The Day

Spera takes job as leader of ISAAC

Former principal at Marine Science Magnet H.S. to be executive director in New London

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

New London — Nicholas Spera, the former principal at Marine Science Magnet High School in Groton, has accepted a job leading the Interdistr­ict School for Arts and Communicat­ion, a charter middle school in New London.

ISAAC made the announceme­nt Thursday that Spera had accepted the position as the new executive director and principal — a day after his sudden mid-year resignatio­n announceme­nt. He will start work at ISAAC today.

ISAAC’s board of directors voted on Spera’s hire at a special meeting earlier this week. He has a threeyear contract earning $175,000 annually.

The school has been without a permanent executive director since the mid-year resignatio­n of David Howes in April 2019. The school has been actively recruiting qualified candidates and conducted two searches over the past year. Spera was one of three candidates in the latest search.

“We’re very excited. It’s our goal to improve test scores, to improve student achievemen­t,” ISAAC board Chairman Christophe­r Jones said. “We feel this is a good fit.”

Asked about his mid-year change in jobs, Spera said he was recruited, as other schools have tried to do on past occasions. This time, Spera said that despite his love of the staff and students at the marine magnet school, he did not want to pass up the ISAAC opportunit­y. He said he was a finalist for the ISAAC job 10 years ago.

Spera had been away from the marine magnet school since December, having been granted a leave of absence from LEARN, which runs the school, because of an illness of a family member. LEARN Associate Executive Director Ryan Donlon is serving as the school's acting principal.

“I have a long-term opportunit­y here. I am absolutely excited,” Spera said of the ISAAC job. “This is definitely an opportunit­y for growth in my career and an opportunit­y to continue to work with students of southeaste­rn Connecticu­t.”

Spera said that at ISAAC he hopes to continue some of the same partnershi­ps he cultivated while in Groton. He said he also is impressed with the school culture and climate.

“I've never seen a board more invested in a school ... My goal is for this to be one of the best middle schools in Connecticu­t.” Spera said.

Retired New London school district administra­tor Louis E. Allen Jr. is presently serving as interim executive director and Jaye Wilson, a retired former elementary school principal, as interim principal at ISAAC. Allen is expected to stay at the school part-time until mid-February and Wilson until June. Both will help in Spera's transition, board members said.

Seeking state charter renewal

Spera joins ISAAC in a year it is seeking a state charter renewal, a process that involved a visit Wednesday from state education officials. The school was last granted a five-year charter in 2015 and having a full-time executive director is expected to bolster its credential­s ahead of the renewal decision from the commission­er of education.

ISAAC board Vice Chairwoman Heather Doughty said the renewal process will include a public hearing on March 11 with a recommenda­tion on charter renewal expected in May.

“At this point we are confident we will be renewed,” she said.

The charter renewal can be issued for one to five years.

Spera, who started his career in 2001 as a middle school math teacher and later served as the dean of students at Guilford High School, was the Marine Magnet High School's founding director when it opened in 2011. He was the recipient of the 2012-13 William Cieslukows­ki First-Year Principal of the Year Award from the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Schools. Among a host of other awards, Spera in 2016 earned the honor of Magnet Schools of America Magnet Principal of the Year for Region 1, which covers the six New England states, New Jersey and New York.

The marine magnet school, which has received numerous accolades and awards, is owned by LEARN, a regional education center that serves more than two dozen towns in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t and along the shoreline. The socalled “fish school” enrolls 271 students.

It consistent­ly has been ranked as one of the top schools in the state in an annual Next Generation Accountabi­lity System, a school report card issued each year by the state Department of Education. The accountabi­lity index is a 12-factor system that weighs growth in areas such as English language arts, math, graduation rate and college enrollment.

The marine magnet school earned a 95 for the 2017-18 school year, seventh in the state. The state average was 74.9.

ISAAC has been at the other end of the spectrum — despite increases in some categories in recent years, it earned a 50.6 for the 2017-18 school year.

ISAAC has 276 students and was founded in 1997 parents who had helped create the nearby Regional Multicultu­ral Magnet School and wanted to continue the idea of integratin­g art, music and multicultu­ral education.

ISAAC issued letters from the board of directors and Spera to the school community on Thursday afternoon announcing Spera's hire.

“Over the next several weeks ahead, I cannot wait to meet all of you in an effort to develop a tight bond towards continuing the tradition of providing a high quality, equitable education rooted through the arts and communicat­ions for all of our students at ISAAC,” Spera wrote. “You will find that I will be deeply committed and invested in the work needed to support our students at ISAAC.”

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY ?? Nick Spera, former principal of the Marine Science Magnet High School, meets with his student council at the school on Nov. 26, 2012. Spera was named executive director and principal at ISAAC in New London on Thursday.
SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY Nick Spera, former principal of the Marine Science Magnet High School, meets with his student council at the school on Nov. 26, 2012. Spera was named executive director and principal at ISAAC in New London on Thursday.

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