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Newark Superintendent Cami Anderson Steps Into the Spotlight

Classroom

First Posted: 05/09/11 08:16 PM ET Updated: 07/09/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK -- Cami Anderson has a big challenge.

In her first press conference since being named the new superintendent of Newark, N.J.'s largely failing public schools last week, the 39-year-old elaborated on the moment she felt inspired to take the job.

It was a sentiment she heard expressed by parents: "We don't need a hero." So Newark, she thought, was the perfect venue for her work. "I don't believe in lonely heroes winning the day. I actually believe in teams," she said. "I think it's the athlete in me ... Education is not an individual sport."

While local parents and educators may have stressed their desire for a team-oriented approach to remedying their schools, the strong national spotlight cast on education in Newark schools will inevitably make hers the face responsible for their fate: If she fails, she'll be pegged as an out-of-towner who made an even bigger mess. If she succeeds, she'll take on the mantle of being a hero.

"She'll be under the spotlight more as Newark's chief education officer," said Aaron Pallas, a professor of sociology and education at Columbia University's Teachers College. Since 2006, Anderson had been in charge of New York City's District 79, the alternate education division, which runs GED programs, among others. Though her previous district was comparable to Newark in scale, she was able to conduct that role under the radar.

At a time when rhetoric about the failing state of K-12 education in America is running high, Newark is seen as dismal. Only half of Newark's about 40,000 public school students graduate from high school on time. Even more require remedial coursework upon reaching college. These problems and an achievement gap persist, even despite the relatively high spending rate of $25,000 annually per student.

This state of affairs, plus the city schools' high-profile $100 million gift from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, makes Newark a national test case for the fixing of troubled urban schools and the use of major philanthropic dollars in an educational system.

"People are hoping that Newark can be an example of successful urban school reform," said Pedro Noguera, a New York University education professor who has worked with Newark's public schools.

That's why Anderson needs to show results quickly, Noguera said. "She needs to put out some goals," he said. "Short, medium and long-term goals. They need to see that Newark can start to move forward in the right direction. Some sense of incremental change will be reassuring to everyone that the leadership knows what it's doing."

Leadership in America's large, urban school districts has faced rapid leadership turnover, with Chicago, New York City, Montgomery County, Md. and New Orleans' Recovery School District hiring new superintendents recently -- and with Detroit, Atlanta and Broward County, Florida, still on the hunt. As failing urban school districts around the country ask who is fit to lead them, Anderson's selection provides one more piece of the puzzle.

"There's no clear talent pool," Noguera said. "But it looks like we're back to trying educators."

Who is Cami Anderson?

After ten years of teaching, Anderson worked as executive director for Teach for America as well as chief program officer for New Leaders for New Schools. Her credentials, Pallas said, are reminiscent of those of a much more recognizable name in education reform: Michelle Rhee, who formerly headed Washington, D.C.'s public schools.

"There are a lot of comparisons to Michelle Rhee, who didn't have the district-level experience," Pallas said. "They have similar backgrounds in similar organizations." Pallas said that Newark now is often compared to Washington, D.C. in its pre-Rhee days. "There's a kind of institutional culture of a failing system, and figuring out how to disrupt that is challenging," he said.

Rhee and Anderson differ in name recognition -- few casual education observers knew Anderson's name until last week. "Rhee became a public face of reform in the district, and I don't know that anyone could have named one of her deputies prior to her departure," Pallas said. "It's striking to see someone who has similar background characteristics but who's coming into Newark with much less of a public profile."

In New York, where Anderson served as superintendent for alternative schools, supporters lauded her results-oriented approach that shuttered failing programs, while critics complained about high turnover rates within her schools.

Lately, she's been busy transitioning. So busy, in fact, that she didn't make the time to talk to The Huffington Post. Her first day included a press appearance with Mayor Cory Booker and Gov. Chris Christie (R-N.J.) -- and heckling from parents as she exited a school.

