With today's vote, 49 public schools will close in Chicago

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The Chicago Board of Education, six members appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, voted unanimously today to close 49 schools in the nation’s third-largest public school district, the New York Times reports.

The mass closure represents the greatest number of schools closed by one school district in one fell swoop ever. It also represents one of the single biggest failures on the part of school governance to consider the studied opinions of the most important stakeholders in our public schools, many of them presented in protests and joined by similar groups nationwide in solidarity.

Specific objections in Chicago ranged from safety issues, such as students having to cross gang turf lines to attend the “receiving” or “welcoming” schools, to charges of racial discrimination. Specific reasons given by Mr Emanuel for wanting to close the schools ranged from “underutilization,” which can easily be seen as a direct effect of policies implemented in the schools following passage of the No Child Left Behind law, to the inability to provide an adequate education for students at all schools in the city.

As of the beginning of the year, the district said it was planning to close 129 schools. Then the list was whittled down in March to 53, and finally, at today’s board meeting, four additional schools were spared.

“The greatest challenge facing our school system right now is that tens of thousands of children every year are trapped in underutilized schools and under-resourced schools,” the Times quoted Barbara Byrd-Bennett, the chief executive of Chicago Public Schools, as saying. “We cannot maintain a system that cannot be sustained and does not benefit the children.”

The district’s own data shows the student population is down about 145,000 over the last decade, and the district has already closed more than 70 schools since 2001. By closing these 49 programs, the district hopes to save more than $500 million over the next 10 years, hoping to make a dent in a projected $1 billion deficit.

List of Chicago schools to be closed and receiving schools

  1. Altgeld E.S. → Wentworth
  2. Armstrong Elem Math & Science → Leland
  3. Attucks E.S. (2 year phaseout) → Beethoven
  4. Banneker E.S. → Mays
  5. Bethune E.S. → Gregory
  6. Bontemps E.S. → Nicholson
  7. Buckingham → Montefiore
  8. Calhoun North E.S. → Cather
  9. Canter Middle School → Hart, Ray
  10. Delano E.S. → Melody
  11. Dumas Technology Acad E.S. → Wadsworth
  12. Roque De Duprey E.S. → DeDiego
  13. Emmet E.S. → Ellington, DePriest
  14. Ericson Elem Scholastic Acad will NOT be closed
  15. Fermi E.S. → South Shore Fine Arts
  16. Garfield Park Prep Acad E.S. → Faraday
  17. M Garvey E.S. will NOT be closed
  18. Goldblatt E.S. → Hefferan
  19. Goodlow Elem Magnet School → Earle
  20. Henson E.S. → C. Hughes
  21. Herbert E.S. → Dett
  22. M Jackson E.S. will NOT be closed
  23. Key E.S. → Ellington
  24. King E.S. → Jensen
  25. Kohn E.S. → Cullen, Lavizzo, L. Hughes
  26. Lafayette E.S. → Chopin
  27. Lawrence E.S. → Burnham
  28. Manierre E.S. will NOT be closed
  29. Marconi Elem Community Acad → Tilton
  30. May Elem Community Acad → Leland
  31. Mayo E.S. → Wells
  32. Morgan E.S. → Ryder
  33. Near North → Montefiore
  34. Overton E.S. → Mollison
  35. Owens Elem Community Acad → Gompers
  36. Paderewski Elem Learning Acad → Cardenas, Castellanos
  37. Parkman E.S. → Sherwood
  38. Peabody E.S. → Otis
  39. Pershing West Elem Magnet School → Pershing East
  40. Pope E.S. → Johnson
  41. Ross E.S. → Dulles
  42. Ryerson E.S. → Ward
  43. Sexton E.S. → Fiske
  44. Songhai Elem Learning Inst → Curtis
  45. Stewart E.S. → Brennemann
  46. Stockton E.S. → Courtenay
  47. Trumbull E.S. → Chappell, McPherson, McCutcheon
  48. Von Humboldt E.S. → DeDiego
  49. West Pullman E.S. → Haley
  50. Williams Middle Prep Academy → Drake
  51. Williams Multiplex E.S. → Drake
  52. Woods Elem Math & Science Acad → Bass
  53. Yale E.S. → Harvard
Paul Katula
Paul Katulahttps://news.schoolsdo.org
Paul Katula is the executive editor of the Voxitatis Research Foundation, which publishes this blog. For more information, see the About page.

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