Kaya henderson dc biography

Kaya Henderson

Kaya Henderson (born July 1, ) is an American educator, activist, and civil servant who served as Chancellor of the District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) from November to September

Education and early career

Kaya Henderson was born in in Mount Vernon, New York, and graduated from that city's public schools.[1]

Henderson graduated from the Edmund A.

Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., in During her senior year, a friend joined Teach for America. Intrigued by why her friend would give up lucrative jobs in order to teach in inner-city schools, Henderson learned more about the organization and became convinced its goals were important to her.[2]

In , Henderson joined Teach For America, and took a job teaching in the South Bronx in New York City.

Henderson was promoted to executive director of Teach for America in , and relocated to Washington, D.C. In , Henderson left Teach for America and joined the New Teacher Project as Vice President for Strategic Operations.[3] While working for the New Teacher Project, Henderson returned to Georgetown University, and received an executive master's degree in leadership in [2][4]

Henderson received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Georgetown University in ,[2] and joined the university's board of directors in [4]

DCPS tenure

Henderson was working for the New Teacher Project when Michelle Rhee, Chancellor of the D.C.

public school system, tapped her in June to be Deputy Chancellor of the DCPS.[5] Rhee resigned as Chancellor effective October 31, , after her political backer, Adrian Fenty, lost renomination as Mayor of the District of Columbia in the Democratic primary. Henderson was named interim chancellor.[6]Vincent C.

Gray, Fenty's successor as mayor, appointed Henderson permanently to the job, and she was confirmed by the Council of the District of Columbia on June 21, [7]

Henderson resigned as Chancellor effective September 30, John Davis, chief of schools, replaced her as interim chancellor.[8]

Henderson was censured in November for an ethics violation after her departure.

According to the District of Columbia Office of Government Ethics, Henderson asked Chartwells, a contractor providing breakfast, lunch, and other food to the school system, for a $, contribution for an event honoring high-quality teachers in the DCPS. Chartwells had just been accused of improperly billing the school district for $19 million, and for providing spoiled food.

(Chartwells later settled the lawsuit for $ million.) Chartwells contributed $50, to the event. City ethics rules, however, prohibit employees from soliciting contributions from firms or individuals that do business with the city. The ethics investigation into Henderson's actions began in May , while she was still chancellor. Henderson agreed to be censured; the Office of Government Ethics chose not to impose a fine.[9]

On April 12, , the D.C.

Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found that Henderson gave preferential treatment to some city officials and members of the public by granting permission for their children to enroll in schools outside the normal attendance boundaries. Henderson defended her actions, noting that District law gives the chancellor the sole discretionary authority to approve out-of-boundary registrations and that she granted only a limited number of registrations and only when circumstances warranted it.[10] Henderson approved transfers for Rashad Young, the City Administrator, and Courtney Snowden, the Deputy Mayor for Economic Development, but declined the request from a Vietnamese family with a deaf child who sought to attend a school with sign language instruction.

In the OIG report, Henderson justified her actions by saying that city officials did not make enough money, though Young and Snowden made $, and $, per year, respectively.[11]

Post-DCPS career

In mid, Henderson—who had acted and modeled as a child—returned to fashion modeling. She initially was interviewed by and modeled clothes for the plus-size retailer Eloquii as part of their series of interviews with high-achieving women.

She modeled clothes a second time for them in late [12]

In October , Henderson was appointed a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Georgetown University.

Kaya henderson dc schools: Tools Tools. Vernon Public Schools. In office November — September The Georgetown Dish.

The university said she will assist in conducting research into affordable higher education, barriers to college, racial justice, and other issues.[13]

References

  1. ^Solomon, Beth (October 13, ). "Rhee rheesigns, Henderson named interim schools chief". The Georgetown Dish.

    Retrieved December 7,

  2. ^ abc"Head of D.C. Public Schools to Receive Honorary Degree".

  3. Kaya henderson dc schools
  4. Kaya henderson dc biography photos
  5. Kaya henderson dc biography husband
  6. Georgetown University. April 12, Retrieved December 7,

  7. ^Russo, Alexander (). "Interview with Kaya Henderson". . Retrieved December 7,
  8. ^ abMonyak, Suzanne (September 5, ). "Kaya Henderson Joins GU Board of Directors".

    Kaya henderson dc biography wikipedia On April 12, , the D. Henderson received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Georgetown University in , [ 2 ] and joined the university's board of directors in The Associated Press. The ethics investigation into Henderson's actions began in May , while she was still chancellor.

    The Georgetown Hoya. Retrieved December 7,

  9. ^Haynes, V. Dion (June 13, ). "Picks to Lead D.C. Schools Have Ties to The System". The Washington Post. p.&#;B1.
  10. ^Craig, Tim; Turque, Bill (October 13, ). "Rhee to resign as schools chancellor".

    The Washington Post. p.&#;A1.

  11. ^Turque, Bill; Clement, Scott (June 22, ).

    Kaya henderson dc salary Wikidata item. Henderson was named interim chancellor. The Associated Press. Fox5 DC.

    "Ratings up for District schools". The Washington Post. p.&#;A1.

  12. ^Stein, Perry; Brown, Emma (June 29, ). "D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson to step down, leaving legacy of progress". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 6,
  13. ^"Former D.C. Schools Chief Kaya Henderson Censured for Soliciting Money for Gala".

    The Associated Press.

    Kaya henderson dc biography death A man named Tom McCann was the head of the marketing department at the time, and he would occasionally take the interns out to lunch or expose them to different aspects of the company. Preceded by Michelle Rhee. Receive quarterly email updates on our social capital research. Gray , Fenty's successor as mayor, appointed Henderson permanently to the job, and she was confirmed by the Council of the District of Columbia on June 21,

    November 16, Retrieved December 7,

  14. ^Matos, Alejandra; Jamison, Peter; Shapiro, T. Rees (April 28, ). "D.C. investigation: Ex-schools chief gave special treatment for school transfers". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 29,
  15. ^Davis, Aaron; Jamison, Peter (May 17, ).

    "Secret report shows 'special' treatment for public officials in D.C. school lottery". The Washington Post.

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  18. Kaya Henderson | Teach for All and Former Chancellor DC ...
  19. Kaya Henderson - Education Leaders of Color
  20. Past Chancellors - DC Public Schools Chancellor
  21. Retrieved May 17,

  22. ^Givhan, Robin (December 2, ). "Kaya Henderson used to run D.C. public schools. Now she's a fashion model". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 27, ; "Former DC schools chancellor Kaya Henderson discusses new career as fashion model". Fox5 DC. January 10, Retrieved March 27,
  23. ^Strauss, Valerie (November 2, ).

    Kaya henderson dc biography He asked me where I wanted to go, and I only really wanted to go to one university: Georgetown. Retrieved April 29, When I was in high school in New York in the mids, I applied to a competitive national internship program, called INROADS—a program still around today that provides internships for minority students in the corporate sector. I was accepted to the internship, went through some training, and placed within the marketing department at General Foods, working for the staff there.

    "Former D.C. schools chancellor Henderson reprimanded by city ethics board". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 27,

External links