Now, this story isn't about me and my awe-inspiring 21 votes. It's not about whether or not there was some sort of problem with the election.I suggest you read the whole thing, and of course we hope to hear your thoughts on this.
This is a story about bureaucracy.
I can rail against charter schools or say negative things about the mayor just like a lot of people who write words that get put on the Internet. I can talk about how great Karen Lewis is just like the next cherished Chicago journalist.
But here is the crux of the situation: Bureaucracies put bureaucracy first. And the reality is that Chicago Public Schools is a horrifically clunky bureaucracy, steeped in nonsensical inefficiencies, ultimately overseen by an unelected board who are themselves nothing more than hand-picked highly privileged bureaucrats. The system is failing its students because the system is more important than the students.
There are a lot of smart and dedicated administrators within CPS. But things are never truly going to turn around so long as everything is about CPS and not about the actual students.
Friday, May 30, 2014
Mechanics: I Ran for Local School Council and Maybe I Even Won!
The author of this article - Phil Huckleberry - discusses his
experience as a candidate for his neighborhood school's LSC. He
apparently won the election, but discovered at a recent meeting that the
results have been challenged. That school's LSC won't meeting until
next year after new elections, and the school's LSC functions would be
governed instead by CPS' central office. Something pertinent Mr.
Huckleberry said in his piece:
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