Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Firm gathers input for new PG superinten­dent

- BY LYNN KUTTER lkutter@nwaonline.com

PRAIRIE GROVE — About 35 teachers, parents and members of the community attended a public meeting Feb. 8 to give their input on what they want in the school district’s next superinten­dent.

Ken James with McPherson & Jacobson LLC facilitate­d the meeting held in the high school cafeteria. Prairie Grove School Board voted Jan. 17 to hire the firm for $17,800 to conduct a search for candidates for the position.

Earlier in the same day, James met separately for more than an hour with students, teachers, administra­tors and classified employees. Each stakeholde­r group had 12 members and, interestin­gly, James said many of the comments made by those in the meetings were very similar to the same comments made during the community meeting.

The district has advertised the position and the deadline for applicatio­ns is March 28. James said his firm will take those applicatio­ns and thoroughly vet all candidates to come up with a list of recommende­d candidates to publicly give the board at its April meeting. From this list, the board will decide whom to bring in for interviews.

James said the candidates who come in for interviews will first meet with the same stakeholde­r groups and all the informatio­n from these meetings will be provided to the board before it goes into closed sessions to interview top candidates, probably the first week of May.

He noted that Prairie Grove wants to hire a superinten­dent who is “happy” where he or she is now and who is successful now.

“You want them to be willing to look at Prairie Grove and Northwest Arkansas as a potential place to live,” James said.

He added that Prairie Grove also wants to pay a competitiv­e salary comparable to what similar school districts are paying, pointing out Prairie Grove is now paying a superinten­dent salary that is “quite a bit less” than what districts smaller than Prairie Grove are paying.

“You’re looking at the person to get you to the next level,”

James said. “You have to be in the ballpark. Now, you’re outside the fence.”

Asked how much, James said Prairie Grove is under in salary by $10,000$15,000.

James also said that, in his opinion, he did not think a person coming in as a first-year superinten­dent would be the right one for the job. Though he added, “I’m not saying they couldn’t do it.”

He encouraged those at the meeting not to dwell on the “hiccup” surroundin­g a controvers­ial video on a school shooting shown to teachers during a profession­al developmen­t meeting on Nov. 30.

Teachers and others may not be satisfied with how showing the video was handled afterward but “we’ve got to go on,” James said. “Don’t dwell on it but on what’s next.”

A superinten­dent should be well visible in every school for a district the size of Prairie Grove, James said.

“When you sign on to be a superinten­dent, it’s a nonstop job if you’re good at it,” he said.

James asked those at the community meeting to provide responses to four questions and, as people spoke, he typed their comments into a document on his laptop. All this informatio­n will be used, he said, as the firm decides on its recommende­d list of candidates for the board.

The questions and some of the responses follow:

1. WHAT ARE THE GREATEST ASSETS OF THE PRAIRIE GROVE COMMUNITY?

• The people and that they support the school district and help meet the needs of students and teachers.

• The size of the town and that it is accessible to resources, such as housing, the arts and sporting events.

• The community has a good mesh of people who serve in different roles.

• It’s beautiful in Prairie Grove.

• Employment opportunit­ies for other members of the superinten­dent’s family.

• It’s a huge opportunit­y for someone who is a problem solver.

2. WHAT ARE THE GREATEST ASSETS OF THE PRAIRIE GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT?

• The staff. Many people grew up in Prairie Grove, leave and then return to rear their children. They have an investment in the school.

• Safety in both the schools and community.

• It’s a smaller school district so kids feel they are part of the school community and teachers and staff can have relationsh­ips with the students.

• The district is the hub of the community.

• Students from different socio-economic background­s are together in the schools and get along very well.

3. WHAT CHARACTERI­STICS ARE MOST IMPORTANT FOR THE NEXT SUPERINTEN­DENT?

• A visionary who will look five, 10 and 15 years down the road and have a plan for how to meet this vision.

• Good communicat­ions and fiscal responsibi­lity.

• Courage to make necessary changes.

This comment was made along the lines of other statements made during the meeting. Several people said the district is “top heavy,” with one person going so far as to say a new superinten­dent needs to have thick skin and come in and “clean house.”

• To trust teachers to do their job.

• Someone who is willing to stand up and ask for a millage increase. Elaboratin­g on this comment, one teacher said Prairie Grove is short on teachers and resources and is “crippled” because it is impossible to have interventi­ons with students for these reasons.

• Willing to listen and also willing to delegate because a superinten­dent cannot do it all alone.

• Someone who remembers what it is like to be a teacher.

• A lifelong learner and willing to model that. • Someone with conflict resolution skills, who never settles and believes the school district can always improve.

• Proactive, not reactive.

4. WHAT ARE THE KEY ISSUES THE NEW SUPERINTEN­DENT WILL FACE ON JULY 1?

• Housing growth in the community, managing the student growth and having space for that student growth.

• To show that teachers will be able to trust the new superinten­dent. One teacher predicted a lot of turnovers because of issues in the district and said staff who stay will need to have trust.

• Be prepared for the financial condition of the school district.

• To be willing to come in and stay in the position for many years.

From comments made by all stakeholde­r groups, James said he gathered that the district needs someone to “garner momentum and keep it going.”

For this to work, James said, district staff, teachers, parents and the community will need to do their part to be ready to help and support the new superinten­dent.

 ?? Lynn Kutter Enterprise-Leader ?? Ken James with McPherson & Jacobson LLC facilitate­s a community meeting Feb. 8 to gather public input for the search to hire Prairie Grove School District’s next superinten­dent.
Lynn Kutter Enterprise-Leader Ken James with McPherson & Jacobson LLC facilitate­s a community meeting Feb. 8 to gather public input for the search to hire Prairie Grove School District’s next superinten­dent.

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