The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How a new schools chief is handling pandemic,

Health, safety top goals for incoming superinten­dent.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

Jonathan Patterson won’t have a honeymoon period when he takes over as superinten­dent of Fayette County Schools in October. Instead of spending time sitting in classrooms getting to know stu- dents, gab- bing w ith cafeteria workers over lunch or cheering on the district’s foot- ball teams, his first responsibi­lity will be to keep everyone safe from a deadly pandemic.

“It’s definitely a unique time to transition,” said Patterson, who was tapped for the top job last week. “For anyone who’s in a leadership position, whether it is a school district or a hospital system or county government, this is a challengin­g time.”

That means he’ll mix discussion­s about hitting cur- riculum benchmarks with how well students are following the district’s mandate to wear masks because of the coronaviru­s. Confabs with principals will focus just as much on students sitting six feet apart as it will on who’s likely to end up on national scholar lists.

Students in Fayette County, one of metro Atlanta’s wealth- iest communitie­s and highest-achieving school districts, went back to school Aug. 1 with both in-person and virtual classrooms. The district has around 20,500 students. Patterson will be paid $240,000 annually.

As he navigates his first few weeks getting to know his new community, he answered a few questions from The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

Question: Tell us a little about yourself.

Answer: I’m a husband and father of two. I’m a former high school science teacher, assistant principal, principal of a middle school and a high school and I worked as an associate superinten­dent for curriculum and instructio­nal support. I’m a big proponent of good schools build good communitie­s and good communitie­s build good schools.

Q: What attracted you to the Fayette County job?

A: There are very few school systems like Fayette County when you look around the nation. The team of princi- pals and teachers has a great academic track record. This is not a turnaround situation. This is a choice location where people choose to live here because of the schools.

Q: How did working for Gwinnett County Schools, the biggest school system in the state, prepare you for being a superinten­dent?

A: Gwinnett is a high-per- forming district like Fayette, with great principals and great teachers. It has a stable board of education and superinten­dent. My last principal position in particular at Nor- cross High School was great because it was a dynamic and diverse community. There are obviously challenges no matter where you go, but it’s all about the focus being on our students.

Q: You are taking the reins as a first-time superinten­dent during a pandemic. Did that decision keep you up at night?

A: What has encouraged me is how this community has pulled together. That’s important for anyone com- ing into a new community like myself. Most importantl­y this is a challengin­g time for our parents and students. They want to be in school, they want to see their teachers. I think people have been very patient and understand­ing as well as optimistic about being able to get back in school for two days a week. That’s not optimal for anyone but that’s a good place to start right now.

Q: Fayette County started the school year with some students electing to receive all-virtual instructio­n while others attend class in-per- son two days a week before returning home for at-home course work. What do you think of the plan and will you continue it?

A: I think it’s a great plan. I think it’s working. I know teachers want students every day and that’s the goal. But we have to do it in a way that is strategic, that’s smart and keeps everyone safe. I’m very appreciati­ve of all the planning that’s happened and the collaborat­ion that’s happened between the health community and the parents and the schools. But it’s still early and we’ll want to look at things from a measured perspectiv­e and make sure we have good opportunit­ies to get feedback from parents, teachers and stakeholde­rs along the way.

Q: Some education experts worry educationa­l quality will suffer because of inconsiste­ncies in instructio­n. For instance, some days are virtual, others are in-person. Some students may miss weeks of class if they are infected or if they expose others, forcing quarantine­s. How do you address that?

A: It is different, but our teachers are profession­als and they are going to make sure our students are progressin­g. They know where their stu- dents are academical­ly. They will still know if a kindergart­ner is at the right reading level or that they know their numbers. Every age has its bench- marks and our teachers are aware of those and what they need to do to get students to meet them. We might have to have students come in and get additional help, but those are the things I think every community is going through right now.

Q: Have you thought about what to do about proms, graduation­s and other important dates to students if the virus is still raging next year?

A: If you get the right peo- ple in the room, the answer is in the room. Teachers are some of the best innovators. So are principals and coun- selors, who are trying to figure out every day how can we best serve our students. That’s about getting the right people in place and us sup- porting them.

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Jonathan Patterson

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