Marisol Rosales |
Let's face it, the appointment of Superintendent Marisol Rosales as the new Senior Deputy Chancellor (a new administrative post) is political, and Ms. Rosales is getting a hefty salary, $241,000.00 to perform her duties, whatever they are.
Betsy Combier
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By Alejandra O'Connell-Domenech, AMNY, August 3, 2021
Manhattan Executive Superintendent Marisol Rosales has been appointed the Department of Education’s first senior deputy chancellor, DOE officials announced Tuesday.Once Rosales steps into the new role on Aug. 16, she will work with First Deputy Chancellor Donald Conyers who oversees executive superintendents and borough offices and will help with “academics, early childhood education, enrollment, school climate and wellness,” according to a DOE spokesperson.
Schools Chancellor Meisha Ross Porter created the new post in order to help better connect the first deputy chancellor and his office to school communities ahead of this fall’s full school reopening. Rosales’ appointment is Porter’s first department shakeup since she took over as chancellor after her predecessor Richard Carranza abruptly resigned in March. According to a DOE spokesperson, Porter does not have plans to create any more new executive offices.
“I am thrilled to elevate a leader who has extensive experience at every level within the DOE and deeply understands what our schools need to be successful and thrive,” said Porter. “Manhattan has been lucky to have Marisol Rosales as executive superintendent for the past three years, and now the rest of our schools, and all of our students, will benefit from her leadership.”
Rosales has worked within the DOE for the past 28 years and had various stints as a teacher and athletic director early in her career before becoming an assistant principal and eventually principal superintendent. For the last three years, she has overseen 273 3-K through 12th-grade schools, with a combined 125,000 students, as executive superintendent of Manhattan. A native of Chile, Rosales is also the only Latina and Spanish speaker on the DOE executive board.
“It has been an honor to serve Manhattan over the last ten years as superintendent and executive superintendent, and I thank the Manhattan school community for their partnership and collaboration,” Rosales said. “Nothing is more important than connecting what is happening at the school level to our leaders at Central to ensure our students are getting what they need to succeed. I look forward to leveraging my extensive experience within the DOE and working hand in hand with our talented Deputy Chancellors during the critical school year ahead.”
Department officials touted Rosales for her role in improving the graduation rate among Black and Latino students in Manhattan during her time as superintendent and executive superintendent between 2013 and last year. During those seven years, the graduation rate for Black and Latino students increased respectively from 61.7% to 74.8% and 62.3% to 75.1%, according to the DOE.
Porter, in part, appointed Rosales senior deputy chancellor due to her experience supporting schools during crises citing her work with school leadership after Hurricane Sandy and work to help embattled former Puerto Rico Education Secretary Julia Keleher reopen schools during the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. Rosales spent 10 days on the island in 2017 offering guidance to principals and superintendents working to reopen their districts and schools.
Danika Rux, superintendent of Manhattan’s District 5, will take over as interim acting Manhattan executive superintendent as the DOE searches for a permanent replacement.
The Department of Education has created yet another high-priced bureaucratic position, tapping an agency veteran as a senior deputy chancellor.
The DOE appointed Manhattan Executive Superintendent Marisol Rosales to serve in the post at a salary of $241,000 a year, officials said.
Schools Chancellor Meisha Ross-Porter will have Rosales focus on “academics, early childhood education, enrollment, school climate and wellness,” according to a DOE spokesperson.
The former physical education teacher and 28-year department veteran has served as an athletic director, assistant principal, and principal before assuming more senior administrative roles, the DOE said.
“As a lifelong educator, Marisol Rosales will be an invaluable advocate for New York City students and bring the school experience into our decision-making during this critical time,” said DOE spokesperson Danielle Filson.
But some critics questioned the latest enlargement of the DOE’s administrative ranks.
David Bloomfield“Every chancellor has the right to make changes as they see fit,” said David Bloomfield, education professor at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. “But this new level of bureaucracy seems to lack strong justification.”
The DOE said that Rosales will help “strengthen the connection” between First Deputy Chancellor Donald Conyers “and the field,” according to a statement.
But Bloomfield questioned how an additional administrative layer will shorten the bridge between Conyers and other DOE executives.
“The idea that another level of bureaucracy better connects him to the field is a paradox,” he said.
The DOE credited Rosales with recent improved graduation rates for African-American and Hispanic students in Manhattan under her leadership.
“Nothing is more important than connecting what is happening at the school level to our leaders at Central to ensure our students are getting what they need to succeed,” Rosales said in a statement.
“I look forward to leveraging my extensive experience within the DOE and working hand in hand with our talented Deputy Chancellors during the critical school year ahead.”
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