By in
Rhode Island’s Future
“School systems
that have successfully ignited reforms and sustained their momentum have all
relied on at least one of three events to get them started: they have either
taken advantage of a political or economic crisis, or commissioned a
high-profile report critical of the system’s performance, or have appointed a
new, energetic and visionary political or strategic leader.”
Rhode Island’s “energetic and
visionary” leader, Commissioner Deborah Gist, wants to keep her job when Gina
Raimondo takes office next year. The Board of Education meets tonight and it’s
not on their agenda, but you can bet it’s on their minds.
In many respects she found this to
be true and she is generous in her praise for the work of ex-Commissioner
McWalters and ex-Governor Carcieri’s Board of Regents for creating a
base she could build on. A founding member of Jeb Bush’s Chiefs for Change
and a graduate of the Broad Academy, Gist was warmly welcomed by
Rhode Island’s business community and its Republican governor.
RIDE ‘s development and
implementation of a new teacher evaluation system is the focus of her
self-study dissertation: “An Ocean State Voyage: A Leadership Case Study
of Creating an Evaluation System With and For Teachers”. Most
teachers are not with and for Gist. Her dissertation discusses
her difficult relationship with teachers through the firings in Central
Falls and Providence and teachers’ strong resistance to the use of student
standardized test scores in their own evaluations.
Now that the Common Core has arrived
in the suburbs, there is growing discontent with her leadership among parents
as well, which is likely to flare up with the the first administration of
the PAARC (Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers)
test in the spring of this school year.
Gist regarded Carcieri as
“reform-minded and open to taking aggressive steps to bring about the necessary
changes to Rhode Island’s education system” and, although she didn’t
have the same rapport with Governor Chafee, she made her peace
with him after a difficult start.
Given Governor-elect Raimondo’s
celebrity as a pension reformer, some assume that she is committed to the
entire union-busting privatizing program of corporate reform. The Fordham Institute’s Michael J. Petrilli, for example:
“Of particular note is Rhode Island—Rhode Island!—which just elected a pro-education reform, pro-pension reform Democrat as governor and a bona fide charter school hero as lieutenant governor. All while voters in Providence rejected a union-backed convicted felon in favor of a charter supporter. Remarkable!”
Governor-elect Gina Raimondo
and her husband, Andy Moffit, are parents of children attending school in
Providence and Raimondo has said positive things about public schools and
public school teachers.
Moffit is a senior consultant in education
with McKinsey & Co. He had a hand in the report, “How the world’s best
school systems keep getting better,” that introduces these comments and that
Gist quoted in her dissertation.
He was a principle
author of Deliverology 101: A Field Guide for Educational
Leaders, which Gist admires. After Governor Chafee’s
election, the Board of Regents changed significantly which worried Gist.
It must also have dismayed Moffit, who was nominated to the Board by
Carcieri but decided not to serve under Chafee. Both Gist and Moffit have
interests in large-scale change of school systems and educational
organizations. Like Gist, Moffit has serious corporate-reform
credentials. If the two don’t know each other well, at the very
least they are professional acquaintances with common contacts.
I don’t know if this
connection will work for or against Gist and I’m not even going to guess how
the next lieutenant governor’s opinion might figure into the decision.
Certainly Raimondo will not want to add to the the anger and distrust
that Rhode Island educators feel over pension issues by
retaining an unpopular Commissioner.
Nor will she wish to create the
impression that her husband’s career has undue influence on her decision.
On the other hand , her sensitivity to the business community, the input
of pro-corporate reform campaign contributors, and a shout-out from Washington
could work for Gist.