Certainly, its editorial page has been favorably disposed toward the efforts of Henderson and former DC
schools chief Michelle Rhee.
A few months ago, former Washington, D.C.
schools chief Michelle Rhee visited Georgia with her lobbying group, StudentsFirst.
The news puts Moskowitz in the company of other education reform leaders like former D.C. public
schools chief Michelle Rhee and Center for Education Reform director Jeanne Allen, among others.
But Eric Lerum, vice president of national policy for Students First, the advocacy group founded by former District of Columbia
schools chief Michelle Rhee, said that compared to other states, California has antiquated personnel policies.
Recently, at a Stand Up event in Sacramento, where Mayor Kevin Johnson and former DC
Schools Chief Michelle Rhee spoke about education reform, it was Sirrele Steinfeld that stole the show.
Not exact matches
They include Stephanie Bolton, Grower Communications & Sustainable Winegrowing Director, Lodi Winegrape Commission; David Glancy, Master Sommelier, San Francisco Wine
School; Lindsey M. Higgins, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in the Agribusiness Department, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo; Allison Jordan, Executive Director, California Sustainable Winegrowing Alliance; Emily Farrant, Sustainability Manager, Sonoma County Winegrowers;
Michelle Novi, Industry Relations Manager, Napa Valley Vintners; Cyril Penn, Editor in
Chief, Wine Business Monthly; and Beth Vukmanic Lopez, SIP Certification Manager, The Vineyard Team.
Chief among the Republicans» supporters is New Yorkers for a Balanced Albany, a super PAC run by the pro-charter advocacy organization StudentsFirstNY — the state branch of the national education reform organization founded by former Washington, D.C.
schools chancellor
Michelle Rhee.
USA Michel Kazatchkine, UN SG's Special Envoy for AIDS, Executive Director of the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (2007 - 2012) György Thaler, Development Director, Gedeon Richter Plc Fook Kay Lee,
Chief Science and Technology Officer, Ministry of Home Affairs, Singapore Presenter for Dr Fook Kay Lee:
Michelle Yap, Senior Assistant Director, Singapore Government, Ministry of Home Affairs, S&T Assessment Taskforce, Office of the
Chief Science and Technology Officer Thomas Hartung, toxicologist of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health
The stars of the film are Geoffrey Canada, the CEO of the Harlem Children's Zone, which provides a broad variety of social services to families and children and runs two charter
schools;
Michelle Rhee, chancellor of the Washington, D.C., public
school system, who closed
schools, fired teachers and principals, and gained a national reputation for her tough policies; David Levin and Michael Feinberg, who have built a network of nearly one hundred high - performing KIPP charter
schools over the past sixteen years; and Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, who is cast in the role of
chief villain.
Author Bio:
Michelle Rhee is a former chancellor of the Washington, D.C. public
schools, a board member of the 50CAN Action Fund, and founder and former
chief executive of StudentsFirst and TNTP.
One, spearheaded by the group Democrats for Education Reform and notable
school - district
chiefs like New York's Joel Klein and Washington, D.C.'s
Michelle Rhee, is the Education Equality Project (EEP).
NEW YORK — The recent resignations of high - profile
school chiefs Joel Klein in New York and
Michelle Rhee in Washington, D.C., raise questions about the future of education reform at a time when
school districts across the U.S. are adopting policies the two icons of change pioneered.
LAUSD
Chief Deputy Superintendent
Michelle King reviewed the list of local
schools where such crimes occurred and she she was shocked to spot an elementary
school among them.
NEW YORK — The recent resignations of high - profile
school chiefs Joel Klein in New York and
Michelle Rhee in Washington, D.C., raise questions about the future of education reform at...
LAUSD
School Board president Steve Zimmer discussed the superintendent race on KNX News Radio this morning and mentioned
Chief Deputy Superintendent
Michelle King as a potential «top candidate» to replace Ramon Cortines.
Ted Neitzke, head of a Cooperative Educational Service Agency based in Oshkosh, Green Bay
School District Superintendent
Michelle Langenfeld, Grantsburg
School District Superintendent Joni Burgin, Wisconsin Association of
School Boards lobbyist Dan Rossmiller and Lori Saqer, director of business operations of Messmer Catholic
Schools, and Bill Hughes,
chief academic officer for Seton Catholic
Schools, both based in Milwaukee, also are on the commission.
ESEA TITLE II, PART A
Michelle Pierre - Farid, the
Chief Academic Officer for the Cleveland Metropolitan
School District, calls out the importance of using ESEA Title II - A funds at the state and local levels to support initiatives that bolster principal effectiveness.
