logo
Texas Education Agency extends Houston school district takeover through 2027

Texas Education Agency extends Houston school district takeover through 2027

Yahoo02-06-2025

The state takeover of the Houston Independent School District will continue for two more years, the Texas Education Agency announced Monday.
Education Commissioner Mike Morath had until June 1 to decide next steps for the state's largest school district, whose former superintendent and elected school board members were ousted and replaced in 2023 due to years of poor academic outcomes at a single campus and allegations of leadership misconduct.
Since then, state-appointed Superintendent Mike Miles has led the district, a controversial figure in Houston who has ushered improvements on state exams while struggling to win over community support.
Still, Morath decided to extend the intervention until June 1, 2027, applauding the district for its improvements but citing the need for more progress. That progress, he said, will have to include no school campuses with failing accountability scores across multiple years, compliance with special education requirements and improved school board governance.
Morath on Monday also announced the appointment of four new school board members, replacing four he selected in 2023.
'With the changes made in the last two years, Houston ISD is well on its way to being a district where all of its schools provide students with the educational opportunities that will allow them to access the American Dream,' the commissioner said in a statement. 'Ultimately, two years has not been enough time to fix district systems that were broken for decades. The extension of this intervention will allow the district to build on its progress and achieve lasting success for students once the board transitions back to elected leadership.'
The Houston Chronicle first reported the extension of the takeover.
Under Miles' leadership, the district has experienced extraordinary staff turnover and plummeting student enrollment. Miles, who inherited a district that for years ran an overall well-performing school system, has faced accusations of shepherding a militaristic educational environment where teachers have limited freedom to teach in ways they see fit and children are exhausted and disengaged from learning.
Miles, on the other hand, has touted student improvement on the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, or STAAR test, and progress in the district's A-F accountability ratings as proof that his model is effective, an achievement that Morath and state lawmakers have publicly commended.
During the November election, Houston voters shot down a plan to approve $4.4 billion in academic and infrastructure improvements for the school district — the largest proposal of its kind in state history — which many saw as a litmus test for Miles' support.
First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas SBOE Proposes Enhanced Training Standards For School Trustees
Texas SBOE Proposes Enhanced Training Standards For School Trustees

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Texas SBOE Proposes Enhanced Training Standards For School Trustees

(Texas Scorecard) – State Board of Education members are considering new standards for local school district trustee training that emphasize elected officials' accountability to Texas families and taxpayers, representing a fundamental shift in public school governance. The State Board of Education is the policy-making body of the Texas Education Agency, which coordinates all government K-12 educational activities. State law requires the SBOE to provide trustee training and adopt a framework for continuing education that outlines critical governing performance areas for public school boards. Five of the 15 elected SBOE members serve on the board's Committee on School Initiatives, which is responsible for developing the trustee training standards: LJ Francis, chair; Julie Pickren, vice chair; Staci Childs; Tiffany Clark; and Brandon Hall. During a meeting on Thursday, the committee approved a revised Framework for School Board Development that emphasizes elected trustees' supervisory role over the superintendents they hire and prioritizes trustees' responsibility to students, families, and taxpayers. 'The board of trustees is the governing body for Texas public schools and holds the ultimate responsibility for the district's success in educating students. Above all else, trustees owe the highest duty to students and their parents, and the board represents taxpayers, attempting to maximize learning outcomes while minimizing resources required,' states the preamble to the proposed new framework. The existing framework instructs trustees to govern in tandem with the superintendent as a 'Team of Eight,' and board members frequently state that their primary responsibility is to the district as a whole, rather than to individual constituents. Francis, Hall, and Pickren voted in favor of the revised framework, which will be put to a vote of the full SBOE on Friday. The rewritten framework focuses on five core areas: —Setting a clear vision and goals for students —Evaluating the likely success of the superintendent's strategic plan —Monitoring progress —Ensuring transparency —Maintaining accountable governance The core areas emphasize trustees' roles and responsibilities in overseeing the superintendent as well as the board's accountability to families and taxpayers for achieving district goals related to students' success. The standards also put transparency in place of the current framework's 'advocacy and engagement.' During Thursday's committee discussion of the revisions, Hall, who represents District 11 in North Texas, cited the arrest of a local superintendent for failing to report teachers accused of abusing students as an example of why trustees need better training. 'As I dug into the issue and communicated with the board, it just became really clear to me that they did not understand their proper role of oversight and accountability,' said Hall. 'I think another thing that's tackled here is the importance of focusing on student outcomes, because the ambiguity of the original framework that we had in front of us from 2020 pretty much allows almost anything as continuing education credits,' he added. 'And so I think narrowing the focus to student outcomes and also emphasizing the role and responsibility of the trustees as elected officials accountable to the taxpayers is really important.' Pickren, who represents District 7 east of Houston, noted the need for improved training on school electioneering, which has been a significant issue in recent election cycles that has sparked several lawsuits. 'One of the largest school boards in Texas… our superintendent of that board was actually under attorney general investigation for electioneering,' said Pickren. 'The members of the school board, they are very well-meaning people. They come from both sides of the aisle. They just want to serve children,' she said. 'So I appreciate this clarification on behalf of my trustees.' She added that the new training framework 'sticks very closely with the letter of the law, and I think that is the safest place that we can put all of our trustees in.' Clark, who represents District 13 in the Dallas area, voted against the new standards, asserting that the committee had not considered sufficient public input. 'I've heard from my colleagues, and they are not in favor of this proposed framework, because it does leave out advocacy and engagement, which are vital components of school board trustees and the work they do,' added Clark. The original Framework for School Board Development was adopted in 1996. It was amended in 2012 and again in 2020. The latest revision was first presented during the committee's meeting in April, but Chairman Francis postponed a vote until the June meeting. The full State Board of Education will vote on the proposed new framework during its meeting on Friday, June 27.

