As president of Prairie View A&M University, retired Army Lt. Gen. Julius Becton earned respect as a starched-shirt leader who demanded accountability in academic and financial affairs and didn’t mind challenging the status quo to achieve his goals.
Now, the students, faculty and parents of the Washington, D.C., public school system will have to determine if Becton’s often gruff, no-nonsense style can help their ailing district heal itself.
Becton, former head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, recently was named chief executive officer of the D.C. school system. He will report to a new education panel appointed by the D.C. financial control board.
The panel is expected to govern the District’s schools for several years before returning power to the elected school hoard. The decision to establish the panel and CEO position are controversial with some residents and home-rule proponents because the elected school board will only serve in an advisory capacity.
Becton, who is a Prairie View A&M alumnus with a master’s degree in economics from the University of Maryland, does not have a traditional educational background. That raises the issue of whether he is an appropriate choice for chief executive officer of a school system. His selection, however, is not unprecedented, according to the Council of the Great City Schools. Seattle public schools are also administered–and with notable success–by a retired Army general, John Sanford.
District schools have been dogged by violent incidents, low teacher morale and allegations of financial mismanagement. How academic programs fared under Becton’s leadership at Prairie View may indicate what D.C. parents, faculty and students can expect from him.
Becton’s lack of academic background temporarily surfaced when he first was appointed president of Prairie View, a historically Black college near Houston, Texas.