Nov 26, 2023

An Open Letter to Members of the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education, Pertinent to the Inadequacy of the Two Candidates--- Sonia Stewart and Lisa Sayles-Adams--- Recommended by the 17-Member, Mostly Unelected, Superintendent Search Task Force


New Salem Educational Initiative

A Program of New Salem Missionary Baptist Church

Gary Marvin Davison, Director

November 26, 2023

 

 

Directors

Minneapolis Public Schools

Board of Education

1250 West Broadway

Minneapolis  MN  55411

 

 

MPS Board of Education Directors:

 

I trust that this note finds all of you well in the aftermath of a warm and joyful Thanksgiving with loved ones, and that the spirit of gratitude lingers as you anticipate a very blessed holiday season.

 

……………………………………………………………………………………………………….

 

Attached to this email are several documents for your reference as we move forward in this week, at the end of which you will, if the schedule holds, on this coming Friday, 1 December, vote on the next Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS).

You have bungled this search terribly.

One of the documents attached is the communication containing the notes that in autumn 2022 A. J. Crabill sent to the previous iteration of the MPS Board of Education.  Mr. Crabill was invited to address that Board as a representative of the Council of Great City Schools.  Seemingly against expectation of key members of that Board, though, Mr. Crabill counseled members to use a search or a law firm only for vetting and handling logistics:  He conveyed his conviction that astute Boards are always in readiness when the need arises to select a new superintendent and should always be cultivating internal candidates.

The previous Board, especially as impelled by the four key members given reference above, ignored Mr. Crabill’s advice and endeavored to put in place a suggested time table for a very conventional process in selecting the next superintendent.  You, the members of the current Board, in large measure followed the signals of the previous Board and charted a very conventional search, except that on 7 March 2023 you voted to extend the contract of Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox. 

With that move you provided hope that you would understand the historically unprecedented nature of the extraordinary initiatives authored by the Interim Superintendent and executed brilliantly, especially by Executive Director of Strategic Initiatives Sarah Hunter, Senior Academic Officer Aimee Fearing, Deputy Senior Academic Officer Maria Rollinger, and Senior Finance and Operations Officer Ibrahima Diop;  but also by Executive Director of Engagement and External Relations Tyrize Cox, Executive Director of Equity and School Climate Derek Francis, and Executive Director of Student Support Services Meghan Hickey.  Indeed, Senior Information Technology Officer Justin Hennes,  Interim Senior Human Resources Officer Alicia Miller, the associate superintendents, and the Anti-Bias, Anti-Racist (ABAR) team give appearance as a nonpareil group of highly talented individuals working with extraordinary and seamless alacrity to implement a knowledge-intensive, skill-replete academic program, with abiding reference to MPS Strategic Plan values prioritizing academic achievement, student well-being, effective staff, and school and district climate.

With exceptional energy and acuity, Cox and Fearing superintended the introduction a new math curriculum (Bridges/Number Corner) that for the first time in recent memory was followed across all grade levels at all schools.  And for reading/language arts, a similar uniformity of curriculum was followed in a process that will now move from Benchmark Advance to a new curriculum currently under trial.  Cox and staff also moved with new vigor to ensure faithful implementation of the reading intervention programs Groves, PRESS (“Pathways to Reading Excellence”), and LETRS (“Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling”).  Academic and Strategic Initiative staff introduced high dosage tutoring provided by the firms of Carnegie and Axiom, online ACT training and, most importantly, 133 three-person professional teams (one licensed teacher, two trained Education Support Professionals [ESPs]), each team responsible for addressing the academic needs of 75 students lagging below grade level and having not experienced growth in reading or mathematics skills for two successive quarters.  

Remember that I have profound knowledge of the history and philosophy of education, that I have spent 52 years teaching students living at the urban core, that I have for 30 years now directed the New Salem Educational Initiative, and that I currently teach 45 students per week, with a 25-person waiting list of students living mostly in North Minneapolis who either attend or live in the attendance zone of the Minneapolis Public Schools.

