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Ninety-five percent of the 430 preschool-through-eighth-grade students at Perez elementary qualify for free or reduced-price lunches, Principal Vicky Kleros said. Even so, it's been designated as a fine- and performing-arts magnet cluster school, earned a Level 1 ranking for academic performance. It also was one of the first CPS schools to implement the rigorous new national Common Core curriculum, meant to improve performance in subjects such as math and reading. Perez is also an important neighborhood resource, a place where parents can take courses in technology, learn to read and write English and work toward a general equivalency diploma, Kleros said. And like parents in many other Chicago neighborhoods, those in Pilsen simply can't afford for their children to not be in school. Showing up late or leaving early from a job can mean unemployment, Rayas said. "They need the school so THEY can function," he said. Perched on the steps of the neighborhood's squat, red-brick buildings, parents spoke of a school that made them feel special, one with kind and hard-working teachers who hopefully will receive a hefty raise. Christina Adame lights up when she talks of how Kleros stopped her on the street to tell her how well her 11-year-old son performed on a standardized test. "The principal said that to me," she said, still sounding amazed. Single mother Danielle Hernandez moved here in March so her son could get help with ADHD and Tourette's syndrome, things that weren't available at his school in the western suburbs. "He's getting speech therapy and it's helping him a lot; his grades are getting better," said Hernandez, a waitress whose two younger children attend Perez's Head Start program. "A teacher called yesterday. They're good people." If there is a strike, Kleros said the school would be open from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. every school day so children still could eat breakfast and lunch and participate in activities. After that, library and park district buildings will be open
-- all part of a $25 million school district strike contingency plan. Even students, in Pilsen and in other Chicago neighborhoods where gangs and drugs have long been problems, recognize that less time in school means more time for trouble to find them. Fifth-grader David Quach said as much last week while playing basketball. "For kids, it (school) gets you out of the street," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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