Banda Leaving Seattle Schools
Update 4: just returned from press conference. It was interesting and I will have a full report later (I am just sitting down to eat something for the first time today. Had an interview with both the Communications director and school board president in Sacramento.)
My belief is that Banda will be gone by July 17th( that is the earliest date the Sacramento board can vote him in as their new superintendent.) But yes, I do believe he will be gone, baby, gone by the end of July.
End of update.
He is letting staff know today.
I don't know where he is going (I have rumor that it is a district in San Jose, California.)
I suspect the Board will make Charles Wright the interim superintendent.
Update: KUOW is reporting that he is a finalist for a job in Sacramento. (My source tells me he has the job.)
From the KUOW story:
“Sacramento is an opportunity to go back to California, an opportunity to be closer to family,” Banda said. “As I near the latter part of my career, it’s an opportunity to get back into the retirement system that I spent almost my entire career in.”
I recall this as having been brought up as a possible issue when he was a candidate to come to Seattle.
Unlike Seattle’s public superintendent search processes, Sacramento was poised to vote on Banda’s contract on Thursday before even announcing that he was a finalist. The vote was postponed at the last minute after board members decided to visit Seattle next week.
Well, now that the cat's out of the bag, that seems a bit awkward. He couldn't be more lame duck at this point and if he doesn't get the job?
Banda said he considers his greatest accomplishments as Seattle superintendent to be the 2013 capital and operations levies, worth a combined $1.3 million. He’s also proud of the district’s new strategic plan.
He leaves with two years left on his contract.
I don't want to hear anything about superintendents being pushed out. He came, he hung around and now he's leaving.
Update 2: letter from Banda - very bland.
I have a call into Sacramento to ask some questions.
Update 3: Checking the search firm that Sacramento SD is using I see a somewhat familiar face. One of the principals at the company, Leadership Associates, is Kent Bechler. I know I have seen Mr. Bechler in the audience at a couple of district meetings in the recent weeks. I had wondered who he was.
Update 4:
Letter from President Peaslee- She's being pretty nice in this letter; good for her.
The Sacramento job starts July 1st so he is gone, gone gone (if he gets it but I suspect he has it).
And yes, this was the big news I had been hinting at.
Press Conference at 1 pm; I'll be there.
My belief is that Banda will be gone by July 17th( that is the earliest date the Sacramento board can vote him in as their new superintendent.) But yes, I do believe he will be gone, baby, gone by the end of July.
End of update.
He is letting staff know today.
I don't know where he is going (I have rumor that it is a district in San Jose, California.)
I suspect the Board will make Charles Wright the interim superintendent.
Update: KUOW is reporting that he is a finalist for a job in Sacramento. (My source tells me he has the job.)
From the KUOW story:
“Sacramento is an opportunity to go back to California, an opportunity to be closer to family,” Banda said. “As I near the latter part of my career, it’s an opportunity to get back into the retirement system that I spent almost my entire career in.”
I recall this as having been brought up as a possible issue when he was a candidate to come to Seattle.
Unlike Seattle’s public superintendent search processes, Sacramento was poised to vote on Banda’s contract on Thursday before even announcing that he was a finalist. The vote was postponed at the last minute after board members decided to visit Seattle next week.
Well, now that the cat's out of the bag, that seems a bit awkward. He couldn't be more lame duck at this point and if he doesn't get the job?
Banda said he considers his greatest accomplishments as Seattle superintendent to be the 2013 capital and operations levies, worth a combined $1.3 million. He’s also proud of the district’s new strategic plan.
He leaves with two years left on his contract.
I don't want to hear anything about superintendents being pushed out. He came, he hung around and now he's leaving.
Update 2: letter from Banda - very bland.
I have a call into Sacramento to ask some questions.
Update 3: Checking the search firm that Sacramento SD is using I see a somewhat familiar face. One of the principals at the company, Leadership Associates, is Kent Bechler. I know I have seen Mr. Bechler in the audience at a couple of district meetings in the recent weeks. I had wondered who he was.
Update 4:
Letter from President Peaslee- She's being pretty nice in this letter; good for her.
The Sacramento job starts July 1st so he is gone, gone gone (if he gets it but I suspect he has it).
And yes, this was the big news I had been hinting at.
Press Conference at 1 pm; I'll be there.
