Showing posts with label Education secretary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education secretary. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2009

Governor pegs Covington's Meyer for post

This from the Enquirer:
Joe Meyer, deputy secretary of Kentucky's Education and Workforce Development Cabinet for the past year, was named by Gov. Steve Beshear this week as secretary of the cabinet.

He replaces Helen Mountjoy, who left the post [last] week.
Meyer, 61, is an attorney and lives in Covington. He served as a state representative from 1982-88, and as a state senator from 1988-96.

He was chief of staff for Rep. Jim Callahan of Wilder in 2004, and has also served as the senior policy adviser for state auditor Crit Luallen. His reason for taking the top job in the cabinet was simple.

"Because the governor asked," Meyer said.

"It's a very interesting, very challenging position that's extremely critical to the Commonwealth."

Meyer will oversee a cabinet that has roughly 3,000 full- and part-time employees, and a budget of $2.5 billion. The education side provides services to the state's P-12 public schools. The workforce side connects Kentuckians with employment and training...

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Pros and Cons: Arne Duncan

Kennedy sets confirmation hearings: Senator Edward M. Kennedy's office announced today a series of confirmation hearings on Cabinet posts under the purview of his committee.The Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee will interview former Senator Tom Daschle, President-elect Barack Obama's choice for health and human services secretary, on Jan. 8, two days after the new Congress convenes. That will be followed a day later, Politico reports, by the hearing for Representative Hilda Solis, Obama's pick for labor secretary, and on Jan. 13, by the one for Chicago schools chief Arne Duncan, Obama's selection for education secretary. Obama gets sworn in a week later. Kennedy has already signaled enthusiastic support for all three nominees. (Boston Globe)

The Early Word: Administration Preview: Though the economic crisis, along with renewed tensions in the Middle East, are likely to loom large as the curtain goes up on President-elect Barack Obama’s first 100 days, it’s not too early to take a look at the new administration’s policies on issues that have attracted fewer headlines lately, starting with education. (New York Times)

In Chicago, Duncan Seen as Collaborator: School closures, innovations in teacher, principal training mark his administration. (Education Week)

Duncan to Confront Host of Challenges at Ed. Department: The Chicago schools chief supports the No Child Left Behind Act and could bridge differing approaches to education reform. (Education Week)

Chicago School Reform Could Be a U.S. Model: At Cameron Elementary School west of downtown, most kids don't know the alphabet when they start kindergarten, nearly all are poor, and one was jumped by a gang recently, just off campus. But the school this year posted its highest reading and math scores ever -- a feat that earned cash bonuses for teachers, administrators, even janitors. (Washington Post)

Arne Duncan's Dark Years in Chicago: Progressives across the country have been disappointed in President-elect Obama's appointment of various cabinet members. As an educator, the appointment of Arne Duncan to Secretary of Education, particularly in light of Obama's rhetoric and the platform of the Democratic Party, raises significant concerns about the future of public school education. (Counterpunch)

Obama Picks a Moderate on Education. The president will ultimately decide whether to take on the teachers' unions: Barack Obama picked Arne Duncan only partly for his skills on the basketball court. As secretary of education, he will be running one of the administration's most important finesse games. The CEO of the Chicago public schools and the ultimate diplomat, Mr. Duncan rises to the rim at a moment when teachers unions are, for the first time, facing opposition within the Democratic Party from young idealists who favor education reform. (Wall Street Journal)

Duncan wrong education choice: Hailed by some as a pioneer in education reform, Arne Duncan was recently selected by President-elect Obama to be our next secretary of education. However, his track record as the CEO of Chicago Public Schools for the past seven years shows that Duncan is the wrong choice for America’s schools. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Arne Duncan on Making the Parents Care: A bit of congressional testimony from earlier this year provides an interesting window into how Arne Duncan, President-elect Barack Obama ’s choice to be the next Education secretary, might provide a counterpoint to Obama’s thinking on how much of the schools’ success is up to the parents. (Congressional Quarterly)

Photo of Arne Duncan and Family from TheAge.com.au.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

President-elect to name Arne Duncan as Ed Secretary


Well, the end of the semester is always a busy time - doubly so when one is working on a grant proposal. So I've be out of action for several days and when I have been able to post it has been overly rushed.

We had a state board meeting last week and some movement on the Ed Sec in DC. One more big stack of papers to grade....then I hope things will get back to normal next week.

This from MSNBC, photo by Charles Rex Arbogast:

Obama taps Chicago schools chief


WASHINGTON - President-elect Barack Obama has chosen Chicago schools chief Arne Duncan to serve as education secretary, people with knowledge of the decision said Monday.


Obama planned to announce his choice Tuesday morning. These individuals confirmed Duncan's selection Monday on condition of anonymity because Obama had not made the decision public.
Duncan has run the country's third-biggest school district for the past seven years. He has focused on improving struggling schools, closing those that fail...

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Who's in the Running for Obama Administration Jobs

This from Ed Week:
As Washington plays its favorite parlor game during a presidential transition—trying to figure out who’ll land a top spot in the new administration—the list of possible education secretary picks for President-elect Barack Obama’s administration has expanded.

According to Democratic officials, Obama is weighing an array of Washington insiders and outsiders, including Chancellor of New York City schools Joel E. Klein, Chicago schools chief executive officer Arne Duncan, Chairman of the House education committee George Miller, D-Calif., and Democratic Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.

Also among those being considered is Linda Darling-Hammond, an education professor at Stanford University and Obama adviser. Teachers around the country have been lobbying the Obama administration through online petitions to pick Darling-Hammond, who started her career as a public school teacher....

Also said to be in the hunt:
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell
Former Gov. James Hunt of North Carolina
Gov. Janet Napolitano of Arizona
South Carolina schools superintendent Inez Tenenbaum
Jon Schnur, CEO and co-founder of New Leaders for New Schools