Take very seriously, then, this communication that conveys to you that Rochelle Cox has been in the process of leading the Minneapolis Public Schools forward toward a model for urban public school districts across the United States. 

The work that Cox and staff have done to address with elevated intentionality the skill acquisition needs of students languishing chronically far below grade level has never been accomplished by any public school district serving students living at the urban core.

Never.

If you doubt this assertion, please read the Analysis and Philosophy sections of my book, Understanding the Minneapolis Public Schools:  Current Condition, Future Prospect, or schedule a meeting with me so that I may explain to you why you have been making history under the direction of Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox.

……………………………………………………………………………………………


Thus, you should have eleven months ago put aside conventional processes and asked Rochelle Cox to be the next long-term superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools.  You should never have given your decision-making responsibility to a task-force that included 14 (of the 17 total) members not elected by the voters in the district. 

You could still take the initiative to decline the recommendations of the task force and offer the contract to Cox;  alternatively, you could make other moves that would alter the track you are now following:

You could add Cox’s name to the list of finalists, so that the whole Board would have the ability to assess her record compared to the other candidates.

I find odd the circumstance that the task force did not recommend three candidates rather than just two: 

While Cox has never publicly stated that she submitted an application, there is a high degree of probability that she did so and could have had her name forwarded to the Board, along with those of Sonia Stewart and Lisa Sayles-Adams.  You members of the Board---  and the public---  should have the opportunity to assess the candidacies of Stewart and Sayles-Adams along with the accomplishments of Cox.

………………………………………………………………………………………………...


As you ponder these recommendations, please read the documents that I have attached to this email. 

I am also going to embed in this email (see below) a mostly objective assessment of the candidacies of Sonia Stewart and Lisa Sayles-Adams.  This combines much information from the presentations on the MPS Board of Education website with objective information from my own investigations, especially including data on the demographics and academic progress for the Hamilton County Schools, where Stewart has served as Deputy Superintendent;  and the Eastern Carver County Schools, where Sayles-Adams has most recently served as Superintendent.

Be attentive, though, in the information provided for Stewart that a controversy arose over her claims of academic progress at Pearl-Cohn High School, in view of policies of her initiation that seemed to make failing courses impossible and rewarded students excessively, giving any student an “A” who merely took an Advanced Placement (AP) exam. 

Please read the article (see link directly below) by Samantha West (“Meet Sonia Stewart, One of Two Finalists for the Green Bay Area Public School District,” Green Bay Press Gazette, May 12, 2023), pertinent to the questions that have been raised about Sonia Stewart’s policies while at Pearl-Cohn High School.

https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/education/2020/02/14/sonia-stewart-candidate-green-bay-schools-superintendent-touts-focus-school-culture/4649734002/

Stewart has written a book, All Our Children Are Our Children:  A Pearl at the Heart of the City that is inspiring at many junctures (I ordered and read this book on Saturday, 25 November) but makes highly exaggerated claims for the academic achievements of students at Pearl-Cohn High School, given that U. S. News and World Report data indicates that only 3% of students at Pearl-Cohn are proficient in math, only 12% in reading, that 35% of students at the high school take at least one Advanced Placement (AP) course but that not one---  not one---  passed (score of at least 3 out of 5) in the year ending in 2022 covered by the U. S. News and World Report presentation, and that college readiness for Pearl-Cohn seniors is only 8.7 (eight and seven-tenths) on a scale of 0 to 100.

As to the record of students in the Eastern Carver County Schools where Sayles-Adams has been serving as superintendent, the data observed is not very impressive, given that this district serves middle class students and only 9.2% (nine and two-tenths percent) of students are on free/reduced price lunch.  Also, the word I have from my sources in the St. Paul Public Schools (SPPS) is that administrators regarded Sayles-Adams as not being ready to take a head superintendent role when she assumed the position in Eastern Carver County Schools.  The latter district serves just 9,377 students, casting doubt as to whether this stronger of the two candidates recommended by the task force is actually prepared to lead the Minneapolis Public Schools, with 48% of 29,000 students on free/reduced price lunch;  at many MPS schools the figure for those receiving free/reduced price lunch is at 85% or more).

