Incoming education commissioner outlines priorities
Pedro Martinez will begin running Massachusetts's Department of Elementary and Secondary Education on July 1, after former Commissioner Jeff Riley stepped down in March 2024 and over a year of interim leadership.
Speaking at his first public event in Massachusetts since he was chosen for the role, Martinez outlined some of his priority goals on Tuesday at a Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education event in Boston.
Among them is getting students back on track when it comes to reading.
'This issue has been front and center for students, as students return from the pandemic. And by the way this is national. Anybody who was a parent of a young child remembers, and remember our third and fourth graders today, those were children that were going to start their education during the pandemic period. So it's not a coincidence,' Martinez said.
Teachers, education advocates and state officials in Massachusetts have been talking about improving student literacy for years, as young people have struggled with reading and writing after the pandemic. On last year's state testing, 41% of third through eighth graders scored in the 'meeting or exceeding expectations' range for English Language Arts.
Currently the superintendent of Chicago Public Schools, Martinez said that in the city 'we realized that the only way to really solve this is we had to go back to the basics.'
'So we had to bring them in as soon as possible,' he said. 'So we expanded universal preschool across every one of the 77 communities. Free, full-day preschool. There we started laying the foundations.'
In Chicago, they began 'implementing the foundational skills from pre-K through fifth grade — some people call it the 'science of reading,' ' he said. 'The instruction incorporates best practices such as abundant reading of diverse texts, frequent opportunities for students to write about what they read, and teaching students how to communicate with digital environments.'
Science of reading is not one specific curriculum program that districts can buy, but a collection of research based on phonics, vocabulary, fluency and comprehension. The approach to teaching reading differs from past approaches partially by emphasizing phonics instruction — teaching students to understand how letters and groups of letters link to sounds and spelling patterns — though it is not wholly based on phonics.
The term science of reading has been around for over a century, but has recently become shorthand to discuss using cognitive research on how children's brains work while reading, and using more classroom time on learning to sound out words and work on comprehension.
'I'll tell you, going into classrooms and seeing kindergartners write about something they've read, it's priceless, especially in high-poverty communities,' Martinez said.
Gov. Maura Healey launched a program dubbed 'Literacy Launch' last year that secured $20 million in the state budget, in addition to $38 million in federal literacy grants, focused on getting higher-quality literacy materials into dozens of districts, which they're hoping will translate into improved reading scores and an improvement in the foundational skill on which all other learning depends.
'I know that Massachusetts recently adopted a long-term plan to improve literacy as well. I commit to you I will do everything in my power to ensure that that plan is successful,' Martinez said.
In addition to literacy, Martinez said he'd be focused on recruiting and retaining high qualified educators.
He shared a story about a teacher who he said changed the trajectory of his life. His sixth grade teacher in the Chicago Public Schools, Mr. Asher, 'was the first teacher that told me I was actually below grade level. He was actually the first teacher that said, 'I'm going to hold you accountable and you're going to make sure that you're going to rise up to that challenge.''
Martinez credited Mr. Asher with his coming out of 6th grade above grade level, and eventually becoming the first in his family to graduate high school and finish college.
'Mr. Asher changed my life,' he said. 'A highly qualified educator is the number one way to really close achievement gaps, and therefore, how we recruit, how we retain teachers — there are proven strategies across the country — and that's what I really want to look at.'
He recommended a few ideas, including teacher residency and internal recruitment programs.
In Chicago, he said, the district created a program called Teach Chicago Tomorrow.
'We're always complaining that we can't find highly qualified teachers, but guess where the students start? They start in K-12, right? In the districts. And so in Chicago we started working with the higher ed community, identifying students that had a passion for education, giving them really a clear path for them to be able to not only get support financially, get mentorship all the way through finishing to become teachers in our schools,' Martinez said.
He added that thousands of paraprofessionals also moved into teacher roles through a similar program.
Another priority Martinez highlighted Tuesday was bilingual education.
'I think we need to go even deeper in Massachusetts,' he said. 'One of the blessings that I feel is to be bicultural, to be bilingual is such a gift. It is such a gift. And so why wouldn't we want that for all of our children in Massachusetts? Why wouldn't we want all of our children to have access to multiple languages?
Martinez immigrated to Illinois from Mexico when he was five years old.
The last priority he highlighted was helping connect Massachusetts students to higher education.
He talked about working in the San Antonio school district in Texas, where he saw people move from out of state to take advantage of Texas's strong economy while local students struggled to get jobs.
