State Board Taps Consultant for New Schools Chief
It took repeated tries, but today the state school board named Michael Sentance, a consultant and former Massachusetts Secretary of Education, its choice to be new Alabama Superintendent.
After extensively debating the best voting procedure and cycling through six rounds of balloting that did not yield the required five-person majority, the state school board eventually voted for Sentance the second time his candidacy came up. He was chosen over five other finalists.
Sentance favors internationally benchmarked standards, stringent teacher preparation, merit pay, and charter schools. He does not support Common Core. He’s worked for the U.S. Department of Education, advised New England governors, helped get books to poor students, and consulted on education policy around the country.
Sentance does not have an education degree or experience running schools. He does have law degrees and was once Massachusetts Assistant Attorney General. The school board’s selection surprised some for other reasons too: Sentance is not from Alabama, and he was not the board’s leaders’ first choice. Governor Robert Bentley, board president by virtue of his elected position, had nominated Jeana Ross, head of the state Department of Early Childhood Education. And board vice president Dr. Yvette Richardson, along with many educators, supported Jefferson County Schools Superintendent and former Deputy State Superintendent Craig Pouncey.
“I felt that we needed someone who had experience as a superintendent, and Mr. Sentance does not have that experience,” she says. “That was my biggest concern, along with the fact that someone from the state of Alabama would know our needs better. I feel Mr. Sentance will get here and learn. But it’s a lot easier for you to know what the needs are than having to spend a year trying to figure out what they are.”
But Richardson struck a hopeful note, adding, “We’re really looking for someone who is going to set high expectations for students and work with our teachers to have them prepared to get where we’re trying to get them to go.”
Her board subcommittee still has to present a contract for the full board’s approval, possibly next month. Assuming Sentance agrees to its terms, he’ll soon after take over leadership of the Alabama State Department of Education.
This report was produced by Sherrel Stewart and Dan Carsen.
How George Wallace and Bull Connor set the stage for Alabama’s sky-high electric rates
After his notorious stand in the schoolhouse door, Wallace needed a new target. He found it in Alabama Power.
FIFA president defends World Cup ticket prices, saying demand is hitting records
The FIFA President addressed outrage over ticket prices for the World Cup by pointing to record demand and reiterating that most of the proceeds will help support soccer around the world.
From chess to a medical mystery: Great global reads from 2025 you may have missed
We published hundreds of stories on global health and development each year. Some are ... alas ... a bit underappreciated by readers. We've asked our staff for their favorite overlooked posts of 2025.
The U.S. offers Ukraine a 15-year security guarantee for now, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday the United States is offering his country security guarantees for a period of 15 years as part of a proposed peace plan.
Genre fiction and female authors top U.S. libraries’ most-borrowed lists in 2025
All of the top 10 books borrowed through the public library app Libby were written by women. And Kristin Hannah's The Women was the top checkout in many library systems around the country.
The Best Tiny Desk Concerts of 2025
Which Tiny Desk made an audio engineer question everything? Which one made a producer want to cry? Touch grass? Look back on the year in Tiny Desk, with the people who make them.