Consider my comments and information provided herein very seriously, and read carefully the attached documents.

I will be attending the events for the upcoming week and will be highly available for any discussion or questions.

Do go ahead and consider the information below.


With my very best wishes--- 

Gary

 

Gary Marvin Davison, Ph.D.

Director, New Salem Educational Initiative

2507 Bryant Ave North

Minneapolis    MN     55411

http://www.newsalemeducation.blogspot.com

 

Author, 

Understanding the Minneapolis Public Schools:  Current Gary Condition, Future Prospect (New Salem Educational Initiative, second edition, 2023)

Foundations of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education (New Salem Educational Initiative, 2022)

A Concise History of African America (Seaburn, 2004)

The State of African Americans in Minnesota 2004 (Minneapolis Urban League, 2004)

The State of African Americans in Minnesota 2008 (Minneapolis Urban League, 2008) 

A Short History of Taiwan:  The Case for Independence (Praeger, 2003)

Tales from the Taiwanese (Libraries Unlimited, 2004)

Culture and Customs of Taiwan ([with Barbara E. Reed] Greenwood,  1998)

 

Sonia Stewart

 

Deputy Superintendent

Hamilton County Public Schools (HCPS)

45,176 students

 

As Deputy Superintendent of the Hamilton County Public Schools, Sonia Stewart has responsibility for the departments of Teaching and Learning, School Leadership, Opportunity and Access, and Social Emotional and Academic Development.  Her initial position at HCPS was Community Superintendent for the MidTown Learning Community.

 

Prior to her three and one-half years at HCPS, Stewart spent 13 years in the Nashville Public Schools, where she became Executive Officer of Organizational Development after serving as Math Teacher and Head Girls Basketball Coach, Freshman Academy Administrator at Glencliff High School, and then an eventful tenure as Executive Principal at Pearl-Cohn High School.  This latter position created a high profile media story of success but has brought negative reflections from some of her HCPS colleagues who say that testing policies at Pearl Conn inflated test scores and prohibited giving students failing grades. 

 

With regard to questionable policies that Stewart may have utilized, former Pearl Cohn guidance counselor Kelly Brown conveys her view that success at Pearl-Cohn maneuvered to make standardized test scores look better than they were.  A Nashville television report in 2015 revealed that Pearl-Cohn had implemented a policy prohibiting giving students a grade below a 60---  even if all the student did was “wad up the test and throw it back at the teacher.  A district spokesperson at the time defended Stewart by saying that Metro Nashville Public Schools had implemented a controversial policy two years earlier that no student could get a grade below a 50 and that Stewart had simply misinterpreted that policy.

 

Brown also criticized a policy at Pearl-Cohn that automatically gave an A to any student who took an Advanced Placement exam — even if they slept through it.  She also claimed that under pressure from the district’s central office to improve test scores, just before students were to take end-of-course exams for which they had not done well on practice exams, Stewart pressured counselor Brown to transfer students from their classes. The district said in a statement that such an action was in violation of district policy that may not have been clearly communicated to principals, and Stewart vigorously denied the accusations.

 

Before those 13 years in the Nashville Community Public Schools, Stewart taught math in Los Angeles, California and served as the Founder and Executive Director of The Oaks Community Development Corporation in Chicago, building a network of parents, community leaders, and partner organizations for bringing educational reform to a neighborhood at the urban core.

 

Stewart has written a book, All Children Are Our Children:  A Pearl at the Heart of the City (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform), based on her experiences at Pearl-Cohn.

 

Stewart’s academic credentials are as follows  >>>>>

 

Ed, D., Education, Leadership, and Policy

Vanderbilt University (Nashville, Tennessee)

 

M. Ed.

Trevecca Nazarene University (Nashville TN) 

 

B.S., Mathematics

Biola University (La Mirada CA). 

