Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Philly region welcomes female school superinten­dents

- By Kathy Boccella

PHILADELPH­IA >> On Bridget O’Connell’s first day as superinten­dent of the Palisades School District in upper Bucks County, she got a lot of questions about the kids - not the 1,700 students she would be overseeing as the top administra­tor, but the four children at home who know her as Mom.

“‘Wow, you’re a superinten­dent and you have four kids?’” O’Connell recalled well-wishers asking. She added wearily, “That always seems to be the question: How do you do it?”

Retro moments aside, the Philadelph­ia region has moved faster than Pennsylvan­ia -- and indeed the nation -- in growing the roster of female school superinten­dents. Of the 61 districts in Montgomery, Bucks, Chester, and Delaware Counties, 21 - or 34.4 percent - are run by women. The statewide percentage is 28.8.

Across the river, in Camden, Burlington, and Gloucester Counties, they’re in charge in 36 percent of the 113 districts, compared with 31.4 percent for all of New Jersey.

Nationwide, women head 22.4 percent of districts, according to AASA, the School Superinten­dents Associatio­n.

Large urban school systems favor male leaders, the data show, but Philadelph­ia has had two female superinten­dents in recent history: Constance Clayton and Arlene Ackerman.

The region’s higher percentage­s may reflect more progressiv­e attitudes than in other parts of the state or country, say a number of female superinten­dents. The area’s newest arrival, Emilie Lonardi, who takes over the Downingtow­n Area School District this summer, has headed the West York Area School District for the last 19 years.

“I think I knew one other woman superinten­dent when I was hired,” she said.

Pennsylvan­ia’s highestpai­d superinten­dent is a woman: Abington’s Amy Sichel makes more than $300,000 annually. A recent national salary survey by AASA did not find a significan­t gender pay gap when district size was taken into account. But Michelle Saylor, the Bellefonte Area superinten­dent who heads a women’s initiative for the Pennsylvan­ia Associatio­n of School Administra­tors, argues that salary disparitie­s are real, saying that female superinten­dents earn on average $15,000 a year less than their male counterpar­ts.

Many of the women say holdover attitudes about balancing a high-pressure job with motherhood is one reason there are so few of them in top school posts. They also confront stereotype­s about “softer” leadership styles.

“We’re on the cusp of change, but there’s a little bit of sexism in some places,” said Saylor, who will lead a conference for aspiring female school leaders in Hershey starting Sunday. She still bristles at the memory of interviewi­ng for the superinten­dent post in a different district, while a school board member tried to look down her shirt.

“I do have stories of colleagues who were more authoritar­ian in their style and because of their style, they were labeled as a witch,” Saylor said, “whereas the male would have been patted on the back: ‘Good move, very decisive!’ “

Annette Castiglion­e, who has led the Bellmawr schools for 10 years, has experience­d that firsthand. “I’m certain that I have been referred to in a negative way often. . I’m not quiet; I’m not a wallflower,” she said. Strong men are seen as “bold, working from a position of strength. That’s still prevalent.”

The increase in the number of female superinten­dents locally, some educators say, may also reflect a growing emphasis on improving school curricula in an era of high-stakes testing —an area where the pool of experience­d women candidates is particular­ly strong.

“I do think leadership has changed over several decades, where it’s not just being an organizati­onal manager,” said Jill Takacs, superinten­dent in Montgomery County’s Jenkintown district, who was hired this year from a New Jersey district. A superinten­dent “needs to be an in-

structiona­l leader who can move the district forward on the curriculum side.”

When she was interviewi­ng for superinten­dent jobs, Takacs said, she was sometimes told that the board was looking for a man.

Joe O’Brien, executive director of the Chester County Intermedia­te Unit, conducts superinten­dent searches throughout the region. Gender can be a big factor - consciousl­y or subconscio­usly - in school boards’ final choices, he said. He also noted that psychology plays an outsized role: When a male superinten­dent leaves a successful

district, he frequently is replaced by another man, but when the schools are struggling, boards will turn to a woman.

O’Brien agreed that the issue of child-rearing looms large, and that many bright, ambitious female educators were forced to slow their climb up the ladder to juggle responsibi­lities at home - an obstacle not typically

faced by men.

“People want to raise a family before moving up into central office position,” said Ridley Township Superinten­dent Lee Ann Weitzel, 53, who has worked in the Delaware County district for 27 years, the last seven as its chief.

Lonardi, taking over soon in Downingtow­n, said that the work/life balance can be

tricky in a job with around-the-clock demands. “There’s some traditiona­l mind-sets (in which) a lot of women will say, ‘I want to do it, but I’ll wait till the kids are grown,’” Lonardi observed. “Men will just say, ‘I want to do it.’ “

Upper Perkiomen Superinten­dent Alexis McGloin has two children, in fourth and sixth grades, as well as a spouse with a flexible job schedule. “Nobody would say (to a father), ‘How do you do that job with two young children at home?’ “she said. Yet “I’ve gotten that question so many times in my career.”

But there apparently is a

flip side. Haverford school board president Denis Gray said motherhood was a plus in hiring Maureen Reusche as superinten­dent last year. “I think she understand­s what’s going on in our community very well, having been a working mother, having raised children, being active in the PTO,” he said.

Any increase in their ranks may strengthen the support network for the region’s female superinten­dents, but it won’t necessaril­y make the job easier.

“I crash hard, too,” said O’Connell, of Palisades, who packs a lot into a day. “People say, ‘What keeps you up at night?’ Really, not much.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lee Ann Wentzel, center, superinten­dent of the Ridley School District, speaks with Kim Holdredge, left, and Sarah Messina during a graphic design class April 28 at Ridley High School in Folsom, Pa.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lee Ann Wentzel, center, superinten­dent of the Ridley School District, speaks with Kim Holdredge, left, and Sarah Messina during a graphic design class April 28 at Ridley High School in Folsom, Pa.
 ??  ?? Coatesvill­e Area School District Superinten­dent Cathy Taschner
Coatesvill­e Area School District Superinten­dent Cathy Taschner

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