The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

New education chief: Don’t normalize failure

- By Kathleen Megan CTMIRROR.ORG

Miguel Cardona, the state’s new education chief, charged the state’s superinten­dents to challenge “the normalizat­ion of failure” to ensure that all students have a chance to succeed.

“For the past 20 plus years, I have devoted myself to being a public school educator, yet I am part of a system that produces results that are still predictabl­e by zip code and shades of skin,” Cardona said at the annual state backtoscho­ol meeting Wednesday for state superinten­dents. “We must do better.”

While poverty is a major factor, it’s not the only one, Cardona said, noting that “more affluent black kids perform worse than poorer white kids” and more affluent Latino children perform similarly to poorer white kids in academic work.

“This is not an urban issue. This is a Connecticu­t issue,” Cardona said. “I am tired of hearing about the gaps in Connecticu­t and … the normalizat­ion of failure. Personally it takes up a lot of my emotional bandwidth. Together, let’s get rid of them.”

The line drew applause from the superinten­dents, many of whom were meeting the new commission­er for the first time Wednesday at A.I. Prince Technical High School in Hartford. Cardona, 44, who is the state’s first Latino education commission­er, started his new position Aug. 7.

“There is no assembly of people that is more widereachi­ng and can positively impact the lives of our children in the state of Connecticu­t more than this group right here, right now,” Cardona said, adding that “the success of the half million students in Connecticu­t will depend on how well we partner together.”

Collaborat­ion was a major theme in Cardona’s remarks, as it was in those of several other speakers at the event.

Allan Taylor, chairman of the State Board of Education, told the group the great “mission of public education is to even out the absence of equal resources with the work you do to make it possible for all students to succeed. As a state, as a country, we cannot afford not to have all of our children able to succeed.”

The State Board of Education can pass policies that hinder or further the work of educators, Taylor said.

“Talk to us, share your concerns, share your ideas,” he said. “Let’s work together. Together, we can, we must and we will do better by our children.”

Alan Addley, Darien superinten­dent and winner of the “superinten­dent of the year” title said the needs of children should be met first.

Drawing on a slogan used by the Mayo Clinic to demonstrat­e its commitment to patients, Addley said, “We will meet those needs with unsurpasse­d collaborat­ion… With unsurpasse­d collaborat­ion, we can make a difference to all kids in the state of Connecticu­t.”

Cardona said his agency will “blur the lines and collaborat­e” with the state department­s of housing, economic developmen­t, early childhood and transporta­tion “to redefine how we serve our shared constituen­ts.”

Cardona said he plans to promote practices that will enable educators to share their expertise and solutions to problems across districts.

“The smartest person in the room is the room itself,” Cardona said, quoting the author David Weinberger. “We is always better than me.”

 ?? Linda Conner Lambeck / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Education Commission­er Miguel Cardona
Linda Conner Lambeck / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Education Commission­er Miguel Cardona

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