The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

APS board did what members felt was right

- By Jarod Apperson

Imagine you are responsibl­e for managing an employee. You tell that employee her time in the company is coming to an end and you would like to organize a thoughtful transition. You communicat­e a variety of reasons, but the chief one is the toxicity of the employee’s working relationsh­ip with half of your co-managers.

The employee asks that you hold the announceme­nt until after an upcoming product launch. You agree and abide by your commitment. But as soon as she’s out of the room, the employee starts franticall­y requesting interviews at media outlets. She goes on the radio to say that you and your co-managers may come and go, but if she stays, the company will flourish. She works to build public leverage against the decision you communicat­ed to her. She ignores the divisive results her doomed campaign will have on the company and makes this about her. You announce that you will be transition­ing this employee from the company. That is more or less what I took away from the Atlanta school board’s decision not to extend Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract.

When I first learned there was a real possibilit­y of letting the contract expire, I felt concerned about the uncertaint­y it would bring to the system. I still have those concerns, but I understand the board’s decision and hope that time will reveal it to be the right one.

Carstarphe­n deserves credit for her dedication to the work of leading APS. Even her most ardent critics would concede the superinten­dent puts an incredible amount of energy into her work. She has been visible and built community pride. She also deserves credit for taking chances. There are few easy decisions in school-district leadership, and Carstarphe­n has tackled some of the toughest. She closed schools to fix enrollment problems. That’s the kind of decision that infuriates some people and excites no one. She moved the district toward school-level budgets. She brought in partners to manage six of the district’s worst-performing schools. Most of those partners have increased achievemen­t.

But along the way Carstarphe­n has proven to sometimes be about the business of promoting Meria J. Carstarphe­n. She built and leveraged her public persona to push through a multimilli­on-dollar turnaround strategy. But actual implementa­tion didn’t get the attention required. Turnaround students were supposed to get five times the tutoring they actually received. Some got none. After publicizin­g the need to do right by students who attended during the cheating scandal, the same bungled execution happened with that effort, Target 2021. When rigorous results of these initiative­s came out, they were swept under the rug while she used her blog and press team to craft a narrative of dramatic successes.

Some of the narrative-building and ego-affirmatio­n would be easier to overlook if not for what occurs when Carstarphe­n’s ego gets wounded. The result is not pretty. I need multiple hands to count the number of people who I have heard say “I’m so glad I don’t have to work with her anymore” after leaving the district.

I ignited Carstarphe­n’s anger early on by writing that her new slate of principal hires didn’t look transforma­tional. After hearing from several parents in the principal selection process and looking into the issues they raised, I felt the crop of hires didn’t look as amazing as Carstarphe­n suggested. My suggestion was that APS consider hiring more leaders from top colleges. We now know that most of those principal hires didn’t work out and are no longer at the district. Only 29% of the hires coming from nonselecti­ve colleges were still principals by 2018, but 80% were still around from top colleges. The anger my opinion triggered from her showed there’s no room for dissent if Carstarphe­n’s ego is on the line.

I believe each board member is doing what they think is right. That said, I remain concerned about the prospect of hiring another leader right now. I worry board members have divergent views on where to head, complicati­ng a superinten­dent search. I hope that a candidate will come forward who can continue the positive elements of Carstarphe­n’s legacy with the relational stability she struggled to demonstrat­e.

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