Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The current principal of St Mary’s lacks leadership, so I don’t blame teachers for leaving. The school needs to get the middle school under control ASAP.
Ultimately, it’s the church’s Rector’s responsibility (and fault). He, not the principal, controls the school. Surprised that the Diocese hasn’t noticed the chaos and stepped in yet.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for this helpful reply! I really appreciate it.
Okay, so this is what I'm hearing. It sounds like some of the big exodus of MS faculty at the end of the 2022-23 school year attrition was natural (ready for retirement or ready for a different role) and some of it was faculty dissatisfaction with the then AP, who was then demoted after the exodus. That suggests that the exodus was not primarily driven by an MS faculty member not getting the principal job, and that it was also not primarily driven by dissatisfaction with the new principal.
This year's attrition may have different causes. It sounds like the broad range of abilities in the classroom combined with new teachers who were insufficiently trained, mentored, and supported, led to problems, both in terms of student/parent experience and in terms of overwhelmed teachers.
On the training and support front, everything you say makes sense. With a lot of new teachers, they need better training and mentoring. And with a broad range of ability levels in each classroom, they need to figure something out to live up to the goal of helping each child reach his or her full God-given potential. (In my opinion, this goal is one of the best things about Catholic education vs. public education (in public, they have goals that are more about the entire student population, closing gaps, etc.)
It seems like they should do a few things:
- proactively invest in teacher training and mentoring
- be prepared to go over budget for a while to address this problem
- be prepared to do much more than just plug attrition gaps with new inexperienced teachers
- hire more aides and teaching assistants
- figure out ways to tailor instruction to the highest and lowest ability students in each grade, even if that means shuffling students around a bit more
- try to recruit a few highly experienced teachers
- recognize that there is a lasting teacher shortage and that there is a need to over-hire in anticipation of continued turnover. Even if it means going over budget a little, they should try to start the next few years with a little extra teacher slack. A few extra teachers would find plenty of useful work to do, and then when someone leaves, the transition would be seamless
- hire someone (either full-time or on a consulting basis) who is an expert in teacher training or teaching excellence. Such a person could do a lot of good--organize a good on-boarding process for new teachers, a mentoring program, professional development, best practice sharing, etc.
- really aim for excellence and rapid improvement and set sights very high
- at least in the brainstorming stage, don't focus on constraints or make excuses ("we're just a little urban parochial school"). First figure out what would dramatically improve things and then figure out how to prioritize and pay for things
I'm interested to hear that the principal has a background in Independent Catholic Schools. To me that sounds like a potential asset. Those schools are often forced to be more competitive with other private schools in terms of academic excellence, teaching quality, how smoothly things run, etc. Of course he'll have to learn to navigate the parochial system, but presumably the priest and experienced staff members can help him with that.
I actually don't have any issues with the principal. He seems good to me so far. I don't have any reason to complain about him or to want him replaced.
I just want some clarity on what people are complaining about on here. It has seemed vague to me. Various posters say:
a) no problems
b) turnover problems but teacher shortage is cause
c) principal is to blame
d) priest is to blame
But no-one is providing any details about why they think a) or b) or c) or d) is the answer.
Other posters, please share your perspective!
Anyway, thank you for your great answer. Very helpful.
Anonymous wrote:
This is the former parent. I am going to try to answer your questions to the best of my ability.
The various pieces of the puzzle I'm curious about are:
1) Why such a big exodus a year ago?
Some teachers were ready to retire or ready for a different role. Some were unhappy with the AP at that time.
2) Why additional departures this year?
It sounds like a difficult year.[i]
3) How can the school do better at hiring, training, and support?
There is a teacher shortage so there are limited candidates. Increasing pay could be helpful. When my DC's were at SMS, there were many different ability levels in one classroom similar to public school. It could be overwhelming for many teachers especially new ones.That is one area the school could support teachers by either hiring more support staff or finding ways to instruct students who are far below or far above grade level.
When DC's attended, a new math program was put in place. The training for teachers was inconsistent. The school should consistently implement new programs.
Losing so many veteran teachers was difficult as there were few or no mentors for new teachers.
During DC's time, teachers did leave mid-year, but there were replacements put in rather quickly.
4) And most importantly, what is the principal doing or not doing that is causing problems?
His background is in independent Catholic schools. Parish schools run very differently than those schools. There is a greater range of students.[i]
Are there other parents you can find who would meet with Father to share your concerns and some solutions? I cannot speak to whether the new principal is causing these problems, but if that is in fact true, then lobbying the priests and the Diocese to replace him is important.
Are there schools who are not having retention issues. Can you find out what those schools are doing?
It is worth paying attention to the HTS thread because it sounds like they are having similar issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The current principal of St Mary’s lacks leadership, so I don’t blame teachers for leaving. The school needs to get the middle school under control ASAP.
Ultimately, it’s the church’s Rector’s responsibility (and fault). He, not the principal, controls the school. Surprised that the Diocese hasn’t noticed the chaos and stepped in yet.
+1 Pastors control the parish and the school. If principals stand up to the pastors, they can be consequences which leads to weak leadership from principals. The priest at St. Mary's is very connected in the diocese and puts unreasonable expectations on the school.
PP (or anyone else who knows the answer)— please explain. How is the Pastor so connected and if so why isn’t he fixing the school but letting it turn to ruins? It can’t be because there is a waitlist, as families are leaving. And what unreasonable expectations?
It sounds like the principal needs to grow a backbone and stick up for the students. As a school should always be focused on the students.
In the Diocese of Arlington, pastors sign the employment contracts. They have the ultimate say in many matters including student disciplinary matters. Administrators have to choose the battles they fight with the pastors. This particular pastor wants students to go to the Basilica for Mass especially during Lent as an example. Many have tried to find alternatives that were less disruptive to instruction, but he was insistent that he wanted students to walk to Mass.
There is a lot of discontent among parents. Ideally, the pastor and principal should be working together to retain qualified staff and attract good teachers. Their plans for improvement should be communicated to parents. The pastor may be thinking that the large number of applications for Kindergarten will make up for losses in middle school.
What does this mean? The entire school is falling apart because the pastor wants the students to walk to church during Lent? There has to be more to the story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The current principal of St Mary’s lacks leadership, so I don’t blame teachers for leaving. The school needs to get the middle school under control ASAP.
Ultimately, it’s the church’s Rector’s responsibility (and fault). He, not the principal, controls the school. Surprised that the Diocese hasn’t noticed the chaos and stepped in yet.
+1 Pastors control the parish and the school. If principals stand up to the pastors, they can be consequences which leads to weak leadership from principals. The priest at St. Mary's is very connected in the diocese and puts unreasonable expectations on the school.
PP (or anyone else who knows the answer)— please explain. How is the Pastor so connected and if so why isn’t he fixing the school but letting it turn to ruins? It can’t be because there is a waitlist, as families are leaving. And what unreasonable expectations?
It sounds like the principal needs to grow a backbone and stick up for the students. As a school should always be focused on the students.
In the Diocese of Arlington, pastors sign the employment contracts. They have the ultimate say in many matters including student disciplinary matters. Administrators have to choose the battles they fight with the pastors. This particular pastor wants students to go to the Basilica for Mass especially during Lent as an example. Many have tried to find alternatives that were less disruptive to instruction, but he was insistent that he wanted students to walk to Mass.
There is a lot of discontent among parents. Ideally, the pastor and principal should be working together to retain qualified staff and attract good teachers. Their plans for improvement should be communicated to parents. The pastor may be thinking that the large number of applications for Kindergarten will make up for losses in middle school.