Joseph Tucci is Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and Chief Executive Officer of EMC Corporation. He has been EMC’s Chairman since January 2006 and President and CEO since January 2001, one year after he joined the company as President and Chief Operating Officer.
Tucci is a member of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). He is one of 150 CEO members of The Business Roundtable and the former chairman of its Task Force on Education and the Workforce. He is one of nine chief executives who steer The Technology CEO Council, the IT industry’s leading public policy advocacy organization, and is a member of the Executive Committee of TechNet, a network of CEOs who work to advance the U.S.?s global leadership in innovation.
“So many important things flow from access to a first-rate education–the ability to acquire and extend knowledge, the habit of life-long learning, and the readiness to compete and meet life’s endless challenges,? Tucci said. ?And therefore I am honored and excited to be one of the chairs of the Governor’s Readiness Project and to be working with Tom Payzant and Jackie Jenkins-Scott. Together we will build on the substantial foundation created by Massachusetts ‘ successful Education Reform Law to create our state’s next-generation education system, with the aim of producing tomorrow’s inventors and innovators and advancing the Commonwealth’s reputation as a global leader in education.”
Over the past several years, Tucci has overseen the most aggressive new-product introduction cycles in the company?s history, led EMC into multi-platform open software for storage, information, and content management, expanded the company?s marketplace beyond the enterprise to commercial and small-medium businesses, broadened the company?s industry alliances, and established new selling, partnership, and distribution channels. Acknowledging EMC?s rejuvenation, the editors of Business Week named Tucci one of Corporate America?s best senior managers of 2004.
Tom Payzant is a senior lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Prior to that, he served as superintendent of the Boston Public Schools from October of 1995 until his retirement in June of 2006. Before coming to Boston , he was appointed by President Clinton to serve as assistant secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education with the United States Department of Education. Over the past decade he has led a number of significant systemic reform efforts that have helped narrow the achievement gap and increase student performance on both state and national assessment exams.
?The challenge for an education leader like Massachusetts is to take action today that will secure the future of all students tomorrow,? said Payzant. ?With leadership, vision, and a willingness to work together to make tough choices about the fundamental elements of our education system, we can take public education where it needs to go.?
In addition to his tenure in Boston , Payzant has served as Superintendent of Schools in San Diego , Oklahoma City, Eugene , Oregon , and Springfield , Pennsylvania . Payzant’s work has been recognized by educators at the regional and national level. In 1998, he was named Massachusetts Superintendent of the Year. In 2004, he received the Richard R. Green Award for Excellence in Urban Education from the Council on Great City Schools. And Governing Magazine named Payzant one of eight “Public Officials of the Year? in 2005.
Jackie Jenkins-Scott has served as the President of Wheelock College since 2004. From 1983 until 2004, Jenkins-Scott served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Dimock Community Health Center in Roxbury , Massachusetts . Previous to that she held several positions with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts , Departments of Public and Mental Health. As community leader, public health advocate and innovative administrator, she has been a nationally known figure for the past twenty-five years.
?By focusing on the connections between all segments of the education system and between education and the broader community, we can be assured of the Commonwealth’s continued leadership in the years to come”, said Jenkins-Scott. “More importantly, we can assist every student toward the lifelong goal of economic success, health and well-being that we know a first rate education can provide. I am honored to be part of what will be an historic turning point for all students in Massachusetts .
Jenkins-Scott has served on many civic and community boards. She currently serves as a Board member of the Kennedy Library Foundation and Museum, the Board of Trustees of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Board of Directors of the Tufts Health Plan. She is a board member of The Boston Foundation and Century Bank. Jenkins-Scott was recently appointed to Co-Chair Boston Mayor’s School Readiness Action Planning Team.
Patrick names co-chairs of Readiness Project
Please share widely!
massparent says
I hadn’t seen this one yet.
<
p>
Another press release from this busy week for education was made on Friday, Governor Patrick Announces Commonwealth’s Acceptance in Partnership for 21st Century Skills .
<
p>
I don’t know anything about this beyond the press release and a brief web search http://www.21stcentu…
massparent says
Ah, now I see the Globe article.
<
p>
One point of interest; next year’s House1 budget will probably be completed before the panel’s report is submitted to the governor. The report will come out when the legislature is contemplating next year’s Chapter 70, but probably won’t have any significant impact until the FY10 budget, unless the report is completed about four months earlier than deadline and signficant recommendations from the report are hashed out in detail with the Governor about six months ahead of the deadline.