'Texas imports a lot of their labor, and then we have individuals that grew up in Texas, and there was a mixed bag. And so my question in Massachusetts, how do we make sure that it's our students that live in Massachusetts? How do we make sure that it's our students that are taking advantage of the amazing, amazing higher ed infrastructure that exists in the state?' he said.
He added that 'one thing that I'm really anxious to talk to everyone about is, how do we get rid of this conversation of careers or college? That's not a thing everybody.'
Martinez proposed working with community colleges and creating pathways in manufacturing, technology and health care to connect higher education and career opportunities for students after high school.
'I can't help but just recognize where I'm at in Massachusetts. This is a rich history, as everybody talked about, of education here,' he said. 'I can just imagine in 1993 when many fine individuals in this room came together to pass the Massachusetts Education Reform Act that has now put Massachusetts, in my opinion, number one in the nation. So think of this moment now. This is a time when we can come together, we can build a similar bold vision about what we expect our students to be able to do after high school.'
WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on WWLP.com.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
DHS accuses 'activist' judge of pushing radical gender ideology by releasing trans migrant
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has ripped a federal judge in Washington for releasing a transgender illegal migrant from detention, saying the release was caused by the judge bowing to activist pressure. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said that U.S. District Court Judge Amy Baggio, a President Joe Biden appointee, ignored the rule of law and promoted "gender ideology fanaticism" by releasing the migrant, a transgender woman who is claiming asylum in the U.S. The migrant, identified by DHS as "Odalis Jhonatan Martinez-Velasquez, a male illegal alien from Mexico," entered the country in 2023 and was released under the Biden administration. Judge Orders Release Of Migrant Trans Woman Held In Male Section Of Ice Facility Martinez-Velasquez was detained on June 2 and placed into ICE's male detention center for the safety of women in ICE custody in accordance with President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at protecting women, DHS said. Baggio ordered Martinez-Velasquez released this week, despite having already been processed for expedited removal, ruling that the asylum seeker had been deprived of liberty without proper procedural safeguards. Read On The Fox News App "The activist judge is ignoring the biological reality of sex, undermining ICE's commitment to promoting safe, secure, and humane environments for women in custody, and subverting the American people's mandate to restore commonsense to our immigration system and reject extreme gender fanaticism," McLaughlin said. "An immigration judge, not a district judge, has the authority to decide if Odalis Jhonatan Martinez-Velasquez should be released or detained." On his first day back in office, President Donald J. Trump signed Executive Order of Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government, which prohibits DHS from detaining males in women's detention centers. McLaughlin said Martinez-Velasquez is no exception. Twice-deported Migrant Rapist Freed As Dems Face Heat For Sanctuary Policies "The President made it clear on Day One: DHS will not buy into radical gender ideology when detaining illegal aliens," McLaughlin said. Martinez-Velasquez is claiming asylum after allegedly being abducted and raped by cartel members in Mexico. The migrant was arrested outside a Portland courtroom last month and transferred to the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, Washington. and held there for over 40 days after a judge granted the government's request to dismiss the asylum case. The nonprofit Innovation Law Lab, whose attorneys represent Martinez-Velasquez, decried the fact that Martinez-Velasquez was being held at a men's facility. Martinez-Velasquez' attorneys filed a habeas petition, a legal motion asking the court to review whether the detention was lawful, saying they were not aware of their client's location after the migrant was taken into custody. Under due process standards, especially in asylum cases, attorneys must be able to locate their client and ICE is required to notify or justify sudden detentions and transfers. In Martinez-Velasquez's case, the judge found that ICE's failure to provide timely, specific information about the migrant's location and legal status violated fundamental procedural fairness. The judge had also demanded to know why it was deemed immediately necessary. One of the migrant's attorneys, Stephen Manning, of Immigrant Law Group, previously told Opb that Martinez-Velasquez was processed into the Tacoma detention center, but he had not been granted access to her since her transfer. Martinez-Velasquez was identified only as "O-J-M" in court documents. "They threatened to kill her because O-J-M is a transgender woman," her habeas petition states, per OPB. "Fearing for her life, she fled and sought asylum in the United States in September 2023," Manning said. Manning told Willamette Weekly that his client had not committed a crime while in the U.S. and had regularly checked in at ICE offices as instructed. Oregon sanctuary laws prevent it from having long-term immigration detention facilities, and — aside from temporary holding cells at the Portland ICE office — the nearest immigration detention center is the Tacoma article source: DHS accuses 'activist' judge of pushing radical gender ideology by releasing trans migrant Solve the daily Crossword


Boston Globe
08-07-2025
- Boston Globe
Massachusetts barred tenant-paid broker fees. It's part of a wider war on ‘junk fees.'
