Lori Lightfoot Finds Her Next Teaching Chapter at UIC

Teaching Leadership in Times of Crisis

Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot in a white blazer, necklace, and black blouse with her hands folded in front of her.

In a classroom at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC), former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot stands before a group of students eager to explore how leadership unfolds when history is moving faster than anyone can control it. The course, Leadership in Times of Crisis, is one she designed herself, rooted in firsthand experience and a conviction that young people must understand the arc of history to lead effectively.

“I have to say, I love this class. Yeah, I really do,” Lightfoot said, smiling. “The great benefit of teaching is learning, and learning from your students.”

Lightfoot, who served as the city’s first Black woman and first openly gay mayor from 2019 to 2023, has traded marathon city council sessions for seminar discussions at the University of Michigan, Harvard, and now, at UIC’s College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs (CUPPA). Her course attracts undergraduate students majoring in Urban Studies and Public Policy and graduate students in CUPPA’s master’s degrees; all programs that prepare future leaders to understand how cities work and how they can work better.

These degrees, offered through Chicago’s most civically engaged public university, emphasize hands-on learning and critical thinking about urban systems. Students examine housing, transportation, inequality, planning, public management, and governance, often with internships or projects in the city’s neighborhoods.

It’s the kind of practical backdrop that Lightfoot says makes UIC special. “You’re in one of the great urban laboratories,” she said of her students. “Anything you can imagine is probably happening in some corner of this city. Go out and learn your city.”

“We’re so lucky to live in this great city, where our civic giants like Mayor Lightfoot are willing to contribute their experience and life lessons to the leaders of tomorrow,” said Stacey Swearingen White, dean of CUPPA.

Many of Lightfoot’s lessons draw directly from her time leading Chicago during the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 protests following George Floyd’s murder. Those moments, which can be described as “a perfect storm,” are studied in her classroom not just as historical events but as exercises in leadership under pressure.

She said the idea to pair those two crises in one unit came from her students’ curiosity. “I would’ve covered COVID no matter what,” Lightfoot admitted, “but I don’t know that I would have gone in further and connected the dots between the pandemic and that summer of great social and civic disruption. That’s really very much driven by what the students express as their interest.”

Margarita Arango, CUPPA Public Policy major enrolled in the Leadership in Times of Crisis course, said, “This class follows the history and policy surrounding specific crises in recent American history and has opened my eyes to the difficult choices public officials face in times of crisis. Mayor Lightfoot details political/social crises from the Great Depression to crises she faced in her own administration and encourages us to evaluate leaders’ choices, including what they could have done differently.”

Lightfoot hopes her students come away with a deeper empathy for those in decision-making roles. “Very few things in life are black and white,” she said. “I want them to see how leaders make decisions in the moment and to be more generous to those under fire.”

“One of my favorite lectures so far was learning about the Japanese Internment. I wasn’t so familiar with it and was shocked to learn what [the US] did,” said Marc Zoppi, CUPPA Urban Studies major.

Lightfoot worries that young people’s understanding of government has been eroded by a lack of civic and historical education. “We’ve failed this generation by not teaching history in the way that we need to,” she said. “Democracy depends on participation. Without that knowledge base, people can feel disconnected from leadership and public service.”

Still, Lightfoot credits her UIC students for their passion and perspective. She described them as “phenomenal, bar none some of the best I’ve ever taught.”

“I didn’t know how many students would even show up,” she joked. “But not only did they stay past the drop deadline, they are really engaged.”

Casey Fitzgerald, CUPPA Public Policy major, said, “Every class, we learn about a historical event and the decisions that were made that affected the outcome. Then we go through it as a class and dissect each choice, discuss what choices could have been made differently, and look at everything in such an intersectional way.”

Lightfoot’s affection for Chicago runs deep. Before entering politics, she built a career as a prosecutor and corporate attorney, eventually chairing the Chicago Police Board. When she won the mayoral election in 2019, she was a relative outsider who promised reform and accountability. Living now in Logan Square, she still sees the city as both a challenge and an educator in its own right.

“This city has tremendous history from the Pullman Porters and modern labor movements to Jane Addams and the Great Migration,” she reflected. “I have a great sense of pride being a Chicagoan. The city itself has been an incredible teacher for me.”

Lightfoot laughs at the idea that her younger self could have imagined this chapter. “I had no political drive when I was their age,” she said. “My older self was shocked when I decided to run. I never expected to be mayor of Chicago.”

And as for teaching at UIC, “I believe UIC is a special place,” she said. “It has the opportunity to be a leader in the city in ways other universities cannot and have not. I like feeling like I’m a small part of that.”

For the students in her classroom, many of whom were in high school during the crises they now study, there’s something equally meaningful in learning leadership from someone who has stood at the center of it.

“When I graduate, I hope to use the experience gained from this course to challenge the problems and emergencies that planners will face in the future; aside from political crises, there are also matters like a potential climate refugee crisis that Chicago will have to prepare for,” said Thomas Rose, CUPPA Urban Studies major. “If I should be in a planning position when such a situation could arise, the valuable firsthand experience from Mayor Lightfoot & her colleagues this course has provided will help me mitigate problems and potentially save lives.”

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UIC CUPPA is globally recognized for its exceptional education, research, and engagement in urban affairs with and for the diverse communities we serve. We offer undergraduate and graduate degrees in urban studies, urban planning, city design, public policy, public management, and civic analytics. UIC CUPPA programs are among the nation’s best and rank  6Th in urban policy, 8th in public finance/budgeting, and 13th in local government management by U.S. News and World Report.