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FROM OUR PARTNER

This story was originally produced in 2019 by our publication partner, the CT Mirror, and is reprinted with permission.

When he was assistant superintendent of schools in Meriden, Miguel Cardona — the state’s new education commissioner — would take new teachers on a tour of the city’s neighborhoods.

He did it because he wanted the teachers to understand the diversity of their students — from those living in half-million dollar homes to those from housing projects.

“The experience motivated the teachers to get to know their kids better,” Cardona said, “and be more actively involved in the community as new teachers.”

Born in a housing project in Meriden to parents who moved here as children from Puerto Rico, Cardona, 44, believes strongly in family and community as well as in the potential for each child to be successful.

Miguel Cardona
Miguel Cardona, whom President-elect Joe Biden has chosen to be his education secretary, speaks to educators earlier this year. Credit: YouTube/State Education Resource Center

The state’s first Latino commissioner of education recalls being the victim of stereotyping as he was growing up.

“For Latino children from communities that are below the threshold of poverty, you know you’re not typically thinking, the data doesn’t suggest that they’re going to be the next principal of the school … or state education commissioner,” Cardona said. “There were times throughout my youth that I think people had lower expectations than they should have. It just made me hungrier.”

“It’s not lost on me, the significance of being the grandson of a tobacco farmer who came here for a better life, who despite having a second grade education was able to raise his family and create that upward mobility cycle,” he added.

Cardona said the values instilled in him — “hard work, service to others, relationships first, treating people with respect” — have helped him achieve what can only be called a meteoric rise from his first teaching job in Meriden in 1998 to his appointment last month as state education commissioner. In between those two jobs, Cardona had the distinction of being the youngest principal in the state at age 28, was named principal of the year in 2012, and served as co-chairman of the Legislative Achievement Gap Task Force.

That’s all while getting married, parenting two children and earning a doctorate at UConn’s Neag School of Education.

Those who have worked closely with Cardona describe him as a hard worker, a good listener, and a collaborator who puts children and equity first.

“His leadership isn’t out there on his shirtsleeve,” said Robert Villanova, director of the executive leadership program at the Neag School of Education at UConn, who worked with Cardona when he was a doctoral student. “He’s not a General Patton. He’s not going to be up in front of people talking about [how] we’re going to charge together. He’s more collaborative. He has a ‘let’s do this’ orientation, but he delivers on it and that can be the surprising part. He knows how to engage people, bring people to the table, knowing you can’t solve any of these complex problems singularly. That’ll be his main theme.”

“He was very committed to collaborating with people to come up with a statewide solution around the lack of minority young people thriving in our overall urban school system.”

New Haven Mayor Toni Harp

Richard Lemons, executive director of the Connecticut Center for School Change, was teaching at the Neag school when Cardona was a doctoral student and worked with him to improve instruction and leadership development in the Meriden school district.

“He is very passionate about serving children well, very passionate about making sure our systems of education do a better job of serving kids, families and communities that have long been marginalized, especially kids of color, kids of poverty,” Lemons said. “He believes in doing this work through people, not at people, not on top of people.”

Elsie Torres is now an assistant superintendent in East Hartford but worked for years with Miguel Cardona in Meriden. He is first and foremost an advocate for children, she said.

“It’s a quality that is consistent across all his work, that kids first mindset,” Torres said. “It would always come down to the child: How are we impacting children? Children who were struggling, children who needed to be accelerated, children at the benchmark. How do we continue increasing the bar? That was his mindset.”

As commissioner, Cardona, heads an agency of about 300 people — not including employees in the technical high school system — and oversees a $3 billion budget, including all state and federal programs.

He takes the reins of the agency under a new governor, Ned Lamont, who so far hasn’t advocated for the sort of sweeping reforms proposed by his predecessor, former Gov. Dannel Malloy.

From the start of his first term, Malloy made it clear that education was a priority, pushing forward a raft of plans during his second year that proved highly controversial — from more rigorous academic goals known as the Common Core State Standards to a more challenging computerized standardized test known as the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium test. The plan to tie those test scores to teacher performance evaluations was so controversial that ultimately the state recommended against using those scores to rate teachers.

Lemons said that part of the “dance” for the new commissioner will be to determine how much leeway the new governor will give him to move his own agenda.

