Los Angeles Times

The district’s Deasy lessons

-

Re “After Deasy, hard choice for LAUSD,” Sept. 6

According to the article, former Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. John Deasy, “who was paid $350,000 a year as superinten­dent, took more than 100 trips, spent generously on meals as he lobbied state and national lawmakers and wooed unions, foundation­s and educationa­l leaders, according to credit card receipts, calendars and emails obtained under the California Public Records Act.”

While there is no doubt knowledge to be gained from taking more than 100 trips, I can’t help but think that the rollouts of both the ill-fated Apple iPad program and the still buggy scheduling system would have gone more

smoothly with a more hands-on approach. Also, teachers are right to question the propriety of expense-account-funded dinners at pricey restaurant­s when we’re reaching into our own pockets for classroom materials.

District students, parents, site staff and teachers deserve a genuine public servant as superinten­dent who puts Los Angeles schools first. If that means having the strength and profession­al integrity to risk saying no to billionair­e donors and foundation money, then that’s a risk worth taking.

Brandon Abraham

Los Angeles The writer is an LAUSD teacher.

Among the lessons we’ve learned from Deasy’s tenure is that there is no substitute for having a leader who was a working administra­tor with multiple experience­s in schools in large, urban environmen­ts with great diversity, including affluence and poverty, different languages and high- and low-performanc­e schools.

We need a leader who has learned to substitute humility for arrogance, can listen to others and has the wherewitha­l to simultaneo­usly accommodat­e the needs of the district while sustaining pressure from influentia­l external forces.

This person must realize that because charter schools educate so many of our city’s kids, they’re not the enemy; neither is the union that protects the rights and interests of teachers, our most important resource.

Is all this a tough challenge for a superinten­dent? You bet. Now, let the search begin.

Stu Bernstein

Santa Monica The writer served as a teacher, principal and administra­tor at LAUSD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States