Top technology official out at Fairfax Schools, as fallout continues from online learning disaster [View all]
Education
Top technology official out at Fairfax Schools, as fallout continues from online learning disaster
By
Hannah Natanson
April 22, 2020 at 10:27 p.m. EDT
The longtime information technology chief for Fairfax County Public Schools is out of a job days after the districts disastrous debut of online learning, according to a letter sent to staffers.
Effective immediately, Maribeth Luftglass is stepping down from her role, Superintendent Scott Brabrand wrote in the message to information technology staffers, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post. I want to thank Maribeth for her nearly 21 years of service to our school division.
Luftglass has served as assistant superintendent of the department of information technology since 1999, according to her profile on the Fairfax schools website. She could not be reached for comment late Wednesday.
Luftglass, who previously directed information technology for the American Red Cross, was at the center of the sprawling school systems botched preparations for online learning over the past month. After two failed attempts, the district this week temporarily canceled face-to-face virtual instruction, announced it was moving away from its technology platform, Blackboard, and retained a law firm to conduct an independent review of the rollout.
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The results
were catastrophic.
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Hannah Natanson
Hannah Natanson is a reporter covering education and K-12 schools in Virginia. Follow
https://twitter.com/hannah_natanson