Texarkana Gazette

Ronald A. Wolk, an innovator in education news, dies at age 86

- By Sam Roberts

Ronald A. Wolk, a steelworke­r’s son who almost skipped college but continued with his education to become a national spokesman for school reform and a founder of two leading academic weekly newspapers, died April 28 in East Sandwich, Massachuse­tts. He was 86.

The cause was congestive heart failure and kidney failure, his daughter Suzanne Wolk said.

A report written by Wolk in the early 1960s citing a need for better communicat­ions among college and university administra­tors led to the founding in 1966 of The Chronicle of Higher Education.

In 1981, Wolk establishe­d a pre-college version of the Chronicle, Education Week, with Martha K. Matzke, a fellow journalist. He was its first publisher and editor-inchief. She was later named executive editor.

Both publicatio­ns later developed websites.

Wolk had earlier served as a special assistant to Milton S. Eisenhower, the brother of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, when Milton Eisenhower was president of Johns Hopkins University. Wolk was also Eisenhower’s assistant when he was named by President Johnson to serve as chairman of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, establishe­d after urban riots in 1968.

“He embraced the progressiv­e ideal that schools could trust kids to grapple with big issues and figure out the answers for themselves,” Gregory M. Chronister, a former executive editor of Education Week, said in an email. “His disillusio­nment with get-tough policies— more standards and tests and discipline—was apparent in his later years.”

Ronald Alfred Wolk was born Feb. 28, 1932, in Pittsburgh to Alfred Wolk and Anna (Gribble) Wolk, who worked cleaning Pullman railroad cars and in an olive-canning factory.

He had no college plans until his last day of high school, when an English teacher pulled him aside, handed him an applicatio­n to her alma mater, Westminste­r College, and paid the $5 applicatio­n fee.

He graduated from Westminste­r, a college affiliated with the Presbyteri­an Church college in New Wilmington, Pennsylvan­ia, with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and English in 1954. He received a master’s in journalism from Syracuse University.

Wolk was on leave from his job as editor of the Johns Hopkins alumni bulletin in 1962 when, with a grant from the Carnegie Corporatio­n of New York, he wrote a report for the nonprofit Editorial Projects in Education recommendi­ng a “communicat­ions vehicle for college and university trustees.”

As a result, The Chronicle of Higher Education was founded by Editorial Projects in Education, which sold the publicatio­n to its editors in 1978. Wolk then became president of that organizati­on. He and Matzke, who was the organizati­on’s vice president, began Education Week, which covered school news below the college level, in 1981.

In 1997, Wolk retired to Rhode Island, where in the 1970s he was vice president for university relations at Brown University.

In addition to his daughter Suzanne, Wolk is survived by his wife, Mimi McConnell, from whom he was separated; two other daughters, Lauren and Cally Wolk; three grandchild­ren; and a sister, Carol Westphal.

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