Dr. Rob Anderson, a member of Chiefs for Change’s third Future Chief cohort, is a passionate and dedicated educator with deep experience at every level of public education over the last two decades. As a teacher, an assistant principal, a principal, and an administrator, Rob has devoted his career to ensuring that every student gets the same kind of opportunity that allowed him to thrive.
In his most recent role as Deputy Superintendent of Academics in Fulton County, Georgia, Rob helped lead a district that has narrowed achievement gaps in the graduation rate, increased college and career readiness for students of all ages, improved ACT performance for four consecutive years, and expanded opportunities for Advanced Placement and Dual Enrollment for all students.
Rob’s passion for public education is rooted in his own experience. Growing up in poverty in a small town in Florida, Rob saw firsthand the power of education to change lives. After graduating from the University of Central Florida, Rob knew he wanted to give other students the support and opportunity his teachers gave him. He started his career as a Title I math and science teacher in Orlando, Florida, rising through the ranks of the Orange County (FL) Public School system to eventually serve as a department chair, administrative dean, assistant principal, and principal.
As principal at Lake Nona High School, Rob led the development of challenging, engaging programs that set all students up for success in higher education and the career of their choice. Among them: a Collegiate Academy that allowed students to have earned an Associates Degree when they graduated high school, a Health Career Pathway that provided students the ability to earn industry certification upon graduation, and an International Scholars program designed to prepare English Language learners for the rigors of college.
Rob was drawn to Boulder Valley School District by the shared commitment to the core values of equity and excellence. He looks forward to building on the hard work of Boulder Valley’s students, families, and educators to continue improving outcomes for all students while closing opportunity gaps.
Rob, his wife Jessica, and their two children are excited to join the Boulder Valley community.
Named Commissioner of Education in December 2016, Dr. Katy Anthes is widely respected for her commitment to listening to diverse perspectives and developing solutions that are founded on productive middle ground. Keeping students’ best interests as her top priority, she focuses on providing high-quality support to districts and educators working to enhance student outcomes.
Dr. Anthes has been with the Colorado Department of Education since 2011, serving as interim Commissioner, Chief of Staff, Interim Commissioner for Achievement and Strategy, and Executive Director of Educator Effectiveness. In that role, she led the state’s effort to evaluate, support, and retain highly effective educators in Colorado. In addition, Dr. Anthes was responsible for rolling out the state’s educator evaluation and development system, pursuant to Senate Bill 10-191.
In her past position as a partner with the Third Mile Group, Anthes led and researched major education initiatives for state, district, and national organizations on a variety of education issues and projects, including the Colorado School Leadership Academy Board, the Expanded Learning Opportunities Commission, and several district education programs across the state. Anthes also worked alongside numerous national education organizations, such as the Council for Chief State School Officers, the National Governor’s Association, the National Commission for Teaching and America’s Future, American Institutes for Research, and many more.
Prior to founding the Third Mile Group, she had seven years of research, policy, and leadership experience at Education Commission of the States, focusing on school and district leader effectiveness. Anthes holds a Ph.D. in Public Policy and a Master’s degree in Public Affairs from the University of Colorado Denver. She did her undergraduate work at the University of Oregon. Anthes lives in Denver and is an avid runner and soccer enthusiast.
Upon being appointed Commissioner of Education, Dr. Anthes became Colorado’s first female commissioner in 65 years, preceded only by the state’s inaugural commissioner Nettie S. Freed in 1950-51.
Steve Canavero, Ph.D., was the Superintendent of Public Instruction for the state of Nevada. Prior to his tenure as the Superintendent of Public Instruction, he most recently served as the Deputy Superintendent of Student Achievement at the Nevada Department of Education and was previously the first director of the newly created State Public Charter School Authority. Canavero brings years of experience working in public education at the state and local level. He has a background in evaluation and planning and worked as a teacher and principal. A graduate of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo with a degree in Ecology and Systematic Biology, Canavero earned his M.Ed. and Ph.D. in Educational Leadership at the University of Nevada, Reno. When Canevero is not working, he can be found with his wife and two daughters on a lake or ski hill – weather dependent.
A champion for children committed to helping every student reach his or her unlimited potential, Fayette County Public Schools Superintendent Emmanuel Caulk has a track record of success in urban school districts that spans two decades. With teaching and leadership experience at the elementary, middle, and high school levels in some of the nation’s largest and most impoverished school districts, Caulk has consistently advanced policies and procedures based on research and best practices to create systems of high expectations and accountability, organizational and governance structures, and metrics to define results.
In his first year at the helm of the second-largest school district in Kentucky, Caulk launched an entry plan that included five external audits, site visits to every school and program, and listening sessions and surveys that drew input from more than 12,750 students, staff, families, and community partners. His resulting “Blueprint for Student Success: Achieving Educational Excellence and Equity for All,” outlined 100 specific strategies in eight pillars of focus that were completed during the 2016-17 school year. The community was able to track progress and hold leaders accountable through a first-of-its-kind online monitoring tool.
Under Caulk’s leadership, the district developed its first strategic plan in a decade, worked in partnership with local business leaders to redesign its high schools through the Ford Next Generation initiative, launched an intentional volunteer campaign called “Give 10,” placed education in the center of community discourse through a highly successful Superintendent’s Book Club, and was the first school district in Kentucky to establish a grant-funded Office for Educating Boys of Color with an intentional focus on meeting the needs of primarily black and Hispanic male students.
In March 2017, the Kentucky Department of Education conducted its fourth and most exhaustive audit of the district in as many years, including 8,691 surveys, 180 classroom observations, site visits to 12 schools in the district, interviews with nearly 200 students, teachers, principals, district administrators, school board members, parents and community members, and the review of more than 1,200 pieces of evidence.
After the review, KDE issued its report concluding that Caulk “has brought stability to the district,” highlighting dozens of accomplishments from the Blueprint for Student Success and affirming that the district has “capacity” to lead future improvements.
Before joining FCPS in August 2015, Caulk had served as superintendent of Portland Public Schools, Maine’s largest school district, since 2012. He previously was an assistant superintendent in the School District of Philadelphia, serving 167,000 students. He also was assistant regional superintendent and deputy chief for the office of instruction and leadership support, and was assistant superintendent for high schools of the 46,000-student East Baton Rouge Parish School System.
Caulk’s experience in education includes time spent as a special education teacher in a juvenile detention facility, an elementary principal, and a high school principal. He also practiced law, serving as an education law attorney and former assistant prosecutor for the state of New Jersey.
Caulk earned a bachelor’s and a master’s degree from the University of Delaware and a law degree from Widener University School of Law. He is completing his doctoral degree in education.
A passionate advocate for providing high quality education to all children, Dr. Sharon L. Contreras made history in August 2016 when she was sworn-in as the first woman, first person of Latina heritage, and the second African American Superintendent of Guilford County Schools. From the moment she took on her new role, Dr. Contreras has been singularly focused on one goal – to ensure that every student graduates college and career ready.
Her first 100 days have been characterized by a spirit of collaboration and measured action, reflective of her lifetime of preparation for such a job. Since joining Guilford County Schools, she has traveled more than 550 miles to visit 80 schools, over 1,000 classrooms, and has met with nearly 100 leaders and community groups. Dr. Contreras has also visited and spoken in several houses of worship, met with parents and community members, as well as university presidents, chancellors, federal and state leaders, and elected officials.
Dr. Sharon Contreras values community and relationships. She believes that every student deserves a quality education, and the chance to lead a life of extraordinary impact. In a January 2017 interview, she said, “This is a district that must raise the bar and close persistent achievement gaps, while expanding school choice and career pathways for all students.” It is already clear across Guilford County, the State of North Carolina, and throughout the nation that Dr. Contreras is on track to meet the goals that she laid out upon acceptance of her new role. She is well prepared for this work.
