School & District Management News in Brief

Atlanta Schools Chief Hall to Depart Next Spring

By The Associated Press — November 30, 2010 1 min read
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Superintendent Beverly L. Hall of the Atlanta public schools, whose tenure has been marked by improving student performance but also a test-cheating scandal, says she will leave her job in June after nearly 12 years.

Ms. Hall was named the American Association of School Administrators’ superintendent of the year last year. But critics called for her resignation after a statewide review found an unusually high number of erasures on standardized tests taken in spring 2009.

The superintendent described the test scandal as one of the greatest challenges the 50,000-student system has faced. In response to the allegations, she ordered tutoring for students at the affected schools, reassigned a dozen principals to jobs in which they do not directly work with students, and turned over the names of more than 100 educators to state authorities, who are investigating.

A version of this article appeared in the December 01, 2010 edition of Education Week as Atlanta Schools Chief Hall To Depart Next Spring

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