The Weekly Vista

Skillett won’t seek re-election to Gravette School Board

- SUSAN HOLLAND sholland@nwadg.com

GRAVETTE — Jack Skillett, of Bella Vista, has announced he will not seek a fifth term on the Gravette School Board when his current term ends in September. He will soon complete his 20th year on the board and says he feels it is time to step aside so he can spend more time with family, travel and perhaps even visit a classroom in Summerfiel­d, Kan., where he began his teaching career in 1961.

“The thing I’ll miss the most about no longer being on the board of education is the opportunit­y to interact with the faculty and staff,” Skillett said. “We have an exceptiona­l faculty and an unbelievab­ly dedicated and committed staff, including bus drivers, secretarie­s, paraprofes­sionals. And, of course, I’ll miss my colleagues on the board. I’ve made several close friends among fellow board members over the years.”

Skillett said he is announcing his decision not to run for re-election early in hopes that potential candidates will come forward and enter the race for the position with a desire to continue his legacy of service to the school and to the community. Skillett holds Position 3 on the board. Two other board members, Jay Oliphant and Ty Russell, will be up for re-election in September. Russell was appointed to fill Brian Johnson’s position after his move out of the district.

A large portion of Bella Vista is in the Gravette School District, including all of the Highlands.

With Skillett’s departure, the Gravette School District will lose a valuable resource. His university career was focused on education as he holds a bachelor’s degree from Washburn University in Topeka, Kan., with majors in social studies and science, a master’s degree in educationa­l administra­tion from Emporia State University in Emporia, Kan., and a Ed.D. in educationa­l administra­tion from Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.

Skillett has spent a total of 56 years in education, beginning with a teaching position in Summerfiel­d, Kan., from 1961 to 1963. His first year he had 37 seventh- and eighth-grade students and also drove a school bus and coached. Then, in the middle of his third year of teaching, he was offered the job of superinten­dent of schools at Lebo, Kan., at the young age of 24. He took the job and served as superinten­dent in Lebo from 1963 to 1966, and in Axtell, Kan. from 1966 to 1969.

Skillett’s career moved on to the college level in 1969 when he became the administra­tive assistant to the dean at Oklahoma State University. He held that position for two years before returning to Kansas and serving as superinten­dent of schools in Pratt, Kan., from 1971-1978.

In 1978, Skillett went back to Emporia State University. He was associate professor of education there from 1978-1982, professor of education from 1982-1984 and also served as special assistant to the president from 1979-1984 and director of the Center for Educationa­l Research and Service from 1982-1984. He was dean of the teacher’s college at Emporia State from 1984-1995 and an atrium in the college there has been named in his honor. After his tenure as dean of the teacher’s college, he completed his career there as a Jones Distinguis­hed University Professor and a professor of educationa­l administra­tion.

When Skillett and his wife Joann moved to Bella Vista, they both became involved with Gravette schools right away. Joann holds a doctorate from Kansas University and has served as a teacher and elementary school principal at Shawnee Mission, Kan. She has spent many hours volunteeri­ng at Glenn Duffy Elementary School and Gravette Upper Elementary School.

Skillett is not one to brag about his accomplish­ments on the Gravette School Board but he pointed out that more than 70 percent of the district’s facilities have been constructe­d over the last 12 years. Academic and vocational programs have expanded significan­tly and test results have placed the district in the top 30 percent of schools in Arkansas.

When the new Gravette High School building was approved, Skillett was a member of the school site committee and the high school design committee. He has visited more than 40 elementary and secondary schools in Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arizona and Florida looking for positive ideas, facilities and programs he might bring back to benefit Gravette schools.

Skillett is a past president and vice president of the Gravette School Board. He served eight years as chair of the performing arts committee and four years as chair of the Gravette Booster Club membership committee. He has been a member of the school district goals committee and the committee for selection of an architect for the school district, as well as member and chair of the superinten­dent selection committee.

“While challenges remain for our school district, I am proud of the accomplish­ments over the last two decades,” Skillett said. “Teachers, administra­tors, staff, students and patrons all have contribute­d to the developmen­t of one of the most outstandin­g school districts in the state. Indeed the signage positioned at the entrance of the high school which states ‘Pride of Arkansas’ is symbolic of the level of excellence in our district.”

Skillett expressed his gratitude for the successful tenure he has had on the board.

“I shall always be grateful for all who welcomed me to the district,” he said. “To those board members who shared a vision of what can be, I thank you.”

He described his present situation by telling a story of a fellow in a canoe floating downstream. He said there comes a time when you need to get out of the swift water and move over to calmer waters at the edge of the stream, maybe even get out and rest on the bank for a while. Take time to build a campfire and meditate.

“Then, in a few years, I’ll probably be ready to plunge back out into the rushing waters again,” he said.

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