Photograph; Steve Johnson, an Amundsen High School Local School Council member, recommends that the council craft a letter opposing CPS budget cuts. | DNAInfo/Patty West

Beginning April 7th parents once again will take action. Some will vote and countless of these will be on the ballot. Those who care about and care for children want to be active; they want to decide what goes on in their child’s schools. Perhaps this election invites greater reflection. What was done, can be done and is being done to improve our schools. How can parents help or better yet, be part of the process? Be informed. Learn more about the candidates.

[See “Local School Council elections attract 4,384 parents and community members as candidates” Below.] Vote and learn more about your local school elections. The history is rich and knowledge of it enriches.

How did Chicagoans find the political will to reform the way their schools are run? And what lessons, if any can be learned from their story-not just for people working on school issues, but those intent on changing public policy?
~Mary O’Connell [School Reform Chicago Style, Center for Neighborhood Technology]
Walk with me through the streets of Chicago and you will see parent involvement that makes a difference and did more so back in the day when we saw School Reform Chicago Style,. How did Chicagoans find the political will to reform the way their schools are run? And what lessons, if any can be learned from their story-not just for people working on school issues, but those intent on changing public policy?

With more school closures than anywhere else in the nation, arguably, the Windy City is the canary in the coalmine for public education privatization. It is also the incubator for citizen activism. We see it in the schools. It is also on display during elections. Remember, 4,384 parents and community members appear on the April 2014 ballot.

In Chicago, local control is more than a issue. It is a reality in education. And people know it. Everyday folks work to have a voice. This year, four thousand three hundred and eighty four [4,384] candidates are running. The goal is to be an LSC [Local School Council] adviser. What does that mean? What do they do? How could what occurs in Chicago affect or inspire citizens in other cities? Let us look at the history and examine what we might do.

The Reagan Administration’s report said we were A Nation at Risk. Secretary of Education William Bennett called Chicago’s public schools the “worst in the nation.” And the people, in frustration, sought a way to ameliorate the situation. Mayor Harold Washington was a critical catalyst for the School Reform movement. His steadfast commitment to strong community voices in public schools shepherded a vision, the birth of Local School Councils were brought into being.

Contrary to the tale most historians tell. It was not the Chicago Teachers strike of 1987 that called people to take action. It was frustration and more so the realization that it was time to organize. Of course it also took legislation.

In April 1987, Chicagoans United to Reform Education [CURE] held a citywide conference at Loyola University that drew 400 people. Its position paper (“Needed: A New School System for Chicago”) called for local school councils with authority to hire (and fire) the principal and teachers, establish curriculum, control lump-sum budgeting, and develop a school improvement plan; principals and teachers would have more say, c:entral administration would be lessened. From the time the CURE plan was announced in April1987, Designs for Change began carefully laying the groundwork to build political and . popular support.

Local School Councils (LSCs) were created by the Chicago School Reform law of 1988. LSCs are duly-elected bodies at nearly every Chicago Public Schools (CPS) elementary, middle and high school. The Councils are intended to be committees comprised of parents. That said, without exception, the LSC chairperson must be a mother, or a father, or possibly a child’s legal live-in guardian.

The Local School Councils are not advisory bodies – the LSCs have real decision making authority in the schools. These Local School Councils hire the school principal, and evaluate him or her each and every year. Councils decide whether or not to renew a principal’s contract after four years, and most notably, they approve the entire school budget and annual strategic plan (called the school improvement plan). These are the strongest school site-based management systems in the nation, and perhaps Local School Councils will become a model? After all, LSC’s do well for our schools and with our children, or did before recent interventions. [Oh, be cautious during this next election! Familiarize yourself with the candidates. See Below.]

According to The Big Picture, a Designs for Change research report, Breaking Up a Rigid Bureaucracy and Creating Local Initiative was quite helpful…it helped the children and their schools. “Research analyzing elementary school achievement over the past 15 [1990 – 2005] years in Chicago reveals 144 public inner city elementary schools — all of them low-achieving in 1990 — that have shown substantial and sustained improvement in reading test score gains, with the typical school in this group now reading at the national average on the Iowa Reading Test.” The number of students in these schools reading at or above the national average has more than doubled.