Comments
He's moving onto some Gate$ wink wink sinecure?
something is rotten
InDenmark
Not sure to what extent this OSPI Coordinated Program Review had to do with this development but it reveals problems that have existed for years and no Strategic Plan would fix them. Takes mandated Corrective Actions.
Other interesting items from the A&F Quarterly Meeting.
Perhaps the board refused to extend Banda's contract at this time and he took that as sign to go.
reader 24
He was not a good leader.
He pandered. He had the style of a weenie - 9 times out of 10, just do what politically is the least damaging to himself. That's not leadership. That's not even competence.
Wright is scary. He's total politics. But unlike Banda, he is slick and smart, so he could really lead the district astray.
Yes, chaos sucks, mismanagement sucks, but, how is it different from
What we have now?
I choose to believe that with Sue Peters in the mix, she won't rest until we have a genuinely great fit with an effective, experienced, no-bullshit leader.
Cautiously optimistic
So much for that.
Notafan
Now that Banda is jumping ship, I hope we have a chance of getting someone in who is interested in improving the efficiency and effectiveness of operations. Ideal would be someone local, who is already in Seattle and plans on being in Seattle long-term, and is not a professional superintendent. We need someone committed to Seattle and focused on efficient and effective government.
I'm googling Steve Enoch as we speak....
compound
I agree with posters -- very poor leadership choices by Banda.
Phil
Can you link it?
--- swk
P.S. I just want to acknowledge that you likely had this scoop before others.
One, someone who knows this district and is connected to this community. No more people looking for a way to make a name and jump ship in a couple of years.
Two, someone who knows how to communicate and reach people. That was not Banda's forte.
I wouldn't mind Norm Rice except I think he is ed reform.
I think they should get Phil Brockman back. Stat.
We need an educator and administrator at heart. No politician. No current establishment. We need someone who knows what has to be done (follow the law and common sense) and tells the Alliance to back off.
One should spend a little bit of time researching school superintendents and retirement systems. Superintendents become invested in well paying retirement systems after a few years and there is no incentive for superintendents to stay.
So much for his word.
How much would it cost to get rid of the people in the many new management positions he created?
Okay, I have the solution. Ken Gotsch is interim. He is a very honest and earnest administrator.
No! To the contrary, the insularity of this district and this city is the reason for all the problems in the first place. We need strong leadership with OUTSIDE COMPARATIVE KNOWLEDGE so that the morass that passes for normal here can begin to shift.
Step out, Seattle School Board!! Go broad, go wide!
Reader
Tobadrubbish
Hey and look what else they voted in for K-6 math? enVision. Interesting because they say it will take nearly $5M to use enVision.
Ben
Funny the day C-CAP is due, he's gone...dont let the door hit you on the way out.
Wouldn't it be better to have a full time board running the show? Do we need another figure head and if so that person should be just that an $80K a year spokes person period?
--Michael
"I think they should get Phil Brockman back. Stat"
Agreed!
- North-end Mom
Can't blame him for that.
--vital statistics
Observer
Sacramento City school district approves charter school plan. Banda can knock himself out with those charters....
Legislature delivers financial rescue for CalSTRS; state, schools, teachers to contribute more
"Under AB 1469, approved by lawmakers as part of a package of budget bills, CalSTRS will get increased contributions from school districts, the state and teachers themselves. The plan, which kicks in July 1, is designed to gradually erase a $74 billion gap between CalSTRS’ assets and its long-term obligations.
Much of the added burden will be felt by school districts. Their combined annual contribution will grow from $2.2 billion to nearly $6 billion, with the increases phased in over seven years, said CalSTRS Deputy Chief Executive Ed Derman.
School district officials said the increased pension contributions will devour much of the increased funding the Legislature approved for education. The budget approved Sunday includes an additional $4.75 billion for school districts under a new funding formula."
Kevin Johnson.
This will make the Alliance seem like mere pests.
Need I say more....
you are better off with a board that focuses on the students needs running the district vs a superintendent. Look back at all the damage superintendents have done at SPS. It's time for a different leadership structure.
We need leadership that will follow the laws and focus on student achievement for ALL students.
We need to downsize the administration and force out bad teachers, raise wages for highly skilled teachers and introduce assistive technology to bridge the achievement gap.
--Michael
The finalist for the top job in the Sacramento City Unified School District is Seattle Public Schools Superintendent José L. Banda, the Sacramento district announced this morning.
Banda spent three decades in California schools, the Sacramento district said, and is credited as having a track record of lifting struggling schools to academic excellence.
