Article #7
The Intellectually Corrupt Context in Which the
Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education Selected Lisa Sayles-Adams as the
New Superintendent
On
26 November 2024, soon after the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Board of
Education announced that the Task Force was recommending two mediocre
candidates, Sonia Stewart and Lisa Sayles-Adams, as finalists in the search for
a new MPS Superintendent, I sent the following letter to the Board >>>>>
…………………………………………………………………………………….
>>>>>
New Salem Educational
Initiative
A Program of New Salem
Missionary Baptist Church
Gary Marvin Davison,
Director
Church Address/ Academic
Sessions
2507 Bryant Avenue
North
Minneapolis
MN 55411
Administrative Office/
Mailing Address
312 South Linden Place
Northfield
MN 55057
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 Hickley. 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 of 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) course.
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.
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
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)
<<<<<
…………………………………………………………………………………….
At the juncture at which I sent the above letter to the Board, the
directors had an opportunity to atone for the miserable decision of the Task
Force. But, although some directors had
misgivings about the recommendations, not one had the courage to take the
necessary action to assure that Rochelle’s Cox’s name was included among the
final candidates for consideration by the entire MPS Board of Education.
The Task Force was following a timeline devised by the MPS Board
of Education and given as follows >>>>>
Superintendent Search Timeline, Academic Year
2023-2024
June 6, 2023
· MPS
Board of Directors and BWP Consultants Meet to Outline Search
June 13, 2023
· MPS
Board of Directors Review and Approve Draft Leadership Profile from BWP
June 15-August 1
· Board
gathers feedback on draft leadership profile
August 2023
· Board
Approves Final Leadership Profile and Vacancy Announcement
September 5, 2023
- Formally
launch vacancy marketing efforts and advertisements
- BWP
opens application portal
November 5, 2023
- Application
Deadline
November 9-10, 2023
- Application
Review and Applicant Interviews
- BWP
Consultant Team interviews top applicants
- BWP
Consultant Team investigates social media footprint of top candidates
- BWP
Consultant Team conducts preliminary reference checks on top candidates
November 14, 2023
- BWP
Meeting with Board of Directors and/or Search Committee (pending Board
determination)
- BWP
presents candidate slate (4 - 7 top candidates)
- BWP
workshop on organizing successful candidate interviews and the
decision-making process of choosing the next superintendent
November 29-30, 2023
- Interviews
of candidate slate (90 - 120 minute interviews per candidate)
- 2- 3
candidates to be interviewed by the Board of Directors
- BWP
completed references checks on “finalist’ candidates
December 2, 2023
- BWP/Selection
Committee present Finalist Candidates to Board
- Board
approves Finalist Candidates
December 15-17, 2023
- Board
interviews Finalist Candidates and Identifies Top Choice
December 18-?, 2023
- MPS
conducts required background checks per Minnesota law
- Board
negotiates candidate contract
- Board
holds special meeting to approve contract and introduce new superintendent
July 1, 2024
- New
Superintendent reports to work (if not before)
………………………………………………………………………………….
An Account of the Week in
Which the Minneapolis Public Schools
Board of Education
Concluded a Terribly Botched Search for
Long-Term Superintendent
The week that began on 27 November
2023 and ended on 1 December 2023 was a momentous phase in the K-12 Revolution.
Sonia Stewart (currently Deputy
Superintendent, Hamilton County Schools [Chattanooga TN]) and Lisa Sayles-Adams
(currently Superintendent of Eastern Carver County Schools [Chaska MN area])
were the two candidates recommended by the 17-person Minneapolis Public Schools
(MPS) Superintendent Search Task Force. The creation of a Task Force was a
mistake, as were all aspects of this failed spectacle that were associated with
a conventional search.
My recommendation, for emphasis
making reference to A.J Crabill’s advice for the Board to utilize a search firm
only for logistics and candidate vetting, was to abjure conventional processes,
understand Rochelle Cox’s unique talent, save time, get on with the mission,
and hire her soon after she received the appointment as interim superintendent.
I maintained that position in the
aftermath of Cox’s contract extension on 7 March 2023 and endeavored to
advocate that the Board, observing brilliant presentation after brilliant presentation
of unprecedented academic initiatives, to appoint Rochelle to the long-term
position before the timetable was set, but to no avail.