Dr. Contreras began her career as a high school English teacher before serving as a principal, area superintendent and assistant superintendent in Rockford, IL. Dr. Contreras went on to serve as the Chief Academic Officer for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia and in the Providence Public Schools in Rhode Island. Through the development of high-performing teams, her work in those school districts resulted in improved graduation rates and access to rigorous academic programs for all students.
In 2011, she became the first woman of color in New York State’s history to serve as superintendent in one of the state’s largest districts when she took over the Syracuse City School District (SCSD). During that time, she increased student access to challenging academic courses, expanded career and technical education options and improved low-performing schools. Under her leadership, SCSD established 16 new career pathways for high school students, opening a school for gifted elementary students and two new high schools to provide students with the opportunity to earn associate degrees in electrical engineering technology, manufacturing technology and health-related fields.
Recognizing the population of SCSD students at risk for dropping out, Dr. Contreras, in conjunction with Say Yes to Education, expanded its Promise Zone program, providing critical supports and resources to students with social, emotional or behavioral challenges. She introduced a new Code of Conduct and was subsequently invited to participate in a White House convening on school discipline, an opportunity through which she briefed members of the U.S. Congress on implementing fair disciplinary practices in schools.
Contreras has also displayed her commitment to addressing students’ social, physical and emotional needs by expanding partnerships with the community and bringing Breakfast in the Classroom and universal free breakfast and lunch programs to all SCSD schools.
Dr. Contreras’s passion for quality education extends beyond the students. She has repeatedly leveraged her influence in support of improved conditions for educators and administrators alike. In one such demonstration, Dr. Contreras worked with the New York state legislature to secure $300 million in construction funding to create 21st century learning environments, and negotiated a landmark contract with the teachers’ union, making SCSD teachers the highest paid in the region over a five-year period.
Over the course of her nearly 30 year career, Dr. Contreras has won countless awards for her civic work and leadership including: YWCA Champion of Opportunity Award; The Network Journals 25 Influential Women in Business Award; Interdenominational Ministers’ Alliance Drum Major for Social Justice Award; Nosotros Radio Latina of the Year; Delta Sigma Theta Sorority’s Fortitude Award; Southwest Community Health Center Leadership Award, Upstate University Hospital Community Leader Award; and the NAACP Freedom Award. She is also a proud and active member of The Links Inc. and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc.
Today, you will find Dr. Contreras visiting schools, engaging the community through various initiatives, and working with her Guilford County Schools Transition Team, a group of leaders assembled to work together to meet her goals of preparing every student in the district for graduation and a full, productive life thereafter. The Transition Team is comprised of 99 members, representing 56 groups and organizations. They have organized the Superintendent’s vision into 4 areas of focus: 1) School Choice, Equity and Excellence, 2) Talent Development, 3) Organizational Effectiveness for Optimal Learning, and 4) Student Achievement. Not surprisingly, the district’s theme is “Soar to Greatness.” And soar, they shall.
Although Sharon Contreras is now considered the object of respect and admiration by many, she never forgets the place from which she received her own solid foundation. She was raised in Uniondale, N.Y. by her parents James and Elizabeth Contreras with her nine brothers and sisters, all of whom supported and encouraged education as a means of gaining the tools necessary to lead a life of extraordinary service to others. She earned degrees from Binghamton University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and now spends her days cultivating a remarkable legacy – leaving every school district better than it was when she arrived.
Susana Cordova, a member of Chiefs for Change’s second Future Chief cohort, brings almost 30 years of experience in the Denver Public Schools to her position as the district’s superintendent. She is a life-long Denver resident and has worked in DPS schools at the elementary, middle, and high school levels.
Cordova believes in the power of schools to transform the city. “Schools have the transformative power to build a more equitable future. We must create equity for all children, not by accident but by design, so that we nurture them to grow and achieve at high levels.”
Cordova has worked on projects like Teacher Leadership and Collaboration, in which teacher leaders both teach and lead teams of teachers; the educator effectiveness systems of LEAP and LEAD; the creation of district wide shared core values programming; and redesigning the districtwide programs for English learners.
Cordova received her undergraduate degree from the University of Denver and a master’s degree in education from the University of Colorado. She is a proud graduate of Abraham Lincoln High School, and lives in Denver with her daughter Carmen, son Alex and husband Eric, who have all attended the Denver Public Schools as well.
Dr. John Deasy became superintendent of Stockton Unified School District on June 1, 2018. He is a former superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District, Prince George’s County Public Schools in Maryland and Coventry Schools, Rhode Island.
He is widely published and has won numerous awards for innovation and leadership and has been named, over the course of his career, Superintendent of the Year, High School Principal of the Year and Teacher of the Year.
Dr. Deasy, 58, coaches current and emerging national education leaders. He is active on a number of boards, including UnboundED, College Summit and Cambriar. He is Board chair of Reset: New Day, New Year, an alternative prison for young men, and he is editor-in-chief of The Line, a magazine dedicated to civil discourse on pressing social issues, including education and social justice.
Dr. Deasy earned his Doctorate from the University of Louisville in Kentucky and has received additional degrees. He received his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Providence College, Rhode Island. He has taught at universities and is a speaker at national education conferences addressing low income communities. At Los Angeles he was credited for his Youth First agenda and with raising student achievement and college readiness.
Dr. Deasy and his wife, Patricia, have moved to Stockton from their Los Angeles home.
Colleagues hail Paolo DeMaria as a passionate leader, a tireless worker, a respectful listener, a consensus builder and a man with a great sense of humor. All are qualities Paolo calls on daily as he works to support an education system of nearly 3,600 public schools and more than 1.8 million students.
Much of DeMaria’s 30-year career has focused on school finance and promoting higher student achievement, college readiness and completion, and school choice for families. DeMaria is an unabashed cheerleader for Ohio’s public schools, having sent his children to Columbus Public Schools and The Graham School.
The son of European immigrants, the West Virginia native is the product of the public education systems of Easton, Pennsylvania; Charleston, South Carolina; Scotch Plains, New Jersey; and Greenville, South Carolina. DeMaria has a 25-year record of public service for the state of Ohio, having formerly served as a staff member in the Ohio Senate, assistant director and director of Ohio’s Office of Budget and Management and as chief policy advisor to former Ohio Gov. Bob Taft.
Later, as associate superintendent for the Ohio Department of Education’s Center for School Options and Finance, he supervised the distribution of more than $7 billion annually to Ohio K-12 school districts and developed policies and legislative recommendations on school finance and educational choices for families. Afterward, he served as executive vice chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents, leading initiatives to improve college completion, increase credential attainment, make textbooks more affordable and increase college readiness.
Before being chosen as chief executive officer of Ohio’s K-12 education system, DeMaria served for six years as principal consultant for Education First Consulting, guiding policy, implementation and strategy projects for K-12 and higher education clients in several states.
DeMaria earned his bachelor of arts, summa cum laude, from Furman University of Greenville, South Carolina, and a master’s of public administration from The Ohio State University’s John Glenn College of Public Affairs. He has co-authored several publications, including K-12/Higher Education Alignment: An Action Agenda for Increasing Student Success, for Core to College and the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association.
His honors include The Ohio State University Alumni Association’s Distinguished State Government Service Award and being named by Columbus Business First Magazine as one of 20 [People] to Know in Education.
DeMaria speaks fluent Italian. He lives with his wife, Patty, and their cats in the Schumacher Place neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio, and often bicycles to work. The DeMarias have two grown children, Sara and Tristan.
Knowing every student by name, strength and need is the promise of Highline Public Schools. Under the leadership of Susan Enfield the district is delivering on this promise by implementing a bold strategic plan committed to ensuring that students graduate bilingual, biliterate with the problem-solving and critical thinking skills that will prepare them for the future they choose.
