BOARDWATCH: Board's claims about 'turnaround' success are challenged by parents and community leaders while complaints about conflicts of interest are ignored... Parents, union and community leaders denounce AUSL 'network' in Black Chicago, West Side schools as new AUSL turnarounds are proposed
In a series of dramatic moments, parents, teachers, union and community leaders from Chicago's West Side repeatedly took the floor at the March 26, 2014 meeting of the Chicago Board of Education to denounce the latest proposal to "turn around" three more of the city's elementary schools based on test scores and other invalid measures of school performance. The speakers also noted that the Board of Education has several conflicts of interest in placing the schools in the hands of the clout-heavy AUSL group. They also charged that the AUSL "turnarounds" in the past have failed despite all of the extra resources that the Board gives to "turnaround" schools during the first years of the corporate-style process.

The proposed "turnarounds" were announced in a CPS press release on March 21, but will not appear on the Board meeting agenda until the April Board meeting. The Board will next meet on April 23 at 125 S. Clark St. Sign in for public participation at the Board meeting will begin at 8:00 a.m. on April 14, 2014. The public agenda for that Board meeting will become available to the public according to the Open Meetings Act by 10:00 a.m. on April 21, 2014.
The proposed "turnaround" of the three schools was announced by CPS officials but did not appear on the public agenda for the Board's March 26 meeting. The seven members of the Board of Education and Board "Chief Executive Officer" Barbara Byrd Bennett sat stolidly or looked away as more than half dozen speakers denounced their latest corporate-style version of reality prior to the Board's vote to impose the turnarounds. The latest attack was on the Dvorak, McNair and Gresham elementary schools, all of which s