Cardona probably first caught the collective eye of the state’s education and political leaders in 2010 when he was appointed co-chairman of a legislative task force studying the state’s intractable academic achievement gap between racial and socioeconomic groups. The other co-chair was then-Sen. Toni Harp, who is now [2019] the mayor of New Haven.

“He was very committed to collaborating with people to come up with a statewide solution around the lack of minority young people thriving in our overall urban school system,” Harp said recently. “He was committed to looking at not just the students and their families and the deficits that people cite as the reason for them not doing well. He was also willing to look at the overall system, particularly higher ed, to see whether teachers are trained appropriately to deal with so many of the problems that youngsters from urban areas bring to the classroom.”

“Being around kids — it really serves almost like fuel for the soul.”

Miguel Cardona

She said that Lamont’s selection of Cardona is “a bold move… It felt to me like he really wants someone still young with the energy to actually move the districts across the state in a direction that ensures that our young people are prepared for the world they will inhabit, that requires you to have strong educational skills.”

Cardona’s appointment as commissioner was not without controversy. About a week before he was offered the position, the Lamont administration offered it to Bloomfield Superintendent James Thompson — who had appeared to be the frontrunner for months. However, the administration’s negotiations with Thompson derailed over issues such as salary — the governor’s staff says — and the administration reversed course, offering the job to Cardona.

Miguel Cardona, who accepted a salary of $192,500, said he prefers to look forward.

“There were a lot of different things being said from the moment the governor took office or was elected …. I knew what I brought to the table. I put it out there and I waited for decisions to be made,” he said. “At this point, I want to focus on just making sure that, you know, we provide the students in Connecticut with the best opportunity to be successful.”

That opportunity almost certainly involves closing the achievement gap. In 2014, the task force Cardona led with Harp produced a master plan with dozens of recommendations to eliminate that gap, including the provision of full day, accredited preschool for all low-income children and an initiative to ensure that every Connecticut parent have at least a high school degree.

Optimistically, the report said that if the recommendations were followed, they would help close the achievement gap by 2020.

While acknowledging last week that the gap is far from closed, Cardona said many of the ideas in the report are being implemented or have influenced legislation. He noted that strides have been made in improving attendance and in school climate.

“We have made some gains [in the achievement gap] but we haven’t closed it,” Cardona said. “It’s still the top of the list for me. I want to make sure we have equitable outcomes throughout the state, regardless of where you live, regardless of background.”

He said he’ll be looking at improvements that can be made “inside the school house” such as ensuring that every child reads by grade three and that every district — even those without strong resources — are delivering a strong curriculum to students.

“There were times throughout my youth that I think people had lower expectations than they should have. It just made me hungrier.”

Education Commissioner Miguel Cardona

He said that he’ll also be looking “outside the school house” to consider other factors that contribute to a student’s readiness to learn.

“Housing insecurity, hunger, you know, economic instability,” he said. “So those are things that I’m super eager to work with sister agencies and partner with other commissioners.”

On the secondary school level, Miguel Cardona said he’d like to make dual enrollment — an approach that enables high school students to take courses on college campuses to earn college credits — “the rule and not the exception so that our kids have better access to college and to reduce some of that fear like I had of being the first time, first college-goer in the family.”

He’d also like to start a program that gives students high school credit for internships that could lead to future employment.

Cardona himself followed his eldest cousin to Wilcox Technical  High School where his concentration was in automotive studies, but he took college preparatory classes where, at times, he was the only Latino student in the class.

He went on to Central Connecticut State University and initially considered majoring in art education — influenced by an excellent art teacher he had.

“But I gravitated toward elementary education and once I started doing internship experiences in New Britain, it was sealed for me,” he said. “There’s so much promise in young children. There’s so much opportunity to help them shape what they want to be or what they want to do. You’re able to positively impact children, not only academically but also hopefully leave a little bit of an imprint on how they develop as people.”

“For me, the best part of my job in every position I’ve had has been visiting the classroom, especially the little kindergarten ones or the 4-year-old kids. Being around kids — it really serves almost like fuel for the soul.”

Cardona, who spoke only Spanish until entering school, said he considered going into bilingual education but “I felt it was important non-Latino students saw a Latino in a position as a teacher. So I chose to stay in the regular education setting.”

