Sunday, August 30, 2009

Garrett's Decision Sets Off Political Scramble

By Barbara Hoberock/Capitol Bureau, Tulsa World ~ State Superintendent Sandy Garrett's decision not to seek a sixth term is likely to bring considerable interest in the 2010 race for the post.
The race had already attracted two candidates, but speculation about who will run has kicked into high gear after Garrett, a Democrat, said last week that she wants to pursue other opportunities.
Enid Public Schools Superintendent Shawn Hime, a Republican, is considering a race. Hime, former assistant state superintendent for financial services, said he is gathering input from school officials, business leaders and lawmakers before making a decision.
State Sen. Susan Paddack, D-Ada, said friends and colleagues have encouraged her to consider running. "So, I am weighing the possibilities and trying to determine how I can best serve my constituents and this state," Paddack said.
The day after Garrett's announcement, former State Democratic Party Chairwoman Lisa Pryor, who now is an assistant superintendent at the State Department of Education, said it was too soon to discuss the race.
Those who say they are not running include first lady Kim Henry; state Sen. Clark Jolley, R-Edmond; Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Keith Ballard; and Rep. Tad Jones, R-Claremore.
Read the entire story at www.newsok.com.

Labels: , , , ,

Share |

Monday, August 24, 2009

Sandy Garrett Says She Won't Run Again

State School Superintendent Sandy Garrett announced today she won't seek another term, ending her elective career after five consecutive terms.
Garrett's surprise announcement said, "I am especially grateful to the voters of Oklahoma and my supporters in both parties who have given me the unprecedented opportunity of serving Oklahoma children and families," Garrett, a Democrat, said in her statement. "It has been an incredible experience, but now it's time for someone else."

Labels:

Share |

Friday, February 29, 2008

Democrat Forum Gets It Wrong, Garrett Says

State School Superintendent Sandy Garrett said today she will seek reelection in 2010 despite a report on the Democrats of Oklahoma Community Forum, www.demookie.com, that she plans to retire.
Lealon Taylor, Chief of Staff of the State Department of Education, said he spoke with Garrett after the story saying she planned to retire was posted and she said it is incorrect.

Garrett will mark 20 years in office in 2010 when she faces reelection.

Garrett was elected in 2006 to a fifth consecutive 4-year term and carried 74 of the state's 77 counties in winning reelection.
In 2001, she received the prestigious Silver Beaver Award from the Boy Scouts of America for her work promoting character education.
Garrett is a Muskogee native who graduated from Stilwell High School. She received her bachelor's and master's degrees from Northeastern State University and pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Oklahoma and the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. After 15 years as a classroom teacher and gifted programs coordinator in Muskogee County schools, she joined the State Department of Education as Gifted and Talented Programs Coordinator, then became Executive Director of Education Programs, which included rural education, technology, satellite instruction, media applications, and library resources.
In 1988, she was named Cabinet Secretary of Education by Republican Governor Henry Bellmon.
She was named one of the “Fifty Making a Difference” in Oklahoma by The Journal Record. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame in March 2001, into the Oklahoma Educators Hall of Fame in August 2000, and is a member of the Northeastern State University Alumni Association Hall of Fame. In November 2000, she received the First Lady's Leadership in Literacy Award for her statewide efforts to improve reading instruction for children and expand literacy programs for adults.

Labels: , , , ,

Share |

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Garrett: Education Cash Shortage 'Serious Situation'

From www.newsok.com ~ The Board of Education today voted to ask the Oklahoma Legislature for a $37 million supplemental appropriation to make up for money lost due primarily to a projected shortfall in state corporate income tax collections.
If the Legislature rejects the request, the department will need to start cutting its state aid payments to districts by about 2 percent a month beginning in March, said Shawn Hime, an assistant state superintendent with the department's financial services division.
State Superintendent Sandy Garrett (pictured) described the projected shortfall as a "serious situation."

Labels: , ,

Share |

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Education Committee Studies Longer School Year

Members of the House Education Committee looked at the possibility of extending the school year for Oklahoma students during an interim study at the Capitol on Tuesday.

The committee heard testimony that said Oklahoma students have fewer instructional days than most of their counterparts in the surrounding states. Committee members were also told that many nations outside the U.S. have as many as 200 to 220 instructional days in one year.

Based on data presented by state Secretary of Education Sandy Garrett, Oklahoma public schools have 175 instructional days per year, while Arkansas schools have 178, New Mexico and Texas schools have 180, and Kansas schools have 186.