A former high school English, journalism and ELL teacher, Susan served as Chief Academic Officer and then as Interim Superintendent for Seattle Public Schools before coming to Highline in 2012. She previously held leadership positions in Evergreen Public Schools (Vancouver, WA), Portland Public Schools and the Pennsylvania Department of Education.
Susan is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, and earned master’s degrees from Stanford University and Harvard University. She also holds a doctoral degree in Administration, Planning and Social Policy from Harvard’s Urban Superintendents Program.
Dr. Donald E. Fennoy II, a member of Chiefs for Change’s second Future Chief cohort, is the 26th Superintendent of Schools for the School District of Palm Beach County. The District is the 11th largest district in the country with a student enrollment of more than 193,000 students. The annual budget exceeds $2.4 billion and the District is the largest employer in Palm Beach County with over 23,000 employees.
Prior to his appointment as Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Fennoy served as the District’s Chief Operating Officer from May 2016 to March 2018. He is credited with significantly improving operational efficiencies across the nine departments within his
division, following the transportation meltdown in 2015. In addition, he created organizational structures to successfully execute $1.3 billion in tax referendum projects. He also managed District operations during Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Irma in 2017.
Before coming to Palm Beach County, he served as the Senior Area Superintendent of the South Learning Community for the Fulton County School District, where he was responsible for the guidance and improvement efforts of 28 schools. Under his
leadership, the South Learning Community schools achieved dramatic academic gains in addition to significantly improving financial and operational outcomes.
Earlier he served as the Executive Director of the New Leaders for New Schools, Maryland Program, overseeing the day-to-day operations and programming for the Maryland Principal Development Program. In a prior position as a principal in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, his high school received the National School Change Award. This honor is presented annually to six schools in the United States that have demonstrated the greatest academic turnaround in a two-year period.
He is a member of the 2015-2016 class of the Broad Academy, part of the Broad Center for the Management of School Systems. Chiefs for Change named him part of their 2017 cohort of the Future Chief program. Dr. Fennoy was honored for his outstanding accomplishments in the field of public education, and for being among the most notable 125 alumni of Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University during the school’s 125th anniversary celebration.
He graduated from Florida A&M University with a degree in Elementary Education. He went on to earn a Master’s Degree in Educational Leadership, and a Doctorate in Educational Leadership and Administration from the University of Central Florida. He and his wife Kendra are the proud parents of two beautiful children.
Dr. Lewis D. Ferebee is the Chancellor of DC Public Schools, selected by Mayor Muriel Bowser in December 2018. Before joining DCPS, Dr. Ferebee, a 20-year education veteran, served as Superintendent of Indianapolis Public Schools beginning in 2013, where he employed transformation efforts to drive turnaround for low-performing schools and raise the district’s graduation rate by 15 percentage points. During his tenure, graduation rates for Black and Hispanic students surpassed the district average, with Black students also surpassing the state average. Dr. Ferebee also designed a student-based budgeting process, enabling schools to innovate in order to meet the needs of their students while improving transparency and equity around the distribution of resources system-wide.
Prior to working for Indianapolis Public Schools, Dr. Ferebee served for three years as Chief of Staff for Durham Public Schools, where he reduced to zero the number of schools in Durham designated by the state as “low performing.” He also worked for Guilford County Schools in North Carolina as a principal, where he was named Principal of the Year, before serving as an instructional improvement officer and Regional Superintendent.
Dr. Ferebee earned his doctorate in educational leadership from East Carolina University, a master’s degree in school administration from The George Washington University, and a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from North Carolina Central University. In 2016, Dr. Ferebee was named among Education Week’s Leaders to Learn From. He also received Marian University’s 2016 John A. Purdie Innovator and Mentor of the Year Award. Dr. Ferebee currently serves on the Board of Trustees for the College Board.
Dr. Chad E. Gestson has served as Superintendent of the Phoenix Union High School District since the fall of 2015. Under his leadership, Phoenix Union has launched five new schools, from a Gifted and Talented Academy to a college preparatory in one of Phoenix’s most underserved communities to the Phoenix Coding Academy. Phoenix Union has seen tremendous increases in graduation rates, scholarship totals, and college matriculation rates since 2015. In the spring of 2018, The Broad Center selected Gestson as a Broad Academy fellow, a member of the 2019 cohort. Prior to being named Superintendent, Gestson was the district’s Director of School Leadership. In that role, he supervised principals as well as developed future principals and assistant principals through an Aspiring Leaders program that he developed. He had previously spent five years as the principal of Camelback High School, where he launched coding and engineering programs and the first and only Montessori high school in Arizona. Gestson served the Isaac School District for five years before joining Phoenix Union in 2009, first as an elementary school assistant principal, and later as a middle school principal. A product of Teach For America, he began his teaching career in the Roosevelt School District in 2001. Prior to his public education career, Gestson was a commercial construction superintendent in Seattle, WA. Gestson holds a B.A. in English from the University of Washington, an M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction from ASU, and an M.Ed. in Educational Leadership from NAU. In 2009, he completed his Ed.D. in Educational Leadership from NAU where he was named the Outstanding Doctoral Student of the Year.
Deborah A. Gist is the Superintendent of Public Schools in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Prior to July 2015, she was the Rhode Island Commissioner of Education. Before going to Rhode Island, Deborah served as the first State Superintendent of Education for the District of Columbia.
In 2008, Gist was a Broad Superintendents Academy Fellow. She serves on the executive committee of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC), and she is a founding member of Chiefs for Change.
In 2010, Gist was one of the Time 100, “the people who most affect our world,” and one of The Atlantic’s Brave Thinkers, whom the magazine recognizes for “the year’s most intrepid and original thinking.” In 2012, she was a winner of a Brian Bennett Education Warrior Award from Democrats for Education Reform.
She began her career in education 25 years ago as an elementary-school teacher in Fort Worth, TX, and, later, in Tampa, FL, where she conceived, designed, and initiated a literacy program serving families in 108 elementary schools in Hillsborough County.
Gist holds a Bachelor’s degree in Early-Childhood Education from the University of Oklahoma, a Master’s in Elementary Education and Curriculum from the University of South Florida, a Master’s degree in Public Administration from the Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government, and a Doctoral degree in education from the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. LaTonya M. Goffney serves as the Superintendent of Schools for the Aldine Independent School District (Texas). Since taking the helm in July 2018, Dr. Goffney has dedicated herself to more than 67,000 students and more than 9,000 employees of the district as well as the entire Aldine community.
Under her leadership, Aldine ISD moved from a ‘C-rated’ school district to a ‘B’ in 2018-2019. The district has developed and implemented a five-year strategic plan to dramatically increase access to highly-rated schools, choices, and opportunities that prepare students for their future. She and her team have created new initiatives to offer parents and students more options, including efforts focused on increasing early childhood education, dual language enrollment, and rigorous instruction and support for teachers and principals. Since joining the district, Dr. Goffney has led the effort to expand opportunities for students to earn a college degree and be career-ready following graduation by opening the Rose Avalos P-TECH School and its partnership with EMERGE Fellowship.
Dr. Goffney began her career as a language arts teacher in Coldspring-Oakhurst County Independent School District. She went on to serve as assistant principal and principal before leading COCISD as superintendent. In 2013, district leaders selected her as Superintendent of Lufkin Independent School District. In this role, she created systems dedicated to supporting teachers through the development of a professional learning academy for educators. She was also instrumental in establishing several community cooperatives, including the district’s first education foundation.
Dr. Goffney was named Superintendent of the Year by the Texas Association of School Boards in 2017. In 20198, the Texas Association of School Administrators selected her as the state’s nominee for the 2018 American Association of School Administrators National Superintendent of the Year award.
A native of Coldspring, Texas, Dr. Goffney is a graduate of Sam Houston State University, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in history, a master’s in educational administration and a doctorate in educational leadership.