That first day in her new city was emblematic of the challenges that await her as she tries to fix Newark's schools. As an editorial in The Star-Ledger noted, Newark's gritty politics is "not for wimps." Anderson is not native to Newark, a factor that can elicit distrust. She's also the first white superintendent in 40 years. Beyond that, the governance system in Newark is different from that of other cities: In 1995, the state intervened, so New Jersey now controls Newark's education. Meanwhile, Booker, though he has no legal control over Newark's schools, has made education a key issue -- and has raised $43 million in private funding to begin matching Zuckerberg's gift.

"It's an extremely difficult situation that she's walking into," said Richard Cammarieri, a former school board member who served on the committee that met with the final superintendent candidates. "We have state control. You'll get the sense that she'll have a commissioner, governor and a mayor looking over her shoulder. The commissioner has, with the complicity of the mayor, made things murky in terms of who's in charge."

Junius Williams, director of Rutgers University's Abbott Leadership Institute, which engages Newark parents in education reform, was similarly skeptical. "She's going to pay for a lack of faith people had in the process which seemed to not involve very much community engagement," he said. "Parents want to see someone who is inependent from the state ... and who is free from the ideology which seems to have settled upon many big cities."

He added that the parents he's spoken to want Anderson to recognize the good programs and schools in Newark, not just tear into the entire system. "We're not starting from scratch here," he said.

Noguera said that there have been some successful reforms -- he pointed to programs for English language learners -- but the patchwork of programs has yielded a disjointed system. "There's often no coordination. There's no larger strategy," he said.

In public statements since her appointment, Anderson has striven to paint herself as a pragmatist. In sharing her thoughts on the role of charter schools, she pointed to her time in District 79, when she closed failing schools when "children and literally their lives were at stake." She added that Newark needs "multiple pathways" for education.

What's immediately next for her are budget negotiations that could include layoffs for up to 400 school employees. Contract talks with the local teachers union have been stalled. And she is charged with determining the use of Zuckerberg's gift.

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NEW YORK -- Cami Anderson has a big challenge. In her first press conference since being named the new superintendent of Newark, N.J.'s largely failing public schools last week, the 39-year-old elabo...
NEW YORK -- Cami Anderson has a big challenge. In her first press conference since being named the new superintendent of Newark, N.J.'s largely failing public schools last week, the 39-year-old elabo...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Salinitis
read 1984.
02:25 PM on 05/10/2011
so much for better pay for teachers? amazing how booker will cry poverty for his city while paying top dollar for a nyc educrat. shame shame shame.
11:39 AM on 05/10/2011
I submit that we must endeavor to eliminate the epithet "failing schools." Students who live in high poverty-high crime neighborhoods face a number of issues that upper middle to upper class "reformers" cannot appreciate or identify with. These students are being failed on many fronts. This particular rhetoric effectively lets everyone else who has an impact on these students lives "off the hook" and places an unreasonable burden on the shoulders of teachers, building counselors and building administrators. Let's please find a more honest and humane way to characterize schools in communities that are struggling educationally, economically, etc.
08:52 AM on 05/11/2011
You do not take something out of the lexicon simply because of the way it is loaded in our current day and age. Schools do fail. Just because we now use that as a catch all for our modern day failure of our youth doesnt mean we go in the exact opposite direction and not take a critical look at what is going on in our schools. Yes we need to fight how failing schools is used in our day and age make it more of societies failing of our youth.

I come from poor neighborhoods in Brooklyn and grew up in them during the crack era with crackhouses and empty lots. Teachers helped pull me out of that. Do you think we can pass the buck and wait until poverty is fixed?
11:28 AM on 05/11/2011
Teachers today continue to positively impact the lives of many youth from difficult and challenging circumstances. However, if anyone is failing these youth, it is well beyond our schools. Their parents and families, their neighborhoods, our culture is failing them.

I think as a culture and a society, if we WANT to, we can do more on multiple fronts, however we CHOOSE not to and conveniently blame our teachers when youth living in poverty do not fare well on the average. We WANT to demand that a small segment of people in our country, who are tasked with performing a specific job in circumstances that are far less than ideal and without meaningful support from the culture as a whole, do the job which we deign not to do.

