Is your Chicago class in quarantine? Tell us about it.

Students wearing face masks sit at desks behind plastic shields in a Chicago classroom with a yellow, cream, and black checkerboard floor and a blue wall. They are working on laptop computers as a teacher wearing a white top watches.
A fourth grade teacher at Miles Davis Magnet Academy in Chicago teaches some children math from the classroom while communicating with others who are learning from home in the spring of 2021. (Cassie Walker Burke / Chalkbeat)

The omicron peak may have passed in Chicago, but COVID continues to disrupt education in the nation’s third largest school district and in districts across Illinois. 

Chicago Public Schools as of Wednesday reported the highest daily total yet of children in quarantine: 15,413, bringing the total to 16,545 once staff quarantines were factored in. Schools chief Pedro Martinez said the district was looking to reduce its quarantine period from 10 days to five in line with recent guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the state school board.

The state does not keep a public tally of the number of school children in quarantine. 

Just 40% of eligible children are fully vaccinated in Illinois; under state guidelines, vaccinated children may return to classrooms after exposure but unvaccinated children must learn from home. 

Quarantine orders have forced schools to re-introduce remote learning, juggle classroom assignments, and scramble on substitutes. 

How have they impacted your household? Tell us in the survey below. Your answers could inform our coverage of this issue.

If you are having trouble viewing this form, go here.

The Latest

Students presented their ideas for dealing with the teen mental health crisis, bias toward immigrants, and rats at a youth version of the famous Aspen Ideas Festival.

The split between Andrew J. Brown Academy and National Heritage Academies involves facilities, finances, and more. One is looking for a new home and has a new operator. The other wants to start a new school.

Nikki Woodson became superintendent in 2011. Since then, the student body’s racial diversity has increased and enrollment has fluctuated.

Starting June 3, families will be able to use one, streamlined application for the city’s free early childhood education programs. Preschool teachers will be eligible for new retention bonuses worth up to $2,000.

DPS hired 64 new international teachers this year, and its goal is to double that number next year.