John White was named Louisiana State Superintendent of Education in January of 2012. That year he launched Louisiana Believes, the state’s plan to ensure every child is on track to college or a professional career. In the time since, White has worked to unify the state’s fragmented early childhood system, to modernize expectations for students, to empower teachers, to guarantee economic opportunity for high school graduates, and to provide families with expansive school options.
Since 2011, Louisiana’s high school graduation rate has risen by 3.2 percentage points. Roughly 5,000 more graduates annually achieve a college-going ACT score than did in 2011. Louisiana is now the nation’s fastest-improving state on Advanced Placement tests, increasing the number of students earning passing scores by 50 percent in that time. And the number of students entering college has grown by more than 3,100 – a 16 percent increase.
Prior to being named State Superintendent, White served as Superintendent of the Louisiana Recovery School District, overseeing the nation’s first system of publicly-funded charter and non-public schools in New Orleans and launching the Baton Rouge Achievement Zone to replicate successes in New Orleans.
Prior to moving to Louisiana, White worked in New York City under Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Chancellor Joel Klein. While in New York he served as Deputy Chancellor, launching the Innovation Zone, a network of 100 21st Century schools that use technology to personalize student learning, and leading the city’s efforts to turn around more than 100 failing schools and start 500 new charter and district schools.
White previously served as Executive Director of Teach For America–Chicago and Teach For America–New Jersey. He began his career as an English teacher at William L. Dickinson High School in Jersey City, New Jersey. White received a B.A. in English with distinction from the University of Virginia and a Master’s in Public Administration from New York University.
Eric Gordon was appointed Chief Executive Officer of the Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) in June 2011 after serving as the district’s Chief Academic Officer for four years. He is responsible for the leadership and daily management of Cleveland’s 39,000-student school district. Mr. Gordon, together with Cleveland Mayor Frank G. Jackson and other business, philanthropic, and educational leaders, successfully lobbied Ohio legislators in 2012 to pass The Cleveland Plan, a revolutionary package of education reform legislation that was signed into law on July 2, 2012. The Cleveland Plan has received national attention for its strong bipartisan support and unprecedented collaborative process that united the people of Cleveland around a collective mission to transform their public school system.
Mr. Gordon is active nationally in the implementation of the Common Core State Standards curriculum and in the implementation of Social and Emotional Learning Standards for children. He serves as a member of the Executive Committee for the Board of Directors for the “Council of the Great City Schools”, a member organization representing more than 70 large urban districts across the United States. On July 1, 2019, Mr. Gordon began a one-year term as chair of the Council’s Board of Directors.
Prior to joining CMSD, Mr. Gordon was the Executive Director for Secondary Learning for the Olentangy Local Schools in suburban Columbus, Ohio. In that role, he was responsible for all aspects of education for students in grades 6-12. He is an experienced educator who has worked in both suburban and urban school districts. Mr. Gordon has served as a teacher, assistant principal and principal.
CEO Gordon was honored with the “Green-Garner Award” in 2016, naming him the Urban Educator of the Year, the highest honor available to an urban superintendent in the United States. Active in the Cleveland community, Mr. Gordon was featured in Inside Business Magazine’s “Power 100” in 2013 and was voted one of Cleveland Magazine’s “Most Interesting People” in 2012. This year, Corporate College and Smart Business magazine honored him with a Smart 50 Award, given to the region’s top executives.
Mr. Gordon is a graduate of Bowling Green State University, where he earned his master’s in Education Administration and Supervision (1997) and a bachelor’s of science in Secondary Mathematics Education and Driver Education (1991).
Dr. Errick L. Greene was appointed superintendent of Jackson Public Schools in October 2018 and immediately began the critical work of transforming Mississippi’s largest urban school district. That transformation effort included the launch of a bold new strategic plan focused on excellence, restructuring and rebuilding the central office team, and adopting a comprehensive instructional framework and rigorous curricular programs.
Dr. Greene’s commitment to education spans more than 27 years. He’s held leadership, school-based, and classroom positions in several states and the District of Columbia. He began his career in the classroom teaching middle school and upper elementary students. He later served as a principal, principal supervisor, chief of staff, and consultant to senior district leaders in Washington, D.C., Detroit, Syracuse, Baltimore and Newark. Prior to his work in Jackson, Dr. Greene served as the chief of schools for Tulsa Public Schools in Oklahoma. There, he supported the superintendent by leading the instructional leadership, family support services and district athletics teams.
Demonstrating his commitment to life-long learning, Dr. Greene has earned several degrees: a doctoral degree in Educational and Organizational Leadership from the University of Pennsylvania; two master’s degrees in Education — one from Trinity University and another from Howard University; and a bachelor’s degree in political science from Howard University.
Dr. Greene’s love for education was inspired at an early age by his third-grade teacher, Mrs. Grandberry. She expected great things from her students, and she made no secret of her love and dedication to them. Mrs. Grandberry was a demanding and nurturing teacher. She worked closely with Dr. Greene’s parents and consistently held him to high standards. She was so deeply committed to his achievement that, due in part to her influence, he never second-guessed his ability to achieve great success.
Dr. Greene is a career educator whose work is fueled by the life-changing experiences that he had as a student, and by his unwavering commitment to providing the same high-quality experiences for all.
With a focus on equity, innovation, and quality, Dr. William R. Hite, Jr. serves as Superintendent of the School District of Philadelphia, the largest public school system in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Since joining the district in June 2012, Dr. Hite has worked to create a system of great schools in every neighborhood. Under his leadership, the School District has opened new innovative high schools, expanded successful school models, launched in-district turnarounds, and redesigned schools in partnership with communities. His overall focus remains on strengthening all elementary and secondary school offerings.
Dr. Hite’s professional experience includes serving at every level – teacher, principal, central office administrator, and superintendent. He was previously Superintendent of Prince George’s County Public Schools in Maryland where his central work focused on enhanced access and rigor to ensure college- and career-readiness. Prince George’s County schools, one of the 25 largest systems in the United States, received national recognition for expanding access to Advanced Placement courses during his tenure. Dr. Hite also served as an Assistant Superintendent in Georgia’s Cobb County School District. In addition, as an administrator in Henrico County, Virginia, he led Highland Springs High School to “Best Practices” honors from the state’s General Assembly.
Dr. Hite has been an adjunct faculty member at the University of Richmond School of Continuous Learning and taught school leadership courses at Virginia State University, Bowie State University, and the University of Maryland. A member of numerous national, state, and local boards, he has participated in national initiatives and associations to reform K-12 education. Dr. Hite holds a Bachelor’s degree in Education from Virginia Tech, Master’s degree in Educational Leadership from the University of Virginia, and a Doctorate in Education, specializing in educational leadership, from Virginia Tech. He and his wife Deirdre have two daughters and a grandson.
Millard House II was appointed Director of Schools at Clarksville-Montgomery County Schools (Tennessee) in July 2017, overseeing a district responsible for over 36,000 students and 42 schools. During his tenure in this role, Mr. House has established a multi-pronged teacher pipeline as part of Tennessee’s “Grow Your Own” initiative that has gained both state and national recognition. The district has also seen steady academic gains across subject areas and, in response to the district’s teacher preparedness initiatives, an increase in prepared teachers within the district.
With over 25 years of education and nonprofit experience, Mr. House has served as the Chief Operating Officer of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System in Charlotte, NC and Deputy Superintendent with The Tulsa Public Schools. Before that, he was an executive consultant and the Executive Director of New Leaders for New Schools. Prior to being named as a member of the executive cabinet with The Tulsa Public Schools, he founded and led a college preparatory middle school in one of the most economically underserved communities in his hometown. Over four years, his school became one of the highest performing and most sought-after schools in Tulsa, OK.