Jataun Austin, Paraprofessional Jon Bacal,
Chief Entrepreneurship Officer Hannah Bech, Americorps VISTA Community Engagement Specialist Reva Berman, Middle
School Special Education Teacher Brittany Boegel, 6th Grade STEM Teacher Desmond Brooks, Maker Teacher Alexei Casselle, Paraprofessional Clara Catalan, Enrollment & Operations Coordinator Yesenia Cuadra, Paraprofessional Derek Davidson, High
School Dean of Instruction & Reading Teacher Dawna Diamon, Middle
School Special Education Teacher John Dietzen, Social Worker Shannon Durphy, Paraprofessional CJ Ellsworth, High
School Math Teacher Erik Erickson, Paraprofessional Marques Fondren, Paraprofessional Corey George, Paraprofessional Katie Green, 6th Grade Humanities Teacher
Michelle Harris, Paraprofessional Megan Hartman, Youth Program Manager Marcus Heidelberg, Paraprofessional Travis Heidelberg, Student Support Liaison Margaret Holland, High
School Partnership Coordinator Jamaal Jarmon, Paraprofessional Anne Keroff, High
School Special Education Teacher Chris Keller, Paraprofessional Levi Kotas, Paraprofessional Jessica Loper, 8th Grade STEM Teacher Alex Mingus, Paraprofessional Anne Molitor, Middle
School Special Education Teacher Deris Morgan, Paraprofessional Kerry Muse,
School Leader /
Chief Learning Officer Peter Pisano, High
School Social Studies Teacher Danika Ragnhild, Paraprofessional Sarah Reschovsky, 7th Grade STEM Teacher Carlos Rivera, Middle
School Special Education Teacher Luis Rodriguez, Middle
School Special Education Teacher Jose Ruiz, Paraprofessional Amanda Salden, Paraprofessional Brian Shephard, 7th Grade Humanities Teacher Heidi Smith, High
School Science Teacher Jacob Smith, ESL Teacher Troy Strand, Maker Teacher Dexter Summers, 6th Grade Deeper Literacy / Culture Teacher Stephanie Tofte, Intervention Specialist Paraprofessional Carlos Torres, Recruitment Specialist Bre Vollrath, Middle
School Dean of Instruction Mike Warner, Dean of Culture Elise Wehrman, Operations Director Lee Wright, 8th Grade Humanities Teacher
The event, a veritable who's who of corporate education reformers, included the
Chief Operating Officer of
Michelle Rhee's StudentsFirst, a couple of national board members of Teach For America, members of KIPP's national board of directors, a board member of New Leaders Inc. (a program to «train»
school administrators in the ways of education reformers) and one of the founders of the national group, Democrats for Education Reform.
The reformist camp, by contrast, issued a statement through the Education Equality Project, signed by
school chiefs like Joel Klein of New York,
Michelle Rhee of Washington, Andres Alonso of Baltimore as well as Al Sharpton, Mayor Cory Booker of Newark and experts like Andrew Rotherham, the former Clinton official who now writes the Eduwonk blog.
A veteran teacher lists his four
chief concerns with
Michelle Rhee and her leadership of D.C.
schools.
Educator and researcher Kevin G. Welner writes that none of the reforms discussed in a «manifesto» for
school reform by Joel Klein,
Michelle Rhee and 14 other
schools chiefs are grounded in research and are nothing more than fads and gimmicks.
We witnessed the damage when summary firings were the reform du jour of charter advocates, and teachers lost union protections in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, in Washington, D.C. under
Michelle Rhee's stint as chancellor, and in Newark, NJ, during Cami Anderson's beleaguered tenure as the city's
school chief.
Editor - in -
Chief of Good E-Reader Interview starts at 3:45 and ends at 33:51 News «Amazon Go cashier - free store could be headed to SF's Union Square» by Matier & Ross at The San Francisco Chronicle - May 13, 2018 «The Information hires NY Times's Wingfield» by Chris Roush at Talking Biz News - May 15, 2018 The Information «Trump personally pushed postmaster general to double rates on Amazon, other firms» by Damian Paletta and Josh Dawsey at The Washington Post - May 18, 2018 «You'll soon hear 8 new voices in Amazon Alexa skills» by
Michelle Fitzsimmons at Techradar - May 16, 2018 Tech Tip «How to Tag Your Highlights While You Read» by Daniel Doyon at Readwise - May 16, 2018 Readwise.io Interview with Michael Kozlowski Good e-Reader Good e-Reader app store and YouTube channel Good e-Reader store «Storytel e-Reader will launch this summer» by Michael Kozlowski at Good E-Reader - May 16, 2018 Storytel Kobo «How CLEARink technology is going to change e-readers for the better» by Markus Reily at Good E-Reader - August 1, 2017 CLEARink Interview with Dr. Jeanne Tifts, English teacher at Belmont Hill
School (Interview begins at 33:52 and ends at 43:50) Loom Next Week's Guest Andrew Updegrove, author of The Turing Test: A Tale of Artificial Intelligence and Malevolence (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 4) Outro music by the Belmont Hill
School B - flats Please Join the Kindle Chronicles group at Goodreads!
