Kentucky
Education Commissioner Terry Holliday has assumed the role of president of the
Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO). For the past year he served as
the group’s president-elect.
“I am proud and very humbled to
serve this outstanding organization,” Holliday said. “If you look at the
accomplishments of CCSSO over the last five to six years, you see an
organization that is certainly a strong leader in public education.”
The Council of Chief State School
Officers is a nonpartisan, nationwide, nonprofit organization of public
officials who head departments of elementary and secondary education in the
states, the District of Columbia, the Department of Defense Education Activity,
and five U.S. extra-state jurisdictions. CCSSO provides leadership, advocacy,
and technical assistance on major educational issues. The Council seeks member
consensus on major educational issues and expresses its views to civic and
professional organizations, federal agencies, Congress, and the public.
Holliday
said as president of CCSSO, he will continue to push for action on education
issues of importance. During the upcoming year, he intends to focus on
communication, collaboration, creativity, innovation and career-readiness.
·
Communication and Collaboration – The diversity of context and opinions among
states is a strength of the organization, according to Holliday.
“CCSSO must continue to look for
ways that all state voices are heard and valued and reach out to other national
organizations,” Holliday said. “Our voice needs to be heard in administrative
and teacher organizations and we must in turn listen and act on the feedback we
receive from these organizations.”
·
Creativity and Innovation – The Innovation Lab Network focuses on developing
innovative models to help more students reach college/career-ready standards.
Holliday said its work must move from a handful of states, which includes
Kentucky, to a national effort to find innovative practices that can be scaled
to help more students be successful and reach college/career-ready standards.
·
Career-readiness -- Most states have done an excellent job defining and implementing
college-ready strategies, according to Holliday. However, as a recent report from the Center on Education Progress
pointed out, there is much work to do with career-ready definitions, measures,
assessments and accountability, he said.
Holliday notes that Kentucky
Governor Steve Beshear is leading the National Governors Association (NGA)
Education and Workforce Committee as well as the Southern Regional Education
Board (SREB) and has committed to focus on career-ready work with both
organizations.
“I think CCSSO has a great chance
for synergy between our organization, NGA and SREB to emphasize career-ready
work,” Holliday said.
Holliday
hopes his work with CCSSO will not only have an impact on the future of
children in the Commonwealth of Kentucky but also make a difference for the
future of millions of children across the nation.
In
December 2010, Holliday was named to the board of directors for CCSSO. He also serves
on the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), known as the Nation’s Report Card.
In February 2012, he was named as a member of the national Commission on
Standards and Performance Reporting, which developed rigorous accreditation
standards for educator preparation that will raise the bar for preparation
providers. Holliday has served as Kentucky’s commissioner of education since
2009.
SOURCE: KDE Press release:
1 comment:
Sounds like the seeds are starting to sprout in a bigger garden.
THough I certainly haven't been his biggest advocate, he has tried to push the state forward, albeit in a rather haphazard and somewhat alarmist fashion. I hope he ends up having to take ownership in not just what he has produced/imposed but also in it's full term implementation (not to mention results).
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