Why is @Centrism4A not on Twitter anymore?

On Tuesday, January 12, 2021 at 2:56:26 PM UTC-5 Chris Hahn wrote:

> Hoping for the best.
>
>  
>
> *From:* [email protected] <[email protected]> *On 
> Behalf Of *Ernest Prabhakar
> *Sent:* Tuesday, January 12, 2021 9:58 AM
> *To:* Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
> *Subject:* [RC] Biden picks Miguel Cardona for education secretary - The 
> Washington Post
>
>  
>
> A very centrist pick.  Wonder if he may turn out radical, given the 
> extraordinary moment he is inheriting...
>
>  
>
>
>
> https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/biden-education-secretary-cardona/2020/12/22/69e8b1f0-4484-11eb-b0e4-0f182923a025_story.html
> Biden picks Miguel Cardona, Connecticut schools chief, as education 
> secretary
>
> Matt Viser
>
> [image: Connecticut Education Commissioner Miguel Cardona, President-elect 
> Joe Biden’s pick for education secretary, speaks with students in Berlin, 
> Conn., on Jan. 20, 2020.]
>
> Connecticut Education Commissioner Miguel Cardona, President-elect Joe 
> Biden’s pick for education secretary, speaks with students in Berlin, 
> Conn., on Jan. 20, 2020. (Devin Leith-Yessian/Berlin 
> Citizen/Record-Journal/AP)
>
> President-elect Joe Biden said Tuesday that he will nominate Miguel 
> Cardona, the commissioner of public schools in Connecticut, as his 
> education secretary, settling on a low-profile candidate who has pushed to 
> reopen ­pandemic-shuttered schools and is not aligned with either side in 
> the education policy battles of recent years.
>
> Cardona, 45, did not enjoy the same level of enthusiastic support as some 
> others who were considered for the post, but he also did not draw any 
> significant opposition. Rather, he is seen as capable of working with 
> people across the education spectrum.
>
> He was named Connecticut’s top schools official last year and, if 
> confirmed for the national job, will have achieved a meteoric rise, moving 
> from assistant superintendent in his hometown of Meriden, Conn., a district 
> with 9,000 students, to secretary of education in less than two years.
>
> He was born in Meriden to Puerto Rican parents who lived in public housing 
> and has a personal story the Biden team found compelling. He was the first 
> in his family to attend college and was raised in a Spanish-speaking home. 
> He began his career as a fourth-grade teacher and rocketed up the ranks, 
> becoming the state’s youngest principal at age 28. He was named the state’s 
> principal of the year in 2012.
>
> His two elementary-school-age daughters are public school students in 
> Meriden, a midsize city near Hartford.
>
> Cardona’s experience in public education offers a sharp contrast to 
> President Trump’s education secretary, Betsy DeVos, who attended private 
> schools and spent much of her energy advocating for alternatives to public 
> education. And though Cardona has lived in poverty, DeVos is a billionaire 
> who has been wealthy all her life.
>
> In a statement, Biden praised Cardona’s background as a public school 
> teacher and leader and said he will help ensure that students are equipped 
> to thrive, teachers have what they need and schools are on track to reopen 
> safely. “In Miguel Cardona, America will have an experienced and dedicated 
> public school teacher leading the way at the Department of Education,” 
> Biden said.
>
> The announcement was welcomed by congressional Democrats. There was scant 
> response from Republicans, but a Senate GOP aide predicted that Cardona 
> would be confirmed.
>
> *Who Biden is picking to fill his White House and Cabinet 
> <https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/biden-cabinet/?itid=lk_interstitial_manual_11ed&itid=lk_interstitial_manual_14>*
>
> In Connecticut, Cardona has worked to reopen schools closed by the 
> pandemic, an important factor in his favor, one person familiar with the 
> decision said. In Connecticut, just over 70 percent of school districts 
> offered in-person options this week, a state official said.
>
> The new education secretary’s first task will be to help guide schools 
> through the final phase of the pandemic. Biden has called on districts to 
> resume in-person teaching within his first 100 days in office.
>
> After schools closed, Cardona also worked to procure electronic devices 
> for students who needed them for remote learning. Biden also prized that 
> work, as well as Cardona’s focus on how the pandemic is widening the equity 
> gaps in education, said a person familiar with the decision who, like 
> others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not 
> authorized to comment publicly.
>
> Cardona has repeatedly stated the need for in-person schooling in equity 
> terms. Providing in-person learning will help “level the educational 
> playing field and reduce gaps in opportunities for our students,” Cardona 
> wrote in an open letter to teachers 
> <https://www.newstimes.com/opinion/article/Ed-Commissioner-Cardona-We-are-grateful-for-15811357.php>last
>  
> week. “If we can do it safely, this is what we owe to them.”
>
> In the letter, he also thanked teachers for their “extraordinary and 
> heightened sense of service.”
>
> While teachers unions across the country have resisted a return to 
> buildings, union officials in Connecticut said Cardona was always willing 
> to listen to their point of view and worked to reopen school buildings 
> safely.
>
> “Even if we disagreed, everyone had a chance to express their feelings and 
> beliefs,” said Jan Hochadel, president of the American Federation of 
> Teachers Connecticut.
>
> She said she had a positive experience working with Cardona earlier in his 
> career on a panel examining teacher evaluations, where she said he promoted 
> evaluations as a way to coach teachers toward improvement, rather than as a 
> form of punishment.
>
> He was described in similar terms by Amy Dowell, the Connecticut state 
> director of Democrats for Education Reform, a group that often clashes with 
> teachers unions. “He has been a real partner,” she said. “Even when he 
> doesn’t agree, he’s been a good listener and takes in a lot of perspectives 
> in his decision-making.”