Mr. House took on leadership roles early in his career. He was appointed assistant principal of Anderson Elementary in Tulsa at age 25 and was promoted to principal the following year. During his five years at the school, Anderson Elementary went from being designated one of the lowest performing schools in the state of Oklahoma to being one of the state’s highest performing Title I schools. In 2003, Mr. House became the first African American to win the Tulsa Public Schools Principal of the Year award and was named the Outstanding Administrator of the year by the Tulsa Area Alliance of Black School Educators.
House earned his Bachelor of Science from the University of Montevallo, Alabama and his Master of Administration in School Administration from Northeastern State University, Oklahoma. He also graduated from the Fisher School Leadership Program at the Hass School of Business, University of California at Berkeley.
Angélica M. Infante-Green, a member of Chiefs for Change’s first Future Chief cohort, is the Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education for the State of Rhode Island. In this role, she oversees the activities and staff of the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE), working to make the state’s schools the best in the nation. Prior to joining RIDE in April 2019, she served as the Deputy Commissioner of the New York State Education Department’s Office of Instructional Support.
Infante-Green began her career as a bilingual classroom teacher in the South Bronx. Since leaving the classroom, she has served in a variety of roles focused on improving instruction for all students, particularly students who are multilingual learners. She held several leadership positions for the New York City School Department before working at the state level, and was a member of the first cohort of the Chiefs for Change Future Chiefs program.
As a first-generation American, Infante-Green considers her first day as a teacher a life-changing moment when she realized her personal calling. Having herself learned English in school, and as the parent of a child with special needs, she has fought to replace a “deficit” view with an “enrichment” view for students who need more. Infante-Green earned an M.A. in Education and in School Administration & Supervision from Mercy College. She is married and has a son and daughter.
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Dr. Janice K. Jackson has been immersed in Chicago Public Schools her entire life. She was a CPS student from Head Start through 12th grade, then began her teaching career at Chicago’s South Shore High School. Since that time, Dr. Jackson has served as a principal, a Network Chief, the Chief Education Officer, and now, as Chief Executive Officer for CPS, the third largest school district in the country.
Dr. Jackson is responsible for all CPS departments, including the Office of Teaching and Learning, which provides high-quality curriculum to engage and empower students, and the Office of College and Career Success, which works to guarantee that every student in every school has the resources they need to be successful in college, career and life. Other departments under her purview include the Office of Language and Cultural Education, which ensures that a language barrier never stands in the way of a child’s success, and the Office of Diverse Learner Supports and Services, which provides students in special education with a high-quality academic experience that is tailored to their unique needs.
During her tenure as Chief Education Officer in 2015, Dr. Jackson has focused on building excellence, equity and access across the District, especially with regard to CPS high schools. Through a comprehensive High School Strategy, she is raising both the bar and the stakes for these crucial academic years, working to ensure that every student in Chicago has a quality high school option within three miles of their home.
Dr. Jackson was also the driving force behind GoCPS, the District’s first common application for all CPS and charter high schools. Launched in October 2017, this application system has dramatically simplified the high school application process while improving access and equity for all CPS high school students.
These combined efforts have propelled CPS students to a record-high graduation rate of 77.3 percent, and Dr. Jackson’s support of a graduation requirement insisting that all students have a solid post-secondary plan is ensuring that Chicago’s youth leave the classroom fully prepared for what comes next.
As a lifelong educator, Dr. Jackson is committed to providing all schools with a clear framework for excellence. This includes high-quality curricular options aimed at minimizing the achievement gap, especially among minority students. The evidence of her success can be seen in rising standardized test scores, especially among English Learners, whose progress led the way to CPS students once again outpacing their peers nationally on the 2016-2017 NWEA exam.
Dr. Jackson is a progressive, forward-thinking educator who believes in setting the bar high. Her Three-Year Vision for CPS, which was unveiled in 2016, is a comprehensive, research-based strategy that will launch CPS to even higher levels of student achievement. The vision focuses on promoting academic quality, building stakeholder trust and integrity, and achieving fiscal stability, and is a carefully crafted plan for guiding work across the District.
Dr. Jackson holds a Master’s in Leadership and Administration and a Doctorate in Education in Policy Studies in Urban School Leadership from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She was a member of the University of Chicago’s Network for College Success, and was also honored by the National Council of Negro Women Chicago as a Woman Making History.
In her spare time, Dr. Jackson enjoys spending time with her family, especially her daughter, Tori, and her stepson, Torrence, Jr.
Aleesia Johnson, a member of Chiefs for Change’s fourth Future Chief cohort, has served as the superintendent of Indianapolis Public Schools (IPS), Indiana’s largest public school district, since July 2019. She is a dynamic and collaborative leader who has demonstrated an uncompromising commitment to educational quality and equity over the course of her career.
Johnson has been an educator for more than 16 years, achieving success as a teacher, school leader, and administrator in both public charter and traditional district schools. A Teach For America alum, Johnson led KIPP Indy College Prep Middle School from 2012 until 2015, meeting or exceeding student achievement standards and increasing student retention year over year. In 2015, Johnson joined IPS as innovation officer and was responsible for developing and implementing an innovation and autonomy strategy across the district of more than 30,000 students, most of whom are children of color from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. She launched and expanded a new autonomous school model within the district and helped transform the central office to better support individual schools.
Prior to being named IPS superintendent, Johnson was deputy superintendent for academics in the district. She oversaw all aspects of curriculum and instruction, performance and continuous improvement, postsecondary readiness, special education, student services and portfolio initiatives. She launched the implementation of academic strategies that led to increased student academic outcomes and postsecondary success based on the district’s 3Es (preparing students for enrollment in a two- or four-year college or university, enlistment in the military, or employment at a livable wage upon graduation).
A native of Evansville, Indiana, Johnson comes from a long line of educators, including her mother, who’s an elementary school principal; and her grandfather, Anthony Brooks, one of the few African-American administrators in the Evansville area in the 1970s and 1980s. Johnson is married and has an adult stepdaughter and three school-aged children who attend IPS.
Dr. Michael Johnson began his service as Commissioner on July 1, 2016.
Commissioner Johnson served in the Copper River School District as superintendent, school principal, district curriculum and staff development director, elementary teacher, and special education program assistant. During his tenure as its principal, Glennallen Elementary School was named a Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education. Dr. Johnson also is a recipient of the prestigious Milken Educator Award.
Commissioner Johnson holds certification in Alaska as a teacher and administrator. He holds a bachelor of arts and a master of arts in teaching in elementary education from Columbia International University, and a doctorate of philosophy in education and intercultural studies from the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Dr. Kyla Johnson-Trammell grew up attending Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) public schools and has spent most of her 22 year career serving the district, including the past three as Superintendent.
Dr. Johnson-Trammell grew up in East Oakland and attended Montclair Elementary School and Montera Middle School. She attended a private high school in Marin County on scholarship before enrolling at the University of Pennsylvania where her career in education began. She first considered a career in law, but when she tried her hand as a student-teacher, her future was sealed.
After graduating college and obtaining her teaching credential, Dr. Johnson-Trammell taught at Parker Elementary School in Oakland for five years, three of which she also served as a teacher coach. That led to her first job as an administrator, serving as an Assistant Principal at Oak Grove Middle School in the Mount Diablo Unified School District. She worked there for two years before returning to Oakland as Principal at Sequoia Elementary School. From there, she quickly rose through the ranks of District leadership as Administrator on Special Assignment. In this role, she was responsible for coaching 40 school leaders. She later took on positions as Associate Superintendent of Leadership, Curriculum and Instruction, Lead Network Superintendent and Interim Deputy Superintendent.
Dr. Johnson-Trammell has earned numerous awards and honors, including Outstanding Principal of Alameda County by the Beta Mu Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa, an international honorary organization for women educators. She also received the Outstanding District Leadership Award. Dr. Johnson-Trammell served as keynote speaker at an American Educational Research Association (AERA) Conference on Urban District Reform and a panelist at a New Schools Summit on Common Core Standards.
