Mobile
Area Education Foundation Brings Together Discordant School Factions
On December 18, Mobile County Superintendent Harold
Dodge and 47 educators and community members sat down
to talk about their district's educational needs and
a plan for change over the long term. The meeting occurred
just a few days after all 100 schools in the district
had been put on probationary accreditation because the
Superintendent and school board members could not get
along. Credit for bringing together the different sides
goes to the Yes We Can project of the Mobile
Area Education Foundation, a local
education fund affiliated with the Public
Education Network. The Foundation paid for an educational
consultant, Cheryl Wilhoyte, a former Madison, Wisconsin
schools superintendent, to come to the district and
sit down with representatives of all its stakeholders.
The discussion's point of departure was the "community
agreement" that Yes We Can produced based on conversations
held since 2001 with parents and community members about
areas of education that need improvement.
Mobile County residents have
been looking for more accountability from their schools, even the lowest-performing
ones, following the passage of the No
Child Left Behind Act and a voter-approved increase in school taxes, the first
in decades. The Foundation plans to bring Wilhoyte back to the school for future
talks, and school board members have pledged to help pay her fee. The goal is
to have in place by August a strategic plan for improvement with built-in accountability
measures, in which as many people as possible are invested. Prepared
December 23, 2002 |