Dear Mr. President-Elect Obama,
I wanted to ask you to consider the rare opportunity you have to select Linda Darling-Hammond as Secretary of Education.
You see, the ED Sec position has always been a political decision, based on repaying the service of select individuals who have worked hard for a new president’s campaign.
Here is a brief history of Secretaries of Education. It is from wikipedia so possibly incorrect, but it shows who held the position previously.
- Carter: Shirley Hufstedler had a distinguished career at the highest levels of legal and public service.
- Reagan: Terrel Bell, the impetus for a Nation at Risk, had a doctorate in education and had been a high school teacher as well as a superintendent.
- Reagan: William Bennet was an American neoconservative pundit, politician, and political theorist. He went on to become the “drug czar” for Bush 1.
- Reagan/Bush: Lauro Cavazos was the first Hispanic to serve in a cabinet post. He held B.A. and M.A. degrees in zoology from Texas Tech University, and a Ph.D. in physiology from Iowa State University. He was forced to resign as Education Secretary, amid an investigation into improper use of frequent flyer miles.
- Bush: Andrew Lamar Alexander (born July 3, 1940) is the senior United States Senator from Tennessee and Conference Chair of the Republican Party. He was previously the 45th Governor of Tennessee from 1979 to 1987.
- Clinton: Richard Riley Riley was elected governor of South Carolina in 1978. Riley made a huge impact by bringing the voices of teachers into the policy arena through teacher in residence program and supporting the establishment of the the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.
- Bush II: Rod Paige began his career in college athletics. Later, as ED Sec Paige criticized the National Education Association (NEA) for obstructing “No Child Left Behind‘s historic education reforms,” calling the NEA a “terrorist organization.” He later said it “was an inappropriate choice of words” and apologized later the same day, but maintained that the NEA uses “obstructionist scare tactics” in opposing the law.
- Bush II: Margaret Spellings was the political director for Bush’s first gubernatorial campaign in 1994, and later became a senior advisor to Bush during his term as Governor of Texas from 1995 to 2000.
The history of the position has seen only two ED Secs with actual experience in education. Only one, Terrel Bell, was a K-12 teacher. What did Terrel Bell do? He changed the future of education in America through bringing together countless stakeholders to create the National Commission on Excellence in Education, and publish a Nation at Risk. And he accomplished this while Ronald Reagan was trying to dissolve the USED and cut funding for all of its programs.
Darling-Hammond is a real threat to efforts to privatize education. She is a friend of unions because she believes in teachers, one the most leftist ideals you can maintain these days. One can hardly imagine what our school systems would be like if teachers were empowered to be the good guys. Mr. President give it a try and watch the inherent heroism of impassioned teachers transform out schools. Let a teacher lead us.
Please.