Trustees in the Sacramento district were expected Thursday night to appoint Banda to the post. But Board of Education President Patrick Kennedy sought a delay in that closed-door vote, saying board members wanted time to complete their due diligence and a site visit. Board members will visit Seattle next week.
Hmmm, no mention of his short term here...
reader47
Been there
If a Supe is going to be making important decisions about my child's school (boundary changes, curriculum changes, funding, etc), then at least have the courtesy to have walked the halls and meet a few folks in that community.
Seattle can do better for our kids.
North-ender
-- Ivan Weiss
First and foremost, we need someone who cares about Seattle and the children of Seattle.
Signed: Draft Gregoire
You know how hard/expensive it is to fire/lay-off high-paid executives? You know how draining it is on an organization to go through the motions of doing this corrective 'right-sizing'? He's leaving us stuck holding the bag? A**hole.
(That's an expression, not name calling, so no need to delete.)
WASTE NOT
Fairly ineffective at leadership, from what I saw. Liked to work on documents, didn't have much ability to make them into real life (his big accomplishment at the end of his time was the equitable access framework! How's that going? The implementation of it by proposing to turn neighborhood schools into alternative language immersion models without even telling the kids in the schools ... remember that debacle on Beacon Hill that Julie Van Arcken highlighted? That was "equitable access" stuff, if I recall. So I don't think he'd be a good promotion. Leave him where he went.
I FULLY agree with bringing in an outside LEADER, not a career education administrator from some other city. Once our ship is righted, then an educator. But we need serious reform of process, systems, transparency, trust, accountability, finances ...
Signed: Draft Gregoire
Seattle Times story
The US dept of education still could pull all the districts federal funding if the district doesn't comply with federal law which currently they are NOT.
We all need to write our congress person and demand federal action or else nothing will improve.
--Michael
This is a great opportunity to get someone who's not into Common Core, ed reform, and heavy testing. I would love it if it's an outsider who cares about good curricula in math and reading/writing - not a fuzzy math advocate and not a fan of Reader's/Writer's Wirkshop. If we're lucky maybe Tolley and Heath will follow Banda.
What is the process for who appoints the interim superintendent and what criteria are involved with that decision?
How did our district get so unlucky and have such a perfect unbroken stream of bad luck?
No to Rice. No, no, no. Bob Boesche? YES!
Wright, NOOOO.
Herndon, NOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Ken G., sure.
Bob Boesche, yes
YES!
I rue the day we dissed Enoch. (Fat chance he’ll take a look at us again, people - and I’m not sure he’s right for us at this point anyway.) I hope this board’s better at hiring. Seattle has a crap track-record, though.
Sacramento City USD Superintendent Search 2014
I believe the intensive superintendent search process in Seattle drives away good candidates. It becomes a PR campaign, and of course the Times butts in.
- knows Seattle Schools, probably better than anybody else alive
- Seattle is not just a rung on the career ladder
- straightforward and without guile
- wants what's best for the kids and doesn't care about Gates' money
- SPS is already her full-time job, she might as well get paid
- her own kids, I think, are graduated
Pogo
And speaking of highly paid people at JSCEE? I'll have a long list of salaries - with raises (including all 5 of the Executive Directors) in an upcoming thread. Absolutely mind-boggling.
Charlie, no, no, the Board likes the SP and plans for the next person to fulfill it (this from Peaslee).
Linh-Co, Banda was asked about taking people with him and he demurred. Yes, there are some I wouldn't mind going with him.
Charles Wright publicly insulted the Board at the Retreat. I can see him being an interim but not a permanent superintendent.
NO ONE pushed out Banda. Listening to him at the press conference, it was all about what he wanted to do.
Banda was sought out, applied for the job (there were 15 applications, 6 interviews) and he came out on top.
Patrick, I used to say "no, I couldn't be superintendent." I would still say that with one caveat - not alone.
Give me, Charlie, Meg Diaz, Kellie LaRue and a couple of others - for two years - I believe we could create change for the better. But I am not "qualified" in the traditional sense but frankly, given that Peaslee made it sound like the Board is wedded to what has been laid out, it's much more a caretaker/inspirational leader at this point. (They all believe they have a great team in place and we all saw that Banda let the team do most of the heavy lifting.)
Lisa, the search process costs a lot. I feel a little bitter over having paid that cost just a scant few years ago and now doing it again. I, too, would favor a penalty clause for leaving early (unless it was a health issue).
