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Fort Worth ISD school board names Molinar as superintendent. Here鈥檚 why

Karen Molinar, lone finalist for Fort Worth ISD superintendent, claps after a student鈥檚 remarks during a school board meeting Feb. 18, 2025, at the District Service Center. Trustee Tobi Jackson, left, and school board President Roxanne Martinez flank Molinar.
Jacob Sanchez
/
Fort Worth Report
Karen Molinar, lone finalist for Fort Worth ISD superintendent, claps after a student鈥檚 remarks during a school board meeting Feb. 18, 2025, at the District Service Center. Trustee Tobi Jackson, left, and school board President Roxanne Martinez flank Molinar.

The timing was right for Karen Molinar to become superintendent.

During her nearly three decades of working in the Fort Worth ISD, she built a reputation as a steady leader, a collaborator who takes every role given to her seriously. With those qualities in mind, the school board unanimously agreed Feb. 18 to name Molinar as lone finalist for superintendent.

Now, as she steps into the top job, she鈥檚 eager to bring her own approach to leadership. Transparency. Student focus. Home-field advantage.

Her family is more prepared for her to take the job than when it .

Plus, she鈥檚 been doing for five months 鈥 just with the word interim in front of her title.

鈥淪ometimes our city and our district need different styles of leadership,鈥 Molinar told the Fort Worth Report. 鈥淎nd now I think they鈥檙e ready for mine.鈥

The choice was clear for trustees, they said.

Trustees reviewed more than a dozen candidates鈥 applications, but none stood out quite like Molinar, board President Roxanne Martinez said.

Molinar and the school board now must wait a state-mandated 21 days before officially hiring her as Fort Worth ISD鈥檚 next superintendent.

鈥淲e are confident that in the coming three weeks, Dr. Molinar will continue to lead with both her heart and her vision and implement impactful changes that will benefit our students,鈥 Martinez said.

Molinar鈥檚 energy is felt through her work and the community responds positively to it, trustee Anne Darr said.

鈥淵our five-month interview has been quite a success, and you鈥檝e knocked it out of the park,鈥 Darr said.

Trustee Wallace Bridges loved the excitement around the district鈥檚 lone finalist for superintendent. Molinar has the right passion, optimism and a clear message, he said.

However, Molinar鈥檚 appointment does not mean the work to improve Fort Worth ISD is over, Bridges said.

鈥淭he real work goes on now,鈥 he said, adding that a great Fort Worth ISD requires the entire city to unite and roll up their sleeves to help students. 鈥淚 look forward to seeing some great things happening in this district.鈥

鈥楬it the ground running鈥

School .

An increasingly .

A.

The three issues are a few of the challenges Molinar will face as superintendent 鈥 and she鈥檚 already started addressing each as part of Fort Worth ISD鈥檚 turnaround effort.

Molinar inherits a district grappling with . In response, she鈥檚 overseeing what leaders call difficult, but necessary conversations around . Officials say closures will allow Fort Worth ISD to realign resources and better serve students.

While no decisions are final, she鈥檚 made transparency a cornerstone of the process, , teachers and community members.

Trenace Dorsey-Hollins, executive director of parental advocacy group Parent Shield, praised Molinar鈥檚 openness.

鈥淚鈥檓 happy to have someone in that seat who is approachable and actually listens to the community,鈥 Dorsey-Hollins said.

Molinar is leading the district through financial uncertainty. She has pushed for a 鈥 prioritizing investments in early reading programs, classroom support and data-driven interventions while identifying areas to reduce administrative spending.

And at the heart of these efforts is student success, particularly in literacy. Fort Worth ISD leaders have called the situation a 鈥渃risis,鈥 pointing to years of underperformance. In response, Molinar championed a that puts reading proficiency at its forefront.

The plan she and district administrators outlined focuses on accelerating literacy initiatives, strengthening early reading interventions, expanding teacher training and ensuring campuses have the resources they need to meet reading benchmarks.

鈥溾奍鈥檓 going to continue to model transparency, collaboration and accountability, as we implement these strategies and action steps for this strategic plan,鈥 Molinar said.

Danny Fracassi, principal of the Leadership Academy Network at Mitchell Boulevard Elementary, told trustees he has confidence in Molinar.

鈥淯nder her leadership, we believe we can continue to make tremendous strides,鈥 Fracassi said.

Molinar鈥檚 approach won over trustees 鈥 and even some critics, including Fort Worth ISD resident and frequent board meeting speaker Hollie Plemons.

鈥淲e need a superintendent who can hit the ground running 鈥 and she already has,鈥 Plemons said.

Pursuing superintendency

After her appointment as interim leader, Molinar arrived home and debriefed her husband, Orlando, about what happened that night in early October, she recounted during a fall 2024 interview with the Report.

He stayed up late watching news coverage about his wife.

Molinar was concerned about his reaction to an answer she provided during a news conference. A reporter asked whether she planned to apply for the full-time gig as superintendent. .

The couple hadn鈥檛 talked about whether she would pursue the superintendency. It wasn鈥檛 necessary.

鈥淚f you would have said anything but yes, I would have been shocked and disappointed,鈥 Orlando told her. 鈥淏ecause if we鈥檙e going to do it, we鈥檙e going all in.鈥

Jacob Sanchez is a senior education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at jacob.sanchez@fortworthreport.org or 

Matthew Sgroi is an education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at matthew.sgroi@fortworthreport.org or .

Jacob Sanchez is an enterprise reporter for the Fort Worth Report. His work has appeared in the Temple Daily Telegram, The Texas Tribune and the Texas Observer. He is a graduate of St. Edward鈥檚 University. Contact him at jacob.sanchez@fortworthreport.org or via Twitter.