The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia picks leader to improve schools

Eric Thomas is named to new ‘turnaround’ position for Georgia.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

Eric Thomas, a Savannah native, has been selected as the state’s first chief turnaround officer.

A private job interview is stressful enough, but Tuesday the three finalists for Georgia’s new school “turnaround” position had to perform before a panel of potential bosses, in a meeting that was open to the public. Winning the job after the daylong event was Eric Thomas, a Savannah native who consults with schools across the country in his role with the University of Virginia.

The interviewe­rs were wowed by his expertise and his ability to articulate a clear vision for different audiences.

“The biggest thing, though, is he understand­s about shared leadership with school districts,” said Mike Royal, chairman of the Georgia Board of Education, which voted unanimousl­y to give the job to Thomas. Details of his contract will be worked out later.

Two other educators who also grew up in Georgia and followed their careers to other places, Eric Parker and Lannie Milon, Jr., were also vying to be the state’s first Chief Turnaround Officer. The position was establishe­d by a new state law aimed at improv

ing low-performing schools. Thomas will face scrutiny from school principals, parents and politician­s as he attempts a daunting task: raising test scores, graduation rates and other measures at schools that have bumped along the bottom, in some cases for generation­s. He will

play a delicate role, as both the high official targeting schools for state interventi­on and the ally coaching them on how to improve enough to avoid a takeover.

Hence Royal’s comment about shared leadership, and the decision to hold the high-stakes job interviews in public.

“We wanted to throw them in the pit and make them fight because that’s part of this job,” Royal said. “Make them dance on their feet a little bit.”

The turnaround chief position was establishe­d by House Bill 338, which was passed along bipartisan lines during this year’s legislativ­e session. Gov. Nathan Deal pushed it through the Legislatur­e after an earlier political miscalcula­tion. Last year, he hoped voters would let him create a statewide “Opportunit­y School District” with authority to take over schools deemed “chronicall­y failing,” but they rejected his constituti­onal amendment in November, preferring to keep schools under local control.

HB 338 requires a more collaborat­ive approach, though school districts could still lose control of schools that do not improve.

With a relatively small staff — the state has set aside $1 million in the budget to fund the office, with $1.25 million more expected to come from a grant program — the turnaround chief will also have to lean on the Georgia Department of Education and its large bureaucrac­y for help. That could take some diplomacy, since Superinten­dent Richard Woods, the agency chief, asked the Legislatur­e to give him control over the turnaround process.

Lawmakers instead handed authority to the school board, which is appointed by the governor.

That may be why, in his answer to his first interview question, about what he would do in his first 10 days on the job, Thomas said he’d spend time in the education department offices, getting to know key people.

He said his goal is to get everyone pulling in the same direction: “I’m a huge fan of framing and messaging, so make sure we’re speaking the same language,” he said.

Thomas is chief support officer of the University of Virginia’s turnaround program and lives in Cincinnati. His hire won’t be official until a contract can be negotiated. A final vote by the school board is expected Oct. 25, after Tuesday’s unanimous school board vote for him.

An advisory council of education advocates who helped with the selection process also unanimousl­y settled on Thomas, said Jimmy Stokes, who chaired that council and is executive director of the Georgia Associatio­n of Educationa­l Leaders.

“There was really not any doubt,” he said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? From left: Eric Thomas, Eric Parker and Lannie Milon Jr. interviewe­d Tuesday for the new job of state Chief Turnaround Officer. It was created by the Georgia General Assembly this year to improve the state’s lowest-performing schools. Thomas was chosen...
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS From left: Eric Thomas, Eric Parker and Lannie Milon Jr. interviewe­d Tuesday for the new job of state Chief Turnaround Officer. It was created by the Georgia General Assembly this year to improve the state’s lowest-performing schools. Thomas was chosen...

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