At a morning assembly marking the first day of Susana Cordova's tenure as Denver schools superintendent, the most telling moment was not the speeches from current and former mayors pledging their support, or even the remarks from Cordova herself.
It was when Cordova whispered in the ear of third-grader Grace Sotelo. Grace was one of four students chosen to present Cordova with gifts, including a bouquet of flowers. Afterward, the third-grader stepped up for a brief turn at the microphone.
"Doctor -- " Grace said, then paused.
"Cordova," the new superintendent whispered to her.
"Cordova," Grace said. "We are proud of your success of being our -- "
"Superintendent," Cordova whispered.
"Our superintendent," Grace said. "We know you'll be the best superintendent we've ever had."
The interaction served as a reminder that the district's new superintendent started her career in the classroom, teaching students like Grace.
The location of the event was also symbolic. It was held at the school that Cordova, a lifelong Denver resident, attended as a child: Barnum Elementary in southwest Denver. A printout of her fourth-grade school photo -- straight-cut bangs, dimples, and a striped turtleneck -- hung on a wall behind the risers.
"When I was a student here at Barnum, one of my very favorite things to do was read," Cordova told the first-, second-, and third-graders sitting criss-cross-applesauce on the gym floor.
"One of my favorite authors was a woman named Judy Blume. And she wrote a lot of good books. Maybe you've read some of them. But Judy Blume also said something that I think is really important. She said, 'Our fingerprints don't fade from the lives we touch.'
"That's what education does. It touches lives. And I want to make sure that our fingerprints -- all our fingerprints -- are forever part of the story, so that our students are successful."
Cordova, 52, officially assumed the role of superintendent of Denver Public Schools on Monday, making her the top boss of Colorado's largest school district with about 93,000 students. Cordova was selected by the school board last month after a four-month national search. She succeeds Tom Boasberg, who served as superintendent for nearly 10 years.
Cordova was an internal candidate. A graduate of Denver's Abraham Lincoln High School, she has worked for the district since 1989 as a teacher, principal, and district administrator. For the past two years, she served as deputy superintendent under Boasberg.
Cordova was the sole finalist for the top job, a decision that sparked accusations from some community members that the search was a sham. In choosing her, the school board noted her depth of experience, her willingness to listen to opposing viewpoints, and how she fit many of the criteria students, parents, and teachers wanted in the next superintendent.
Among them: Cordova is an educator. The previous two superintendents came from the business world. She is also Latina. The previous two superintendents were white men. Only 25 percent of Denver students are white, while 54 percent are Hispanic and 13 percent are black.
Cordova is also bilingual in English and Spanish, and started her career in Denver as a bilingual teacher. Currently, more than a third of Denver students are learning English as a second language. The most common first language spoken by students is Spanish.
Denver students, on the whole, have made academic gains over the past decade. Many people credit the progress to controversial strategies such as replacing struggling schools.
But Cordova faces several big challenges as superintendent, including narrowing persistent test score gaps between students of color and white students, and between students from low-income families and those from wealthier ones.
Last year, 69 percent of Denver students from high- and middle-income families met expectations on state literacy tests, compared with just 27 percent of students from low-income families. About two-thirds of Denver students belong to the latter category.
While Cordova has emphasized the importance of closing those gaps, she said on Monday that her sole focus for the next two weeks will be reaching an agreement on teacher pay with the Denver teachers union. The two sides have been negotiating changes to the district's pay-for-performance system, called ProComp, for more than a year. The union has threatened to hold a strike vote if the two sides don't reach an agreement by Jan. 18.
The union and the district are set to return to the negotiating table Tuesday for the start of several all-day bargaining sessions. Cordova said she plans to attend every one, a departure from her predecessor's approach to contract negotiations.
"I'm very optimistic we can get to a good solution," Cordova said in an interview following the event at Barnum. "My closest friends are DPS teachers. I deeply understand and know the complexities of what it means to be a teacher in the district."
Toward the end of the interview, after the students had returned to class and the custodial staff was stacking the chairs, Cordova was approached by two women with district lanyards around their necks. They introduced themselves as teacher's aides who'd worked for the district for more than 20 years each. One of them held out her cell phone.
"Could we have a picture with you?"
Yes, Cordova said. In the gymnasium of her old elementary school, festooned for the occasion with yellow and blue crepe paper, the new superintendent stood between them and smiled.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.