“This was a very interesting interim study,” said Rep. Tad Jones (above right), R-Claremore, who chairs the committee. “It appears that our students’ classroom time can be improved under our current structure, but we also need to consider extending the school year if we want to be competitive.”

Several officials from the education community testified before the committee today, including Garrett, Phyllis Hudecki of the Oklahoma Business and Education Coalition, Superintendent Marilyn Bradford of Shawnee Public Schools, Stratford School Board member Rick Griffin, and Sabra Tucker of the Oklahoma Education Association, who is also a teacher in Shawnee.

Another teacher, Robert Marshall of Sentinel Public Schools, gave information to committee members that charted all the students who would be gone from his class during a given month due to various school activities. In one particular month, Marshall said there wasn’t one day that he had his entire class in attendance.

Rep. Randy McDaniel, R-Oklahoma City (pictured), requested the interim study. “We want to be competitive with surrounding states and other countries,” he said. “That may very well require more classroom time for our students.”

Labels: , , ,

Share |

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Cannaday Questions Longer School Year Idea, Wesselhoft Wants To Add 15 Days

State Rep. Ed Cannaday (D-Porum), a former school administrator, today questioned State Superintendent of Public Instruction Sandy Garrett’s call to expand Oklahoma’s school day and academic year.
“State Superintendent of Public School Sandy Garrett’s 'State of Education' speech on July 10 focused on the challenges facing Oklahoma education. She concluded that we could fix some problems by adding an extra hour per day and an extra week per year. This proposal also includes conducting extracurricular programs after school hours.
“She failed to mention the frequent interruptions to instructional time required by state mandates and required staff development schedules.
“Her recommended expansion would constitute a 20-percent increase in instructional time. However, the educational community learned in their 'block schedule' strategies that this expansion in time does not correlate to additional learning if a teacher does not add at least two different teaching strategies to the extended class period. Some mistakenly approached this as additional time to do assignments in the form of an unofficial study hall. This leads me to be concerned that we are merely adding to our schools another responsibility that should be handled by the family. I and other school officials have found there are long-range negative effects on schools when we isolate the family from participation in their child’s education.
“Many parents will gladly approve the greater time that schools extend their care and nurturing because it frees parents to pursue individual interests and concerns. We must realize that this is the precise difference between the US and the countries mentioned in the Superintendent Garrett’s speech: the families in the nations of Japan and China are intimately involved in their children’s education.
“There are three basic areas that this legislator must have addressed before I will join this parade of 'let’s try something new' led by those wishing to look like real problem-solvers. First, what specific problem are we attempting to solve or minimize by extending the school day/year? I do not mean some glib generality like 'getting students to learn more.' Are we talking about reducing remediation rates as students go to college? Do we want to improve the number of students going to college? What about ACT scores? What about CRT scores? And the list goes on. Each of these will require different strategies to address desired improvements and not just expansion of the school day/year.
“Second, what research based data is available that shows the extension of our school calendar results in a high positive correlation between the desired change and the action taken? We often say, well they are doing it in Kansas and Texas so it must be good. We must focus our plan on a specific problem and see if the school calendar of these other states resulted in the change we desire.
“Third, are the Legislature and state of Oklahoma ready and willing to increase the common education budget by 20 percent (giving schools 45 percent of the total state budget) to attempt this unproven technique to solve an unidentified problem? I believe that the state government will be more responsible than this. We will expect specific problems to be identified with specific proposed research based solution before we commit to such a large increase in expenditures.”
However, State Rep. Paul Wesselhöft drafted a bill last week to extend the number of student class days each school year from 175 to 190. He said today that a recent report by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that gave Oklahoma's public school system two "F" grades is evidence that such a change is needed.
"Oklahoma has the lowest number of mandatory school days in the nation, and that's one of the reasons why our students are not as well educated as students in other states and in other nations around the world," said Wesselhöft, R-Moore. "Whether we like it or not, our children will have to compete in a global economy when they enter the workforce, and we must make sure they have every reasonable advantage possible."

Labels: , , ,

Share |

Monday, June 11, 2007

Lisa Pryor Joins Department Of Education

Former Oklahoma Democratic Party Chair Lisa Pryor today joined the State of Oklahoma Department of Education as an assistant state superintendent. She previously worked as a consultant to the department and is a former school teacher.
Word of Pryor's employment by Superintendent Sandy Garrett at $75,000 per yer comes at the same time Pryor's husband, Dick, left Lt. Governor Jari Askins as her chief of staff to return to the Oklahoma Educational Television Authority, where he worked for 16 years before joining Askins last January.

Labels: , ,

Share |