Re: “Search for new Seattle school superintendent pushes into fall” (Aug. 1, Schooling Lab):
At a time of uncertainty federally and transition in our colleges, we should ask: What sort of management does this second demand?
Whereas we’ve made progress, not each pupil in Seattle is flourishing and that should change. College students thrive after they really feel protected, seen and supported. Attaining this imaginative and prescient takes daring, equity-centered native management.
We’d like leaders who see college students as entire individuals and perceive that educational success can’t be separated from emotional well-being or social connection.
We’d like leaders who stay and breathe fairness to put money into the faculties and communities that want it most.
We’d like leaders who’re emotionally clever, who can reply and restore throughout difficult instances, and have the ability to encourage and obtain our shared objectives.
We’d like leaders who’re daring within the face of unraveling federal techniques to combat on behalf of marginalized college students and keep the course regardless of empty authorized threats.
We’d like leaders who will reply with each imaginative and prescient and urgency. And in the course of the superintendent search and election this fall now we have the chance to elect and choose leaders who’re daring, emotionally clever and relentlessly centered on fairness for each pupil, in each ZIP code in our metropolis.
Yonas Fikak, vice chairman of affect, Alliance for Schooling, Seattle