Race to Top Uber Analyst Smarick Bolts for NJ
Andy Smarick, the Fordham Fellow who perhaps knows as much about the Race to the Top competition as the folks at the U.S. Department of Education, will have to leave his wonky federal analysis, insights, and general blogginess behind when he takes on a new job as deputy education commissioner in New Jersey.
He'll work as the lone deputy under Commissioner Bret Schundler, who was a controversial pick for newly elected Republican Gov. Christopher Christie.
Smarick officially starts his new role sometime this summer, probably in early August (although if New Jersey were wise, it would tap his expertise as it puts the finishing touches on its Round 2 Race to the Top application, due June 1).
So what prompted Smarick's change from an inside-the-Beltway wonk to state government bureaucrat?
"In my lifetime there hasn't been a more exciting time to work for a state in education reform," he told me this afternoon.
Smarick, a former education department official under President George W. Bush, has cemented his role in the D.C. education wonk world with his writings on Race to the Top and turning around low-performing schools. He's been quoted in the Baltimore Sun, New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and, yes, frequently in EdWeekand on this blog.
He'll work as the lone deputy under Commissioner Bret Schundler, who was a controversial pick for newly elected Republican Gov. Christopher Christie.
Smarick officially starts his new role sometime this summer, probably in early August (although if New Jersey were wise, it would tap his expertise as it puts the finishing touches on its Round 2 Race to the Top application, due June 1).
So what prompted Smarick's change from an inside-the-Beltway wonk to state government bureaucrat?
"In my lifetime there hasn't been a more exciting time to work for a state in education reform," he told me this afternoon.
Smarick, a former education department official under President George W. Bush, has cemented his role in the D.C. education wonk world with his writings on Race to the Top and turning around low-performing schools. He's been quoted in the Baltimore Sun, New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and, yes, frequently in EdWeekand on this blog.