 

U.S. News and World Report data on public school districts indicates the following for Hamilton county Schools >>>>>

 

Hamilton County Schools

 

79 schools;  22 high schools

Student enrollment 45,176

 

White                                47.6%

African American            25.6%

Hispanic                            17.9%

2 or more ethnicities       6.9%

Asian/                                 1.8%

Pacific Islander

American Indian/             0.0%

Alaska Native

Native Hawaiian/             0.0%

Other Pacific Islander   

 Free/Reduced Price Lunch     46.7%

English Language Learners      6.0%

 

I am working on obtaining information on percentage of students who receive Free/Reduce Price Lunch;  the N/A given in the typically copious U.S. News and World Report data is highly unusual. 

 

Academic Proficiency

 

                         Math             Reading

 

Elementary                39%                 35%

Middle School           26%                 26%

High School               21%                 42%

 

College Readiness                         18.3      (Rated on scale of 0-100) 

Graduation Rate                            86.5%

 

 

 

Lisa Sayles-Adams              

 

Superintendent

Eastern Carver County Schools

9,379 students

 

Lisa Sayles-Adams began her career in education at the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS)  from 1996 to 2004 as a teacher and eventually served as principal at an MPS contract alternative school in the organization The City, Inc. 

 

Sayles-Adams then worked from 2004 until 2012 in the 52,000-student district of Clayton County Schools in Georgia, serving as high school principal and principal for two elementary schools.

 

Next, Sayles-Adams moved to the St. Paul Public Schools in 2012, holding positions as middle school and elementary school principal before serving for five years as an assistant superintendent.  Then, in 2020, she moved into the same position in the Eastern Carver County Schools;  she was selected as superintendent for the 2021-2022 academic year. 

 

Sayle-Adams's academic credentials are as follows  >>>>>

 

 

Ed, D., Educational Leadership (2022)

Minnesota State University/Mankato

 

M.A., Curriculum and Instruction (2002)

University of Minnesota/Twin Cities 

 

B.A. Political Science        (1992)

University of Minnesota/Twin Cities

 

U.S. News and World Report data on public school districts indicates the following for Eastern Carver County Schools         >>>>>

 

 

Eastern Carver County Schools

21 schools;  6 high schools

Student enrollment 9,379

 

White                                74.6%

Hispanic                            10.4%

African American              5.4%

Two or                                5.2%

more ethnicities

Asian/                                 3.9%

Pacific Islander

American Indian/           0.3%

Alaska Native

Native Hawaiian/           0.1%

Other Pacific Islander

 

………………………………………………….

 

Free/                                 9.2%

Reduced Price Lunch     

English                              5.6%

Language Learners

 

Academic Proficiency

 

Math             Reading

 

Elementary                64%                 63%

Middle School          42%                 59%

High School               56%                 67%

 

Graduation Rate                69.5%

 

College Readiness             45.2   (scale of 0-100)

 

Nov 22, 2023

Article #2 in a Series >>>>> The 2023 Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Search

The Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Superintendent Search Task Force announced at 7:00 PM on Tuesday, 21 November 2023, two finalists for MPS superintendent.

Information issued by candidate Sonia Stewart herself, listed on the School Board portal of the MPS website is reproduced as follows  >>>>>

2023 Minneapolis Schools Superintendent Search Finalist  

Sonia Stewart

 

Dr. Sonia Stewart currently serves as the Deputy Superintendent for the Hamilton County Public Schools in Chattanooga, TN (44,000 students). In this role she supervises the School Leadership, Teaching and Learning, Opportunity and Access, and Social Emotional and Academic Development departments. She came to Hamilton County three and a half years ago as the Community Superintendent for the MidTown Learning Community.