The invitations to apply went out
on 5 September 2023; the application window closed on 5 November. Twenty-five
(25) people applied and BWP Associates (the search firm unfortunately hired by
the MPS Board of Education) recommended five (5) to the Task Force for
interviews; the Task Force recommended Stewart
and Sayles-Adams to the Board as a whole.
As should have been predicted, the
Task Force phase was critical and corrupt.
Any objective assessment would
have at the very least recommended Rochelle Cox among the two or three referred
to the Board as a whole.
But clearly there were connivers
on the Task Force who did not want Cox’s name put forward, knowing that she
would have a very good chance of getting the vote: My assessment was that she had the votes of
Ira Jourdain, Kim Ellison, Joyner Emerick, and Abdul Abdi--- so that only
one more vote for Cox would be needed before a potential cavalcade of votes might
result in a clear majority.
After the corrupt decision by the
Task Force, I recommended to Board members that they reclaim control of the
process and at the very least include Cox’s name for consideration. The
vote took place on Friday, 1 December; no such reclamation occurred, even
by those who were the most in favor of Rochelle Cox’s academic initiatives and
in favor of her gaining selection as long-term superintendent.
The 1 December vote went 8-1, a
rather confusing development since Adriana Cerrillo had advocated energetically
for Sonia Stewart during the discussion phase; only Ira Jourdain, though,
cast his vote for Stewart.
Only a dozen or so people were in
the audience--- very unusual, since such gatherings are often teeming
with all manner of folks and their particularistic interests. One could
have proverbially heard the proverbial pin drop throughout the meeting,
including when the decision was made and officially announced--- even
more unusual. The strong suggestion is that this Board move is unpopular
and Sayles-Adams will begin with little enthusiastic backing from staff or
community.
………………………………………………………………………..
Apparently, the discussion
and debate within the MPS Superintendent Search Task Force turned very
boisterous and acrimonious, with just a few members dominating the
debate. MPS Board of Education Director and Clerk Lori Norvell, as chair
of the Task Force, eventually called in staff from BWP associates, the search
firm who identified five candidates from 25 applicants for recommendation to
the Task Force, to mediate the discussion.
I do not at this point
have a firm conclusion as to how only two candidates were recommended by the
Task Force to the entire MPS Board of Education with the exclusion of Rochelle
Cox’s name, but according to reports the majority of participants either
supported her as the number one candidate or wanted her name recommended to the
entire Board; supporters included the principal, the teacher not
officially representing the MFT--- but
maybe even the official MFT representative and probably the Education Support
Professional (ESP [teacher’s aide), with whom Cox has developed an excellent
relationship), at least three of the five community members, and the three
students (including the two MPS Board of Education Student Representatives).
There is, then, a high
probability that two or three voluble members prevailed in limiting the options
to two candidates, not reporting Cox’s name out to the entire Board.
This and other
assessments, including the exact stances of the Board members both within the
Task Force and on the Board as a whole, will be among my continuing
investigations as I prepare the second edition of Understanding the
Minneapolis Public Schools: Current Condition, Future Prospect for
circulation and formal publication.
………………………………………………………………………………………………
Abhorrently, the neither
the Task Force nor the MPS Board of Education as a whole consulted senior staff
and cabinet members in making their calamitous decision. Many staff members were in tears as the decision
of 1 December was made.
But these same highly
talented staff members joined Rochelle in conducting a tour d’ force Committee
of the Whole on Tuesday evening (5 December), providing evidence of success
thus far with the key academic initiatives and giving all manner of information
as to MPS finances, school climate, progress in hiring and retaining BIPOC
teachers, and improvement in getting students who have lagged in attendance or
dropped out entirely back on track
The staff members felt a surge
of elation in the aftermath of the meeting, inasmuch as this demonstration of
programmatic success and progress was the perfect answer to the Board’s having
bungled the search so badly and so coarsely.
In view of current
circumstances, my own stance toward and relationships with Board members has
shifted:
I
will continue to advocate for sustaining the initiatives of Rochelle and staff,
even as I keep Board members and Lisa Sayles-Adams on notice that my 55,000
blog viewers per month will be observing and responding to how Rochelle and
staff are treated.
……………………………………………………………………………………….
Information and Analysis Pertinent to the Candidacy of Sonia
Stewart
The following presentation
gives the objective information pertinent to the career and credentials of
Sonia Stewart, along with a few remarks giving my view of the Stewart
candidacy.
