James Whitcomb Riley School 43 joins Indianapolis Public Schools innovation network as arts school

A blue school sign reading “James W. Riley” sits on a grassy lawn with a red stop sign in the foreground.
James Whitcomb Riley School 43 will become a visual and performing arts innovation school in 2023-24. (Dylan Peers McCoy / Chalkbeat)

James Whitcomb Riley School 43 will become a visual and performing arts school starting in fall 2023. It is the latest school to join the Indianapolis Public Schools’ innovation network under an agreement the school board approved on Thursday. 

The four-year agreement will allow Edison School of the Arts to run School 43 as an innovation school, which has operational autonomy from the district and an exemption from union contracts under state law. The school board approved the new agreement unanimously.

Both Edison and School 43 will be K-8 schools through at least June 2027. 

Most innovation schools in IPS are run by charter operators, but a few — such as Edison — have become innovation schools without inviting in a charter operator. School 43, as a sister school to Edison, will also not have a charter operator.

The school board also unanimously approved the renewal of a five-year agreement with Matchbook Learning at Wendell Phillips School 63. The preK-8 charter school joined the district’s innovation network in 2018-19 as a restart school — an underperforming school in need of academic improvement. 

Matchbook still had proficiency levels below statewide and districtwide averages for English and math on the state ILearn test. District officials noted, however, that the school has increased its enrollment, and staff retention rates mirror the IPS average. 

The new agreement between Matchbook and IPS includes mandatory school visits from IPS as well as a data review, and allows the district the opportunity to implement a performance improvement plan.

Amelia Pak-Harvey covers Indianapolis and Marion County schools for Chalkbeat Indiana. Contact Amelia at apak-harvey@chalkbeat.org.

The Latest

Illinois high school juniors will have to take the ACT to graduate starting spring 2025. This comes at a time when most colleges and universities are again requiring students to take entrance exams for the admissions process.

Council members questioned officials as the looming expiration of federal COVID relief money threatens to shave $808 million from the Education Department’s budget.

The district’s plan calls for training on alternative discipline practices and aims to focus on the “root cause” of student behavior.

The program will train young adults ages 18 to 24 to act “as navigators serving middle and high school students,” according to state officials.

Roughly 12% of Chicago residents age 16 to 24 are not working or in school. Black teens are most impacted.

Representing families challenging school segregation, here’s what the NAACP’s chief legal counsel told the high court.