A Smithtown Central School District administrator who helped guide the district’s diversity and equity work will leave for a job at an education foundation.
Jennifer Bradshaw, the district’s assistant superintendent for instruction and administration, will take a job as an international curriculum consultant in the World Leading Schools Association Foundation, Smithtown Superintendent Mark Secaur said Friday in a statement emailed by a district spokesman. “We wish her well and thank her for her 19 years of committed service to the Smithtown school community.”
Bradshaw had been criticized by some district parents and others who conflated the district’s equity work with critical race theory or CRT, a body of academic thought broadly defined by its focus on themes of racial exploitation. On Friday, Shawn Farash, a leader of the conservative group Long Island Loud Majority, tweeted approvingly about Bradshaw’s departure.
District spokesman Michael Ganci said in an email that Bradshaw’s departure “did not have anything to do” with outside pressure. Bradshaw did not respond to an interview request. Secaur did not immediately agree to an interview request.
District officials have repeatedly said they do not teach CRT but are implementing what Secaur in an email to Newsday this month called “inclusive practices that encourage a sense of community and opportunity for all students.” Parents have said topics include race but also LGBTQ people, special education and different cultures.
Bradshaw helped guide that work through her leadership of the district’s Equity Team, said Amy Fortunato, a team member and district resident.
A web page for the equity team says its more than 100 members “meet regularly to discuss and develop ways to meet the needs of all students by elevating their voices, making our schools more inclusive, embracing diversity, providing students what they need to thrive, and ensuring that our curriculum is representative of the world around us.”
The team is working to meet goals including increasing the diversity of district staff and developing a “more culturally relevant curriculum,” according to the web page.
Fortunato said Bradshaw was “a great educator… It just seems like a huge loss for us.”
WLSA hosts international educators’ conferences and operates student exchange programs, according to its website.