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 from June 2012 through June 2018. 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 Stewart and staff 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 the classes in which they had been enrolled to the Credit
Recovery program. 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%
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%
Information
and Analysis Pertinent to the Candidacy of Lisa Sayles-Adams
The following presentation
gives the objective information pertinent to the career and credentials of Lisa
Sayles-Adams, along with a few remarks giving my view of the Sayles-Adams
candidacy.
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
2020-2021 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%
Graduation
Rate
69.5%
College
Readiness
45.2 (Rated on scale of 0-100)
Information
Pertinent to the Dissertation---
Written as
Requirement for the ED. D., Minnesota State University/Mankato---
Embargoed by Lisa
Sayles-Adams
DISCIPLINE
·
Education (1)
·
Educational
Leadership (1)
PUBLICATION YEAR
·
2022 (1)
PUBLICATION
·
All
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects (1)
PUBLICATION TYPE
·
Theses/Dissertations (1)
FILE TYPE
·
None (1)
African American Women
Principals: A Phenomenological Study to Explore their Experiences in K-12
Leadership
Lisa Sayles-Adams
Publication: All Graduate Theses,
Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects
African American Women Principals: A Phenomenological Study to
Explore their Experiences in K-12 Leadership
Advisor
Natalie Rasmussen
Committee
Member
Candace F. Raskin
Committee
Member
Efe Agbamu
Date
of Degree
2022
Language
English
Requirement for
the Ed. D. In Educational Leadership at Minnesota State University/Mankato
Educational Leadership (EDD)
The
doctorate in educational leadership is dedicated to developing racially
conscious leaders for P-21 schools, higher education, and non-profit
organizations.
PROGRAM
REQUIREMENTS
Common Core
EDLD
734 Professional Development Colloquium I 3 credits
EDLD
735 Professional Development Colloquium II 3 credits
EDLD
747 Organizational and Critical Race Theory & Analysis 3 credits
EDLD
751 Seminar: Advanced Leadership Ethics 3 credits
EDLD
752 Seminar: Leadership Exemplars 3 credits
EDLD
759 Influences and Assessment of Public Policy 3 credits
Doctoral Internship
(Specialization): Higher Education, P-12, or Non-Profit Leadership - Choose 8 Credit(s). Select 4 credits each, in consultation
with advisor, during Semester 3 and Semester 5.
EDLD
798 Doctoral Internship in Educational Leadership 1-12 credits
Research/Methods Course(s)
EDLD
782 Design and Method in Qualitative Inquiry 3 credits
EDLD
792 Quantitative Research Methods for Educational Leadership 3
credits
EDLD
793 Focused Research Investigations I 3 credits
Doctoral Internship -
Research Internship (in consultation with advisor). - Choose 4 Credit(s).
EDLD
798 Doctoral Internship in Educational Leadership 1-12 credits
This course is designed
for doctoral candidates in educational leadership to experience implementation
of theory where they are given the opportunity to create, demonstrate, and
maintain effective strategies and methodologies from leadership practices in a
school or higher education setting.
Prerequisites: none
Unrestricted Electives
Unrestricted Elective
Credit and/or Advanced Standing Recognition - Choose 9 - 10 Credit(s). Advanced Standing will allow up
to 10 post-Masters degree credits to satisfy this category.
EDLD 600 -
799 credits
Capstone Course
EDLD
799 Dissertation 1-12 credits
Other Graduation Requirements
Program will recognize a
maximum of 30 credits from an earned Masters degree program and will apply
toward the required 90 credits of EdD program
Creator
Title
African American Women
Principals: A Phenomenological Study to Explore their Experiences in
K-12 Leadership
Responsibility
by Lisa L Sayles-Adams.
Publisher
Mankato, Minnesota : Minnesota State
University, Mankato, 2022
Format
1 online resource (134 pages)
text file PDF
Dissertation
Ed.D. Minnesota State University,
Mankato 2022 Educational Leadership: Ed.D.
Description
African American women have
played a pivotal role as leaders in public education. Their contributions have
spanned three centuries, impacting their communities, families, and workplaces.
Despite their contributions and demanding work, African American women principals continue
to experience the double jeopardy of race and gender. This
phenomenological study explored and described the impacts of race and gender on
the leadership experiences of five African American women
principals in the upper Midwest region of the United States. The purpose
of this qualitative study was to examine the intersectional experiences
of African American women principals and the challenges they faced to
improve academic outcomes for students. Special attention was given to the
barriers and coping strategies the leaders used to navigate their marginalized
and oppressive experiences. The major themes that emerged were categorized as
barriers that confirmed; different expectations, double standards, questioning
authority, acts of resistance, aggression, and being treated as
clean-up women. An additional theme emerged that described coping
strategies utilized to navigate racism and sexism in the workplace that
included self-advocacy and being authentic, spirituality, support networks, and
concealment of their emotions.