Dr. Johnson-Trammell has a B.A. in Communications from the University of Pennsylvania, a teaching credential from California State University, Hayward, an administrative credential (M.A.) and her Ed.D in Educational Leadership from the University of California, Berkeley. She and her husband are raising two children who attend Oakland Schools.
Hanseul Kang was appointed DC State Superintendent of Education in February 2015. Kang previously served as Chief of Staff for the state of Tennessee’s Department of Education. A seasoned leader and former high school teacher, she reorganized and restructured the department to reflect strategic priorities, and created a more streamlined budget process that allowed for improved personnel decision-making and better use of resources. Kang was part of the team that implemented policies and offered support to districts and schools that resulted in Tennessee becoming one of the fastest improving states in the nation in student achievement outcomes.
Prior to joining Tennessee’s education department, Kang worked for Teach For America, where she was a managing director of program for the organization’s regional office in the District of Columbia. She led a team of program directors supporting middle and high school teachers in schools across the District and Prince George’s County. Kang holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Politics from Georgetown University and a J.D. from Harvard Law School, and was a Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Graduate Scholar.
On March 18, 2015, Dr. Henderson Lewis Jr. began his tenure as one of New Orleans’ youngest ever school superintendents. With over twenty years of educational experience as a teacher and school administrator, Dr. Lewis brings a unique and very classroom focused perspective to the table.
His administration has implemented a number of important reforms and has led the district into a new unified era, where for the first time since Hurricane Katrina all schools that had been overseen by the State of Louisiana are now being governed by the locally elected NOLA Public Schools.
Before serving as superintendent in New Orleans, Dr. Lewis was a celebrated superintendent in Louisiana’s East Feliciana Parish, which is just north of Baton Rouge. As a result of his four-year strategic plan and leadership, Superintendent Lewis raised the bar for classroom teaching and evaluation, and made significant gains among low-income students. As a result, East Feliciana Public Schools were recognized by the Louisiana Department of Education as 2nd in the state for elementary student academic growth.
In addition to his work as superintendent in New Orleans and East Feliciana, Dr. Lewis also served in a variety of roles for the Algiers Charter Schools Association, the first Charter Management Organization to open after Hurricane Katrina. He was their director of academics and instructional technology, the assistant principal for Alice Harte Elementary Charter School, and founding principal of Algiers Technology Academy charter school.
Dr. Lewis was also a teacher for seven years in St. Bernard Parish Public Schools. In addition to his service in schools, for eleven years Dr. Lewis represented District 9 on the St. Bernard Parish Public School Board.
Dr. Christina M. Kishimoto began as Superintendent of Hawaii schools on August 1, 2017. She previously served as the Superintendent of Gilbert Public Schools in Arizona, a district of 39,000 students. In both 2014 and 2015, GPS was named one of the top ten districts in the state as well as being voted best place to work in 2016.
Dr. Kishimoto is a student-centered, data-driven educational leader who believes in student and parent voice, and site-based empowerment for principals and teachers. She is a passionate advocate for public school systems, student-centered educational policies, and strategic planning based on quality, standards-based goals. In addition to pre-k-12 education, Dr. Kishimoto has experience in higher education and business.
During the 2014-15 school year, Dr. Kishimoto rolled out a board-adopted strategic operating plan focused on three high leverage strategy areas: scholarship, innovation, and technology. She has used these three high-impact approaches to refocus and rebrand the district.
Dr. Kishimoto is recognized nationally as a visionary leader in education and for her educational reform work in school turnaround and portfolio school development. She serves as the President of the Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS), the nation’s premier Latino-driven educational leadership organization for school administrators and superintendents. She is also a member of the Arizona Association of School Administrators. Dr. Kishimoto earned a Master’s in Public Affairs from the University of Connecticut and a Doctorate from Columbia University. In June 2014, she completed two years of board service for the Nellie Mae Education Foundation, an organization focused on student-centered practices and policies.
Pedro Martinez joined San Antonio Independent School District as Superintendent in June 2015, bringing to the district a laser-like focus on improving academic achievement so that many more students are performing at higher levels and are well-prepared for college and career. In his first State of the District address in January 2016, he unveiled the district’s Blueprint for Excellence: Target 2020, which outlines the strategies that the district plans to use in achieving by the end of the 2019-2020 school year the 10 academic goals it has set. The plan is supported by five pillars: Academic Excellence, Talent Management, culture shift, stakeholder engagement, and fiscal management.
Before coming to San Antonio, Martinez was Superintendent-in-Residence for the Nevada Department of Education and was responsible for advising the governor’s office and the Superintendent of Public Instruction on education policy decisions. Prior to that, he served as Superintendent for the 64,000-student Washoe County School District, covering the Reno, Nevada area. While in Washoe County, Martinez improved graduation rates and increased the percentage of students participating in and passing Advanced Placement exams. He also previously served as Chief Financial Officer at Chicago Public Schools, the nation’s third-largest school district, under the leadership of Arne Duncan, the former U.S. Secretary of Education. His employment history reflects that he is a data-driven leader with a strong financial background and in-depth knowledge of school improvement strategies.
Martinez has more than 20 years of experience in the private, nonprofit, and public education sectors. He holds an M.B.A. from DePaul University and a Bachelor’s from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is a graduate of the Broad Superintendents Academy.
Dr. Candice McQueen was sworn in as Tennessee’s Commissioner of Education in January 2015. During her first year as Commissioner, Dr. McQueen created a new strategic plan called Tennessee Succeeds. The comprehensive plan provides aligned goals, priorities, and strategies focused on increasing postsecondary and career readiness for Tennessee’s 1 million students. McQueen also connected with over 10,000 teachers on the Classroom Chronicles Tour, oversaw the transition to the state’s new assessment, TNReady, and saw the standard review process for math and English language arts through to completion. McQueen has worked to open lines of communication between the department and external stakeholders through the creation of a number of councils and stakeholder groups including the Assessment Task Force, Early Literacy Council, Career Forward Taskforce, and the department’s inaugural Parent and Student Advisory Councils.
Commissioner McQueen has focused on strengthening areas that support students’ long-term success, and through that lens she has worked alongside the governor and first lady of Tennessee to launch a statewide literacy campaign called Read to be Ready with a goal of 75 by 2025 – 75% of third graders reaching reading proficiency by 2025 – which includes multiple initiatives to strengthen early grades instruction through a statewide coaching network and providing summer learning opportunities for younger students who are not reading on grade level. She also worked with state leaders and the general assembly to pass the largest investment in K-12 education without a tax increase in Tennessee history. In addition, the Commissioner has deepened the department’s work in key areas through the transition to the new federal education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). In that effort, she led the team at the department in building a transition plan that was based on feedback from thousands of Tennesseans statewide and capitalized on the successes and work underway. Through the ESSA plan, the department is going further to ensure all students can access opportunities throughout their K-12 education that prepare them for their next step, with a particular focus on making sure all high school graduates are truly ready for college and careers. The department is also increasing transparency on how all students and schools are performing by working with families and community members to create new user-friendly score reports and state report card website, which will include a variety of new dashboard metrics.
Prior to her appointment as Commissioner of Education, McQueen served as senior vice president and dean of the college of education at Lipscomb University. She began her career as a classroom teacher, teaching in both public and private elementary and middle schools. She also served as a higher education faculty member and department chair before being named dean in 2008. While at Lipscomb, McQueen served as a member of the university’s executive leadership team and oversaw both her college and the 1,300 pre-K-12th grade students in three schools at Lipscomb Academy. Under her leadership, Lipscomb’s college of education and teacher preparation program were consistently highlighted as one of the top teacher training programs in the state of Tennessee for quality and effectiveness based on the Tennessee Report Card on the Effectiveness of Teacher Training Programs and was most recently pointed out as the second highest ranking program in the nation by the National Council on Teacher Quality.
