sa国际传媒官网网页入口

Featured

APS hosts a packed-house, but mostly tame, school board candidate forum

Published Modified
Eight candidates on the dais
Candidates running for the sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools board participated in a forum at APS headquarters on Sept. 24. Eight candidates are running for three seats of the seven-member school board. To check which of the seven APS districts you live in, go to the New Mexico Voter Information Portal atNMVote.org.

Improving student outcomes and sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools鈥 new five-year strategic plan to do so were among the issues eight school board candidates, each sitting in a seat that may soon be his or hers, took up at a hosted by the district on Monday.

The vast majority of the packed-house, two-hour forum was tame and apolitical, although two challengers in the hotly contested District 2 race, where incumbent Vice President Peggy Muller-Arag贸n is defending her seat, did at times fire shots in her direction.

District 1 Name Experience
Robert TrujilloSmall business owner
Janelle AstorgaLicensed educational assistant
Verland CokerLicensed substitute teacher

District 2 (copy) Name Experience
Ronalda Tome-WaritoEducation consultant
Adrian NogalesLicensed teacher
Peggy Muller-Arag贸nIncumbent, former teacher

District 4 (copy) Name Experience
Heather BenavidezCEO of The Arc of New Mexico, former magistrate judge
Stephen CeccoMortgage banker

鈥淚 won鈥檛 attack,鈥 she said during closing statements, during which challengers Adrian Nogales and Ronalda Tome-Warito accused Muller-Arag贸n of not putting students first and of neglecting safety concerns at her alma mater, West Mesa High 鈥 a school that is not in her district.

Muller-Arag贸n, board member Barbara Petersen and board President Yolanda Montoya-Cordova are the three longest-serving members of the board, with the former two being elected in 2015 and Montoya-Cordova being elected in 2018.

Montoya-Cordova, who represents South Valley District 1 and Petersen, of District 4, which includes the International District and much of Nob Hill and Uptown, have both decided not to run for reelection. Muller-Arag贸n, of Northwest sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 District 2, is the only incumbent fighting to retain her seat.

The forum covered a range of topics, including school safety, how to address findings from a judge in the landmark Yazzie-Martinez education sufficiency lawsuit, and how candidates would approach consolidating schools.

At least one member of the audience said the forum helped inform her decision as a voter.

鈥淚 felt that we had a good chance to understand all the different personalities,鈥 said Diana Shea, a retired 27-year veteran teacher. 鈥淏y the time (it) was over, I identified six people up there that I would be willing to see on our school board.鈥

Inside the power struggle brewing for the APS school board

Turning the ship

Everyone agreed on one thing: APS must do better in educating its students.

None of the candidates tried to argue that the district doesn鈥檛 have a lot of ground to cover. Just over a third of its students were proficient in reading and a quarter were proficient in math, according to during the 2021-2022 school year.

Stephen Cecco and Heather Benavidez

But how to improve was another issue.

Some candidates held up early childhood education as the key to the future. Some referenced reducing class sizes, or emphasizing literacy more, or 鈥渘ot teaching to the test鈥 so teachers can focus on teaching and meeting children where they are.

Some, like District 1 candidates Robert Trujillo and Janelle Astorga, also spoke about trusting teachers鈥 professional expertise to educate their students, an issue that has been contentious for the current school board, with members last year controversially tabling a proposed teachers contract over language about that right for teachers.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how to teach a kid,鈥 Trujillo said in response to a question about what high-quality instruction means and how it should be implemented. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what our teachers are here for.鈥

Astorga added that 鈥渢eachers know best when it comes to educating our students because they are the ones that are in the classroom.鈥

The plan

Some questions asked of candidates, as well as many of their answers, centered on APS鈥 recently unveiled five-year strategic plan and on goals developed by the current board earlier this year.

Some said they are for the plan. For example, Muller-Arag贸n, Trujillo and District 4 candidates Heather Benavidez and Stephen Cecco all spoke in support of the current board鈥檚 goals or the district鈥檚 strategic plan.

On the other hand, candidates like Nogales and District 1 candidate Verland Coker spoke against it.

Peggy Muller-Arag贸n

鈥淭hese goals and guardrails are a slap in the face to what we can accomplish,鈥 Coker said.

Most of the goals call for improvements of at least 10 percentage points in proficiency levels or other metrics of specific student groups and grade levels over the next five years.

But ultimately, Muller-Arag贸n said, turning student outcomes around is a long game for APS.

鈥淲hen it comes to low proficiency, it (has) been, obviously, a long-term problem for APS,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 see a pretty simple solution, (that) every child can learn. And if the adults in the room believe that, that鈥檚 exactly what鈥檚 going to happen.鈥