It’s been a very long time since Seattle Public Faculties appeared like a supply of vitality or imaginative and prescient.
These are early days but. However the election of a brand new college board majority — and the work of the present board to pick a promising new superintendent — counsel the daybreak of revitalized promise.
Ben Shuldiner, who nonetheless must finalize his contract with the district, has a stellar résumé that exhibits ferocious ambition and vital experience in an area that has hobbled many professionals earlier than him. At 26, when Shuldiner conceived and opened New York City’s High School for Public Service in 2002, he grew to become the youngest principal ever to guide a highschool in New York state.
At present, the 48-year-old heads Lansing, Michigan’s, college district, the place he has been heralded for elevating commencement and reducing drop-out charges in 4 years.
Is all of this mere spin? Native media are digging to seek out out. For now, mother and father, employees and college students should put their religion in vetting achieved by the present college board, led by the considerate Gina Topp and her supporters.
This week, voters strengthened that staff by reelecting Joe Mizrahi and Vivian Track to seats on the board and including Jen LaVallee. All have made clear their distaste for Scholar Outcomes Centered Governance, the hands-off administration mannequin that’s formed insurance policies, funds and oversight in Seattle for the previous 4 years — with dispiriting outcomes.
Shuldiner’s challenges will probably be many. The district has an $87 million price range gap to fill after three consecutive years of $100 million gaps. These deficits have led to elementary school rooms of greater than 30 kids and highschool programs full of as much as 40 youngsters. Overlook about private consideration in that context. No surprise achievement has flatlined.
There are, as properly, ongoing questions round pupil security, a number of main lawsuits taking part in out and a deep mistrust amongst households that anybody at district headquarters can do something to make SPS what it needs to be: a top-tier college district in a metropolis constructed on brainpower.
Shuldiner seems unfazed by these hurdles, affecting a New Yorker’s tough-minded willingness to roll up his sleeves and get to work.
He’ll want it.