Cardona said that he would have been content as a fourth grade teacher, but the superintendent at the time saw potential in him and insisted that he pursue training to become a principal.

“It was the opportunity to increase my scope of influence and service to kids,” he said. “I went from 25 kids to 600 at Hanover Elementary School … Now it’s over 530,000, but it’s still service to kids.”

Cardona plans to meet with students on a regular basis so he can hear directly from them.

While in Meriden, Cardona said, he established dialogue sessions three or four times a year where students would come together and talk about what was working and what wasn’t.

“It’s not like we’re giving students a voice,” he said. “They have a voice — right? We’re just sometimes not designed to listen. You know when we talk about preparing students for the jobs of the future, it’s critical thinking, it’s self-advocacy. Well, let’s do that now.”

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Letters to the Editor

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  1. Parents should ultimately have the choice in education not the government. Many who make decisions for others send their children to private tuition paid private schools. Did Dr. Cardona send his kids to public schools? Most of the members Congress and President Biden choose private schools for their children and their grandchildren. People of financial means usually make that choice. An excellent education should not just be for children of the wealthy. Let all parents choose – through the use of vouchers or charter school. Too much mediocrity in urban schools.

  2. Today we experience such greed in our secondary educational systems, there are several factors that are still being overlooked and it’s just mind-boggling.
    First of all, In the 80’s there was a math and Reading teaching shortage. Colleges were recruiting relentlessly to find great candidates to enter their education department. I was encouraged to take an introductory to educator class where I found my niche. I was funded through a Perkins loan with the promise of only having to teach for FIVE years in a Title-I school and my loans would be forgiven. It is now thirty- three years later with twenty-five of those years in Title one school and I have yet to have one penny forgiven. WHY? You ask? Well, Upon graduating the Department of Education encouraged us to consolidate our loans and then they said we were now ineligible to receive the forgiveness through Perkins Loans and other parts of our loan forgiveness. I am 55 years old and owe more Eight Thousand TIMES my original loan amount with retirement on the horizon but I can’t because I need to restart my years over after being denied, garnished and just given the run around for about 30 years! Why hasn’t the department of Education investigated why so many people over 50 have ridiculous loan amounts? I can guarantee there are numerous others at my same age that have had these same issues. Let’s hold these student loan lenders accountable for being so deceptive! They tried every trick to keep these nooses around our necks and I know you’ve found and heard many of these stories so we would need forgiveness if they would have done the correct things long ago. I ponder how many other 30+year educators fall under my umbrella of deception.
    Secondly, It would be a GREAT day to help the thousands that attended Argosy University and their FOR PROFIT GREED that left us without a degree and empty promises! I have contacted numerous agencies before they were closed and the process was long and then once they were closed I was told to take it up with the Department of Education. I have proven my case of the extraction of funds yet I was not making progress. I tried to transfer to another campus but due to them trying to grow the camus in Tampa, FL I was denied. There have been numerous for profit schools given the relief of student loans but I haven’t heard one peep about Argosy University, Tampa, FL. I have been trying to fight them since December, 2009 when I was forced to leave Florida due to domestic violence. I begged them to allow me to proceed because I needed to complete that chapter of my life. I ended up leaving Florida in order to keep myself and my children safe and lost access to my data to complete my dissertation. They were given the police reports, the restraining orders and the pictures of my bruised body. Only one person in our cohort was pushed along and finished and her chair was fired for doing so. I have a plethora of evidence yet my cries still go unheard about the deplorable money making factory they were.
    Lastly, I view my student loans and was garnished due to them not accepting my payment that I tried to work out with them. They took 600.00 every two weeks from me and I see no documentation of where those funds were applied to my outstanding loans. As a then single parent, we struggled unnecessarily through this time. I was responsible for four children. I provided the document that my ex husband was not paying child support and was at that time over 15,000 in arrears of support. He is now over 40,000 and lives well! That was not taken into consideration.
    The Department of Education has created many issues for me by not complying with terms from my undergraduate degree, not investigation Argosy University for their for profit promises and no degree which would have given me a little more salary, garnishing my wages for 1200 a month as a single parent and not providing one cent of forgiveness!
    I am looking for a way to right the many wrongs of a previous dysfunction Education Department
    SINCERELY,
    TEACHMETIFF

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