From DAY ONE of the Moskowitz path of destruction, Jenny Sedlis has been at her side attached at the hip, making up whatever lies were necessary to push the evil Success machine. So making Jenny
head of StudentsFirstNY to replace the slime bag Micah Lasher, who jumps from place to place like a bedbug, is a sign that Eva wants to solidify her influence with the next mayor whoever he/she may be.
Jenny can be a nervous sort, dependent on Eva's approval that when things go wrong you get the impression it ain't pretty. I have heard stories about Jenny using hysterics to try to turn away negative stories about Eva and Success, knowing she will get blamed. So it will be interesting to watch how Jenny in charge operates -- but we know she is really not in charge.
I first met Jenny Sedlis at the end of the 2009 school year at a rally GEM supported outside PS 123 in Harlem, another Eva take-over target. She claimed she was an ed notes reader --- monitoring even the blogs for negative Eva stuff, of which Ed Notes is proud to have lead the way. Over the years we have had some nice chats at Gotham Schools parties and at confrontations with the Success machine. I think she really believes that ed deform crap. I know people who despise her for her shilliness but as you know I am not a hater and when we see each other we sometimes hug ---- (she is better than Joel Klein to hug). The thinking must be that using charm might moderate some hostility. It doesn't work but I always love to joust with the Success Stepford crew, though I find some of the parents interesting to talk to.
At one hearing in district 14 the vehemence against Success was so intense as she spoke she looked rocked. (I have some good tape of that -- I almost felt sorry for her.) She started sending surrogates to do her dirty work.
Hey, I have an idea: Jenny Sedlis for next chancellor.
Here is the WSJ article:
StudentsFirstNY, a pro-charter school organization that launched with a
bang a year ago and then stalled, has signaled it is ready to jump back
into New York City politics, hiring the top lieutenant of a polarizing
charter chain.
Jenny
Sedlis, who helped former City Council Member Eva Moskowitz build
Success Academy Charter Schools, will start in September as the new
executive director, the group plans to announce Friday. Officials said this would show they weren't going to sit out the mayor's race.
"This
is a launching of a pretty important new beginning, especially with the
mayor's race in full swing," said Ms. Moskowitz, a StudentsFirstNY
board member.
The
group had said it could raise about $10 million and would put its stamp
on the mayoral contest, but it has yet to take action. Ms. Sedlis said
it is still unclear whether the group will make an endorsement in the
mayoral primary or the general election, though she said there would be
roughly the same amount of money on the table.
Until
now, the 30-year-old Ms. Sedlis has been Ms. Moskowitz's right-hand
woman, running ground battles for the Success Academy chain, which
consistently posts high test scores but draws a backlash when it opens a
new school. "I'm pretty battle-tested," Ms. Sedlis said. "I'm not going
to shy away from a fight that's going to take place."
StudentsFirstNY
turned heads a year ago when it launched as the New York partner of the
national advocacy group founded by former Washington, D.C., schools
Chancellor Michelle Rhee, a pioneer in the movement known as education
reform.
At
the helm was Micah Lasher, a former lobbyist for Mayor Michael
Bloomberg who promised to put pressure on elected officials and provide
an alternative source of cash and support for politicians afraid of
breaking with the United Federation of Teachers. Another board member is
former city schools chancellor Joel Klein, who now works for News Corp., which owns The Wall Street Journal.
In
the fall, StudentsFirstNY made enacting tougher teacher evaluations its
top priority, running advertisements urging the city and the teachers
union to negotiate a resolution. It hosted parent meetings explaining
the importance of new evaluations and ran social-media campaigns to draw
attention to the issue. And in January, it released a report about the
proliferation of poorly rated teachers in the city's lowest-income
schools.
Pro-union
groups fought back, recruiting elected officials to pledge to reject
money from the organization. Many said they wouldn't take
money—regardless of whether it was offered to begin with. For instance,
mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio, the city's public advocate, has said
he wouldn't take money from the group. (StudentsFirstNY has said it
wouldn't offer him any.)
UFT
President Michael Mulgrew said StudentsFirstNY's was already having an
effect on the mayoral race: Candidates think "what they need to do is
stay away from them."
Mr.
Lasher left in March to work for Attorney General Eric Schneiderman,
leaving the group leaderless just when the mayoral race started to pick
up steam. Mr. Lasher declined to comment.
"It was disappointing, just because the thing was getting under way, but such is life," Ms. Moskowitz said.
In
Ms. Sedlis, the group has someone who comes alive when talking about
the specifics of education policies, and someone who isn't just a
fighter, but also one who has spent years building schools and walking
in and out of classrooms.
Though
she said the organization's priorities weren't set, she personally is
in favor of changing teacher certification to make sure educators are
better prepared to step foot in the classroom, and she supports
something known as "parent trigger," a concept that allows parents to
take over a public school. Perhaps most importantly, she said she cared
about a new teachers contract, which the next mayor will negotiate.
"There
are so many provisions of the contract people don't talk about," she
said. "So much of why [Success Academy] is successful is because we have
the flexibility to orient the school around the needs of children."