A Publication of Massachusetts Elementary School Principals’ Association, Inc. and Massachusetts Elementary School Principals’ Education Foundation Vol. 31, No. 3 Spring, 2015 MESPA is unified with NAESP “ Building a Collaborative Culture for Growth during Changing Times ” THE 2015 MESPA/MESPEF SPRING CONFERENCE and PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE featuring Douglas Stone and Robert Evans Will be held at The Resort and Conference Center at Hyannis ~ Hyannis, Massachusetts on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday May 27, 28, and 29, 2015 Visit mespa.org for more details In This Issue: 3 Nadya’s Farewell Message 8 Welcome New Members 10 Spring Conference Registration Form Robert Evans is a longtime friend of MESPA, and has appeared at many of our conferences and workshops. He is a clinical and organizational psychologist and the Executive Director of The Human Relations Service in Wellesley, Massachusetts. A former high school and pre-school teacher, and for many years a child and family therapist, he has consulted in more than 1,700 schools throughout the U.S. and internationally, working with teachers, administrators, and boards, and speaks widely at educational conferences. Rob received his undergraduate degree from Princeton and his doctorate from Harvard. His interests have focused on change and resistance to it in schools and organizations, on the challenges of leading innovation, and on changes in American families and their impact on schools. He is currently concentrating on ways to improve collegiality and candor among educators and to promote realistic dialogue about accountability. He is the author of many articles and three books: Seven Secrets of The Savvy School Leader, The Human Side of School Change, and Family Matters: How Schools Can Cope with The Crisis in Childrearing. Douglas Stone is a Founder of Triad Consulting Group and a Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School. Through Triad, he consults to a wide range of organizations, including Fidelity, Honda, HP, Merck, Shell, Time Warner, the Nature Conservancy, and the Boston Area Rape Crisis Center. He has also had the opportunity to teach and mediate around the world. He has worked with mediators and journalists in South Africa, Greek and Turkish political and community leaders in Cyprus, doctors and executives at the World Health Organization, and diplomats at the former Organization of African Unity in Ethiopia. He has appeared on many TV and radio shows, including Oprah and NPR’s Diane Rehm Show, and was a keynote speaker at the World Negotiation Forum in Brazil. In addition to teaching and consulting, he has spent 22 years with the Harvard Negotiation Project, where he worked with Roger Fisher and other colleagues on advanced negotiation applications and the development of negotiation theory. He learned an enormous amount from Roger, perhaps most importantly, how to cultivate optimism in the face of seemingly-intractable conflicts. He graduated from Brown in 1980, and Harvard Law School in 1984. Prior to returning to Harvard, he practiced transactional and regulatory banking law at firms in Boston and New York. In his spare time he plays guitar with his band, Monkey Down. “It’s not so much a band as it is a few guys pretending to be a band.” Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View President’s Message Jennifer Chapin, President Hatfield Elementary School, Hatfield I received a gentle reminder that I needed to write my presidents article for the Principal View last week and honestly it was on my to do list along with the following…. Administered MCAS, scheduled make-up MCAS, packed up MCAS, unpacked MCAS when I discovered that the rules for bubbling changed for schools who took advantage of the extended time, repacked MCAS, attended two TEAM meetings, prepared a proposal for a new transitional kindergarten model and presented at the School Committee meeting, screened 40 applications and scheduled interviews, called the DPW to fill all the potholes in the parking lot, organized and facilitated a Superhero Math Scavenger Hunt Adventure Night for 84 people, attended a PTA meeting to plan for the 3rd annual Strawberry Festival (I’ll be in the dunk tank again!), met with the administrative team, met with 2 staff members regarding professional responsibilities, prepared documents for our Coordinated Program Review, met with the play producer and director, realigned/reduced the budget for FY16, met with 3 teachers to review 63 pieces of evidence for their summative evaluation, observed 5 teachers, conferenced and completed observation reports, interviewed 5 candidates for next school year, conducted the preschool lottery, gave 3 school choice families tours of the school, filed a 51A, wrote thank you letters to 5 staff members who went above and beyond, attended the 6th grade Europefest and 1st grade Animal diorama exhibit, called or emailed 8+ parents regarding discipline issues, calmed down a bus driver who was angry about the first grade bus behavior, read and responded to ridiculous amounts of emails, shopped for 2 staff baby shower gifts, mediated with two kindergarteners who spit in each other’s ears, met with the transition team to plan for moving up to 7th grade, welcomed a local author and attended a whole school assembly, attended the Hatfield Book Club Teachers Tea, met with the EEC coordinator to plan for a kindergarten registration night, participated in the SSDR webinar, negotiated and developed a contract for the new executive director, painted my daughter’s bedroom and planned, cooked and cleaned for her 21st birthday party for 18 people and, because my life isn’t full enough, picked out a new german shepherd puppy! The roles of the principal are vast and they never told us we would be doing ½ of these things in our principal training classes! I am sure that everyone is equally as busy as I am at this time of year, if not more so! President’s Message Continued on page 8 2 THE PRINCIPAL VIEW The official publication of the Massachusetts Elementary School Principals’ Association, Inc. and Massachusetts Elementary School Principals’ Education Foundation, published