Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have a 2 year contract for $180k per year. What qualifications did Kaya have over him? At least he was an assistant superintendent and superintendent.
$180 per year? For a Superintendent/Chancellor????? That's what building principals make! Wasn't Kaya making much more--$280+?
What's with the low salary? I thought the $400+ sounded a bit high but $180?????
Did you mean 280,000?
For someone with less than 2 years experience on the job?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have a 2 year contract for $180k per year. What qualifications did Kaya have over him? At least he was an assistant superintendent and superintendent.
$180 per year? For a Superintendent/Chancellor????? That's what building principals make! Wasn't Kaya making much more--$280+?
What's with the low salary? I thought the $400+ sounded a bit high but $180?????
Did you mean 280,000?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He will have a 2 year contract for $180k per year. What qualifications did Kaya have over him? At least he was an assistant superintendent and superintendent.
$180 per year? For a Superintendent/Chancellor????? That's what building principals make! Wasn't Kaya making much more--$280+?
What's with the low salary? I thought the $400+ sounded a bit high but $180?????
Anonymous wrote:He will have a 2 year contract for $180k per year. What qualifications did Kaya have over him? At least he was an assistant superintendent and superintendent.
Anonymous wrote:He sounds great to me. - Asian-American, grad of a top university with an advanced degree, two kids in Title I DCPS schools. I work in education, believe it or not, with many extremely competent black people. Take your racist bs to Breitbart you altright nitwits.
Anonymous wrote:I would at least give up this obsession with ivy-trained and advanced degrees. Part of the problem with the central office right now is that there are many young super-stars from Harvard trying to reorganize and run departments. Unfortunately they don't have much real experience with urban schools or with actual teaching or running of schools. I say at least give this guy a chance. Sometimes experience is much more valuable than fancy degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well that's really "white" of you to say. What if he had the same qualifications and was white? Take race out it for a minute and let's focus on what really matters.
If he were white with the same qualifications, he would not have been hired.
Donald, is that you? Right! Because there ARE no under-qualified white people. GTFOHAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well that's really "white" of you to say. What if he had the same qualifications and was white? Take race out it for a minute and let's focus on what really matters.
If he were white with the same qualifications, he would not have been hired.
Anonymous wrote:Well that's really "white" of you to say. What if he had the same qualifications and was white? Take race out it for a minute and let's focus on what really matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Maybe. This is just another Kaya. She might as well had stayed. Overpaid and under qualified. It's the DC way!"
+1 million
Should we start taking bets on whether his writing abilities are as bad as the Wilson principal's?
"She might as well had stayed. " And you have the nerve to criticize anyone's writing. PULEEZE!!!
Anonymous wrote:Compared to most of the instructional superintendents, DME, and a lot of principals, Wilson looks under qualified, other than having the title superintendent for a hot minute.
Looks like some of his achievements have pretty much happened in DC already.