Dennis Walcott: New NYC Schools Chancellor Greeted With Applause

Dennis Walcott

First Posted: 04/07/11 04:27 PM ET Updated: 06/07/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK -- From the cheering and excitement swirling around Tweed Courthouse this afternoon, one thing was clear -- Dennis Walcott has something Cathie Black was rumored to lack: respect.

“Our one bottom line is our 1.1 million students,” the nominated schools chief told Department of Education executives, employees and reporters to thunderous applause.

Walcott has served as a deputy mayor to Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s from the beginning of his first term. This morning, Bloomberg announced he would appoint Walcott to the position of Schools Chancellor just months after publishing executive Cathie Black took over the post. Walcott's appointment is pending a waiver from the state because he lacks a formal superintendent’s license.

Walcott held a getting-to-know-you meeting Thursday afternoon for staffers and the New York press corps.

“You guys are applauding now,” he said. “People may be saying nice things, [but] that can turn around just like that. Even when it turns around just like that, we have one responsibility; and that one responsibility is all of our students, plain and simple.”

Walcott used the platform to qualify a few things. He stressed that going forward, the administration's education policies -– the accountability-focused rules put into practice by Black’s predecessor, Joel Klein -- "will be basically the same." These policies include a grading system for schools that has resulted in closures and turnarounds.

Those unchanged policies include promoting charter schools. "I wish I had the option [of school choice] when my children were attending public schools that we have today," Walcott said.

When it comes to student performance, he added he plans to be "visible" in closing the achievement gap.

When asked about lessons to take from the last three months under Black, during which the school system lost key leaders, Walcott affirmed his commitment to and belief in mayoral control of schools -- the system allowed Bloomberg to appoint wild card candidate Black in the first place. "We fought for control because in the past it was a dysfunctional system," he said.

Walcott deferred to Mayor Bloomberg's decision to appoint Black as chancellor. "We always learn lessons," Walcott said, "but really the mayor made a selection, and I'm very comfortable, quite frankly, with the selection."

He thanked Black for her three-month stint, saying she is "a very jazzy person." Walcott added that he will collaborate with her "in whatever way Cathie wants to. I value what Cathie represents," he said.

Addressing one of the major complaints against Black, Walcott stressed his own commitment to constant communication. “I’m just going to be all over the place," he said, "seeing how you’re doing, listening to what you have to say, talking to the people in the communities, the parents in the schools, wherever.”

FOLLOW HUFFPOST NEW YORK

NEW YORK -- From the cheering and excitement swirling around Tweed Courthouse this afternoon, one thing was clear -- Dennis Walcott has something Cathie Black was rumored to lack: respect. “Our o...
NEW YORK -- From the cheering and excitement swirling around Tweed Courthouse this afternoon, one thing was clear -- Dennis Walcott has something Cathie Black was rumored to lack: respect. “Our o...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 9
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
11:00 AM on 04/09/2011
I hope he does a good job!
10:17 AM on 04/08/2011
I am disappointed that he will be continuing a failed Vision when what was really needed was Leadership. Now he will just be another talking-head with no real power or purpose other than to promote Bloombergs/kleiss agenda. And that will end badly as they follow the money and corruption, and the payoffs--WOW the payoffs----Black,Rhee,Klein, Reporters, Columnists, Editors, Politicians from all parties--hmmmm--Dunacn, Obama, Skelos??? who knows??

Without a NEW vision the State shouldn't grant the waiver.
photo
EmmaNYC
shoes & ships & sealing wax, cabbages & kings
12:03 AM on 04/08/2011
Let's not be too quick to praise Dennis Walcott. We have to remember that he's been the palace dog for years now and will do Bloomberg's bidding just as willingly as Klein/Black did. It's not a new day in NYC education, just a new mayoral mouthpiece.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:04 PM on 04/07/2011
....And teachers were actually cheering for another unqualified, incompetent "yes man." Are teachers that love starved or in complete "Shock" that they will accept just about anything offered up by disaster capitalists! Get it together people!
photo
THE GREAT PURIFIER
If you are going through hell, keep going.
07:09 PM on 04/07/2011
Dennis Walcott should NOT be the new NYC school chancellor.

He should be the new MAYOR.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
photo
Absolute
Teacher and Old-School Liberal
06:00 PM on 04/07/2011
We should all recognize that he has been with Bloomberg since his first term and that he helped to create NYC's current education policy. He's a true believer, not a reformer.
05:37 PM on 04/07/2011
What? When will they learn? Why are they hanging on to their ludricious failed education policies
that profit the businesses and test companies? Now about some mea culpa and getting back to educating kids? Will be destroy education before the deform movement is destroyed?
04:40 PM on 04/07/2011
While I'm glad they got rid of the unqualified hack and put someone in the job that actually, from what I've read, knows at least something about education, if the failed policies aren't going to change, I don't really see how this change will mean much for the kids.