four times per school year to members, superintendents, NAESP, 49 other state principals’ associations, and others. All advertising should be addressed to The Principal View in care of MESPA. All articles published become property of MESPA and may not be reprinted without permission. WEBSITE mespa.org ADVISORY BOARD Jennifer Chapin, Hatfield Stacey Jenkins, Williamsburg Nadya Aswad Higgins, MESPA Executive Director (ex-officio) MESPA PRESIDENT Jennifer Chapin Hatfield Elementary School 33 Main Street Hatfield, MA 01038 413-247-5010 jchapin@hatfieldps.net EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Nadya Aswad Higgins MESPA Education Center 28 Lord Road, Suite 125 Marlborough, MA 01752 Tel: 508-624-0500 Fax: 508-485-9965 higginsn@mespa.org Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View EXECUTIVE EXCERPTS Nadya Aswad Higgins MESPA Executive Director The End of a Journey This is my last article for the Principal View. In eight weeks, I will complete my tenure as the MESPA / MESPEF Executive Director. I have served in this position since February 1979, and it has been quite a journey – one I have loved. It has been my distinct pleasure and a real privilege to serve the PreK - 8 principals of Massachusetts for over thirty-six years. When I first began this journey, the association had no offices. It had been a strictly volunteer organization. When I was hired, I established an office in my home in Harvard with one secretary who came to my house. My husband and I eventually put an addition on our house, and I worked from that location for twelve years. In 1989, we began to look for space into which to move, as the program and membership were growing rapidly. In 1990, we moved to Marlborough and into a building that allowed us to have both office and conference space. We have been in this location ever since. It is through the concerted efforts of Board and Staff members that we have been able to grow and serve the principalship in innovative and effective ways. Some of the milestones during the past thirty-six years have led us to be the first in the country to do many things. MESPA was the first elementary school principals’ association in the country to: Develop and own a conference center/headquarters building Develop and conduct a state-approved certification program for principals Develop a technology center for educators Develop a Legal Services Program that provides unlimited legal assistance (for an additional fee) for contract and work-related issues Develop a doctoral program in educational leadership Develop an Instructional Technology Licensure/Masters program Develop a comprehensive recertification program for principals and other educators Develop a music program in technology, which grants national certification for music educators Many of these programs still exist today while some are no longer offered, but all were unique at the time they were created. As I leave MESPA, it is with a sense of gratitude for the opportunity to have worked with so many wonderful people and to have done creative work. Every year brought new challenges. But mostly, I am grateful for the people – my terrific staff who work so hard to serve our members, Board members who love MESPA as much as I do, Committee members who serve expecting nothing in return, and the membership (past and present) in which I have made many friends. There are also the great friendships made with other associations, the consultants who work for MESPA, and those hard-working people at NAESP. Not many people serve today for such a long period of time in the same job, but I have been able to do so because of the people and, of course, because of the mission. I hope to see you at the MESPA Spring Conference or in other venues before I leave. In case I don’t, I wish each of you the very best as you meet the challenges facing principals in today’s complex educational world. Try to keep a balance in your life; you deserve that. And continue to support MESPA, because it is the one organization that has your best interests at heart. 3 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View NAESP Report John Quinn NAESP Representative Greetings, Principal Colleagues! This past February, I joined 200 elementary and middle level educators and leaders from across the country in Washington, D.C. for the National Association of Elementary School Principals’ (NAESP) National Leaders Conference (NLC). For two full days, we advocated on behalf of principals, schools and students to ensure that lawmakers do what’s right for American Education. I had several meetings with Congressional leaders who were in the process of debating reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), commonly referred to as No Child Left Behind. Providing access to early childhood education, opposing the use of school vouchers, and improving principal training and recruitment were the priorities of this group while on Capitol Hill. We are all on the front lines every day working as hard as we can to improve schools for our students. I realized during my visits how important it is for Congress to listen to what we are saying, especially when so many important decisions are being made about the future of our schools. This was my first NLC, and I was amazed at the support and guidance the NAESP staff provided. With the support of NAESP, principals from all over the United States called on federal lawmakers to oppose Title I “portability,” to support the Principal Recruitment and Training Act of 2015, to oppose the House ESEA bill in its current form, and to encourage early pre-kindergarten programs and a P-3 alignment. A highlight of the conference was attending a panel discussion and “Q & A” session with Eleanor Clift, contributing editor to Newsweek and The Daily Beast, and Pat Buchanan, former Presidential candidate and Chairman of the American Cause Foundation. Another highlight was meeting so many Principals from across the country. On our bus ride to Capitol Hill a Principal from Louisiana was sitting next to me and she could not believe that the Potomac River was frozen. It was the first time she had ever seen that. And listening to her stories of