This story originally appeared on the blog.
Tenn. Gov. Bill Haslam has appointed Malika Anderson to head Tennessee鈥檚 special school district for its worst-performing schools.
Anderson will in 2012. He will leave the job at the end of the year and Anderson will take over in January.
The state-run district operates 29 schools serving close to 10,000 students.
Back in July, Chalkbeat Tennessee reported that .
The ASD鈥檚 current deputy superintendent, Anderson is a graduate of the , a two-year training program for high-level managerial positions. She served that residency from 2009 to 2011 as director of academic analysis and support for the District of Columbia public schools.
In a letter posted on the district鈥檚 website Tuesday morning, mission for her.
鈥淢y family helped lead the civil rights movement in Tennessee from the 1950s through the 鈥70s and demanding access to equitable, high quality education for all students was central to the movement,鈥 she wrote.
鈥淭oday when less than 20 percent of students in our state are black, but over 90 percent of the students consigned to neighborhood schools that perform in the bottom 5 percent are black, we have to take a critical look at how we have let the blood, sweat and tears of freedom fighting generations past turn into today鈥檚 segregated and unequal systems of schools.鈥
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Photo Credit: Malika Anderson, Achievement School District handout