Write to us at . To subscribe, . TODAY'S STARTING POINT Three years ago, when Mark Martinez found what would become his apartment in Roxbury, the situation seemed ideal. Martinez knew the person vacating the apartment. He also knew his future landlord, a neighbor. But then the landlord connected him to a broker. 'Never met her in person, she never showed me the apartment, nothing — and I had to pay her a broker's fee,' said Martinez, a housing attorney with the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute. 'Easiest $1,500 somebody has ever made in their entire life.' Advertisement A new provision in Massachusetts law aims to spare future tenants a similar experience. On Friday, Governor Maura Healey signed a budget that effectively bars landlords from requiring tenants to pay broker fees, which are payments to middlemen who find and show apartments — or, as in Martinez's case, sometimes do much less than that. The fees typically amount to an additional month's rent, raising the upfront cost to secure an apartment. The broker fee ban is, in part, an effort to lower rental costs in Massachusetts, one of the most expensive states in the country for housing. But it's also the latest in a series of policy moves targeting so-called 'junk fees,' hidden service charges that can inflate the cost of everything from concert tickets to airline seats. Advertisement Junk removal The issue of junk fees gained political attention thanks in part to two world-altering events: the Covid pandemic and Taylor Swift's Eras Tour. In the early weeks of the pandemic, many Americans flocked to cancel gym memberships — only to discover that many had hidden cancellation fees or continued to charge membership dues despite being closed. And in 2022, add-on fees charged by the company Ticketmaster — combined with high demand — made tickets to Swift's concert series exorbitantly expensive, sometimes adding $100 or more to the price of a seat. The incidents caught politicians' attention. Healey, then Massachusetts' attorney general, The junk-fee crackdown is part of a bipartisan strain of economic populism. In his second term, President Trump has rolled back many of his predecessor's policies, but left the rule mandating junk fee transparency in place. Trump has also Some states have followed suit. Earlier this year, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell Advertisement What's next? Massachusetts' new rules, which take effect in September, require companies to disclose junk fees but don't actually ban them. Similarly, the state's ban on tenant-paid broker fees tackles only one of the add-on charges that beset renters. Others include lease renewal fees, parking fees, and processing fees. Getting rid of those Martinez, the housing attorney, helped draft Some companies have accepted the new regulations without a fight. After Biden's junk fee transparency rule took effect, Ticketmaster pledged to display a seat's full price up front. But there are opponents. Banking groups argued that Biden's credit card rule was illegal. Earlier this year, a court sided with airlines Martinez concedes that landlords who pay the broker fees themselves may simply charge more for rent. Still, he argues, that's better than tenants having to pay a big lump sum up front. And Martinez expects the broker fee ban to pave the way for more junk-fee reforms. 'This is an issue across the board,' he said. 'The stakes are just much higher and a lot more dire when we're talking about the housing context.' 🧩 6 Across: 91° Advertisement POINTS OF INTEREST A cancer drug that a Harvard lab helped develop saved Steve Sehy, left, seen at his home in Teutopolis, Ill. Kate Munsch for The Boston Globe Lack of lawyers: People charged with crimes are going free Karen Read fallout: The Norfolk District Attorney's office Ambulance desert: Berkshire County's Special education: An autistic teen in Newburyport has missed years of school after the district said Trump vs. Harvard: A cancer drug that a Harvard lab helped develop saved Stephen Sehy's life. Trump's cuts to research funding 'No way around this': Boston University will cut $50 million from next year's budget and Abortion rights: A judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from enforcing a provision in its new tax law that defunds Planned Parenthood's health care services. ( RFK Jr.: Health groups Advertisement Jeffrey Epstein: Trump officials pledged to release the wealthy sex offender's 'client list.' Now the administration says no such list exists and that it won't release any more documents related to the case. ( Immigration: Dozens of heavily armed immigration agents and National Guard members paraded through a Los Angeles park before departing in military-style armored vehicles. ( BESIDE THE POINT By Teresa Hanafin 📸 As he sees it: Stan Grossfeld's photo essay this week features pictures that show how New Englanders are ▒ Throwing shade: Some think the art installation in Cambridge's Central Square — a large gray cube with airy mesh sides — is an eyesore. Others love the protection from the sun it provides. Judge for yourself. ( 💍 The Big Day: Olivia Rochman and Coby Venable met at a party in New Orleans' French Quarter. Their Martha's Vineyard wedding wasn't big, ⛱️ Backwards Beach Day: Instead of hitting the beach in the morning with little kids, wait until late afternoon after their naps. Fewer crowds, lower UV index, and a nice setting for a picnic dinner. ( 🍔 Summer Eats: The joint state/federal program to provide kids and teens with free meals through August has begun, with dozens of locations from Salisbury to Sheffield. ( Advertisement 🛒 Market Basket, please stop: New Englanders have always relied on the beloved supermarket chain, says food writer Kara Baskin. But the current turmoil 🛍️ More Prime: Amazon is extending Prime Day, which starts today, to four days amid tariff-related price worries and possibly some consumer boredom. ( 🏨 The case of the missing hotel: Consumer reporter Sean Murphy investigates how Thanks for reading Starting Point. This newsletter was edited by ❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at ✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can 📬 Delivered Monday through Friday. Ian Prasad Philbrick can be reached at


