thursday to a standing-room-only crowd at the City Club, where he outlined his strategies for improving schools and promised more details in the weeks to come.

July 08, 2009

Recently, Chicago Public Schools CEO Ron Huberman told school principals that the district plans to focus on data analysis as a first step toward improvement. There's one statistic that the district ought to immediately turn its attention to: suspensions and expulsions of African-American boys.

May 22, 2009

Could the state’s budget deficit be a blessing in disguise for education funding? That might turn out to be the case, if state Sen James Meeks is successful in finally getting Senate Bill 750 passed into law. What’s different this time around is that the proposal takes aim not just at school funding, but the state’s crippling $11 billion deficit.

The proposal would raise $1 billion for schools, $1 billion for capital projects and $4 billion for the state’s general revenue fund.

May 07, 2009

More classroom time, more early education and more incentives for school staff are at the top of the agenda for next year under a proposed $47.6 billion federal education budget unveiled Thursday.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan talked about the 2010 education budget in a telephone press conference with reporters, where he repeatedly stressed that his goal was to cut wasteful or ineffective programs and shift spending with a “laser-like focus” toward initiatives that aim to improve the worst-performing schools.