Michael W. Kirst

mwkirst
Michael W. Kirst
Former President of the California Board of Education and Professor Emeritus of Education and Business Administration,
Stanford University

Michael W. Kirst is professor emeritus of education and business administration at Stanford University as well as co-founder and current advisor to Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE). He has been the chief education advisor to former California Governor Jerry Brown, who four times appointed Kirst president of the California State Board of Education. In this position, Kirst was instrumental in reshaping education policy and finance in California, overseeing the new academic standards and assessments in math and English language arts, the new science standards, and the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). Prior to joining Stanford University, Kirst held several key leadership positions within the federal government, including staff director for the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Manpower, Employment, and Poverty, and director of program planning and evaluation for the Bureau of Elementary and Secondary Education in the U.S. Department of Education. He was vice president of the American Educational Research Association and a commissioner of the Education Commission of the States; a fellow at the Stanford Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences and has been a member of the National Academy of Education since 1979. Kirst received his PhD in political economy and government from Harvard University.

updated 2021

Publications by Michael W. Kirst
PACE, a university-based research center, provides "nonpartisan, objective, independent" information on K-12 schooling in CA. Its analyses have been invaluable to lawmakers and educators during the state's active education-reform period. PACE has…
Evaluating Omnibus Education Reforms in the 1980s
The study examines curricular changes in California's high schools from 1982 to 1985, a period of educational reforms aimed at increasing academic rigor. The state mandated more extensive graduation requirements while universities adjusted their…
Continuing growth and sustained progress on educational reform characterize California's public schools, but the Gann spending limit, which potentially restricts state dollars for education, and projected shortages of highly qualified teachers…
Recent Research on the Federal Role in Education
This article reviews the literature on federal involvement in U.S. elementary and secondary education, from the 1960s to the present day. The federal government's share of spending has decreased since the 1980s, and regulatory pressures have…