Education Board Retains Leadership
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Thursday, December 4, 2008
The Prince George's County Board of Education voted to keep Verjeana M. Jacobs and Ron Watson in the panel's top two posts for the coming year, but only after a process that highlighted divisions among the school system's leadership without clarifying what they are.
The action began much like last year, as Pat Fletcher (District 3) nominated Jacobs (At Large) to be chairman and Watson (At Large) to be vice chairman. "Their tenure this year has been unbelievable," she said. "I think we have gone on a great path. We have gone through great things under their leadership; and if it ain't broke, don't fix it."
There were no other nominations, and it appeared the vote would roll through as easily as it has in years past. Then Donna Hathaway Beck (At Large) departed from the script and made a motion to vote on Jacobs and Watson separately.
Board members, looking slightly puzzled, voted on that motion, which had five votes in support. It was briefly declared to have passed until board members were reminded that the motion required six votes to pass. A few motions later, they finally got around to voting on the nomination of Jacobs and Watson. It passed, but Beck and Linda Thornton Thomas (District 4) voted against it, and Amber Waller (At Large) and Edward Burroughs III, the student member, abstained.
Those who opposed the nomination offered no public explanation at the meeting.
"I would have preferred the vote to be split, because then I could have voted yes once," Beck said. She declined to elaborate.
Jacobs said she would "do everything in my power to ensure that we stay the course -- the course of success." She promised to reach out more to the community and to take a close look at the school system's budget.
She spoke sharply against "special interests" who "have come to rely on the dysfunction of this school district." Noting the county's steady gains in test scores, she implored the public to "please, stop, look and listen to what's going on in this school district."
Asked afterward what special interests she was referring to, she declined to say.
"It has just become even clearer that there are groups who really live and breathe on dysfunction," Jacobs said. "Whether it's business opportunity, whether they just enjoy it, or it's political opportunities. . . . When adults fail, the children fail."
High School Exit Tests Remain Contentious Issue
The school board was clearer in expressing its frustration with the Maryland State Department of Education, which has developed and grades a set of four exit exams students must pass before graduating from high school.
Board members received a briefing Monday night on how Prince George's seniors are doing on the exams, and they were alarmed by what they saw: A third of the senior class -- more than 2,700 students -- either had not taken or has failed at least one of the exams in algebra, biology, English and government.