>
> During Cardona’s tenure, Connecticut became the first state to require 
> high schools to offer courses in Black and Latino studies. Earlier, he was 
> co-chairman of a state task force studying achievement gaps. His doctoral 
> dissertation <https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/AAI3468062/> 
> was titled “Sharpening the Focus of Political Will to Address Achievement 
> Disparities.”
>
> As a candidate, Biden promised to choose a public school educator as 
> secretary, and his search focused on people with K-12 experience. He also 
> sought out a person of color for the post, considering several other Latino 
> and Black school leaders as he worked to diversify his Cabinet.
>
> And while the president-elect has been criticized for choosing a number of 
> Obama administration veterans for top jobs, Cardona is an entirely fresh 
> face, albeit one that a transition official acknowledged was “a little 
> green for the job.”
>
> Biden frequently invokes his wife, Jill, who is a community college 
> professor, as he explains why education is important to him and his agenda. 
> She was more involved in the education secretary nomination that she has 
> been in others, and she participated in an interview with Cardona.
>
> The trickiest part of the selection process was navigating competing 
> education wings inside the Democratic Party. Biden and his team considered 
> more than a ­dozen candidates, and all were aligned with one side or the 
> other in the divisive debate over improving American schools, two people 
> familiar with the process said.
>
> Democrats who support ­accountability-driven reforms, such as student 
> testing, teacher evaluations and charter schools, touted several big-city 
> superintendents for the secretary job. Teachers unions rallied behind two 
> union leaders who were under consideration, particularly Lily Eskelsen 
> García, who recently stepped down as president of the National Education 
> Association, although Randi Weingarten, the president of the American 
> Federation of Teachers, was more seriously considered.
>
> But in the end, Biden did not want to choose a candidate from either camp, 
> and Cardona won praise Tuesday from a wide range of education groups, some 
> of which were relieved that even if their favorite candidate was not 
> selected, at least the nominee was not firmly in the opposing camp.
>
> *Two outsiders emerge as top contenders for Biden’s education secretary 
> <https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/biden-education-secretary-fenwick-cardona/2020/12/16/5811142e-3fb4-11eb-8bc0-ae155bee4aff_story.html?itid=lk_interstitial_manual_41>*
>
> The decision came down to two people after the process was well underway, 
> both suggested by Linda Darling-Hammond, who headed the education 
> transition team. In addition to Cardona, she suggested Leslie Fenwick, a 
> former dean of the Howard University School of Education, three people 
> familiar with the process said.
>
> Fenwick is a fierce critic of centrist education reforms that gained 
> traction under President Barack Obama and has said as much in blunt and 
> controversial ways. She argued that reform ideas are “schemes” driven by 
> racism and that urban reforms are really about land development 
> <https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2013/05/28/ed-school-dean-urban-school-reform-is-really-about-land-development-not-kids/?itid=lk_inline_manual_44>.
>  
> Those views helped kill her candidacy, with Biden’s team fearing she would 
> be too controversial.
>
> Meanwhile, Democrats on the other side of the debate mobilized behind 
> Cardona. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus also endorsed him last week.
>
> Cardona was a safer selection, having toiled more as an educator than a 
> policymaker at the height of the education wars.
>
> Cardona has described himself as “a goofy little Puerto Rican” born in the 
> Yale Acres public housing complex, according to the Hartford Business 
> Journal. 
> <https://www.hartfordbusiness.com/article/cts-miguel-cardona-in-the-mix-for-bidens-education-secretary>The
>  
> paper reported that Cardona was blunt when asked about how the state 
> educates students learning English. “Not good enough. Not good enough,” he 
> said. “We have to focus on that more.”
>
> “Education is the great equalizer: It was for me,” Cardona told 
> legislators considering his nomination for the top state education post. 
> “Our success as a state will be dependent upon how we support students who 
> are learning English as a second language.”
>
> *With DeVos out, Biden plans series of reversals on education 
> <https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/biden-education-change/2020/11/08/b5b25c7a-21d5-11eb-a688-5298ad5d580a_story.html?itid=lk_interstitial_manual_50>*
>
> As a candidate, Biden promised to address the shortfalls of U.S. education 
> primarily through increased funding, a sharp departure from Trump, who 
> repeatedly proposed deep cuts to the federal education budget and billions 
> of dollars in tax credits to subsidize tuition at private schools.
>
> Biden proposed tripling the $15 billion Title I funds that support 
> high-poverty schools and said he would double the number of psychologists, 
> counselors, nurses and social workers in schools, provide new money for 
> school infrastructure and dramatically increase federal spending for 
> special education.
>
> Next year, his Education Department will have to decide whether to waive a 
> requirement that states test students in the spring. DeVos waived it last 
> year because of the pandemic. Cardona has said he favors the 
> <https://www.edsurge.com/news/2020-12-22-what-to-know-about-miguel-cardona-biden-s-pick-for-education-secretary>assessments
>  
> to see where students are academically after a year of disrupted education.
>
> He brings little experience on higher education, though that area 
> represents a large share of the Education Department’s work. Some of 
> Biden’s biggest education promises involve college, including proposals to 
> forgive college debt and make community college free.
>
> Cardona also won praise from Ted Mitchell, the president of the American 
> Council on Education, which represents college and university leaders. He 
> said Cardona has been supportive of state funding for higher education, 
> seeing college as the natural extension of a K-12 education. 
>
> “I’ve been a fan, a big fan,” Mitchell said. “He has been very articulate 
> in talking about access and opportunity for low-income students, and 
> whether that’s K-12 or higher education, and that’s exactly the right place 
> to start.”
>
> -- 
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