Tens of thousands of students transfer within Chicago Public Schools. Are you one of them?

Close-up of a student’s hands typing on a laptop.
A student uses on a laptop. Nearly 48,000 students transferred schools within CPS last year. Chalkbeat Chicago wants to hear your stories about transferring. (Stacey Rupolo / Chalkbet)

Sign up for Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter to keep up with the latest education news.

Every year, tens of thousands of Chicago Public Schools students transfer schools.

The district tracks more than a dozen reasons for why students change schools, including leaving the city, graduating, or going to a private school.

But the most common type of transfer among CPS students is going to another school in the district.

During the 2024-25 school year, more than 24,000 kids — or more than 7% of the student body — transferred within the district, according to data obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. That number excludes 8th graders who move on to high school.

Chicago families may choose to switch schools for a range of reasons. Children may move to a different neighborhood. Parents might feel their child’s school is not a good fit. Or, in more extreme cases, students may feel unsafe in their buildings due to harassment or abuse.

No matter the reason, school transfers can mean significant change for a student, the school they’re leaving, and the new school they’re going to.

Are you or your child one of the tens of thousands of students who have transferred schools? We want to hear from you about your experience. Tell us here or in the short survey below. (We will not use your answers or your name in our reporting without your permission.)

Editor’s Note: This article has been updated with additional information about the data provided by CPS after publication to clarify the number of transfers in a given year.

A previous version used numbers that included 8th graders who are labeled as transfers when they move on to high school. We’ve revised the numbers to exclude this cohort since there is not an option for them to remain at their existing school.

Reema Amin is a reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Reema at ramin@chalkbeat.org.

The Latest

Multiple reports say an FBI investigation relates to a now-defunct edtech company. Here’s what we know so far.

The state is still in the midst of a comprehensive review ordered by a bipartisan 2023 law. But some lawmakers say the state should make an effort to reduce the time students spend on tests.

“Nobody in the state actually regulates how BOCES operate or what they can do,” said the leader of a membership group for public education co-ops.

Bills reshuffling Indianapolis schools, requiring a bell-to-bell school cellphone ban, and implementing lessons about waiting until marriage to have children are going to the governor’s desk.

A report calls for doing more to connect research to classroom practice. Will the Education Department act on it?

The teen coalition during Thursday’s school board meeting said their proposals would have given students more say in how the district addresses mental health needs and building concerns.