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« Return to list The Chicago Annenberg Challenge: Successes, Failures, and Lessons for the Future August 2003. Mark Smylie, Stacy Wenzel, Elaine Allensworth, Carol Fendt, Sara Ray Stoelinga (credited as Sara Hallman), Stuart Luppescu, and Jenny Nagaoka Order printed copy

From
the 1996-97 through 2000-01 school years, the Annenberg Foundation
awarded special funding to as many as 210 of Chicago’s public schools,
90 percent of which were elementary schools. The funding, which had
also been provided to cities such as New York and San Francisco, was
part of a large-scale local school reform philosophy that intended to
improve student achievement and other social and psychological
outcomes. In Chicago, the Annenberg Challenge reflected a democratic
localism that placed great faith in the ability of local schools, in
partnership with parents and their communities, to develop their own
strategies to achieve professional development and instructional goals.
In order to determine the value of such reforms, the Chicago Annenberg
Challenge funded a five-year analysis of the program, led by Mark
Smylie, Stacy Wenzel, and a specialized Consortium research team. This
team received guidance from a diversified base of local and national
researchers and educators, including dozens of Chicago Public School
(CPS) teachers.
Drawing from student test scores, longitudinal surveys, and teacher and
principal interview data, the Consortium team evaluated whether the
Challenge catalyzed school improvement and student academic
achievement, and investigated the myriad factors that contributed to
these results. During the same period as the study, CPS implemented its
own set of major reforms, including high-stakes testing, increased
emphasis on basic reading and mathematics skills, and the end of social
promotion. As a result, this report also examines the ways in which the
Chicago Annenberg Challenge’s goals conflicted with those of CPS, and
how those conflicting policies may have helped or hindered students’
and schools’ success. Understanding these outcomes will inform future
large-scale school reform initiatives and their implementation at the
local school level.
This is the final technical report of a series of publications on the
Annenberg Challenge that began in the summer of 1998. The series of
technical reports on the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, along with a
series of special topic reports that examine particular areas of school
development, student outcomes, and change strategies, are listed below.
Reports in both series are available to the public, and the most recent
reports may be downloaded for free as PDF files.
Related Link:
Part 1 of the report
Part 2 of the report
Chicago Annenberg Challenge
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