The Commercial Appeal

Memphian among school turnaround chief finalists

- Marta W. Aldrich

Tennessee has chosen three finalists, including one longtime Memphis educator, in a national search for the state’s first-ever school turnaround superinten­dent.

Cedrick Gray, a former school principal and current education adviser to Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris, made the short list out of 54 applicatio­ns submitted to the Tennessee Department of Education.

The other finalists are Tamekia Brown, who most recently was chief academics officer for public schools in El Paso, Texas, and Lateshia Woodley, assistant superinten­dent for Kansas City Public Schools.

Tennessee’s hire is considered key to jumpstarti­ng school improvemen­t work in a state that has pioneered multiple turnaround models with limited success.

Education Commission­er Penny Schwinn rebooted the search this summer after two delays — once in 2020 when the pandemic began and again in January due partly to budget uncertaint­ies.

Tennessee aims to select its top candidate by the end of the year to start the job by February 1, 2022, said Brian Blackley, a spokesman for the department.

The superinten­dent will supervise state interventi­ons in schools in the bottom 5% across Tennessee, including the state-run Achievemen­t School District, known as the ASD. The charterbas­ed model is at a crossroads after yielding sluggish and uneven results for almost a decade in schools in Memphis and Nashville.

The turnaround chief also will work with nonasd schools that have large achievemen­t gaps among groups of historical­ly underserve­d students such as English language learners, students with disabiliti­es, or those from racial and ethnic groups or economi14 cally disadvanta­ged background­s.

All three finalists have overseen school turnaround initiative­s in multiple states.

A native Memphian, Gray is a former principal of several Memphis schools including Craigmont Middle. He had short stints as a school superinten­dent in Fayette County, Tennessee, and Jackson, Mississipp­i, and joined the Harris administra­tion in 2019.

Brown has been a school administra­tor in Arkansas and Texas, while Woodley has been a school turnaround leader in Georgia and Missouri.

The finalists were interviewe­d in person in early November by staff at the education department, plus separate virtual interviews with up to invited education advocacy and community groups that provided feedback to the department.

Participan­ts in the virtual interviews — which were led by the Iowabased search firm of Ray and Associates Inc. — included representa­tives of Shelby County Schools, Achievemen­t School District, Memphis Lift parents group, State Collaborat­ive on Reforming Education, Tennessee Public Charter School Commission, Tennesseec­an, Hamilton County’s Partnershi­p Network Advisory Board, Hyde Family Foundation, and Capstone Education Group.

This story was originally published on Chalkbeat, a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

 ?? COURTESY OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND KANSAS CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS ?? The three finalists to become Tennessee’s school turnaround superinten­dent are Tamekia Brown, Cedrick Gray, and Lateshia Woodley.
COURTESY OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND KANSAS CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS The three finalists to become Tennessee’s school turnaround superinten­dent are Tamekia Brown, Cedrick Gray, and Lateshia Woodley.

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