Patrice Wingert
|
Nov 25, 2008 05:59 PM
Though presidential candidates often say that education will be one
of their top priorities, the job of education secretary is often among
the last cabinet seats filled. While Barack Obama's transition team
hasn’t floated any names yet, the education establishment---reformers,
teachers’ unions, colleges and universities--has no shortage of
candidates. What no one knows is whether Obama is leaning toward
someone from the more innovative end of the reform movement (the group
Democratic Rep. George Miller, who heads the U.S. House education
committee, admiringly calls the “Disrupters”) or a candidate with close
ties to the teachers’ unions. Long a key constituency in the Democratic
Party, the unions are now under attack by the Disrupters, who see
teachers’ protectiveness of tenure and seniority as barriers to
dramatic reform, particularly in failing urban schools.
The
innovators, who have made key alliances with corporate donors and
politicians eager for a faster pace of reform, want one of their own in
the top spot. Their favorites include New York City schools chancellor
Joel Klein, who has helped transform the country’s biggest urban school
system; Jon Schnur, the head of New Leaders for New Schools, who acted
as an Obama surrogate during the campaign; Michelle Rhee, chancellor of
the Washington, D.C., school system and founder of the New Teacher
Project; Kati Haycock, the outspoken head of Education Trust, a
nonpartisan powerhouse pushing for bold education reforms, or Wendy
Kopp, who founded Teach for America, which funnels new graduates of
prestigious colleges into hard-to-fill teaching positions.
The
teachers’ unions prefer someone like Linda Darling-Hammond, a professor
of education at Stanford who acted as a surrogate for Obama during the
campaign or former Gov. Jim Hunt of North Carolina, both reformers who
have a long history of working respectfully with the unions on issues
like increased teacher professionalism. There’s even talk of Obama
choosing one of their own, like Randi Weingarten, the savvy new
president of the American Federation of Teachers.
During the
campaign, Obama managed to convince both groups that he shared their
vision of change. Teachers liked his criticism of the federal No Child
Left Behind reform plan as inflexible and underfunded, and his promise
that future reforms would be done with them, not to them. The
innovators were encouraged by his shout-out to Rhee during the third
presidential debate, his call for performance-based pay for teachers
and his enthusiasm for the expansion of charter schools. However, when
Obama recently put Darling-Hammond in charge of his education policy
transition group (immediately raising the perception that she was a
candidate for the top job), there were howls of protest from the
Disrupters, who fear a return to the more modest and incremental pace
of reform that characterized the Clinton years.
What about
someone who can bring both sides together? Names that come up in those
conversations include former secretary of state Colin Powell, who has
long had an interest in education, as well as programs benefiting
disadvantaged youth; Arne Duncan, who is well known to Obama as chief
executive of Chicago’s public schools as well as a basketball-playing
buddy; and Freeman Hrabowski, president of the University of
Maryland-Baltimore County, an independent thinker who has been notably
successful in attracting and graduating minority students in highly
demanding college science and technology programs. Other governors
getting buzz include Republican Tom Kean, former governor of New
Jersey, former president of Drew University, and chairman of the 9/11
Commission, as well as Democrat Tim Kaine, the current governor of
Virginia, who made Obama’s short list for vice president.
If
the country’s economic woes slow down, Obama’s ability to boost
education funding as promised, he may focus on someone who could wield
the power of the bully pulpit as skillfully as Bill Bennett did during
the early Reagan years. Powell and Hrabowski would both meet that
criteria, while adding racial diversity to the cabinet.
More