The Indianapolis Public Schools Board of School Commissioners will undergo dramatic transformations in the coming weeks. Three new board members will take their seats in January, and then the new board will have to find a replacement for departing Superintendent Lewis Ferebee, who is leaving the district to become chancellor of District of Columbia Public Schools.
During his five-year term with IPS, Ferebee led the way on an innovation model that simultaneously became his most lauded and criticized accomplishment. The current board provided little pushback to Ferebeeās ambitions, allowing the innovation model to charge ahead at a quick pace. In the three years since opening its first innovation school, IPS has added 19 more.
But voters ousted two supporters of the model in the 2018 general election. Mary Ann Sullivan lost her At-Large seat to Susan Collins, and Dorene Hoops lost her District 5 seat to Taria Slack. Collins and Slack were both critical of the districtās innovation model during the campaign. Theyāll join current board member Elizabeth Gore, who occupies the other At-Large seat, as a reliable source of what can at least be characterized as skepticism of innovation schools.
āHonestly, I feel weāll be a little bit more scrutinizing, not so embracing of every opportunity there is for an innovation school,ā Gore said of the new board.
Gore said she is āwearyā of the innovation model because there hasnāt been enough time to evaluate its effectiveness in educating students. Gore said she values continuity over a major shakeup with the superintendent position, so she expects the next superintendent, who the new board will hire, to keep IPS on the innovation path. Gore added the pace of innovation growth in the district may slow down. Collins and Slack did not respond to a request for comment.
There are four categories of innovation schools: completely new schools, former traditional public schools that were struggling, previously independent charter schools and former traditional public schools whose principals wanted more autonomy. For the 2017-18 school year, nearly 20 percent of IPS students attended innovation schools, according to district data.
Asked how he views the future of innovation schools once heās gone, Ferebee credited the innovation model with bringing the school district away from the threat of state takeover, which was looming in 2013 when Ferebee took over.
āI think thatās a representation of how we have been proactive and strategic with our schools that have struggled with student achievement,ā Ferebee said at a Dec. 7 board meeting formalizing his resignation. āThe challenges ahead will be different. The strategies will be aligned to those needs accordingly.ā
The board also announced Ferebeeās last day with the district is Jan. 4, 2019. Aleesia Johnson, currently the deputy superintendent for academics, will serve as the interim superintendent until the board finds a permanent replacement. Johnson did not say if she is interested in becoming the permanent superintendent.
The third new board member, Evan Hawkins, was supportive of innovation schools during his campaign. Taking into account the stances of current and incoming members, Hawkinsā win for the District 3 seat secured a 4-3 majority for reformers on the seven-person board. Hawkins did not respond to a request for comment for this story, but he told the Recorder after the election he believes āinnovation schools are part of the offering that we should have for families.ā
For innovation leaders in Indianapolis, a change in leadership and new board members bring uncertainty.
āHis departure, for me, creates concern,ā Earl Phalen, founder of Phalen Leadership Academy, said of Ferebee leaving.
PLA is a charter operator that took over IPS School 103 in August 2015 to make it the districtās first innovation school. Alluding to Collins and Slack, Phalen said incoming board members are āfocused on adults,ā implying theyāre not looking for the best solutions for students.Ā
āI worry that the board has made a move from trying to do something for children,ā he said.
Justin Ohlemiller, executive director of Stand for Children, a nonprofit advocate of school choice, didnāt directly answer how he thinks Ferebee leaving will affect the future of the innovation model, but he did imply Collins and Slack wonāt remain as critical once theyāre on the board.
āWhen youāre a board member and you represent all of IPS, that perspective is different than when youāre running a campaign,ā he said. ā⦠There are members on the board who are going to think about what they said during the campaign differently.ā
Michael OāConnor, the current board president, knows there is more pushback coming when the new board comes into place Jan. 8, but he said that isnāt necessarily a bad thing for IPS.
āWe donāt want a board thatās rubber stamping and acting in lockstep,ā OāConnor said.
As for moving on from Ferebeeās leadership, OāConnor said the current board chose Johnson as the interim superintendent with consultation from incoming members. The search for a permanent replacement wonāt begin until the new board is in place.
District parents have been critical of the board for what they say is a lack of transparency and communication, and OāConnor acknowledged as much, saying community engagement should improve.
āWhile the board is committed to the path of progress weāve taken,ā he said, āthe board is also committed to hearing concerns and addressing concerns.ā
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Contact staff writer Tyler Fenwick at 317-762-7853. Follow him on Twitter @Ty_Fenwick.
Three new IPS school board commissioners: (l-r) Susan Collins, Evan Hawkins, Taria Slack.