Why Secretary Cardona is ‘more optimistic than usual’

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona arrived at the Monitor Breakfast on September 13 with “gifts,” as he called them: a stack of thick, glossy booklets titled “Raise the Bar,” touting his department’s goals. He had just come from a back-to-school bus tour of the American heartland and was feeling, he says, “more optimistic than usual.”

Dr. Cardona shared how satisfying it was to put a face to policy, “whether that’s early childhood programming in Illinois or after-school programming in Minnesota. It is good to see that students are involved.”

Still, he hastened to add that these are challenging times for education, whether it is the continued efforts of primary and secondary education to recover from the pandemic ‘learning loss’, the teacher shortage, or the ministry’s new plan of Education for student debt relief after the Supreme Court ruled. the previous program was cancelled. In June, the Supreme Court also ended affirmative action — race-conscious admissions — at colleges and universities, an issue that Dr. Cardona is clearly close to her heart. He was born in Meriden, Connecticut, to Puerto Rican parents, and English is his second language. He was the first in his family to go to college.