By Safiyah Riddle
AP News

The AFRO sends condolences to the family and all those who knew and loved Dr. Rod Paige, the first Black leader to serve as the secretary of education. Paige died at 92 years old on Dec. 9. (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson, Files)

Dr. Rod Paige, an educator, coach and administrator who rolled out the nationโ€™s landmark No Child Left Behind law as the first African American to serve as U.S. education secretary, died Dec. 9.

Former President George W. Bush, who tapped Paige for the nationโ€™s top federal education post, announced the death in a statement but did not provide further details. Paige was 92.

Under Paigeโ€™s leadership, the Department of Education implemented No Child Left Behind policy that in 2002 became Bushโ€™s signature education law and was modeled on Paigeโ€™s previous work as a schools superintendent in Houston. The law established universal testing standards and sanctioned schools that failed to meet certain benchmarks.

โ€œRod was a leader and a friend,โ€ Bush said in his statement. โ€œUnsatisfied with the status quo, he challenged what we called โ€˜the soft bigotry of low expectations.โ€™ Rod worked hard to make sure that where a child was born didnโ€™t determine whether they could succeed in school and beyond.โ€

Roderick R. Paige was born to two teachers in the small Mississippi town of Monticello of roughly 1,400 inhabitants. The oldest of five siblings, Paige served a two-year stint the U.S. Navy before becoming a football coach at the high school, and then junior college levels. Within years, Paige rose to head coach of Jackson State University, his alma mater and a historically black college in the Mississippi capital city.

There, his team became the first โ€” with a 1967 football game โ€” to integrate Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium, once an all-white venue.

After moving to Houston in the mid-1970s to become head coach of Texas Southern University, Paige pivoted from the playing field to the classroom and education โ€” first as a teacher, and then as administrator and eventually the dean of its college of education from 1984 to 1994.

Amid growing public recognition of his pursuit of educational excellence, Paige rose to become superintendent of the Houston Independent School District, then one of the largest school districts in the country.

He quickly drew the attention of Texasโ€™ most powerful politicians for his sweeping educational reforms in the diverse Texas city. Most notably, he moved to implement stricter metrics for student outcomes, something that became a central point for Bushโ€™s 2000s bid for president. Bush โ€” who later would dub himself the โ€œEducation Presidentโ€ โ€” frequently praised Paige on the campaign trail for the Houston reforms he called the โ€œTexas Miracle.โ€

And once Bush won election, he tapped Paige to be the nationโ€™s top education official.

As education secretary from 2001 to 2005, Paige emphasized his belief that high expectations were essential for childhood development.

โ€œThe easiest thing to do is assign them a nice little menial task and pat them on the head,โ€ he told the Washington Post at the time. โ€œAnd that is precisely what we donโ€™t need. We need to assign high expectations to those people, too. In fact, that may be our greatest gift: expecting them to achieve, and then supporting them in their efforts to achieve.โ€

While some educators applauded the law for standardizing expectations regardless of student race or income, others complained for years about what they consider a maze of redundant and unnecessary tests and too much โ€œteaching to the testโ€ by educators.

In 2015, House and Senate lawmakers agreed to pull back many provisions from โ€œNo Child Left Behind,โ€ shrinking the Education Departmentโ€™s role in setting testing standards and preventing the federal agency from sanctioning schools that fail to improve. That year, then-President Barack Obama signed the sweeping education law overhaul, ushering in a new approach to accountability, teacher evaluations and the way the most poorly performing schools are pushed to improve.

After serving as education secretary, Paige returned to Jackson State University a half century after he was a student there, serving as the interim president in 2016 at the age of 83.

Into his 90s, Paige still publicly expressed deep concern, and optimism, about the future of U.S. education. In an opinion piece appearing in the Houston Chronicle in 2024, Paige lifted up the city that helped propel him to national prominence, urging readers to โ€œlook to Houston not just for inspiration, but for hard-won lessons about what works, what doesnโ€™t and what it takes to shake up a stagnant system.โ€

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