The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Five challenger­s seek Georgia school superinten­dent’s job

Woods faces foe in primary; four Dems vie for shot at post. CANDIDATES FOR STATE SCHOOL SUPERINTEN­DENT

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com

Five challenger­s aim to topple Georgia’s two-term state school superinten­dent and seize control of the Department of Education during a turbulent time for teachers.

Richard Woods, a Republican, has held the office for eight years and wants another four. He will face predecesso­r John Barge in the May primary. Four Democratic candidates are also vying for the position.

Most of the candidates are talking about the culture war issues that have dominated educationa­l policy recently: book banning, critical race theory, mask mandates and other controvers­ial school topics addressed during the latest legislativ­e session.

But several other issues these candidates are talking about are timeless, such as public school funding, poor academic outcomes and a shrinking teacher pool.

Woods, a former teacher and school administra­tor from rural Georgia, supported GOP bills that would limit how teachers discuss race, let sports associatio­ns decide on transgende­r student participat­ion, amend the process for removing books and affirm rights to see instructio­nal materials. He said his education department’s implementa­tion will ensure uniformity.

“It will put in place processes that will unite us as a state so it’s not so much Wild West out there,” Woods said.

Barge, the other Republican in the race, who opted to run for governor rather than reelection in 2014, says the Legislatur­e didn’t go far enough. He said he wants his old job back because of parent allegation­s about obscene materials in schools and because of transgende­r policies.

“Who is going to make a stand to make sure that children are being educated and not indoctrina­ted?” he asked.

Republican lawmakers saw the potential of these issues last year. The Georgia General Assembly convened two months after Glenn Youngkin won the Virginia governor’s office by courting parents opposed to COVID-19 safety measures, critical race theory and school books they deemed obscene.

Atlanta lawyer Currey Hitchens and Dr. Jaha Howard, a pediatric dentist elected to the Cobb County school board, said they were inspired to run, in part, in reaction to this political movement.

Hitchens, who recently was at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society, said she read a book parents have attempted to ban from schools. “It’s about police violence against teenage kids, but that’s something that happens,” she said. “Things that happen are sometimes divisive but we still have to learn about them.”

She was referring to adopted state legislatio­n that defines nine “divisive concepts” prohibited in classrooms. They involve generaliza­tions, like saying one race is inherently superior or America is fundamenta­lly racist.

Howard said Woods follows the GOP’S lead. Howard said he would push for more funding and call attention to problems like low literacy rates.

“So here we have somebody who’s touting all this educationa­l experience, but when you get into a room of political sharks, he’s folding like a lawn chair,” Howard said.

Alisha Thomas Searcy, a former Democratic state representa­tive from Austell and charter school operator, ran for state superinten­dent eight years ago. She said she was inspired to run this time in part by “the ugliness of politics.” But she was more interested in school funding and teacher recruitmen­t and retention. She thinks the state should be doing more to innovate.

“The pandemic should have been an opportunit­y to rethink, reimagine public education, and it appears that the desire is just to go back to quote-unquote normal,” Thomas Searcy said.

James Morrow Jr. coaches soccer and flag football at a Clayton County high school. The former social studies teacher says is concerned about student violence and that schools need more police officers and stricter discipline.

“We’ve got to take drastic measures to get it done,” Morrow said. “Because we’re going to lose a lot of these kids, man, because they’re just pushing them through. They barely can read.”

Most of the candidates are talking about the culture war issues that have dominated educationa­l policy recently: book banning, critical race theory, mask mandates and other controvers­ial school topics addressed during the latest legislativ­e session.

 ?? ?? Republican incumbent Richard Woods
Republican incumbent Richard Woods
 ?? ?? Democrat Alisha Thomas Searcy
Democrat Alisha Thomas Searcy
 ?? ?? Democrat James Morrow Jr.
Democrat James Morrow Jr.
 ?? ?? Democrat Currey Hitchens
Democrat Currey Hitchens
 ?? ?? Democrat Jaha Howard
Democrat Jaha Howard
 ?? ?? Republican John Barge
Republican John Barge

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