Incredulous ...
I remember when he came in July 2012 and he said that he intended to take some time, learn about our city and our district, engage stakeholders, listen and deliberate before launching new initiatives. I know many people did not support this intentional "learning curve," particularly when it seemed to drag on month after month, but I supported that slow, intentional, humble approach. I thought once he felt like he knew the ropes, he'd come out swinging and be a popular leader who would make carefully conceived decisions.
Instead, we paid him over a quarter of a million dollars for his year-long "listening and learning" tour. Beyond the money, it was also time that he took from us. And time is a scarce and precious resource. But he took an entire year of time to "learn" and he pays us back by giving us just 1 year of "leadership."
It's really stunning to me that he feels justified, after taking over half a million dollars in salary from our city, to declare any successes whatsoever and move on. All that time and money we invested in him, now wasted. Wow.
So, yeah, I'll be curious what all of the back story really is, but for now, I am completely underwhelmed. Unless there are some amazing successes we can attribute to his leadership that I'm just not aware of right now, I can't help but feel that we all got taken advantage of.
That is what President Peaslee said at the press conference.
Lori, I would agree with most of what you just wrote. I'm not sure there IS any backstory. Banda is just doing what is good for him. That's his right as a person with a career but some of the statements he made about the work don't jibe with his actions.
As for the rest - what Lori said. From the beginning I thought he was anodyne (at best). But this feels like him getting away with daylight robbery. I hope that if there are penalties in his contract for leaving early, they are invoked.
--flibbertigibbet
PS: here's a vote for Melissa, Kellie et al to make the clean sweep. I'd be happy to come and help.
I think the board actually needs to hire a new superintendent in the traditional mode. Seattle needs a new superintendent who is/was recently a superintendent of a medium-sized school district IN THIS STATE with a history of strong management (including a system of performance evaluation for central administration staff) and strong teaching and learning credentials, including evidence of policies and procedures that have addressed achievement gaps.
I would not want someone who has a direct connection to SPS. And I do not want anyone who has been a Broad fellow --- that is a deal breaker.
This person needs to demonstrate a willingness to sit down with the union to strengthen the role and professional support of teachers and to AUTHENTICALLY engage with the community, including parents. I want someone who recognizes and respects the Seattle Way (process) without allowing it to run amok.
I don't think Melissa is qualified to run a large, urban school district (even with a quality team). But with that said, I'd support the district hiring Melissa as its Communications Director/board liaison who has a seat at the table for policy discussions, like a senior policy advisor.
I actually have a person in mind but I'm not going to name names. No reason to poison the well.
--- swk
Special Education (how long will director brought in by Banda last?)
Advanced Learning (only the minimum will get done until the next perma super arrives)
Downtown School
Enrollment in general (a mess with Libros leaving)
Bell Times (Big operational changes tabled until next boss can take the heat)
Capacity (procuring more space, any boundary adjustments)
Middle school math
That is a 30 second list. I'm sure it could double with another 30 seconds of thinking.
So exasperating and disappointing.
EdVoter
No, T&L has several of those items in their cross-hairs, and will continue unchecked and unguided to do whatever the heck they want, b/c T&L can do it as program placement with no one to stop them. T&L for instance could divide APP into 6 schools or dismantle it entirely in favor of walk-to, could do away with pathway to Garfield, any of that stuff - and there would be no one to appeal to, no one to stop them, no one to hear the voices against that action.
So no, don't think those are dead in the water. All of that list? Now merely unsupervised and without coordination - so all the depts. can work on the same thing going several different ways, with no one to control.
And I DEEPLY regret Tracy Libros's retirement at this time. She at least was a steady voice of reason and could be counted on to listen and be thoughtful, and she wasn't pushed around by the T&L or others.
Signed: DRAFT GREGOIRE
I wish Banda the best and don't begrudge him for leaving for a sunnier, more functional district. I imagine being Superintendent of SPS is like playing a whack-a-mole game.
-former Californian
I would dearly love someone who has the courage to give SPS management a directive - that motto of ours? "Students First"? Well guess what - I really mean that and any initiative that doesn't directly support/benefit the kids in the classroom is OVER
Oh and we're not accepting grants that put us in debt in a few years - if we can't afford it now, we can't afford it later.
Don't like it? There's the door - maybe LEV is doing some hiring
reader47
Wright? Ugh.
