Christina Kishimoto has been selected as the next Hawaii Department of Education superintendent.
Kishimoto will replace current Superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi, whose contract is up June 30. Matayoshi was criticized by educators for creating an overly centralized school system. Kishimoto begins her聽three-year contract on August 1, according to a Board of Education聽, and the board will pick an interim superintendent to serve during July.
Kishimoto聽currently serves as Superintendent of Gilbert Public Schools in Arizona.聽As Hawaii superintendent, Kishimoto will be responsible for the country’s only statewide school district. The Department of Education oversees 256 schools with 175,000 students, 22,300 permanent employees and 13,500 casual hires.
鈥淚n partnership with Chairperson Mizumoto, the Board, and Governor David Ige, I look forward to implementing a vision of excellence for all students,” Kishimoto said in the statement. “I look forward to working hand in hand with Hawaii鈥檚 teachers, leaders, staff, parents, community members, and student leaders to execute on this vision of high quality college, career, and community readiness.鈥
BOE Chair Lance Mizumoto聽said the decision was difficult for the board because “both finalists were so highly qualified.” But Kishimoto had “the right combination of experience, knowledge, and focus” to implement Gov. David Ige’s strategic vision for education and Blueprint, he said.
She聽beat out finalist Linda Chen, who started Baltimore-based Ikigai Educational Consulting last year, and has a background in teaching and educational administration.
In to the board, people overwhelmingly opposed both finalists and called for a local candidate. The Hawaii State Teachers Association told the board they didn’t support either candidate.
Others testifying felt they lacked experience and gave vague answers in their statements at a press conference. Many questioned the candidates鈥 performance in previous education jobs.
Neither candidate has served in a school district as large as Hawaii.
The Star-Advertiser first 聽that聽Kishimoto was unanimously for her job as superintendent in Hartford, Conn. The schools board previously gave her on a performance review, citing poor communication.
She defended her performance at last month鈥檚 press conference, saying she maintained good relationships with politicians and board members. Kishimoto called herself a 鈥渂old leader鈥 who brought change to a high-poverty district that was in the midst of a state takeover.
Kishimoto also responded to criticism of her current performance as a superintendent in Gilbert, Ariz. at the press conference. The schools system was under pressure from a conservative right and a need for innovation, she said, and pointed to some of her achievements.
The statement said that Kishimoto passed a full background check. Mizumoto added that “district officials, former superintendents, and other individuals in the Gilbert district were contacted” and “negative statements made about Dr. Kishimoto were either inconsequential or simply invalid.鈥
Kishimoto has served as superintendent in Gilbert since July 2014.
A news conference will be held next month to introduce Kishimoto, according to the release.
View the candidates鈥 full resumes and watch videos of the press conference .
A Call For More Transparency
Jim Shon, director of the University of Hawaii at Manoa Hawaii Educational Policy Center, said the search has been stressful for those who follow education in Hawaii and the finalists 鈥渓eaped into the final arena in a cloud of smoke and not transparency.鈥
Candidates from the mainland might be more aggressive in their work ethic, he said, which is something Hawaii might not be used to.
Hawaii residents might be looking for more stability in a superintendent than mainlanders would expect, he said, and outsiders might have difficulty to adjust to the DOE鈥檚 single district system and collective bargaining arrangements.
Shon said he doesn鈥檛 know of anyone willing to 鈥渟tick their neck out鈥 and say recruiting candidates from outside the DOE is a positive thing.
鈥淚 think a lot of people are in the same situation. What is it about these folks that stood out from the 92 (original pool of applicants)?鈥 he said.
Randy Roth, UH law professor, also complained of a lack of transparency in the superintendent search. There should have been an open forum so candidates could answer questions in public, he said.
Roth also said he doesn鈥檛 know of anyone who鈥檚 vocally supported either finalist, but because there hasn鈥檛 been an opportunity for public interviews, 鈥減eople don鈥檛 have enough information to form a valid opinion.鈥
It鈥檚 conceivable the mainland finalists may do a good job, he said, but he hasn鈥檛 heard them answer any questions about Hawaii鈥檚 unique education community.
He noted that Gov. David Ige has a lot of power over the DOE and can 鈥 plus, Hawaii is the only state with a single school district. In testimony, Roth suggested the board ask candidates questions about the governor鈥檚 plan for 鈥渁 schools-centered system鈥 and his Blueprint for Public Education.
鈥淭heir resumes suggest (the candidates) are smart, hardworking people with an excellent formal education,鈥 Roth said. 鈥淲hether they鈥檙e a good fit for Hawaii 鈥 I think is anybody鈥檚 guess.鈥
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.