Contents
Includes bibliographical references.
Language
English
Genre
Academic theses.
Contributor
Rasmussen,
Natalie degree supervisor
Raskin,
Candace F degree committee member
Agbamu,
Efe degree committee member
Minnesota
State University, Mankato, degree granting institution.
Identifier
OCLC : (OCoLC)1371330595
OCLC : (OCoLC)on1371330595
Source
Library Catalog
Links
Cornerstone
Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects
………………………………………………………………………………………..
Note that Lisa Sayles-Adams’s dissertation ran only 134
pages and that she took the highly unusual step of embargoing this slim and in
all likelihood shabby work, the only such doctoral thesis among all of the
dissertations on record at the University of Minnesota/Mankato during the
two-year period that encompassed the completion and defense of this thesis,
until autumn 2024.
………………………………………………………………………………………..
Revealing Exchanges with Sharon El-Amin (Chair of the MPS Board of
Education During the Superintendent Search) and Lori Norvell (MPS Board of
Education Clerk and Chair of the Superintendent Search Task Force)
Below
I provide a contentious email interaction that I had with Sharon El-Amin, who
during the months of the superintendent search was Chair of the Minneapolis
Public Schools Board of Education.
El-Amin
was responding to the letter that I sent to the whole Minneapolis Public
Schools Board of Education on 26 November, urging the Board to reclaim control
of the process from the Task Force and move forward in a way likely to result
in the selection of Rochelle Cox as long-term superintendent of the district.
>>>>>
From Sharon El-Amin, 1 December 2023
>>>><
Good
afternoon Gary,
Thank
you for your continued attention and dedication to MPS and our students. I
have always offered you the respect of listening to and considering your
perspective, a courtesy I will again extend by reviewing the information you
have sent.
I
know you are aware that neither board members nor Search Task Force members are
allowed to disclose or discuss anything about who may or may not have been an
applicant, beyond those that were selected for an interview. Therefore, I do
not expect that others will respond on that portion of your message. Rather,
like me, I imagine they will review the information you provided on the two
finalists and incorporate that into their decision.
As chair I have strived to
collaboratively lead with integrity throughout this search process over the
past year. The Board has voted to affirm the process and its specific steps at
several junctures during that time. At length, we carefully deliberated and
voted unanimously to delegate the selection of finalists to the Search Task
Force. My focus is now on seeing through the final stages of this process with
fidelity and we have two strong finalist candidates, both of whom I believe
would be an excellent leader for MPS.
Without making comment on
her status as an applicant for the position or not, my respect and gratitude
for Interim Superintendent Cox is unparalleled. She has provided much needed
leadership and stability for MPS and to me personally, and I am forever thankful.
I am excited to see her continue the work for MPS in her next capacity.
Thank you for your
research and for reaching out.
Sincerely,
Chair El-Amin
Sharon El-Amin
Board of Education,
District 2 Director|Chair
Sharon.El-Amin@mpls.k12.mn.us |
612.986-3281
…………………………………………
Reply
from Gary Marvin Davison
December
1, 2023
Sharon:
This
communication is the promised concluding statement on the matter of selecting
the next Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Superintendent, personalized as a
note sent particularly to you.
I read your own framing
of the process with care; there is little surprise that you and I have
very different views of that process and the various possible scenarios at this
evening’s (1 December 2023) 4:00-6:00 PM meeting.
Hence, before proceeding
to my comment on the responsibility that you bear for the superintendent
process, be reminded that my key points remain as follows >>>>>
>>>>>
The MPS Board of Education has bungled the search for the next long-term
superintendent badly.
>>>>>
The Board should have taken much firmer control in selecting the next MPS
superintendent, in the spirit of A. J. Crabill’s advice, and looked first for
an internal candidate, of which there were and are several good
prospects; Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox was clearly the best, a
circumstance that she had proven as Interim Superintendent.
>>>>>
I have observed superintendents ranging from Richard Green in the 1980s through
Ed Graff during 2016-2022. Because of the terrible training that
superintendents receive in education programs, and the academically lightweight
nature of their background, there is little surprise that superintendents of
the Minneapolis Public Schools and other districts typically fail to address
the chronic substandard academic proficiency of students, particularly those
facing the challenges of familial poverty at the urban core.
