Chicago Public Schools says May 1 will be a full school day: what families need to know now
Chicago IL – CPS says May 1 is a regular instructional day with normal transportation and activities, plus limited civic-event options for some students.
May 1 is not a school shutdown
Chicago Public Schools says families should plan for a normal school day on May 1. The district’s April 22 guidance says students are expected in class for a full instructional day, with transportation and school activities operating as usual.
That matters because the confusion around May 1 has not gone away. For parents, the practical takeaway is simple: do not treat the date like a districtwide closure, holiday, or citywide day off. Unless a school tells families otherwise for a specific reason, students should go to school and follow the regular schedule.
What CPS says will happen
In its family update, CPS said schools will remain open for a full day on May 1. The district also said transportation is expected to run normally, which should help parents and commuters plan around bus and school-day routines without guessing about a special schedule.
The update also says school activities should continue as planned. That includes the regular academic day, along with after-school programming that is already scheduled at individual schools.
What the civic-engagement option actually means
CPS is allowing a limited civic-engagement path for some students, but it is not automatic. Schools may organize voluntary civic-engagement field trips only if principals approve them. In other words, a school can choose to sponsor a trip, but it does not have to, and not every campus will take part.
The district also says students in grades 6 through 12 may receive an excused absence for a civic event if families notify the school in advance. That detail matters. The absence option applies only to older students, and it depends on advance communication from families. It is not a blanket excuse for all students or a same-day request.
For parents, the safest approach is to contact the school directly if they want to use that option or if they are unsure whether a student’s planned activity qualifies.
Why families are still hearing mixed messages
The district’s April 17 agreement created the framework for May 1, but the follow-up guidance was still needed because families were hearing different interpretations of what the day would look like. Local reporting from WTTW and ABC7 Chicago showed that confusion remained even after the deal was announced, especially around whether students would attend class, whether schools would sponsor activities, and how absences would work.
That is why the April 22 clarification is the most useful document for day-of planning. It turns a broad agreement into family-level instructions: regular school day, normal transportation, optional school-sponsored civic trips only with approval, and a limited excused absence path for grades 6 through 12.
What to watch next
The next public chance for lingering questions to surface is the Chicago Board of Education meeting on April 23. If families, staff, or board members want more detail on school-by-school implementation, that is where follow-up questions are most likely to come up.
For now, the practical answer for Chicago families is straightforward: expect school to be open on May 1, plan for the regular day, and check with your school only if you need to confirm the civic-event absence option or a principal-approved field trip.