Illinois has several types of
school districts: •
Chicago Public Schools • Common school districts •
Community college districts (the
Illinois Community College System) • Community high school districts •
Community unit school districts •
Non-high school districts • Special charter school districts • Township high school districts Elected
boards of education and boards of trustees (in the case of community college districts) govern these districts, except for the Chicago Public Schools and the
City Colleges of Chicago, for which the boards are appointed by the
Mayor with the approval of the
Chicago City Council, and the special charter districts, which may have elected or appointed boards. The
Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE) is the administrative agency with responsibility for overseeing all higher education in Illinois. With regards to the
Illinois Community College System, the
Illinois Community College Board (ICCB) is the state coordinating board for community colleges. Area
vocational centers and
special education cooperatives may be formed by joint agreement between two or more school districts. A board consisting of representatives of each participating school district governs each entity of these two types. Educational service regions replaced the former county school units administered by county superintendents. Each region originally served one county but now may serve multiple counties because of minimum population requirements. Each region is headed by a regional superintendent of schools and is also governed by a regional board of trustees; the latter deal primarily with district boundary changes. Township land commissioners manage school lands and funds in certain counties. Educational service centers are established by the state board of education and function primarily to coordinate and provide special and ordinary services to affiliated school districts. These service centers are governed by boards consisting of members appointed by the regional
superintendent. ==Special districts==