Dr. Stewart’s career pathway includes 13 years of experience in the Nashville, TN public schools, working as:

  • Executive Officer of Organizational Development
  • Executive Principal at Pearl-Cohn High School 
  • Freshman Academy Administrator, Glencliff High School
  • Math Teacher and Head Girls Basketball Coach

In addition, Dr. Stewart taught math in Los Angeles, California and was the Founder and Executive Director of The Oaks Community Development Corporation in Chicago where she built a broad network of parents, community leaders, and partner organizations in order to drive change for students and families in a targeted neighborhood focused on education and educational reform.

 

Dr. Stewart earned her Doctorate of Education in Education, Leadership, and Policy from Vanderbilt University. There, she earned the Dean’s Merit Scholarship Award and Wheeler prize. She also has a Masters of Education from Trevecca Nazarene University in Nashville, TN and a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from Biola University in La Mirada, CA. 

 

In her application letter, Dr. Stewart highlights her career accomplishments, as well as her personal investment and commitment to improving long-term learning outcomes for marginalized youth from a variety of cultural and socio-economic backgrounds. As Minneapolis superintendent, she would boldly pursue a strategic vision that fosters the growth and success of all children regardless of their background, zip code, and personal needs.  In her roles with the Hamilton County Public Schools, Dr. Stewart led and contributed to efforts that resulted in a district composite level five growth score and increases in student achievement and exceeding state proficiency rates in all core content areas—literacy, math, science, and social studies.

 

Dr. Stewart believes that the MPS is uniquely positioned to build on its mission, vision, and commitment to provide high quality, culturally responsive education for its students. This work, however, cannot be done alone. Dr. Stewart believes that strong community partnerships are essential to student success. In Hamilton County, she points with pride to her efforts to ensure that 34,000 students received wrap-around services articulated in individualized student success plans.

 

Dr. Stewart has earned significant respect for her work. In his reference letter, her boss, Superintendent Dr. Justin Robertson wrote, “Dr. Stewart’s leadership qualities are unparalleled, making her the most exceptional educational leader I have encountered throughout my career.” The Hamilton County School Board Chair wrote in her reference letter that Dr. Stewart, “is truly a leader that has the ability to hear, see, learn and bring together multiple perspectives and educational needs for a community in a way that benefits all those around her.” Additionally, former HCS interim superintendent, Dr. Nakia Towns remarks, “Dr. Stewart is a leader among leaders and has become an ‘irreplaceable’ in HCS, institutionalizing legacy-building initiatives that will endure to serve students for decades to come.”

 

On a personal note, Dr. Stewart has been married to her husband Rayna for 28 years, and together they have four adult children.  She enjoys reading, hiking, sports and traveling.

Article #3 in a Series >>>>> The 2023 Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Search

The Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Superintendent Search Task Force announced at 7:00 PM on Tuesday, 21 November 2023, two finalists for MPS superintendent.

Information issued by candidate Lisa Sayles-Adams herself, listed on the School Board portal of the MPS website is reproduced as follows  >>>>>

Lisa Sayles-Adams

 

Dr. Lisa Sayles-Adams boasts a distinguished career in educational leadership spanning over two decades. Beginning in Minneapolis Public Schools from 1996 to 2004, she held various roles, including teacher and coordinator, ultimately becoming the principal at the City Alternative High School. Her journey continued in Clayton County Schools in Georgia (52,000 students), where she served as the principal for a high school and two elementary schools from 2004 to 2012.

 

Returning to Minnesota in 2012, she contributed significantly to the St. Paul School District (37,000 students) until 2019, holding roles such as middle school and elementary school principal, and later ascending to Assistant Superintendent for five years. In 2019, she took on the role of Assistant Superintendent in ISD 622 before assuming the prestigious position of Superintendent at Eastern Carver County Schools in 2020, overseeing a district of 9,600 students.

 

Dr. Sayles-Adams' academic background further solidifies her commitment to excellence. In 2022, she earned her Educational Doctorate in Education Leadership from Minnesota State University, Mankato. She also holds Pre-school through 12th-grade Administrative Licensure from St. Mary's University (2003), a Master's degree in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis (2002), and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Minnesota (1992).

