It’s been over two years since Michelle Rhee left D.C., but this week it’s like she never left at all.

First off, today Students First, the Sacramento-based education advocacy group that she formed after resigning her post in late 2010, issued a nationwide report card grading the 50 states and D.C. on their education reform efforts. How did D.C. fare? All told, pretty well. Rhee’s group gave her former school system an overall grade of C+, giving it solid marks on improving teacher quality while saying it could improve on how it spends its money and how much information it makes available to parents:

The District of Columbia’s education policies reflect its unique city-state status. Parents are empowered with a wealth of choices through a robust public charter school sector and an opportunity scholarship program. D.C.’s sole traditional public school system is operated under a strong mayoral control model, enabling school leaders to pursue aggressive reforms. With the system’s landmark collective bargaining agreement in place, DC is a national leader in terms of elevating the teaching profession. Other state policies could be improved, however. Parents lack a single, coherent school performance report card or meaningful information about how well D.C. resources are used to support student learning. Also, D.C. should no longer lock teachers into the existing outdated pension system and should instead offer a more attractive, portable retirement option.

If you think that a C+ would put us somewhere in the middle of the pack nationally, you certainly don’t know much about how well the states are doing in implementing Rhee-approved education reforms. According to the group’s rankings, D.C. was bested only by Louisiana, Florida and Indiana in implementing reforms.

And though Rhee has been gone for a while and was replaced by her once-deputy Kaya Henderson, tomorrow PBS’s Frontline will dedicate an hour-long segment to Rhee’s tenure in D.C. Not only will the segment include exclusive content—like the infamous on-camera firing of a principal—but it will touch upon the test-score tampering scandal that flared up during the tail end of Rhee’s tenure.

The Frontline report comes only weeks before Rhee is set to release an autobiography of sorts, Radical: Fighting to Put Students First. The book, ghost written by the Washingtonian’s Harry Jaffe, is due out the first week of February. In it, Rhee fondly remembers Mayor Adrian Fenty and studiously avoids claims from her past and her D.C. tenure that were challenged by critics as being untrue.

Watch The Education of Michelle Rhee Preview on PBS. See more from FRONTLINE.