>>>>>
Therefore, the fact that Rochelle Cox is a keen reader of books and has
interests across the mathematic, scientific, and liberal arts is highly
unusual. Following from that keen academic interest and her intense love
of children and adolescents, Cox in the months stretching from July 2022
through the present (as November turns into November 2023) has relentlessly
presented to the Board at each monthly business meeting and each Committee of
the Whole an abundance of long-needed mathematics and reading development and
knowledge-intensive academic programs, closely faithful to the goals of
Strategic Plan (academic achievement, student well-being, effective staff and a
school climate of equity).
>>>>>
I sat for years observing Board members and was ever stunned that so little
discussion of academics took place. The various initiatives that Cox and
staff have authored and articulated, and those into which they have injected
new energy--- the intervention triads, online ACT training, much more
vigorous implementation of Groves, PRESS, and LETRs, the assemblage of an
outstanding group on the Anti-Racist, Anti-Bias (ABARS) for addressing the
concerns and the retention of BIPOC staff, the uniform implementation of math
and reading curriculum, and the current pursuit of a reading curriculum that
provides background knowledge and sophisticated vocabulary development---
represent an unprecedented program for addressing the academic of students of
all demographic descriptors, most especially the needs of students whose
fundamental skills have languished far below grade level.
>>>>>
The Board should have long ago offered Rochelle Cox the position of long-term
Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools.
>>>>>
To depend on an MPS Superintendent Task Force, in which 14 of the 17 members
are not elected officials and lack suitable qualifications, to recommend
two or three candidates from which the Board is to select one to be the new MPS
Superintendent, is an abominable neglect of the Board’s duty to take full
responsibility for all aspects of the selection process.
>>>>>
Those two candidates put forward should be regarded only as
recommendations. Rochelle Cox’s name should be put forward as a third
option. As detailed in my previous communication, Sonia Stewart has
disturbing red flags in her professional history and is the typical mediocrity
from superintendent candidate pools; Lisa Sayles-Adams, again as detailed
in the previous communication, is also a mediocrity.
>>>>>
There are various scenarios that could ensue this evening (1 December 2023),
including putting Cox’s name forward among the three for consideration.
>>>>>
If the process unfolds as you foresee, and either Stewart or Sayles-Adams is
selected, then I will be monitoring the continuation of the promising
initiatives of Cox and staff, with the expectation that those initiatives move
forward with current first-rate staff.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
I am deeply disappointed
in your own role in the MPS Superintendent Search process, Sharon.
I will continue to
investigate the details of that process and report that process, as the full
range of facts become clear, as I complete the second edition of my book, Understanding
the Minneapolis Public Schools: Current Condition, Future Prospect and
write a bevy of new articles for my blog, which currently receives
approximately 55,000 views per month, nationally and across the globe.
Be
proud, therefore, of whatever happens this evening and in the days and months
to come---
With
best regards---
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)
………………………………………………………………………………………………
Below
I provide a contentious email interaction that I had with Lori Norvell, who
during the months of the superintendent search was Chair of the Minneapolis
Public Schools Board of Education
Norvell,
as was the case with El-Amin, was responding to the letter that I sent to the
whole Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education on 26 November, urging the
Board to reclaim control of the process from the Task Force and move forward in
a way likely to result in the selection of Rochelle Cox as long-term
superintendent of the district.
Revealing Exchange with Lori Norvelle
Lori Norvelle, 1 December 2023
>>>>>>
Hi
Gary,
Thank
you for sharing your thoughts and perspective with me. Interim Superintendent
Cox stepped into this role and was the right person for our District at that
time. I appreciate her, her work, and commitment to MPS. I am very happy
with the work of the Superintendent Task Force as well as the process for the
Superintendent search. And I am very excited to begin this very important work
with Dr. Sayles-Adams.
Best,
Lori
Lori
Norvell, Director | she/her
Minneapolis
Public Schools | District 5
612-919-8136
………………………………………………………………………..
Reply from Gary Marvin Davison, 2 December 2023
December
2, 2023
Lori---
Thanks
much for your reply.
................................................................
The
ineptitude, intellectual corruption, and low information bases that I have
witnessed among the members of the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of
Education are stunning.
I
am now sorting through the facts to determine whether, as I have queried with
reference to other education establishment figures, you and the others
are
1)
ignorant (abysmal information bases);
2)
in denial (staring straight into the truth but rejecting facts);
or
3)
outright corrupt.