 

Widely regarded by colleagues as an exemplary leader, Dr. Sayles-Adams is praised by Dr. Theresa Battle for her embodiment of a servant leader, emphasizing her commitment to academic excellence, cooperation, cultural awareness, and diversity. Additionally, Dr. David D. Thompson lauds her as an action-oriented educational leader, highlighting her expertise in innovative programming and organizational structures, impacting student outcomes positively.

 

Nov 20, 2023

Article #1 in a Series >>>>> The 2023 Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Search

Article #1

Superintendents Recently Hired After Search Led by the Firm BWP Associates (the firm that led the current Minneapolis Public Schools Search) >>>>>   Weak Academic Credentials and Dismal Student Proficiency Rates


Eric Gallien      

(Note >>>>>   Gallien was dismissed by the Charleston Board of Education with a $359,000 contractual buyout after just four months.)

 

(Superintendent, Charleston SC; now dismissed )

 

Ed. D., Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis

University of Wisconsin/Madison

 

M. A., Curriculum Development and Educational Leadership

Alverno College

 

B. A., History Education

University of Wisconsin/Milwaukee

 

Previously

Superintendent, Racine Unified School District

 

27 Schools/ 6 High Schools

16,516 students

 

White                  35.5% 

 

Latine                  30.2%

 

African                25.7%

American  

   

2 or                     7.3%

more 

ethncities  

 

Asian/                 1.0%

Asian Pacific Islander  

 

American           0.3%

Indian/

Alaska Native                   

 

Native                 0.1%

Hawaiian/  

or other 

Pacific

Islander

 

Free/                   45.9%

Reduced

Lunch

 

English                15.0%

Language

Learner

 

 

Student Academic Proficiency

                       

                             Math             Reading

 

Elementary               10%                 17%   

Middle School          11%                 20%

High School               17%                 33%

 

 

Crystal A. Hill

(Superintendent, Charlotte-Mecklenburg)

 

Ed. D., Educational Leadership

Gardner Webb University

 

M. A., Instructional Technology

North Carolina A&T State University

 

B. A., Elementary Education

 

Previously

Superintendent, Cabarrus County School District NC

 

42 Schools/13 High Schools

33,562 students

 

High School                      91.2%

Graduation Rate

 

High School Students    28.2% 

College Ready

 

 

Student Demographic Composition

White                  44.5% 

 

African                27.7%

American  

 

Latine                  18.8%

   

Asian/                 8.9%

Asian Pacific Islander  

 

2 or                     5.0%

more 

ethncities  

 

 

American           0.3%

Indian/

Alaska Native                   

 

Native                 0.1%

Hawaiian/  

or other 

Pacific

Islander

 

Free/                   22%

Reduced

Lunch

 

English                  8.7%

Language

Learner

 

 

Student Academic Proficiency

                       

                             Math             Reading

 

Elementary               49%                 49%   

Middle School          44%                 50%

High School               46%                 60%

 

 

Denise Watts

(Superintendent, Savannah GA)

 

Ed. D.,

Wingate University

 

M. A., School Administration

University of North Carolina/Charlotte

 

B. A., Elementary Education

Elizabeth State University

 

Previously

Chief of Schools, Houston Independent School District

 

274 Schools/51 High Schools

33,562 students

 

High School        83.2%

Graduation Rate

 

High School       39.1%   

Students           

College Ready  

 

Student Demographic Composition

 

Latine                  61.8%

   

African                22.2%

American  

 

White                  9.7% 

 

Asian/                 4.5%

Asian Pacific Islander  

 

2 or                     1.6%

more 

ethncities  

 

American           0.2%

Indian/

Alaska Native                   

 

Native                 0.1%

Hawaiian/  

or other 

Pacific

Islander

 

Free/                   59%

Reduced

Lunch

 

English                36.8%

Language

Learner

 

Student Academic Proficiency

                       

                             Math             Reading

 

Elementary               26%                 32%   

Middle School          24%                 34%

High School               25%                 52%       52%