Gregroire - interesting thought. Normally I'd say no politicians, but I also have seen her at work negotiating settlements and such, and she is quite good at that. More than once I've seen her take two opposing groups and enable them to meet some consensus and find a compromise. Though I'd still rather have someone with teaching experience and Supe experience.
I do agree with swk - NO MORE BROADIES. Been there, done that, failure, additional examples of Broad failures across the country. In fact, I'd be curious if there are any successful Broadies out there (Deasy is a disaster, Vallas is a crock.....)
CT
Anon STEM mom
Shame on any Board members who "praise" this travesty and go, Sue go!
Oh and we're not accepting grants that put us in debt in a few years - if we can't afford it now, we can't afford it later."
Job 1.
"In this leadership vacuum, central staff are having a field day."
Yup. And somebody better check that but only the Board can do that. We can only point out the obvious.
Right, reader47, that list of Big Moneymakers is depressing; if it isn't "promotion," "job title/reclassification," or "market adjustment," it's something else equally incredible.
Why is it every step forward is two steps back? My gawd, if Peaslee and crew weren't there, I'd hate to think WTH we'd be at right now.
To me, his tenure (juxtaposed against MGJ's) is a great illustration of the difference between what happens when you hire someone truly bad -- truly WRONG for the job (MGJ) and someone who is merely not terribly effective (Mr. Banda, to date -- because I think he could have been good over time). To me the nightmare of the MGJ years was like going to the hospital with diabetes and mild (but worrisome) symptoms of heart failure -- where was a LOT to be done to get back to good health, but you aren't dying -- and having the doctor hook you up to chemo, diagnose you with bipolar disorder and prescribe lithium and some scary other stuff -- and start talking about maybe -- amputation of a limb or two. WTF??!?!? you think! This is nuts. I wasn't in great shape, granted but - now I am way worse! Instead of work on narrowing the achievement gap, executing on the strategic plan, etc., we got scary contracts with the Board on no dissent, MAP testing, standardization of courses that nearly cost us the Ballard academies and Garfield's science courses, dreadful high school math books, and a neigborhood attendance plan that eliminates any ability by the district to control school populations (which promptly ballooned in the rececession and subsequent growth spurt of the city, instead of shrinking as predicted). She attracted horrible people to work under her. We had dreadful audits, to say nothing of Mr. Potter's escapades. Remember all the Lowell stuff with the speech pathologist? The attempted firing of Ingraham's principal (under Dr. Enfield, but only by a few months -- and instigated by the EDs that MGJ had hired).
Mr. Banda stopped the amputation plan, turned off the chemo, and discontinued the lithium. We managed to get really good math for years 1 through 5 (I am still wondering what will hit the fan when a bunch of kids who have done REAL math for 4 or 5 years hit the CMP books in middle school -- I suspect a tidal wave uprising of seriously ticked off middle school kids, who will take nothing short of a mass of waivers for an answer) -- But -- we still have so many of the problems we had before the bad MGJ hiring (sped problems, performance gap issues, AL issues, etc.). AND, because time never stands still, we have NEW ones -- growing capacity problems in the north end, etc.
I agree with the "no Broadies" policy. But I hope they get someone who can take on the SPED issues and make some serious headway there. I also wish they would find someone willing to get rid of the layers of upper management (EDs etc.) and adopt a policy of finding and hiring really great principals -- at present, it seems to me that weak (or worse) principals are a MUCH worse problem than any issues in the teaching corps. And they are a good PART of the problem with SPED.
And (I have always been something of a Banda fan, even when maybe not merited) -- I cannot fathom being the Superintendent in a city where Michelle Rhee is married to the mayor. I concede to those who are unhappy because we maybe didn't get our money's worth -- but I have to wish him the best, because I think he is walking into a dragon's nest down there. And it makes me feel sorry for him.
Jan
An adversarial relationship has formed. It no doubt is not the way he or any super feels they can be effective in serving students in that environment. The board is now forced with trying to find a sycophantic super who will do any crazy thing they want. I don't think any self-respecting educator would be willing to work with them.
--- swk
Please. Did you see that list of "priorities?"
Crazy thing? You betray yourself in what you think of the Board. That's just not merited or true.
MiF was not "crazy" but it was adopted as a result of a power play by the Peters faction. Banda wants to work at a district that is cooperative not confrontational. I just don't think there are many if any big city supers who are willing to deal with a confrontational board. Maybe there's a person who the majority believes will mirror their own ideas about education but sooner or later there's going to be another instance of "we know best because we were elected even though we are laypeople".
