How unfair to all involved. |
Schools are understaffed. |
Really? |
Assistant principals are transferred all the time, none have been destaffed. |
. I’ve never seen this many admin get moved in the middle of the year. I’ve also never seen principals pulled from their school mid year and told to interim at another school. |
That is correct: none have been destaffed. But they have been moved. Right now some schools are overstaffed with APs. If a principal leaves and that job is filled by a current AP OR if an AP leaves, it will be filled by one of the overstaffed APs. It doesn’t matter where the AP lives and where the school is located. This is being done now to avoid destaffs in the spring. Asst superintendents have been moving APs proactively now and trying to keep APs in their own region. If they don’t, and one is overstaffed at a school in their region, that AP will likely be moved into another school as soon as there is an opening. And it might not be in the same region. |
| Of course FCPS ignores what students need. |
It's kind of a weird flex. Reid made a complete hash of the county-wide boundary study, and the roll-out of the new Skyview High School has been atrocious, but she can wield her power by moving principals and APs around with a phone call. So impressive! |
Technically it is a destaff. If an elementary is deemed to not need an AP anymore, they get moved to another school. That is a destaff. A few years ago they added APs to schools because of so many post Covid issues and behaviors and the admin was stretched thin. I guess they decided that wasn’t necessary anymore and now these positions are getting destaffed and moved to openings elsewhere. People who are seeking their first admin job are going to be waiting awhile because of this and there are also central Office people applying to open positions and being placed in AP roles. |
| Yeah a destaff and an involuntary transfer are the same thing. Neither one is a firing. You don’t lose your job. You are moved to a school that has need of something you are certified in if your school is overstaffed in that area. They try to do it by seniority but it doesn’t always work out that way. You don’t really get a say so and it sucks. The thing with the APs might be different though, their positions don’t move like teachers’ do. |
| Wow. Just when one thought it could not be worse. Wow. |
Nope. Not a destaff. It’s an administrative placement. |
Nobody wants to teach elementary, especially 3-6 grades. It’s the worst grades to teach. SOL testing begins in 3rd, and you have to deal with behavior issues on top of all that. Not that teaching PK-2 don’t have any challenges, but the academic demands are not as excessive. This teacher will have to suffer for 4 more months but she’s probably already lining up interviews for new jobs next school year. |
| I will add to this that when teachers and admin have been involuntarily transferred they were given almost no time to prepare. The high school teacher moved to elementary was given 48 hours notice. He was given one sub day to pack up his classroom and say goodbye to his students. His HS students were pretty upset. He has worked at the HS for many years. The admin were told the afternoon before their last day at the school. It is pretty heartless and I don't understand why, if these transfers have to happen, staff cannot be given more time. |
Pathetic but not surprising. Reid is totally incompetent, and incompetent people in senior positions often try to compensate for their own inadequacies by behaving imperiously. It’s a way to reassert your authority while those around you are rolling their eyes behind your back. |