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Talks go on, Chicago schools still closed

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“She tended to be more aggressive but also tempered that. She wasn’t a crazy,” Rieck said. “She’s a very mature woman and confident in her own skin.”

Lewis has sometimes come off as careless and inappropriate, including during a speech to educators and union members last fall in Seattle, where she mocked the way former schools CEO Arne Duncan talked and joked about smoking marijuana at Dartmouth. Lewis apologized to Duncan, who is now President Obama’s education secretary. Supporters say she learned from that experience.

“She was trying to be something she wasn’t, a comedian, and that’s what got her in trouble,” Rieck said.

One person Lewis hasn’t made amends with is Emanuel, who suggested soon after he was elected that students were getting “the shaft” from teachers because of flat test scores and a graduation rate of just over 50 percent. He rescinded a 4 percent raise, then asked the union to reopen that same contract and accept a 2 percent raise in exchange for working longer hours.

When union leaders refused, he tried to go around them by asking teachers at individual schools to waive the contract and add 90 minutes to the day — until the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board told him to stop.

During a heated meeting with Emanuel, Lewis has said, the mayor “exploded,” used profanity and pointed his finger at her. She also issued a sarcasm-laced statement after learning he would send his children to a prestigious private school.

“We understand why he would choose a school with small class sizes, a broad rich curriculum ... a focus on critical thinking and not test-taking, a teacher and an assistant in every elementary classroom, and paid high-quality professional development for their teachers,” she said.

Emanuel, for his part, doesn’t take any of the barbs personally and believes Chicago has some of the best teachers in the country, said spokeswoman Sarah Hamilton. But he also has staged photo-ops with idle students to condemn the walkout as a “strike of choice” that disrupted the school year just as it began.

“For him, the only thing personal is about the children,” Hamilton said. “It’s not about Rahm Emanuel or Karen Lewis. It’s about making sure the kids of Chicago get the best education possible.”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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