Prior to joining Lipscomb University, Dr. McQueen was awarded multiple awards for both her teaching and the curriculum design of a new magnet school. Dr. McQueen has a Bachelor’s degree from Lipscomb, a Master’s degree from Vanderbilt, and a Ph.D. from the University of Texas. She serves on the Board of Trustees of the University of Tennessee and the Tennessee Board of Regents.
Scott R. Muri became the Superintendent of Schools for Ector County Independent School District (ECISD) in West Texas in July of 2019. Prior to joining ECISD, Dr. Muri served as Superintendent for Spring Branch Independent School District in Houston and as Deputy Superintendent of Academics for Fulton County Schools in Atlanta, GA. He also held leadership roles in North Carolina’s Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools including Chief Information Officer as well as Area and Zone Superintendent.
In addition, Dr. Muri worked in Celebration, FL, for more than a decade as a technology leader and administrator at Disney’s Celebration School. Early in his career, he served as a high school principal and teacher, and was one of the first National Board Certified teachers in the country.
Dr. Muri believes that children are individual learners and that the student-teacher equation is most effective when instruction is personalized to meet each child’s unique needs. He also strongly believes in the importance of a great teacher in every learning environment and a great principal leading every school.
Dr. Muri graduated with a bachelor’s degree in intermediate education and middle school education from Wake Forest University in Winston‐Salem, NC. He earned his doctorate in educational leadership from Wingate University in Matthews, NC, and holds a master’s degree in public school administration from Stetson University in Deland, FL. He conducted master’s-level coursework in public school administration at Appalachian State University in Boone, NC.
Kunjan Narechania, a member of Chiefs for Change’s first Future Chief cohort, was appointed as CEO of the Louisiana Recovery School District (RSD) in 2017, where she oversaw the unification of schools in New Orleans and statewide school improvement efforts under the Every Student Succeeds Act. She previously served as Chief Operating Officer for the Louisiana Department of Education. In this capacity, she was responsible for managing the internal operations at the Recovery School District in New Orleans and for leading the portfolio office at the Department. Prior to this role, she was the Vice President, Teacher Support and Development at Teach For America from 2009 to 2011, and she has held several other leadership positions within Teach For America in Chicago and in North Carolina since 2003. She started her career as a teacher in Durham, North Carolina, where, by her third year teaching, her students achieved the highest math scores at her school. Narechania holds a Bachelor’s in Biology and Psychology from the University of Illinois and currently resides in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Harrison Peters, a member of Chief For Change’s third Future Chief cohort, was appointed as the State Turnaround Superintendent of Providence Public Schools in January 2020.
Before moving to Providence, Mr. Peters was the Deputy Superintendent/Chief of Schools for Hillsborough County Schools (Florida) and oversaw the day-to-day operations of the district’s 250 schools that educate 220,000 students. His team of eight area superintendents, 850 administrators, and 15,000 teachers achieved record-breaking graduation rates, industry certifications, and college scholarships, as well as a significant reduction in the student achievement gap.
Mr. Peters was raised by his grandmother in Pensacola, Florida. Her formal education ended in second grade, but she raised Harrison to value education. Mr. Peters’s drive for education was sparked by one 10th grade teacher who said he was not college material and another who said, “I love you, I believe in you, and I refuse to allow you to fail.” He learned then that what we tell our children absolutely matters. With student success as his “north star,” Peters is convinced that within every child lies an endless potential that, when given the right support, can produce extraordinary results. That experience and belief has guided his work to always put children first for more than two decades in education.
He began his career as a 4th and 5th grade teacher in Apopka, Florida. Since that formative time in the classroom, he served in many leadership roles (including Dean of Students, Assistant Principal, Principal, Assistant Superintendent, Deputy Superintendent, and Chief of Schools) before being named to his current role. His work in large school districts, including Charlotte Mecklenburg, Chicago Public, Houston Independent, and Hillsborough County (Tampa), afforded him the opportunities and challenges of transforming some of the toughest schools in the country.
As Chief of Schools on the Southside of Chicago, Mr. Peters was credited with significantly increasing ACT scores, 3rd grade reading, math proficiency, and graduation rates. As a Chief School Officer in Houston, he was part of the leadership team that led a majority vote in favor of a $1.9 billion bond, the largest in the history of the state. While in Houston, he was also awarded the “Outstanding Educator” award by Zeta Tau Lambda. A proud veteran of the United States Navy, Harrison served on the USS Cleveland.
He brings that experience and track record of success to his role in Providence, where the state has committed to a comprehensive effort to transform the city’s schools.
Mr. Peters earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of West Florida in Elementary Education. He earned a master’s degree in Education Leadership from Nova South Eastern University and a Specialist’s Degree in School Transformation from the University of South Florida.
Mr. Peters and his wife, Tarneisha, have two sons, Devin and Kenneth.
Mr. Orlando Riddick joined Midland ISD as Superintendent in the summer of 2017. It was his second stint as superintendent, having led the Cedar Hill ISD for from 2014-2017. Prior to that, Mr. Riddick oversaw all high schools for Austin ISD and later Houston ISD, which boasts one of the largest enrollments in the country.
Mr. Riddick’s career in education includes teaching, and serving as an administrator and principal in Dallas, Fort Worth, and San Antonio. Mr. Riddick also spent eight years in marketing/public relations, serving a variety of clients from major corporations to politicians.
Mr. Riddick graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in advertising and public relations from the University of Texas at El Paso in 1992. After serving in the Army Reserves, he completed a post-baccalaureate degree in English literature in 1997. In 2004, Mr. Riddick earned his Master’s degree in educational administration from Texas Woman’s University. Then, in 2007, he began the Cooperative Superintendency Doctoral Program at The University of Texas.
Mr. Riddick is married to Yvette Riddick and has 3 children: Alejandra, Diego, and Aaron.
As superintendent of the sixth largest school district in the nation and second largest in Florida, with nearly 270,000 students in 238 schools, centers, and technical colleges, and more than 30,000 employees – Broward County Public Schools Superintendent Robert W. Runcie is committed to educating today’s students to succeed in tomorrow’s world.
Superintendent Runcie knows first-hand how a high-quality education can transform a person’s life. Born in Jamaica, he moved to the United States as a young boy and became the first member of his family to attend college, graduating from Harvard University and earning an MBA from Northwestern University. He later founded a management and technology consulting company, and held several strategic leadership positions with Chicago Public Schools, including serving as its Chief Information Officer, Chief Administrative Officer, Chief Area Instructional Officer, and Chief of Staff to the Board of Education.
Superintendent Runcie proudly joined Broward County Public Schools in 2011. With the support of a dynamic school board, Mr. Runcie developed a strategic plan for the district focusing on three key areas: high-quality instruction, continuous improvement, and more effective communications. Under his leadership, the district has increased its focus on ensuring students are college and career ready, and has implemented operational efficiencies that have allowed the district to reinvest millions of dollars back into classrooms to support student learning.
His commitment to collaborating with stakeholders and creating partnerships has earned Superintendent Runcie state and national recognition, including being named Florida’s 2016 Superintendent of the Year by the Florida Association of District School Superintendents. Additional honors include being selected as the Florida Virtual School Superintendent of the Year, Consortium of Florida Education Foundations Superintendent of the Year, Champion District Superintendent of the Year for Florida Consortium of Public Charter Schools, Florida Department of Education’s District Data Leader of the Year Finalist, 2014 Leader to Learn From by Education Week, and 2015 Hispanic-Serving School District Superintendent of the Year. In 2015, Nova Southeastern University also awarded Superintendent Runcie with an honorary doctorate for his work in education.
