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Harrison Keller Will Be Texas' Next Higher Education Commissioner

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Harrison Keller is deputy to the president for strategy and policy and a professor of practice at The University of Texas at Austin.

Texas’ next higher education commissioner will be Harrison Keller, a high-level administrator at the University of Texas at Austin and the founder of recent initiatives designed to improve college readiness and student outcomes. He will assume the post Oct 1.

The appointment was announced Wednesday, following a unanimous vote of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. Keller will succeed Raymund Paredes, whoannounced in January that he would step down after more than a dozen years in the state's top higher education job.

Keller is currently a clinical professor of public policy practice at UT-Austin and serves as a deputy to the president, responsible for strategy and policy.

His professional biography highlights his policy efforts to boost students’ success — particularly students coming from low-income backgrounds or first-generation college-goers. At UT-Austin, Keller created a program to provide college-level courses to high school students, called OnRamps, and founded an initiative to improve college and career advising. He previously served as the vice provost for higher education policy and research and as executive director of an educational innovation office and of a teaching and learning center. He also worked in the Texas House, as a senior education policy advisor and director of research.

As commissioner, Keller will serve as the chief executive of the Coordinating Board, an agency that administers the state's financial aid programs and stewards its strategic plan for higher education. It has an operating budget that tops $30 million and a 264-person staff, according to aposting for the commissioner job.

Disclosure: The University of Texas at Austin has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

The Texas Tribune provided this story.

Shannon Najmabadi is the higher education reporter at the Tribune, where she started as a fellow in 2017. She previously reported for the Chronicle of Higher Education, where she covered the gender equity law Title IX, fallout from an executive order on immigration, and a federal loan forgiveness program with an uncertain future. She is a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.