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Joe Williams, Executive Director, Democrats for Education Reform

Related Link: http://www.dfer.org

Biography provided by participant

After more than a decade of frontline newspaper reporting on education reform, Joe Williams has established a nationally-recognized reputation as a writer, contributor and speaker on cutting-edge education reform issues at the federal, state, and local levels. His most celebrated work was as author of the controversial book Cheating Our Kids: How Politics and Greed Ruin Education (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005).

In June of 2007, Williams decided to make it his full-time job to implement the social change for which his investigative journalism had repeatedly called, and he was named Executive Director of Democrats for Education Reform (DFER). Williams identified with DFER's focus on building a powerful national coalition in support of meaningful education reform.

Williams knew from his research and writing that a political problem demanded a political solution, a solution that draws on all communities and community leaders who are committed to putting America's children first.

Williams previously worked as an award-winning education journalist for the New York Daily News. He also served as an education reporter with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, where he won numerous local, state, and national awards for his coverage of the Milwaukee Public Schools and that city's groundbreaking school choice programs.

In addition to studying reform efforts in Milwaukee, Williams has completed exhaustive research on the challenges of individual school districts in cities such as New York City, Los Angeles, and San Diego. He has developed expertise on national education policy such as the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation, and on state issues such as the growing Charter School movement.

Williams has written in-depth pieces for the Hechinger Institute, the Thomas Fordham Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute. He has served as a non-resident Senior Fellow at Education Sector, a non-partisan, Washington DC-based think tank.

Williams has contributed book chapters, articles and policy reports on numerous education-reform related topics, and for a variety of respected publications including: Education Next, Education Sector, and Harvard's Kennedy School of Government Press.

Williams lives in New York City with his wife and two children, both of whom attend city public schools.

Recent Responses

August 3, 2009 08:05 AM

RE: Are The 'Race To The Top' Requirements Fair?

It’s totally fair. This is a race. If you show up at a race all flabby and out of shape and you don’t even have a pair of running shoes, all you are doing is crowding out the other runners who are serious about winning. It's still too early to tell, but there is a chance that this Race to the Top could live up to its billing as an historic effort to advance education reform in the U.S. But the politics here are tricky – President Obama and Education Secretary Duncan are running head first into the blob. One…  Read more

June 29, 2009 09:31 AM

RE: What's The Best Use Of Stimulus Money?

Rep. Obey is wrong when he suggests it is unrealistic for cash-strapped states to pursue "dramatic new reforms" right now because of their dire fiscal situations. These states, in particular, should be willing to take bold steps to make sure that public education is positioned to survive for the long-haul. Using the $100 billion in stimulus dollars just to patch holes in unrealistic state budgets merely prolongs the inevitable, and puts public education on a collision course with a future fiscal climate that could be even worse than it is today. This is the time to couple change with the federal bailout…  Read more

About This Blog

This Education Blog is funded by support provided, in part, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for the purpose of creating an educational forum for sharing research, ideas and opinions regarding issues related to college readiness and college completion. The Blog may not be used to post partisan political statements supporting or opposing candidates for public office. All statements and materials posted on the Blog, including any statements regarding specific legislation, reflect the views of the individual contributors and do not reflect the views of National Journal or the Bill& Melinda Gates Foundation. National Journal and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation take no positions regarding any legislation discussed in the Blog. National Journal reserves the right to monitor material placed on this site and to remove any posting they may deem inappropriate.

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