In
any case, as I once told Eric Moore, my former home-dude, when it comes to my
babies, the only friend I have is the Truth.
And
now my readers across the city, state, nation, and world are receiving the
truth and monitoring what you have done.
Lisa
Sayles-Adams does have a chance to succeed if she embraces the initiatives of
Rochelle and her staff. If she does not, I will induce her
resignation, as I did in conjunction with others, in the case of Ed Graff---
Be
well---
With
best regards---
Gary
Gary
Marvin Davison, Ph.D.
Director,
New Salem Educational Initiative
2507
Bryant Ave North
Minneapolis MN 55411
(Cell)
507-301-9902
http://www.newsalemeducation.blogspot.com
Author,
Understanding
the Minneapolis Public Schools: Current 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, 2008)
The
State of African Americans in Minnesota 2008 (Minneapolis
Urban League, 2004)
Tales
from the Taiwanese (Libraries Unlimited,
2004)
A
Short History of Taiwan: The Case for Independence (Praeger,
2003)
Culture
and Customs of Taiwan ([with Barbara E. Reed]
(Greenwood, 1998)
A World
History: Links Across Time and Place ([with
six other authors] (McDougal Littell, 1988)
<<<<<
………………………………………………………………………………………..
Given below are the member of the MPS Superintendent Task Force,
who botched the search so terribly, raising the same questions that I posed in
the case of the MPS Board of Education Members who made such a terrible
decision when they cast their votes formally on Friday, 1 December 2023
>>>>>
The Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Superintendent Search Task
Force 2023
Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Superintendent Search Task Force
2023 that bungled the search so badly was as follows >>>>>
Task Force Member Task
Force Role Appointed by
/MPS
Affiliation
Brenda Johnson Education
Minneapolis
Support Federation
Professionals
of Teachers
(ESP)
(MFT),
ESP
Chapter
Wyhett Johnson ESP Student
Representatives
Matthew Collier Teacher MFT/
Teacher Chapter
Katie Kamphoff Teacher Student
Representatives
Matthew Arnold Principal Minneapolis
Principal
Forum
Mauri Friestleben Principal Student
Representatives
Drew Wessen Student Student
Representatives
Titilayo Bediako Community
Director
Member Joyner Emerick
Nekima Community
Director
Levy-Armstrong Member Sharon El-Amin
Patricia Community
Director
Torres Ray Member Kim Ellison
Nekima Community
Director
Levy-Armstrong Member Sharon El-Amin
Francisco Segovia Community
Director
Member Collin Beachy
Abdirahman Community
Director
Muhktar Member Faheema
Feerayarre
Lucie Skjefte Community
Director
Member Ira Jourdain
Abdihafid MPS
Board of MPS Board of
Mohammed Education Education
Student
Representative
Director MPS Board of
Director,
Abdul Abdi Education MPS Board of
Education
Director MPS
Board of Director,
Adriana
Education MPS Board of
Cerrillo Education
Director MPS
Board of Director,
Lori
Education MPS Board of
Norvell Education
………………………………………………………………………..
Apparently, the discussion
and debate within the MPS Superintendent Search Task Force turned very
boisterous and acrimonious, with just a few members dominating the
debate. MPS Board of Education Director and Clerk Lori Norvell, as chair
of the Task Force, eventually called in staff from BWP associates, the search
firm who identified five candidates from 25 applicants for recommendation to
the Task Force, to mediate the discussion.
I do not at this point
have a firm conclusion as to how only two candidates were recommended by the
Task Force to the entire MPS Board of Education with the exclusion of Rochelle
Cox’s name, but according to reports the majority of participants either
supported her as the number one candidate or wanted her name recommended to the
entire Board; supporters included the principal, the teacher not
officially representing the MFT--- but
maybe even the official MFT representative and probably the Education Support
Professional (ESP [teacher’s aide), with whom Cox has developed an excellent
relationship), at least three of the five community members, and the three
students (including the two MPS Board of Education Student Representatives).
There is, then, a high
probability that two or three voluble members prevailed in limiting the options
to two candidates, not reporting Cox’s name out to the entire Board.
In doing so, this task
force and the Board of Education that created this inept and corrupt group, who
had the opportunity to make a historic decision in the advancement of pubic
education in the United States, instead made the greatest blunder even made by
a group participating in processes leading to the appointment of a
superintendent of public school district.
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