and that there is the longest "puff piece" i have ever read. the chicago reader, until recent financial problems left it a shadow of it's former self, was one of the most thorough investigative papers in the state. hell, probably the country. they wrote long cover stories like this about just about everything that went on in this city since it's founding in 1971. they always were unabashedly lefty, taking the government of chicago and cook county to task at least once a month in pages and pages long cover, exposing all manner of corruption from ballot box stuff to police brutality to bid rigging, etc. their investigation into police misconduct in death penalty cases in illinois is one reason we have a moratorium here and why john burge is on trial.
trust me, they never, ever put puff on the front page. nor had to.
who is emily krone?
Senior Manager for Outreach and Publications
Consortium on Chicago School Research
Email: ekrone@uchicago.edu
Emily Krone is the senior manager for outreach and publications at the Consortium on Chicago School Research.
Krone previously worked as an education reporter at the Daily Herald in Arlington Heights. Most recently, she traveled across the country writing about charter schools and school reform as part of a year-long journalism fellowship sponsored by the Washington-based Phillips Foundation.
Krone received a Master in Science and Journalism from Medill at Northwestern University and a B.A. in history from Princeton University.
http://uei.uchicago.edu/about/staff/bios/ekrone.shtmlmore from emily krone
Via speakerphone from his office at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, linguistics professor Noam Chomsky told Dundee-Crown High School students that a two-tiered educational system exists: While the elite attend schools that promote critical, independent thought, the masses attend schools that train students to pass tests and follow orders.
http://www.dailyherald.com/story/?id=192670&src=5another completely unrelated but typical reader cover story also by emily krone, for those who are interested
http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/why-did-pieter-die/Content?oid=914993>the consortium was instrumental in the process of reforming chicago schools. and yes, i really do mean reforming. however imperfect they are today, they are light years from the black board jungles that many of them were when i moved to the city 30 years ago.
the university of chicago lab school has been at the forefront of progressive education for a century.
now, would you care to back up your contention that "chicago charters not the fairy tale success story they were initially made out to be."? fyi no one in chicago believes in fairy tales. but what we do believe in is doing the best for all of our kids. moving to the suburbs so kids could go to better schools has been the number one reason for leaving chicago for several decades. these days people are not only not moving to the burbs when the kids turn 5, they are moving TO the city when the kids turn 5.
the archdiocese of chicago ran a successful private schools system, open to children of any faiths for decades that has shrunken to 1/10th of it's former self in the 20 years that richard daley has been mayor.
you can point to all the studies or blogs or opinion that you like about charter schools. but people actually handing over their children is a whole different measure of proof. there are no empty seats in charters in chicago.