The Hill
06-07-2025
- The Hill
Zohran Mamdani's education agenda would set New York City up for failure
Zohran Mamdani's recent victory in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary has drawn widespread attention for his affiliation with the Democratic Socialists of America and what some see as antisemitic rhetoric. But beyond the headlines, it's the education platform Mamdani champions that could pose the greatest threat to New York City families — especially those striving to access better schools and brighter futures for their children. At the core of Mamdani's approach is an unambiguous rejection of school choice. He opposes vouchers, charter school expansion, and even co-location policies that allow high-performing charters to operate in underutilized public school buildings. His platform calls for a funding overhaul that could severely reduce resources for charter schools, even though they serve 15 percent of city students. Mamdani opposes charter schools and vouchers based on the claim that they divert public resources, lack accountability and mainly benefit wealthier families at the expense of low-income students. He argues that voucher programs, despite being marketed as tools to help struggling students, are often used by affluent families already in private schools. As President Trump pushes for a national voucher initiative, Mamdani insists that New York must instead invest in a fully funded public school system to ensure true educational equity. But the evidence paints a sharply different picture. Success Academy, New York City's largest and most scrutinized charter network, enrolls a student population that is 98 percent made up of minority students, with the vast majority coming from low-income households. Despite these demographics, its academic results are nothing short of exceptional: 96 percent of its students passed the state math exam, and 83 percent passed the English Language Arts exam. By contrast, the citywide public school proficiency rate hovers around just 49 percent, underscoring the extent to which charter schools like Success Academy are not undermining public education but outperforming it. By restricting charter expansion and threatening funding, Mamdani's platform effectively removes one of the few viable paths to academic success for students in underserved neighborhoods. The families who rely on charters are not opting out of public education — they are opting out of failure. As a co-author of the 'People's Budget' proposed by the Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislative Caucus, Mamdani supports targeted spending initiatives that prioritize political messaging over tangible educational outcomes. The 2025 budget included an initiative aimed at increasing teacher diversity, with the caucus demanding an $8 million investment in recruitment, training and retention programs to make the teaching workforce more diverse. This initiative is particularly ironic given that New York City's public school system — the largest in both the state and nation — already has a teaching staff that is approximately 42 percent Black, despite African Americans comprising only 22 percent of the city's population. In the same budget, Mamdani's caucus allocated $250,000 to promote 'racial and cultural inclusivity' in K–12 classrooms and dedicated $351,500 for statewide conventions aimed at supporting 'underrepresented' educators, supposedly to address barriers faced by educators of color. But the problem isn't with diversity — it's with Mamdani's misaligned priorities. New York City already boasts one of the most diverse populations in the country. Meanwhile, student performance in core subjects continues to falter, and chronic absenteeism nears 40 percent. Despite spending more per student than any other state — over $36,000 annually — New York continues to fall short on basic benchmarks. Mamdani's answer is more spending, with little accountability and no meaningful strategy to improve outcomes. School choice, in contrast, offers a proven mechanism to elevate student achievement without pulling funding from traditional public schools. Programs in states like Florida and North Carolina show that scholarship and charter models can coexist with public education. In many cases, they drive improvement system-wide. A 2019 study even found modest academic gains in public schools that must compete with nearby choice-based alternatives. Mamdani dismisses these successes, framing school choice as an ideological threat rather than a practical solution. But for many families, school choice lets parents select the best educational environment for their children, whether that's a high-performing charter, a faith-based school, or specialized instruction that better fits a student's needs. Mamdani's plan offers the opposite. It preserves a rigid system that too often fails the students most in need, while redirecting resources toward symbolic programs that do little to improve reading, math, or attendance. His vision elevates bureaucracy over results and ideology over opportunity. New York City doesn't lack funding, it lacks alignment between spending and outcomes. What the city needs are policies that empower families, reward effective schools and confront failure with urgency — not just slogans. Mamdani is not the kind of leader New York City students can afford to have in office. Gregory Lyakhov is a high school student from Great Neck, N.Y.