Diamant Hysenaj, GOP businessman and immigrant from Kosovo, to challenge AOC
Diamant Hysenaj, GOP businessman and immigrant from Kosovo, to challenge AOC

New York Post

time17 hours ago

  • New York Post

Diamant Hysenaj, GOP businessman and immigrant from Kosovo, to challenge AOC

A Republican city real-estate developer says his experience with war in his native Kosovo will help him topple Democratic Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. 'I came here as a young kid and had to make my way in a tough neighborhood in The Bronx,' said congressional hopeful Diamant Hysenaj, a 42-year-old Albanian immigrant and president of the construction and building firm DCG New York, to The Post. 'My life could have gone another direction, but I worked hard, tried to fit in as best I could as an outsider and achieved the American Dream: a successful business, a beautiful family and a calling to serve,' the GOPer said. 5 Businessman Diamant Hysenaj is running for the Republican nomination in the 14th Congressional District. Facebook/Diamant Hysena 5 Hysenaj is president of the construction and building firm DCG New York. Facebook/Diamant Hysena Hysenaj said his upbringing growing up on a farm in Kosovo, then experiencing war and the break-up of the former Yugoslavia, also prepares him to fight to represent the immigrant-heavy 14th House District encompassing parts of The Bronx and Queens — a bid considered a long shot against the popular progressive AOC. 'Imagine a story that runs through nearly half of NY-14 — immigrants, dreamers like me,' Hysenaj said. 'It begins on a dusty farm in Kosovo, 1982. 'Thirty-six of us — cousins, aunts, uncles — crammed into three weathered houses, alive with laughter and my nana's cooking. My parents, hands rough from factory shifts in the old Yugoslav regime, carved out a life that felt golden to me. I was a kid then, chasing chickens, oblivious to the war creeping closer— shielded by love, by family, by a world they kept steady just for us. 'That was my beginning,' Hysenaj said. 5 Hysenaj will attempt to unseat Democratic Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in her Bronx and Queens district. WILL OLIVER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock 'Then, 1991. Fade to black. A dictator's grip tightens, and we're gone—my parents, my sister, me, a suitcase of hope — landing in The Bronx. The streets hit hard: gangs lurking, a skinny kid scrapping to belong. No welfare, just work.' He earned an associate degree from SUNY Westchester Community College. 'I rebuilt from zero once, found my passion in real estate. Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan —homes, restaurants, buildings — I built them, hired hundreds, made this city my canvas,' the Republican said. 5 Hysenaj with upstate New York Rep. Elise Stefanik. Facebook/Diamant Hysena He said he also recovered from the 2008 Great Recession, endured the tragic death of his sister from a car crash and the suicide of a close family member. Hysenaj said the American Dream is 'alive and well, but not in AOC's New York. 'I am running for Congress to make our streets safer, reform a broken immigration system and improve the decaying infrastructure in our district. Meanwhile, AOC is flying on private jets to preach socialism everywhere else, while the people of the 14th District suffer,' he said. 5 Hysenaj immigrated from Kosovo in 1991. Facebook/Diamant Hysena 'I am fighting for a country where every voice matters, not just the privileged elite. With the help of the great people of the 14th district, over 50% of whom are immigrants just like me, we will win.' Ocasio-Cortez, 35, who was first elected in 2018, is seeking re-election to a fifth term next year in an overwhelmingly Democratic district. She is riding high at the moment. Her fellow Democratic Socialist, state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, whom she endorsed for mayor, won the Democratic primary contest last week and is on the odds-on favorite to win the general election for City Hall. Her name has been floated to run for US Senate against Chuck Schumer in 2028 or even for president.

Washington Post editor on leave after DOJ charges him with possessing child pornography
Washington Post editor on leave after DOJ charges him with possessing child pornography

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Washington Post editor on leave after DOJ charges him with possessing child pornography

An award-winning editor from The Washington Post has been placed on leave after the Justice Department charged him with child pornography possession. The DOJ announced that 48-year-old Thomas LeGro, The Post's deputy director of video, appeared in court Friday after being arrested Thursday as his home was searched by authorities. "During the execution of the search warrant agents observed what appeared to be fractured pieces of a hard drive in the hallway outside the room where LeGro's work laptop was found," the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington D.C. said in a press release. Washington Post Bashes Socialist Zohran Mamdani As Potential Disaster For New York City According to the filing, "several devices" were seized from LeGro's home, including a laptop computer that "contained 11 videos depicting child pornography." The filing also linked LeGro to a prior Fbi investigation from 2006 of E-Gold, a digital currency platform used by child pornography websites, alleging LeGro was an E-Gold user. Read On The Fox News App The charges were announced by interim U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro and will be prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Caroline Burrell and Janani Iyengar. A spokesperson for The Post told Fox News Digital, "The Washington Post understands the severity of these allegations, and the employee has been placed on leave" and declined to comment further. Washington Post Admits That 'Trump Is Right' When It Comes To One Issue About Europe LeGro began working for the Post in 2000 and left in 2006 for a stint at "PBS NewsHour" before returning to the Post in 2013, according to his LinkedIn page. Notably, LeGro was among the Washington Post journalists who earned the paper a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for its investigative reporting of failed Republican Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, who was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, several of whom said they were minors at the time. Moore denied the allegations mentioned in The Post's article source: Washington Post editor on leave after DOJ charges him with possessing child pornography

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store