From 1971 to 1999, Jones was employed by the city school system in Monroe in Ouachita Parish, which he considers his hometown. From 1999 to 2003, he was superintendent for the Claiborne Parish School Board in Homer. From 2003 to 2012, he was superintendent for the Rapides Parish School Board in Alexandria, where he still resides. In 2011, he was named "Superintendent of the Year" by the American Association of School Administrators and the Louisiana Association of School Executives. In Rapides Parish, Jones turned around an $11 million school deficit into a $14 million surplus by what he calls "targeting" resources: "A lot of money comes through our district. I just try to put it where it will get the best results." Jones said that as superintendent he worked with troubled students to keep them out of trouble with the law: "I get personally involved with troubled students. Instead of getting expelled, such students meet with Jones to sign a performance contract. We negotiate a contract between the student and me, and then we both agree to live up to it." In the 2009–2010 school year, Jones was the president of the Louisiana Association of School Superintendents. From 2012 to June 2015, he was the assistant state education superintendent for policy implementation in Baton Rouge under John C. White. Since July 2015, he has been an educational consultant. In his race for the BESE seat, incumbent Republican Jay Guillot, an engineer with the firm Hunt Guillot & Associates LLC of Ruston, did not seek a second term. Jones instead defeated another Republican, Johnnie Ray Fatheree of Downsville in Union Parish, a businessman who formerly studied at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Jones polled 77,301 votes to Fatheree's 46,863. The district encompasses these nineteen parishes, some of small population: Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, East Carroll, Evangeline, Franklin, Grant, Jackson, LaSalle, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Rapides, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll. Neither Jones nor Fatheree reported having any campaign contributions for the race. Prior to the election, however, Jones received $35,000 from four political action committees. James Garvey, Jr., who won a third term in District 1 in suburban New Orleans, reported the most assets prior to the 2015 primary election. Jones said that he expects the controversial Common Core State Standards to be phased out in Louisiana with the establishment of academic standards in mathematics and English by the individual states. As an incoming BESE member, he vowed to work for higher standards in Louisiana: "A kid should not get condemned to a lower quality education because of his zip code." Jones indicated that he prefers a series of informal teacher evaluations, rather than one annual formal evaluation. He also supports merit pay. Since joining BESE, Jones has faced continuing issues regarding Common Core and the status of the employment of State Superintendent John White who was given a positive annual review by the board in 2017, but he has not had an official contract since 2016. As Jones noted, the board lacks the 6/11 vote to place Jones under a renewed contract, and it lacks the same vote required to dismiss him. Jones said that he has generally supported White: "He has done some good things for Louisiana. I know there are folks that won't agree with that statement, but I look at it, I haven't always agreed with everything he did, but on balance, I have to." Jones said that the future focus of BESE must be on school accountability: "What I have become a big fan of is parents having opportunities."