Too bad.
Get real.
This super did jack squat. And he's probably been looking for a new gig for 6 months, since he's a "dial it in" kind of guy, and the crisises (SpEd, Capacity, underfunding, disciplin, etc) mean that you can't sit and hide behind a desk and expect things to just tick along.
Waste not, and, he's performance has been a total waste.
WASTE NOT
The fact that staff has had to backtrack some (typically) lamebrained and tin-eared decisions (particularly with respect to SpEd) in the last few months demonstrates the night and day difference between this and previous administrations. MGJ and Enfield would've just laughed while the great unwashed pounded on the castle walls. Serious. I would've filed a few more OSPI complaints but the district backed off some idiotic initiatives. This is because Banda said "Fix it!" Crap like this takes time. Too bad he didn't want to stick to the task.
As for all those AL task forces funny how you engage all those people for their recommendations just as much of their areas of concern are already budgeted for our are being crafted by an internal work group long before the work is completed. Besides, every gifted kid should take World history three times right?
It's so sad as we were just getting to know you... And your style of leadership by poll. Even if some of those polls went out after it was clearly obvious that you had made the moves already.
If the folks from Sacofpimentos want evidence of his body of work have them look at the error ridden math adoption presentation and how his boy Tully went out of his way to circumvent the Board after it didn't go through. All very clever stuff... But it failed and Tully should have been reprimanded unless he was just following orders... Which he clearly was.
-Good Riddance
There are a lot of people asserting that Banda leaving lets the staff run willy nilly, but it is not clear the Board is powerless in this situation. Does anyone know the actual powers of the Board when there is no superintendent?
Its shameful and no end in sight if Wright continues to drive the agenda for them.
The Board cannot fire or hire anyone but the Superintendent.
BUT, they could, in their discussions that Pealee said are coming this week, decide to look for someone to streamline - not get rid of - the SP. It's too much and too much at Central. The middle management bloat is getting out of hand.
I think Monica is right. The powers that be would LOVE for Wright to be superintendent. I do not think it is to be for a variety of reasons. I'm not even sure it's his heart's desire. He, too, has moved around and that should be a tip-off to the Board (among other things).
It will be interesting to see how the Board proceeds. We have three people who have seen several supers come and go (Carr and Martin-Morris and Patu) but it's not like the ones haven't been keeping careful watch.
The pre-K agreement with the City has GOT to be shelved. I suspect if there isn't a lot of push for a hold on this, we will see Banda's last act to include signing off.
This needs a long, hard look before anyone signs.
I was reminded of this when someone wrote to me to let me know that Kent Bechler, who works for the search firm being used by Sacramento Schools, has ALSO been working for our district. As Superintendent Banda's coach.
How much was he paid? I don't know. Why did Banda need "coaching?" I don't know. Mr. Bechler is himself an award-winning superintendent.
Of all his actions I most regret his handling of the Jon Greenberg incident. I think that was cowardly. That has forever tainted my opinion of him. Sorry to say. And his ties with enVision were at least suspect.
All I want is someone who will streamline admin and redirect money back to the schools.
I'm with you, Draft Gregoire. I think she''d be fabulous!
Rather than assert who should be Banda's successor, I think we'd do better by insisting the school board fix their dysfunctional search process. (Board members don't seem to work well with each other; I guess it stands to reason they wouldn't work well finding or working with a Superintendent.)
The school board has to be clear about what they want from the Superintendent and senior staff before they can credibly search for a leader.
Lastly - and this may be unpopular - I'm starting to feel the school board needs some tough love from other authorities: either the OSPI or the Seattle Mayor. The latter in particular has a big stake in having a well-run school system.
Really, Seadad? Are you talking about the same Mayor that pushed through the tunnel deal? The same Mayor that wouldn't denounce the actions of his PAC for distributing misinformation related to victims of violence to win the election? The same mayor that blames- everyone and everyone- for poor outcomes when, he, himself, failed miserable to fund education? C'mon and No thanks.
Democracy isn't always pretty and I'm sure this board will provide an accurate representation of the community atlarge; even if they don't always agree.
There are better options out there, some internal, some external, but getting Murray involved in SPS is not one of them.