Dr. Sonja B. Santelises has spent close to 30 years focused on building high-quality teaching and learning to help students excel, including her tenure as chief academic officer for Baltimore City Public Schools from 2010 to 2013. She returns to Baltimore schools after serving for three years as vice president for K-12 policy and practice at The Education Trust, a Washington, DC-based nonprofit focused on closing the achievement gap experienced disproportionately by African American, Latino, and Native students and students from low-income families.
Dr. Santelises first came to Baltimore from Boston, where she was the assistant superintendent for pilot schools, a network of 23 schools with broad autonomy and a track record of successfully meeting students’ needs and improving the achievement of low-income students, particularly students of color. Prior to the pilot schools post, she was assistant superintendent for teaching and learning/professional development in Boston.
Before joining Boston Public Schools, Dr. Santelises lectured on urban education for two years at Harvard University and spent six years as a senior associate with Focus on Results Inc., where she coached superintendents and trained school leaders in five major urban districts. Prior to that, she served as executive director of the New York City Algebra Project, the local site of the acclaimed national math reform program, also present in Baltimore.
Dr. Santelises began her career in education as director of professional development and teacher placement with Teach For America-New York. She then served as a teacher and curriculum specialist at Decatur Clearpool School, a year-round school in Brooklyn, where she oversaw the founding of the middle school.
Throughout her career as an educator, academic, and administrator, Dr. Santelises has been steadfast in her belief that excellence in urban education is achievable at scale. She is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Brown University. She holds a Master of Arts degree in education administration from Columbia University and a Doctor of Education in administration, planning, and social policy from Harvard University. She has lived in Baltimore with her husband and three daughters since 2010.
Penny Schwinn, a member of Chiefs for Change’s third Future Chief cohort, has made education her life’s work. She currently serves as Education Commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Education. Schwinn was previously the Chief Deputy Commissioner of Academics at the Texas Education Agency (TEA), and over the last fifteen years has served in senior roles at the state, district, and school levels.
Schwinn began her work in education through Teach For America as a high school teacher in Baltimore, MD and a new teacher coach in south Los Angeles. She transitioned into the private sector to develop a deeper capacity for business, where she supervised work in the finance, operations, marketing, and information departments for a multinational corporation. She later moved home to Sacramento to begin the Building Excellent Schools (BES) Fellowship, while acting as the Senior Consultant and Director of Student Achievement for the Superintendent for St. HOPE Public Schools. Through the BES Fellowship, she founded Capitol Collegiate, which produced exceptional results for traditionally underserved students (highest performing Title I or similar school in Sacramento).
As the Assistant Superintendent of Performance Management in Sacramento City Unified, Schwinn used a community planning process to develop the county’s first districtwide accountability system. Further, she designed the first localized school choice calculator in the country, ran the Principal Development Program, oversaw district testing, and served as a lead on the CORE Waiver. Later, as the Associate Secretary of Education in Delaware, Schwinn led multiple departments geared towards improving the quality of information provided to schools, as well as the strategic investment of resources towards accelerated student achievement. She further led the statewide Offices of Assessment, Performance Management, School Turnaround, Accountability, and Data Management.
As the Chief Deputy Commissioner at TEA, Schwinn oversaw the statewide assessment system; Performance Reporting (accountability); Research and Analysis; Curriculum, Digital and Blended Learning; Instructional Materials, the Office of State Board of Education Support; Early Childhood Education; Elementary and Middle School Programs; College, Career and Military Preparation and CTE; Special Education; English Learner and Bilingual Education; Gifted and Twice Exceptional; At-Risk, Highly-Mobile; Homeless and Foster Youth; Monitoring; and Special Projects.
Schwinn earned her BA from UC Berkeley, her MA from Johns Hopkins University, and her PhD in Education Policy from Claremont Graduate University. She was a Fellow with the Broad Academy, a senior consultant with America Achieves, and served as a Commissioner for Sacramento County Parks and Recreation. Schwinn was elected as a Trustee to the Sacramento County Board of Education and has served on the boards of several organizations and committees.
Elliot Smalley was the Superintendent of the South Carolina Public Charter School District (SCPCSD), where he led efforts to dramatically improve student learning and close achievement gaps in South Carolina through the growth of excellent and equitable charter schools. Under Elliot’s leadership, the SCPCSD focused its efforts on four key levers—authorization, accountability, equity and access, and policy—and SCPCSD-sponsored charters are making historic gains. Since 2015, the SCPCSD’s graduation rate has grown by over 23 points–higher than any district in the state—and the percentage of students of color served by SCPCSD charter schools has grown from 28% to 40%. For three straight years, Math and ELA proficiency scores grew and in 2019, 49% of SCPCSD schools were rated “Excellent” or “Good”—a 13-point increase over last year’s 36%.
Previously, Elliot was the Chief of Staff for the Achievement School District (ASD) in Tennessee, where he helped to create a new statewide turnaround district with the goal of moving schools from the bottom 5% to the top 25% in the state. During his three and a half years at the ASD, the ASD opened or converted 29 neighborhood schools serving nearly 10,000 students. During this time, student achievement in Tennessee’s bottom 5% “Priority’’ schools grew four times faster than in non-Priority schools and students in 2nd- and 3rd-year ASD schools earned “Level 5” growth—the highest-possible growth rating in Tennessee.
Before joining the ASD, Elliot was the Deputy of Strategy and Communications for the Charleston County School District, where he developed “Vision 2016,” Charleston’s district-wide strategic plan, and led the district’s communications and outreach efforts during a time in which a ten-year enrollment decline reversed to a five-year increase. Prior to his time in Charleston, he was a Senior Program Specialist at the U.S. Department of Education, leading national partnerships and initiatives in support of education.
Elliot’s wife Rebecca Kockler and his three children Harper, Benton and Cooper form his core and fuel his spirit.
Offering more than 35 years of vast experience in the field of education, Dr. Carey M. Wright is currently the State Superintendent of Education for Mississippi. She has served as the Chief Academic Officer for the District of Columbia Public Schools as well as the Deputy Chief for the Office of Teaching and Learning, providing leadership for PK-12 education by managing the offices of Curriculum and Instruction, Professional Development, Early Childhood Education, College and Career Readiness, Youth Engagement, Bilingual Education, Out of School Time, School Counseling, Educational Technology, Gifted and Talented, and Library Media Services. After implementing a policy requiring four Advanced Placement courses to be offered in all high schools, student participation increased more than 25% and the number of students passing at least one AP exam increased over 85%. The total number of AP exams receiving passing scores increased 64%. In addition, African-American student performance on AP exams increased 86%, and Hispanic student performance increased 184%.
From 2003 to 2009, Wright served as the Associate Superintendent for the Office of Special Education and Student Services for the Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland. In this capacity, she was responsible for student services for 150,000 students and special education programming for 17,000 students with disabilities, managing a budget of $325 million, overseeing nonpublic placements and alternative programs, providing special education staffing for 200 schools, the provision of K-12 school counseling, psychological services, pupil personnel services, and the administration of the International Student Admission Office. Under Wright’s leadership, the percent of special education students being educated in the general education classroom increased from 53% to 67%. During the last four years of her tenure, special education student proficiency on state reading and math assessments increased between 13 and 34 points at the elementary, middle, and high school levels. The biggest gains occurred in high schools, where student proficiency increased by 30 points in reading and 34 points in math.
Wright spent the majority of her career in Howard County Public Schools, also located in Maryland. In Howard County, Wright was a teacher, a principal for fifteen years, and the Director of Special Education and Student Services. She began her career as a teacher in Prince George’s County Public Schools in Maryland.
Wright has been recognized as an outstanding educator by the National Center for Culturally Responsive Systems, nominated twice for The Washington Post Outstanding Principal Award, and awarded the Howard County Chamber of Commerce Outstanding Educator of the Year. She obtained her Bachelor’s, Master’s, and Doctoral degrees from the University of Maryland, College Park. She currently resides in Madison County, Mississippi.