Episode Info: Editor - in -
Chief of Good E-Reader Interview starts at 3:45 and ends at 33:51 News «Amazon Go cashier - free store could be headed to SF's Union Square» by Matier & Ross at The San Francisco Chronicle - May 13, 2018 «The Information hires NY Times's Wingfield» by Chris Roush at Talking Biz News - May 15, 2018 The Information «Trump personally pushed postmaster general to double rates on Amazon, other firms» by Damian Paletta and Josh Dawsey at The Washington Post - May 18, 2018 «You'll soon hear 8 new voices in Amazon Alexa skills» by
Michelle Fitzsimmons at Techradar - May 16, 2018 Tech Tip «How to Tag Your Highlights While You Read» by Daniel Doyon at Readwise - May 16, 2018 Readwise.io Interview with Michael Kozlowski Good e-Reader Good e-Reader app store and YouTube channel Good e-Reader store «Storytel e-Reader will launch this summer» by Michael Kozlowski at Good E-Reader - May 16, 2018 Storytel Kobo «How CLEARink technology is going to change e-readers for the better» by Markus Reily at Good E-Reader - August 1, 2017 CLEARink Interview with Dr. Jeanne Tifts, English teacher at Belmont Hill
School (Interview begins at 33:52 and ends at 43:50) Loom Next Week's Guest Andrew Updegrove, author of The Turing Test: A Tale of Artificial Intelligence and Malevolence (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 4) Outro music by the Belmont Hill
School B - flats Please Join the Kindle Chronicles group at Goodreads!
Selected for the job were Stuart Comer, formerly a film curator at Tate Modern and now
chief curator of media and performance art at the Museum of Modern Art; Anthony Elms, associate curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, in Philadelphia; and
Michelle Grabner, an artist and professor of painting and drawing at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago as well as a teacher at Yale.
The seventy - seventh Whitney Biennial — on view March 7 — May 25, 2014 — is being organized by three outside curators: Stuart Comer,
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA; Anthony Elms, Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia; and
Michelle Grabner, Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
The Museum's signature survey of contemporary American Art will take on a new form as three outside curators — Stuart Comer (currently Curator: Film at Tate Modern, London, and soon to become
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA), Anthony Elms (Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia), and
Michelle Grabner (Professor and Chair of the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute, Chicago)-- each oversee one floor.
Curated by Stuart Comer (
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA), Anthony Elms (Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia), and
Michelle Grabner (artist and Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute, Chicago)
The 77th Whitney Biennial will, this year, be corralled by three curators sourced from outside the institution (but no less internationally regarded): Stuart Comer (
Chief Curator of a Media and Performance Art at MoMA), Anthony Elms (Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia), and
Michelle Grabner (artist and a professor in the Painting & Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago).
The hefty artist list, curated by Stuart Comer of MoMA, Anthony Elms of the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia and
Michelle Grabner of the
School of the Art Institute, Chicago, was hailed as «one of the broadest and most diverse takes on art in the United States that the Whitney has offered in many years» by Whitney
Chief Curator Donna De Salvo.
Within this anodyne context, the show's organizers — Stuart Comer,
chief curator of media and performance art at the Museum of Modern Art; Anthony Elms, an artist and associate curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia; and
Michelle Grabner, also an artist and professor of painting and drawing at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago — have made some interesting choices, pulled in some new faces and shaped three quite different shows.
The 2014 Whitney Biennial on March 7 — May 25, 2014, will take a bold new form as three curators from outside the Museum — Stuart Comer (
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA), Anthony Elms (Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia), and
Michelle Grabner (artist and Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute, Chicago)-- each oversee one floor, representing a range of geographic vantages and curatorial methodologies.
The 2014 edition is curated by Stuart Comer,
chief curator of media and performance at New York's Museum of Modern Art; Anthony Elms, associate curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art Philadelphia; and
Michelle Grabner, an artist and curator who teaches at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago and at Yale University.
Perhaps reflecting the wide range of approaches artists engage today, the Whitney rejected a team approach and selected three separate curators: Anthony Elms, Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; Stuart Comer,
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA; and
Michelle Grabner, artist and Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago; to organize their own independent sections of the show.
For the Biennial's finale in the Marcel Breuer building, the Whitney invited three outside curators to organize the show: Stuart Comer,
chief curator of media and performance at the Museum of Modern Art; Anthony Elms, associate curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia; and
Michelle Grabner, an artist and a professor in the painting and drawing department at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
The 2014 Whitney Biennial will take a bold new form as three curators from outside the Museum — Stuart Comer (
Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art at MoMA), Anthony Elms (Associate Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia), and
Michelle Grabner (artist and Professor in the Painting and Drawing Department at the
School of the Art Institute, Chicago)-- each oversee one floor, representing a range of geographic vantages and curatorial methodologies.
«We meet youth where they are — physically within
schools and emotionally with nurturing adult relationships — to help youth form positive social identities that greatly improve their chances of
school and life success,» said
Michelle Adler Morrison,
Chief Executive Officer of Youth Guidance.