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The superintendent of public instruction was an elected officer in the state government of Indiana.The official was an elected member of the executive branch of government and worked with the state Board of Education as head of the Indiana Department of Education to oversee certain areas of public schools in Indiana.
She defeated Dawn Wooten and won the Republican nomination at the state party convention on June 11. McCormick defeated incumbent Glenda Ritz in the Indiana superintendent of schools election. The theme of her campaign was to remove politics from education and that the superintendent should again work in tandem with the Department of Education ...
The Superintendent serves as voting member and the chair of the Indiana State Board of Education, an eleven-member body with its ten other members appointed by the Governor of Indiana. The board sets statewide school policy and has limited control over curriculum. The department's offices are located in Suite 600 of the South Tower of Indianapolis.
Hoosier voters will choose the people to be Indiana’s next governor, attorney general and U.S. Senator. Read IndyStar's profiles on the candidates.
Glenda Sue Neubauer was born in 1954 in Lafayette, Indiana, to Mr. and Mrs. James L. Neubauer. [7] [8] [9] She graduated from Jefferson High School.[2] [7] She holds bachelor's and master's degrees in education from Ball State University, and received a second master's degree in library science from Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis.
Indiana has had Republican governors for the last 20 years. In November, Hoosiers will vote on whether to continue the state's GOP reign for another four years. It's an especially intense election ...
McCormick, an educator and former Republican, previously served as state superintendent of schools. Donald Rainwater is running as the libertarian on the ticket. Learn more about the governor's ...
These titles include Secretary of Education, State Superintendent of Education, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Commissioner of Education, and Director of Education. [1] Thirteen states have an education executive directly elected by voters, but in most states they are appointed, by the governor, state legislature, or a state board.