The most consistent characteristic of these schools is that all adults work together to improve education. Teachers, parents, Local School Council, principal, and community agencies labor as a team. The study states that the most effective and long-lasting improvements occurs when schools take swift advantage of major authority granted by the legislature in the 1988 reform legislation. The Local School Councils built on their success and will once more as long as we are active. Please Vote, but first become more informed. Acquaint yourself with the candidates!

Local School Council elections attract 4,384 parents and community members as candidates

By Linda Lutton | Originally Published at WBEZ. April 4, 2014

There’s an election in the city of Chicago Monday and Tuesday that you may not even have heard about—and thousands of candidates are running.

Local School Council elections happen every two years (Mayor Rahm Emanuel thinks he voted in the last one). Just about every Chicago public school has a council—something like a mini school board. (Charters don’t have LSCs, but there’s a bill afoot to change that.) Councils are made up of six parents, two community members, two teachers, and one “non-teaching” school staffer. The councils are unique in the nation because they have some real power. They hire and fire the principal, and along with the principal they determine parts of the budget and curriculum, and outline the school’s strategy for improvement.

Under mayoral control of the schools, the councils’ power has been scaled back; schools on probation get less say over budgets and principal selection. Many of Chicago’s new schools and privately managed public schools have only “advisory” LSCs.

Despite that, and despite many schools struggling to get enough candidates to fill their council, there are still 4,384 parents and community people running for local school councils this time around, along with 1,736 teachers and other school staffers. Elections at grammar schools are Monday, at high schools Tuesday. Polls are open 6a.m. to 7p.m.. Any Chicago resident can vote—no citizenship or voter card needed. Candidate statements must be posted in each school and made available for the public.

WBEZ filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the list of candidates from all schools (we’re not sure why the school district doesn’t post this list for the public, or why it takes a FOIA and 10 business days to produce it). We present it here, along with a few things we noticed about the candidates:

  • Indicted state representative LaShawn Ford, who denies allegations of bank fraud, wants to become a community representative at George Rogers Clark Elementary.
  • Ninth Ward Alderman Anthony Beale, who most recently ran for U.S. Congress (he came in third in the special election to determine who would replace Jesse Jackson, Jr.) is on the ballot as an incumbent community representative at Brooks College Prep, which is in his ward.
  • Former Chicago Board of Education member Rodrigo Sierra, who was hand picked by Mayor Rahm Emanuel for the school board, is running at two schools—at Blaine as a community rep and at InterAmerican Magnet as a parent. It’s believed to be the first time a former Chicago Board of Education member has run for LSC. Sierra is a former deputy press secretary under Mayor Richard M. Daley; he resigned from Emanuel’s school board when he was asked by the mayor to join the Chicago Housing Authority Board, where he still serves.
  • The two schools where teachers announced publicly they would refuse to give the ISAT exam this spring—Saucedo Scholastic Academy and Drummond Montessori —both have contested parent races. At Saucedo, all races (parent, teacher, school staff and community) are contested.
  • Two high-performing elementary schools that have had no LSC until now have the most hotly contested parent LSC races in the city. Eighteen parents are running for six seats at Skinner North, a selective school, and 16 parents are running at STEM Magnet; both schools opened in the last five years.
  • Earle Elementary in Englewood, which has had a rocky consolidation with Goodlow, one of Chicago’s 50 closed schools, also has 16 parents running.
  • The two schools attracting most community member candidates are South Shore International and Roosevelt high schools, with 10 candidates each.
  • Ames Middle School—which the Chicago Board of Education recently converted to a military high school despite noisy community opposition—will not hold elections. Current LSC members were given a letter saying that “next fall, a non-binding advisory poll will be conducted at Ames on report card pick-up day to nominate candidates for appointment to the parent and teacher representative positions on the newly constituted Board of Governors for Ames.”
  • The school with the greatest number of total candidates is Farragut High School in Little Village, where 38 candidates are running—12 parents, 7 community members, 5 teachers, 7 non teaching staff, and 5 students (high schools elect one advisory student representative).
  • Some very troubled schools have not attracted enough candidates to fill their councils. At Austin Business and Entrepreneurship High School, where WBEZ reported students went much of first semester without teachers in key subjects, only three parents are running for the six seats available on the council. At Hirsch High School, where low enrollment is also hurting educational offerings, just one teacher, one parent and one non-teaching staffer have signed up for the 11-person council.
  • A few Chicago Teachers Union staffers pepper the list. Union researcher Sarah Hainds is running as a community rep at Amundsen High School. Joey McDermott (a union organizer featured in Chicagoland) is running as a parent at Sayre. Active Chicago Public Schools employees are not allowed to run as parents in their children’s schools, or as community reps.
  • Several charter school advocates are running, which has prompted “vote no” Facebook campaigns by activists and parents who believe the charter advocates are trying to undermine the traditional public schools from within. Three employees of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools are running: Jodie Cantrell as a community rep at Blaine, Eric Johnson as a parent rep at Audubon, and Jelani McEwen as a community rep at Kenwood.
  • Some other names that caught our eye: Vicente “Vince” Sanchez, Jr., chief of staff to 25th Ward Alderman Danny Solis, is trying to keep his seat as a community rep at two schools in the ward, Whittier Elementary and Juarez High School.
  • Juliana Stratton, executive director of the Cook County Judicial Advisory Council under Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, is running as a parent rep at Kenwood Academy High School.
  • Lori S. Yokoyama, running as a parent rep at Payton College Prep, is the 4th Ward Republican Committeeman and has been a candidate for alderman and Cook County State’s attorney.
  • Charles R. Bowen, an Emanuel appointee to the Illinois International Port District and “the link that connected the African American communities to the Daley Administration,” will keep his seat as community representative at Chicago Military Academy at Bronzeville.
  • Marc Kaplan, unsuccessful 2010 aldermanic candidate in the 46th Ward and co-chair of Northside Action for Justice, which has organized “to defend public schools from closure and privatization,” is seeking another term as community representative at Uplift High School.
  • Another unsuccessful 46th Ward aldermanic candidate, Scott Baskin, the former CEO of Mark Shale retail stores in Chicago, is running as a community rep at Northside College Prep, where he served seven years as a parent rep.
  • Theresa Mah, senior policy advisor and liaison to the Asian-American community for Gov. Pat Quinn, is running for another term as community rep at Kelly High School.
  • Ahmed Khan, the unsuccessful 2010 candidate for alderman of the 50th Ward (and chair of the West Rogers Park Community organization), is trying to hold onto his seat as community rep at Stone Academy.
  • Wanda Hopkins, a vocal opponent of many CPS policies and an activist with PURE, a group that helped write the law that created LSCs, is running for seats on three councils—as a community rep at Prosser High School and Lewis Elementary (now privately managed by AUSL), and as a parent at Young.
  • We invite you to use the comment section below to tell us what you know about the candidates. The list is in alphabetical order by school. There’s also a downloadable version (scroll down for that).

    Contributing: Tony Arnold, Kathy Chaney, Natalie Moore, Odette Yousef.

    FILES TO DOWNLOAD
    LSC candidates list 2014.xlsx

    Remember each LSC consists of:

    • Six parent representatives, elected by parents and community residents..
    • Two community representatives, elected by parents and community residents..
    • Two teachers, elected by the school staff.
    • The school’s principal.
    • A student elected by students (in the high schools).
    Unique among U.S. cities, Chicago’s LSCs were given strong powers, including powers in the following areas:

    • Principal Selection and Evaluation. LSCs appoint the school’s principal to a four-year contract and rehire or replace the principal at the end of this contract period. And they supervise and evaluate the principal on an ongoing basis.
    • School Improvement Planning. LSCs set priorities for their school’s improvement through helping develop and approve an annual school improvement plan. These plans must focus on achieving student learning standards set by the state.
    • School-Based Budget. LSCs help develop and approve a school budget, with major control over an average of $500,000 per year in flexible funds from the state.


    References and Resources for Introductory Essay…