The Day

Waterford native returns to town as Oswegatchi­e School principal

Son of longtime high school chief, Joe Macrino comes home

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

“There’s a lot of connection­s and it has that nice community feel. But I’ve got something to prove. I need to do well in the eyes of the community and those roots are deep.” JOE MACRINO, OSWEGATCHI­E ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PRINCIPAL

Waterford — Joe Macrino says in some ways, he still is a big kid.

As he kicked off his first school year as principal of Oswegatchi­e Elementary School on Wednesday, the 38-year-old former TV producer turned educator said he stays grounded by never growing up.

Macrino and his wife, Sarah, live in New London raising their 8-yearold son, Elvis — with whom Macrino collects vintage action figures and comic books — and 5-year-old daughter, Coral May, who was “very excited to join her brother on the bus” for her first day of kindergart­en on Wednesday, he said.

A rocker in New London’s music scene for years, Macrino still sings, plays banjo and guitar and hopes to “get everything set up in the basement again.” He also moonlights as an announcer for an independen­t wrestling outfit started by a friend a few years ago; his son, Elvis, is the bell ringer.

“I’m surrounded by reminders of how important it is to never forget what it’s like to be a child,” said Macrino, who was appointed in April to fill in for the retiring Christophe­r Ozmun. “I have to take a step back when things get too serious and think about what this kid is experienci­ng, or what you could look like to this kid.”

Macrino officially started the job in July, meeting teachers and staff and getting accustomed to Oswegatchi­e after four years as assistant principal of Lewin G. Joel Elementary School in Clinton.

Superinten­dent Tom Giard said he’s impressed by Macrino’s “child-centered approach.”

“He really thinks through issues and decisions with a ‘what is best for this child’ mindset,” Giard said.

For Macrino, son of longtime former Waterford High School Principal and current Saint Bernard School Headmaster Donald Macrino, working in Waterford is a homecoming that keeps him on his toes.

“There’s a lot of connection­s and it has that nice community feel,” he said, describing Oswegatchi­e as a “well-oiled machine” and proud community of teachers, staff, parents and students. “But I’ve got something to prove. I need to do well in the eyes of the community and those roots are deep.”

Family dinners on Sunday still are entertaini­ng at the Macrino house, he said.

“My middle sister, Olivia, is raising a lively 3-year-old,” he said. “I’m the elementary administra­tor, my youngest sister, Marceline, is a high school administra­tor, so we’re all talking different languages half the time and advocating for different things. And my father is consiglier­e, taking it all in. You can learn a lot from his eyebrow or the smile.”

From MTV and SNL to the classroom

After graduating from Waterford High School in 1997 and studying to become a journalist at Fordham University, Macrino served as a substitute English teacher at New London High School before picking up an internship in MTV’s production department.

“It was the tail end of when they still played videos,” said Macrino, who freelanced with MTV and became an associate producer before getting a gig with Saturday Night Live. At SNL he coordinate­d shoots for their film unit “for everything that’s not live, like the fake commercial­s. That was great.”

He also worked for a while with Donna Karan’s creative services department, helping design storefront windows along Madison Avenue and SoHo.

But the teaching “seed was planted” during his time as a substitute, Macrino said.

“No offense to the television industry ... but I never felt such a level of fulfillmen­t and giving back to kids and society than I did as a teacher,” he said. “That was the best avenue for me to make a small difference in the world.”

After working odd jobs, starting a band and substituti­ng again, he attended Southern Connecticu­t State University’s educationa­l leadership program alongside his youngest sister, Marceline, who is now assistant principal at Griswold High School. He earned a master’s degree in elementary education at the University of New Haven.

Starting in 2007, he taught third- and fourth-grade students at two Waterford elementary schools for six years before joining Clinton Public Schools.

The Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Schools named Macrino the 2018 elementary school assistant principal of the year for his work in Clinton. He called the award “an amazing honor” but credited his former staff and the “amazing group of families and kids” he worked with at the school, which had a population of about 500 pre-K through third-grade students. Oswegatchi­e has about 300 students in kindergart­en through fifth grade.

Kelly Enoch, director of spe- cial services at Clinton Public Schools, lauded Macrino’s “ability to work with and understand the complex needs of our special education students who had behavioral difficulti­es or had experience­d trauma. He was such an integral part of making their day positive and empowering kids.”

Enoch said Macrino appreciate­s the difference­s between students, “gently supporting them and pushing them forward to grow and be their best.”

Macrino said he wasn’t actively looking for another job, “but when a position opened in Waterford, I had to go for it. This is home to me. Not only is it a district that got me to where I am as a student and the wonderful experience­s I’ve had, they opened the door for me to become an educator. This is my chance to give back.”

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