EDUCATION

Ryan Stewart named New Mexico secretary of education

Morgan Lee
Associated Press
Ryan Stewart, left at podium, speaks at a news conference in the state Capitol building Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, in Santa Fe.

SANTA FE — New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Monday tapped the leader of a Philadelphia-based nonprofit devoted to improving opportunities for poor, minority students to lead the state’s Public Education Department.

Ryan Stewart of Partners in Schools took control of the state agency as it redraws its student testing, teacher-evaluation and school ratings systems and rolls out investments to extend classroom learning time for a heavily Latino and Native American population.

Lujan Grisham, a first-year Democrat, has made improvements in public education a priority. Last month, she shook up the education department by firing Education Secretary Karen Trujillo.

MORE:Karen Trujillo: Ouster from Public Education Department 'came as a surprise'

Stewart said at a news conference Monday he was persuaded to take the job by Lujan Grisham’s description of a state poised for critical changes.

“There is an opportunity to take a state that, to date, hasn’t yet fulfilled its potential, but that’s investing in it, where the Legislature, the governor’s office, the stakeholder community are all aligned,” Stewart said. “You’re going to have strong investment; you’re going to have strong support to make a difference … for kids who traditionally the system hasn’t served well.”

Stewart previously led the Philadelphia school district’s improvement and innovation office and began his career as a middle school teacher.

Ryan Stewart, New Mexico secretary of public education, attends a news conference in the state Capitol building Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, in Santa Fe.

MORE:Blistering court brief accuses New Mexico Legislature of shorting public schools

The leadership change comes as the administration and lawmakers respond to a court order for the state to put greater resources toward public education, especially for children from impoverished households and families that speak a language other than English at home.

New Mexico is among several states where parents have turned to the judiciary to resolve frustrations over funding levels for public education and student academic achievement. A judge last year found the state was failing to meet its constitutional obligations to provide an adequate education.

Lujan Grisham signed legislation in April that increased annual spending on K-12 public education by roughly 16% to $3.2 billion — accounting for nearly half of state general fund spending. New Mexico public schools depend mostly on state funds for operations.