Arne Duncan has never disguised his preference for privately-managed charter schools over public schools. He especially favors “no excuses” schools.

So it is not surprising that–according to Joy Resmovits at the Huffington Post, he has invited Emma Vadehra, the chief of staff of Uncommon Schools, which is known for its rigid discipline and high suspension rates, to be his chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Education.

As Resmovits notes:

“For Vadehra, the move would be a return to the Education Department, where she worked as deputy assistant secretary for planning, evaluation and policy development until leaving for Uncommon in 2011. In that job, she developed a reputation for being a policy whiz kid. Before that, she worked as the late Sen. Edward Kennedy’s (D-Mass.) chief education adviser on the Senate’s Education Committee. She has a law degree from Yale Law School and graduated from Brown in 2002.”

Before she joined the U.S. Department of Education in 2009, she also worked for Uncommon Schools.