We are already passing the buck, onto our teachers.
04:53 PM on 05/11/2011
And, furthermore, language, labels frame our discourse. The issue is in how we choose to frame what is happening. We can endeavor to be honest with our frames, or we can use frames to manipulate and scapegoat. When we do the latter, and frame a situation with charged words, we create a circumstance where people don't have to question, inquire, read and think for themselves, they jump directly to blaming and indicting. The folks who have successfully brainwashed populations know how easy this is to do.

As a teacher, and a human being who is concerned about the value of critical thinking in our culture, I condemn blanket judgments that preclude thoughtful evaluation.
09:55 AM on 05/10/2011
Both the kids in that photo are gonna be fatties. The chick might be cute...until she hits 140 lbs... then it's all gonna be downhill.
God Bless America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CabCurious
let's be honest
05:21 AM on 05/10/2011
I don't believe that photo is Cami Anderson.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Idit Harel Caperton
10:30 PM on 05/09/2011
Congratulations Cami Anderson and Good Luck! We are supporters of Booker's amazing work, including selecting you, and we are here and ready to help Newark students and teachers innovate the education system (for a really modest portion of Zuckernerg's money) with www.Globaloria.org - We hope to hear from you! Cheers. Idit and Team
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
John Thompson
10:01 PM on 05/09/2011
I’m hopeful. Anderson presided over the biggest success story of NYC. Alternative schools and other interventions helped to raise the graduation rates in NYC, and similar approaches have worked in Newark. In her last job she overcame "the dance of the lemons" and presumably attempted the alignment that Noguera rightly wants.

Rhee’s problem was not race, and her personality was just a second level disqualification. She, first, was not remotely qualified. And she didn’t have a clue about teaching and learning. Education is a people process built on relationships. If you want to improve the culture of neighborhood schools, you have to expand alternative schools. You can’t have respectful learning environments without safety and order, and no school leader could attempt that without alternative slots. Those slot must be high-quality, though.

The politics of discipline and alternative schools is much more difficult than the sideshows that Rhee fought over. Compare the importance of orderly schools over performance pay and “accountability” issues, and ask what is far far more important. It isn’t even close. Rhee was so clueless, though, she thought “Expectations” and classroom instruction could drive reform.

Yes, poor communities can be insular, but speaking as a white who has evolved into a mulit-racial family, I know how welcoming the Community can be.

And lets not forget what Newark has recently done right with preschool and community schools and eith Balfanz's dhop.
09:21 PM on 05/09/2011
I knew Cami Anderson. She is an amazing leader, with a history of taking on challenges like this. She is innovative, and deeply involved in the success of her students. She should please the parents of Newark with her ability to make them part of the solution. I urge HuffPost to get an interview with her, while her background of recent is impressive, she was making marks on society early on in her teenage and college years.
07:52 PM on 05/09/2011
Good luck to her. I am tired of school systems bashed with the logic: We give you more $'s and the graduation rate is falling. Hence, the teachers are terrible. So lets take away pensions, and more from their small salaries. I like how the teas and gops like to use places like Newark and
Detroit for their examples. Why don't they use wealthy areas for examples, ie. where I live in Sarasota, FL. The people are loaded, kids get extra paid tutoring, and the parents pass down their knowledge/habits to the children . The real issue has almost nothing to do w/ teachers, but mostly to do w/ socioeconomic class, single parents, crime, drugs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PTAOfficerforObama
It's arithmetic, stupid
08:22 PM on 05/09/2011
That was VERY well said. f/f
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jenn May
"insert clever quote here"
09:20 PM on 05/09/2011
Exactly! I'm sorry, but schools cannot fix children that society is failing...
10:44 AM on 05/10/2011
We'll see if she tries to work with the community and the union or just TFA's and Christie and Zuckerberg. Saw that are trying to close a bunch of schools over the communities objections and fire a bunch of teachers. Newark's current sup, Janey, was DC's former sup, came out looking a little better after the Rhee scandals hit the front page. He says teachers were only about 20% of the picture and poverty mattered. So let's see how this pans out.