CT
This District is difficult for the Superintendent to manage for two reasons:
First -- we have a lot of problems either created by (or left unsolved by) past Superintendents, together with a few new ones (high growth) -- so there is a fair amount of hard work to do.
Second -- certain departments of downtown staff consistently fail to do their jobs. The current sped failure is an example. So is much of the neglect in Teaching and Learning. They don't spend time in the buildings; they don't seem service oriented (hint -- they NEED to be focused like lasers on support of teachers and building staff)! They don't do what they are asked/told in any meaningful manner (and sometimes they don't even go through the motions).
If we are going to solve problems, the people we hire have to be willing and able to solve (or at least make good progress) on them. If that was a task he either didn't agree needed to be done, didn't relish doing, or couldn't do -- then that is a problem. I know he didn't come on all "visionary leader" like Stanford, or all "martinet" like MGJ. He had a much different style. Personally, I still think he could have done much of the work that needed to be done, with more time. But this is all moot at this point.
I also agree with the "no mayors," no "state intervention." The farther you get from people who are accountable to the Board (and to Seattle parents and residents), the more likely you are to have people who make boneheaded decisions and listen to faux grass roots advocacy groups, instead of Seattle parents and teachers.
Jan
What you probably don't know is that they aren't allowed to spend time in schools. Literally, not allowed. When the district killed the coaching program (already anemic) last year they turned professional development into "trainings" held at JSCEE. This is what now passes for professional development in this district, and it is shameful, and morale is very low among the lower level of T&L folks, who indeed should - and want to be - out in buildings, working with teachers and staff.
This is what happens when a superintendent is MIA and the power vacuum allows the upper level of management, under Mr. Wright's control, to run things. Remember, Mr. Wright came from the Gates Foundation and, as far as I know, is not an educator. There is an enormous disconnect between that upper level management, now bloated by yet more highly paid, useless positions, and teachers and building administrators.
We need a superintendent who understands that the "core mission" of a school district is students. We need superintendent who is a visible leader. And we need superintendent who can undo all of the bloat and damage that has occurred during Mr. Banda's tenure. And this is particularly true as Burgess (and maybe the Mayor, I don't know) are circling the district.
Lastly, Ms. Peaslee's comments about the board's support for Banda's leadership deeply, deeply concern me. Those comments seem to go far beyond just being politic.
And i guess you believe Larry Craig had a "wide stance"?
c'mon, people quit high level jobs and rarely if ever give the real reason when it's a dispute with their board. he could have done one more year and then gone back with no loss of pension.
the Peter's majority now gets to taste power and gets to pick a new person of their choosing. bully for them. Peters needs to learn what is involved in a super search. she acted like she knew EVERYTHING about math, so we'll see how much she knows about hiring. hopefully it won't interrupt her vacation plans.
bill2
That said, maybe he thought the Board was too much work. Sorry, but a superintendent - a good one - learns how to work with a board and give and take is part of it.
Peaslee is trying for stability; no reason to attack.
There are unfounded attempts to link Banda's departure to the board. Has anyone considered that any superintendent in this town would be put-off by the politicos in this town and would want to head-out of dodge?
--- swk
What is it you find "disgusting" about the Larry Graig comparison? That he spent his career supporting anti-gay legislation? That he was arrested and pleaded guilty to soliciting sex in the mens' room?
That he's a closeted gay man?
Wonder Bread
P.S.
my take on the Banda exit is as follows,
He did some great work but after the math adoption fight, he saw the board was going to ignore staff on big decisions and go with their "gut" do their own googling. It would be like the mayor telling the head of City Light how to pick new type of transformer.
To "Undo the damage" -- I had no idea that exec staff was no longer "allowed" in buildings. Nor do I have anything I can really say in response to your conclusion -- that this follows from a MIA Superintendent who has neglected T and L, and allowed Mr. Wright too much influence. I am not a Wright fan -- especially after his performance in the math adoption meeting (though I am sure that is a trifle compared with other things he may influence -- it is just the only thing I have seen of him lately). We certainly do need someone who gets that the core mission of the District is student learning -- and that the bloat has to be cut. If the line you draw between lower T and L staff is accurate, it does not reflect well on Mr. Banda (whatever his reasons for leaving).
Jan
Where do you get your information about California's pension system? Most defined-benefit pensions, the pension depends on years worked * final 2-3 years salary * a factor, 2-3%. Banda got a raise to come here and will make about the same in Sacramento as he does here. So if he stays in Sacramento 2-3 years, he gets a pension on California's plan based on his higher salary. If he stays here, his California pension is based entirely on his lower pay from his previous job.
