蜜桃影视

Explore

New Chicago Schools CEO Will Have to Repair District鈥檚 Reputation, Fight Decreasing Enrollment

Photo credit: Chicago Public Schools via Facebook.com

The new chief executive of Chicago Public Schools knows she will have to navigate a complex landscape of mistrust, controversy, and politics to make changes in the nation鈥檚 third-largest school district. In a recent with the Chicago Tribune, she discussed her priorities.

Janice Jackson, formerly the chief education officer, was named acting CEO of the district in December and is expected to be confirmed permanently by the school board this month. She took over when the previous CEO, Forrest Claypool, amid allegations that he lied during an ethics investigation.

In addition to trouble at the top, analysts have called into question recent praising Chicago鈥檚 student growth and about the city鈥檚 graduation rates.

Getting out from under the shadow of her predecessors and restoring trust in the district will be priorities for Jackson, who attended Chicago Public Schools, and previously served the district as a teacher, principal, and district administrator.

We鈥檝e outlined her stated priorities as she moves into the new role.

1 Restoring trust

Succeeding two disgraced CEOs 鈥 one of whom for participating in a kickback scheme 鈥 is a challenge in itself, but the district is also under the microscope for a number of other scandals, including about rising graduation rates, a state into , and, most recently, that employees stole gift cards meant for students and their families.

鈥淚f people don鈥檛 believe in the district, if they don鈥檛 believe that the district is going in the right direction, they鈥檙e not believing in the work that so many people are doing at the local level,鈥 .

2 Dealing with underenrollment and underperforming schools

Decreasing enrollment across the district and at a number of schools has fueled about whether the district will close schools in 2018. After the district shut down 50 schools in 2013, it put in place a five-year moratorium on closures that lifts this year.

The issue of underenrollment 鈥減ersonally worries me,鈥 . Whether to close struggling schools, attempt to turn them around, or implement special programming to improve them will be a 鈥渘eighborhood by neighborhood decision,鈥 she added.

3 Getting finances under control

In the with the Chicago Tribune, Jackson said that although the district needs more funding from the state, she wants to decrease the amount the district borrows annually to less than $1 billion. The Chicago Board of Education had $6.2 billion of outstanding debt last year, according to a , and Jackson said the annual debt is more than $1 billion.

鈥淚llinois definitely has to allocate more money for education. I think many people agree with that,鈥 she said, noting that the district also needs to spend more efficiently and deal with its debt.

4 Ensuring all students are getting a quality education

Ultimately, Jackson will focus on ensuring that all kids are getting a good education in the district where her own children attend school, she said.

鈥淎t the end of the day, I鈥檓 gonna always look at it like an educator and like a parent,鈥 of making decisions about schools.

Despite its reputation as a leading district in growth and graduation rates, Chicago has come under attack for without passing annual tests. Diminishing budgets have prevented from offering students elective courses, extracurricular programs, and other resources. Additionally, Chicago鈥檚 charter schools have outshone district schools in recent years (though district schools appear to be closing the gap, if slowly).

The Chicago school board is to officially make Jackson the CEO at its January 24 meeting.

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today