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How Indianapolis Public Schools board candidates stand on issues

The IPS John Morton-Finney Center for Educational Service
Dylan McCory / Chalkbeat Indiana
The IPS John Morton-Finney Center for Educational Service

In the contentious race for seats on the Indianapolis Public Schools board, it can be easy to lose sight of the issues. But Chalkbeat has it covered.

With four of the board’s seven seats up for election, voters could shift the balance of power this Tuesday. The current IPS board is dominated by members who largely agree on many of the biggest issues facing the district, including support for partnering with charter schools. But critics of the administration are making a strong push to seize control.

With just five days to go before Election Day, here is a guide to help readers compare where candidates stand on some of the important issues in the race.

For more on why each candidate is running, the strengths they say they will bring to the board and their detailed positions on these issues, see the full profiles:

This guide can be filtered or sorted by issue, name and seat. The answered are condensed versions of the views in the candidate profiles.

Candidate positions on the issues

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

Dylan Peers McCoy is a staff reporter for Chalkbeat Indiana, where she covers Indianapolis Public Schools. Previously she covered education for the Lafayette Journal & Courier, the Daily Hampshire Gazette and American RadioWorks. Her reporting on parks and regional policy also​ has appeared in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. She came to education reporting by way of public radio, and her documentary work has aired on WCAI, Latino USA and Studio 360. Prior to pursuing journalism, she worked in tech, politics and law. ​She graduated magna cum laude from Smith College with a degree in government, and she attended the Transom Story Workshop.
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