HGSE Alum Rivera Unanimous Choice to Lead Boston Public Schools
Posted: September 22, 2006
Boston Mayor Thomas Menino announced today that the superintendent
search committee has unanimously recommended that HGSE Alum Manuel Rivera,
Ed.M'75, Ed.D'94, be named the next superintendent of Boston
Public Schools.
Rivera, currently the superintendent of Rochester City School District,
plans to begin his role as Boston Public Schools superintendent next
year. Thomas Payzant, a fellow HGSE alumnus, stepped down as Boston
Schools superintendent in the spring and has since joined the HGSE faculty
as a senior lecturer.
"I started thinking about the possibilities of Boston,"
Rivera told the Boston Globe today. "They've had a great
superintendent. It's terrific. They just won the Broad prize [the
top award for urban education]. It's like joining a winning team."
Rivera knows a thing or two about winning. Last year, the American
Association of School Administrators named him Superintendent of the
Year. The award honors an educator who exhibits leadership for student
learning, personal and organizational communication, continuous improvement
of skills, and active community involvement.
Over Rivera's six years as superintendent of Rochester (NY) City
School District made a tremendous impact in the classroom and community.
Under Rivera's leadership, the district set up a series of early
college schools with higher education partners and has changed the organization
of many elementary schools from neighborhood to magnet schools. He also
started a district-wide school choice program.
As a result of Rivera's secondary school redesign plan, both
the graduation rate and the percentage of students earning a Regents
diploma increased significantly.
Although he has spent his entire education career in New York schools,
Rivera admitted that he almost didn't pursue education as a career.
In fact, he was accepted into law school, but decided to study at HGSE
instead. Ultimately, his decision to earn his master's degree
at HGSE contributed immensely to his future in education, he says.
"It was a great experience for me. You tend to think of Harvard
as an elitist place, but it was not," Rivera says. "I worked
with great minds and people who cared a lot about kids." Rivera
lists among his influences the late professor Jeanne Chall, Pforzheimer
Professor Susan Moore Johnson, and Thompson Professor Richard Murnane.