Actually, the pension may be one factor, but I bet the deciding factors are being closer to his family like he said, and the damp and dark winters here.
Wonder Bread, the adoption committee was deeply divided. You can't compare well-known engineering decisions like electrical transformers with textbook adoption. Kids have personalities and families and react differently to the same stimuli; electrons don't.
An executive coming out of that experience will respect the teachers and demand high quality, on time work from the central administration. I think someone from any of these industries would also narrow the mission of the central administration and prevent further mission creep.
Moreover, I would hope that such a leader would work to improve the generally low quality of management throughout the district. Not only are principals, for the most part, poor managers, the managers in the central administration are poor managers.
mirmac1...... who is Mary H.? Don't DFER's want charter schools?
We need someone committed to closing the achievement gap not just in word but in actions.
Carol
The thing is, he seems like a smart, thoughtful, and cautious person. Someone like that doesn't leave a long-time state job at the age of 55 without having carefully thought it through. He put in 30 or so years and must have a decent pension in California. He's making $270K/year here, plus another $22K going into retirement here - surely he can continue saving for retirement while working here. And, sure, Sacramento is physically closer to Bakersfield than Seattle is, but last I looked, it's still a 4-hour drive. He's not going to be having dinner with his family every night!
I think both of these things are convenient excuses to leave a job that he doesn't like. He took a year to listen and learn and decided he didn't like what he saw. It just isn't plausbile that a mere 2 years after leaving CA, he's suddently worried about his retirement and wants to shore up his pension. Someone who behaves rashly might have made the move without thinking it through, but nothing he's done here has ever been rash.
And who can blame him for wanting out? He's stuck between a rock and hard place in that his boss (the Board) doesn't buy into various state mandates (Common Core) and doesn't trust his employees (district staff). Maybe he doesn't like the local politics (eg, preschool initiative) or maybe he sees no way to solve the intractable problems in times of fiscal austerity, like the coming high school capacity crisis. Who knows?! I don't. But I just don't buy homesickness or financial concerns as his main motivators.
"I'm not convinced that hiring from within JSCEE HQ is the answer. We need someone untainted and objective."
Wonder if she still feels that same.
--- swk
--- swk
Where did you get this? I have not heard any pushback from the Board over CC. That was a big part of the math adoption.
I think the biggest issue is that staff see the Board as know-nothings and could they please get out of the way of the important work of staff.
That's wrong thinking and they will continue to clash with the Board if they keep it up.
Well gee, SWK, don't leave us hanging. Who was it?
The Board, on the other hand, thinks that they have a duty to make policy and oversee management. Funny, right? So the Board occasionally - rarely, to tell the truth - takes a break from floating with the current and sticks an oar in the water. They suggest something. Something like having a transparent program placement process, actually conducting performance evaluations, keeping track of the money, or setting school start times that work for students. You can review the past several years' of "Board Priorities" for a complete list.
The staff reacts to these signs of life with the gnashing of teeth and rending of garments, but without ever actually doing the work that the Board asks them to do. How could they possibly do any of that silly work when they are so busy with the same implementation that they have been trying to make (under a variety of names) for over a decade now?
It was called Standards-based Learning System, "the same high quality instruction at every school", Fidelity of Implementation, Equitable Access, and now MTSS. It doesn't matter what they call it, they can't get it to happen. And they are trying in every way they know. Yet no matter how many PowerPoint presentations they make or how many clever names they invent, the teachers are ignoring them. A chain of Chief Academic Officers have all tried and failed to get the teachers to pay attention to the district administration instead of the students, but the teachers just obstinately keep addressing student needs. The insurgents! Well, just wait until they get a load of the next PowerPoint. That'll fix 'em.
The only way this ridiculous dysfunction can be fixed is for a new superintendent to come in and fix it. A superintendent who understands administration and management of a company of professionals. A superintendent who understands that you have to allow people to participate in the development of an idea if you want their buy-in. A superintendent who will articulate a narrow mission for the central administration so they aren't wasting their time on pet projects that don't advance the mission, so they actually can address themselves to the mission, and so they can eliminate the excess payroll in the JSCEE that doesn't support schools, teachers, and students.
--- swk
Mary Alice Heuschel - short-time Inslee Chief of Staff and former supe of Renton. No reform she doesn't like.
Gina
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