how she persevered through Hurricane Katrina were amazing. I had the pleasure of speaking with Zone 1 Director for NAESP, Tara McAuliffe. Massachusetts is part of Zone 1 along with Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. Tara is Principal of the Rockwell School in Bristol, RI and her term of Zone Director ends in 2017. Tara is planning on coming to our 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Spring Conference in May. If you see her at the conference, please make it a point to introduce yourself to her. It is difficult for Zone Directors to get to other states conferences and she is excited about attending. Our current NAESP President, Mark White, is Principal of Hintgen Elementary School in La Crosse, WI. Mark’s term is coming to an end and our new NAESP President will be Robyn Conrad Hansen. Robyn is Principal of Playa Del Rey Elementary School in Gilbert, AZ. 4 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View Congratulations go out to Steven Geis, Principal of North Trail Elementary School in Farmington, MN on being elected as President-Elect and Brian Partin, Principal of Thomas Jefferson Elementary School in Kingsport, TN on being elected as Vice President. Other election results were: Director, Zone 5: Adam Drummond, Principal of Lincoln Elementary School in Huntington, IN Director, Zone 7: Dave Steckler, Principal of Red Trail Elementary School in Mandan, ND Director, Zone 9: Dwight Cooper, Principal of Reardan Elementary School in Reardan, WA Director-At-Large, Minority Level: Kimbrelle Lewis, Principal of Cordova Elementary School in Cordova, TN was appointed by the Board of Directors As you know, the NAESP National Conference is in Long Beach, California from June 30-July 2. If I can help you with any conference planning or questions, please do not hesitate to contact me. If you have not already done so, please try to take advantage of the President Awards for Academic Excellence, Academic Achievement and Citizenship offered through NAESP. The certificates are free and the pins to accompany the awards are inexpensive. I’ve been giving out these awards to our fifth grade students for years and they are always very much appreciated. You can find information about the awards on the NAESP website. I hope to see you at the Spring Conference in a few weeks. Elaine Mead, Professional Development Chair, and her committee members have done a lot of work in preparation for a great conference this year. Her committee is always looking for new members so, if you would like to be part of future conference planning, please let Elaine or anyone on the committee know. Finally, as you know, this will be Nadya Aswad Higgins final Spring Conference as Executive Director of MESPA/MESPEF. I want to say that it has been a pleasure to work with her for the last nine years on the Professional Development Committee and the Legislative Committee and this past year on the Executive Board. Nadya, I wish you a happy and healthy retirement! If I can be of any assistance, please do not hesitate to contact me at jquinn@naschools.net 5 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View 6 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View The MESPA and MESPEF Boards of Directors would like to extend a warm welcome to the following principals and assistant principals who have joined the Association since our last publication of Principal View as new or reclaimed Active Members: Lacey Becotte Maura Burke Heather Castonguay Kathryn Castonguay Matthew Castonguay Monica Crowley Jennifer Lilley Dr. Josephine Robertson Sharon Seyller Eric Ventura John Burke Elementary Schools St. Brendan Elementary School Rockport Elementary School Spoford Pond Elementary School Louise Davy Trahan Elementary School Amos E. Lawrence School J.R. Briggs Elementary School Sullivan Middle School Fuller Middle School Woodland Elementary School 7 Peobody Dorchester Rockport Boxford Tewksbury Brookline Ashburnham Worcester Framingham Milford Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View President’s Message Continued from page 2 Last week was vacation week and I hope that everyone found a moment or two for themselves. The next round of MCAS and PARCC are soon to be upon us then hopefully things will start to wind down. The last few weeks are always full but are generally enjoyable and I know my stress level is reduced significantly, especially when field day comes around!! This year, our Spring Conference is in May. It is the perfect opportunity to get away from your school, network with colleagues, attend some exciting workshops and enjoy some time off each evening. I always return to school after the conference refreshed and excited to implement what I have learned. If you haven’t registered yet, please take a few minutes to look at your calendar and then examine your budget and squeeze out some funds so you can attend. I look forward to reuniting with some of you and meeting new colleagues at this year’s conference. Best, Jen Chapin MESPA invites our membership to share your best practices and submit articles for the Summer 2015 issue of Principal View. The copy deadline is June 12, 2015. We look forward to hearing from you. Please send articles to Doreen Stuart at dstuart@mespa.org 8 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View 2015 CPAL Cohort to be Convened in July 2015 The MESPA Certification Program for Administrator Licensure (CPAL) has begun taking registrations for its next cohort. This cohort will be the 25 th cohort of this outstanding program. If you have staff, who are potentially strong leaders and who wish to become principals or assistant principals at the elementary, middle, or secondary levels, have them go to this link for information: http://mespa.org/licensure-program/ 9 MESPA 2015 SPRING CONFERENCE May 27, 28, and 29, 2015 AT THE RESORT AND CONFERENCE CENTER, HYANNIS, MA Visit mespa.org for Registration and Conference info Keynote Speakers: Nadya Aswad Higgins, MESPA/MESPEF Executive Director, is retiring after 36 years. Let’s make her last Spring Conference the best ever! 10 Spring, 2015 MESPA/MESPEF Principal View 11
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