If a group of parents, teachers, and civil rights groups in the Boston Public Schools have it their way, interim BPS Superintendent Laura Perille will not keep her job for long.

Citing the former education nonprofit director’s lack of classroom or school leadership experience, several organizations this week told the Boston School Committee it was calling for a commitment that Perille will only serve for a short while leading the school system, and that she will ultimately step down.

Perille, who previously headed a nonprofit called EdVestors, was installed by Boston Mayor Marty Walsh’s administration earlier this year following the resignation of former Superintendent Tommy Chang.

The groups—which include Citizens for Public SchoolsStart Smart BPS, the Boston Network of Black Student Achievement, and the Boston branch of the NAACP— say they would prefer someone who was more directly qualified to lead schools, and also raised concerns that the search for a permanent superintendent would be hampered without a firm commitment to step down.

Read the full article on the Boston Magazine website.