![]()
|
||||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
School
candidates largely from Oregon The seven semifinalists
for Sisters School Superintendent are a varied lot, but not geographically.
All but one already work in Oregon, three in Central Oregon.
Redmond Superintendent Jerry
Colonna, who is helping to coordinate the search, told The Nugget that
“out-of-state candidates are shying away from Oregon because of our financial
situation, so the out-of-state pool has really gone down."
The fact that 28 other Oregon
districts are looking for chief executives is also a limiting factor.
Colonna was selected Monday as superintendent of Beaverton schools.
The candidates will be interviewed
by the Sisters School Board Friday and Saturday, March 14-15. Quotes in
the descriptions are from answers to the question: Why are you interested
in the Sisters job?
Merrill Adams (goes
by Jack). As an educator, Adams has
always worked in Washington. He began teaching in Kelso in 1972 and later
moved to Blaine. In 1977 he became the state's youngest school superintendent,
taking the helm at Toutle Lake, where he stayed for 15 years. In 1993
he became superintendent in Montesano and in 1999 took his current superintendency,
in Colville. He says he has now served as a school superintendent longer
than any of his contemporaries in Washington.
He is looking to Oregon partly
because this is his 30th year in the Washington education system which
means his retirement credits are maxed out. He is also a finalist for
superintendent of Reynolds School District near Portland.
Within this group of candidates
Adams is unique in several respects, including the fact that during the
15 years he lived in Toutle Lake he operated a skydiving business. He
learned to parachute during service with the Army Special Forces in Vietnam.
"I really like that area (Sisters).
We've been down there for recreation... and I would like to put in another
10 years in education, or at least eight...I have a great wealth of experience,
you know, and I think I could be helpful to the community and helpful
to that area and I want to work 10 more years."
Tim Comfort Comfort is widely known in
the Sisters area, where he has been principal of the elementary school
since 1995. His career has combined school psychology and administration.
He began as a school psychologist
in Jackson, Wyoming in 1981, moving to Oregon in 1988 to become coordinator
and supervisor of psychological services for the Education Service District
that serves the schools in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties.
In 1991 he became assistant
principal of Obsidian Junior High School in Redmond, his last job before
coming to Sisters.
Comfort says that although
he has lived in a variety of places he has deep family roots in Oregon.
Both of his parents obtained degrees from Linfield College and his grandfather
was a high school principal in The Dalles.
"I've been in many different
states...and I've worked in the entire Central Oregon area as a school
psychologist. And Sisters far and away has the best community support
and real commitment to education. It's rare, and once you see it and you
feel it and do it it's kind of like, wow, let's make sure this continues.
It's a pretty special thing."
Consuelo Yvonne Curtis
(goes by Yvonne). Curtis has been the principal
of Terrebonne Elementary School, part of the Redmond School District,
since 1997. Before that she served one year as an assistant principal
of Jefferson County Middle School in Madras. She began her career as an
elementary school teacher in San Diego in 1984, moving to a teaching job
(combined fourth and fifth grades) at Bear Creek School in Bend in 1989,
where she worked for eight years.
"My husband and I belong to
a church in Sisters and we have been drawn to Sisters ever since we moved
to Central Oregon."
"We always keep saying that's
the next place we want to go. When the position opened up I was delighted
to have the opportunity to apply because of what I know about the Sisters
community. It has a very strong community spirit. I know that the schools
are very focused on academic excellence and offering a lot of options
to kids as far as having a very well-rounded education in art and music
and sports and all of that.
"I believe my philosophy is
right in line with Sisters' philosophy in offering opportunities to kids
that even extend beyond the school day."
Judith A. Delahunt
(goes by Judy). For the past two years, Delahunt
has been the Central Oregon program director for the Initial Administrator
Licensure Program operated by the University of Oregon. She has an office
on the Central Oregon Community College campus in Bend.
She has strong ties to the
Redmond School District, where she was director of personnel from 1996
to 1999. For a year following that she had a special assignment as the
board's planning director for new schools.
She is currently a member
of the Redmond School Board, having accepted an interim appointment for
one year to fill the unexpired term of Neil Thompson, the Sisters City
Planning Director, who resigned from the board last year. She does not
plan to seek election to the full term that begins in July.
Delahunt began her career
as a classroom and special education teacher in the Hillsboro area. From
1984 to 1996 she served as a principal of elementary and junior high schools
in Beaverton, Tigard and eventually Redmond.
"There are very few superintendent
positions that I would apply for, but living in Central Oregon I know
about the exceptional quality of the district (Sisters). I know that there
is a great deal of community involvement. I think that to be an effective
superintendent in Sisters one would need to be not only a school leader
but a community leader.
"I've had an opportunity to
work for several (community) boards in Redmond...and have been able to
do a lot of community work. I'd like to couple that with my professional
experience as an educator and find a perfect match for my skills at this
time in my life."
Charles Hellman Hellman, who lives in Medford,
has been the superintendent of Rogue River School District north of Medford
for the past 12 years. He first came to the district in 1989 as an assistant
principal of the high school.
His career began in New York
City, where he taught in an elementary school for four years. He then
moved across the country and taught and later served as head counselor
in several San Francisco elementary and middle schools. He was a middle
school assistant principal at the time he accepted the high school job
in Rogue River.
"I'm interested in the (Sisters)
school district because of its reputation for excellent programs and community
involvement. It's exactly the size of district that I'm used to and favor
in terms of getting a quality education job done...I enjoy the area; I
have been to Bend and Sisters many times over the years and think it's
a beautiful area..."
Douglas Clayton Jantzi
(goes by Doug). He has been the director of
secondary education and director of curriculum assessment for Central
Point Schools near Medford since 1999. The district covers the separate
communities of Gold Hill and Sams Valley.
Immediately before taking
this post, he spent six years with Greater Albany Public Schools as a
coordinator of matters related to the Oregon Education Act for the 21st
Century, the school reform law adopted by the Legislature in 1991.
Between 1991-93 Jantzi worked
in the State Department of Education doing research and development related
to implementing the reform bill, working specifically on the Certificate
of Advanced Mastery (CAM ) program.
He began his career as a teacher
and coordinator of business-related subjects and computer applications
at North Medford High. After 10 years there he moved to Treasure Valley
community College as an associate dean for one year, 1990-91.
"(Sisters) is one of my favorite
places to be and I look at Sisters as being a very successful school district."
"(I would be) following a
very successful superintendent there, which is a little scary in itself.
But it's nice to have that for a superintendent's position in a district
that is as solid as any school district can be right now in the state
of Oregon. So it just looks like a great place to live and work."
Wayne D. Kostur Kostur is the superintendent
of schools in Rainier on the Columbia River in northwest Oregon. He has
spent his entire career in the state except for a three-year diversion
to Texas.
To track him chronologically:
He was a band director for grades five to 12 in Amity from 1975 to 1977;
band director for grades 9-12 in Gladstone from 1977 to 1982; head band
director for grades 6-12 in Mt. Vernon, Texas from 1982 to 1985; band
director for grades 6-12 in Sweet Home in 1985-86; the junior/senior high
principal in Adrian from 1986 to 1989; a high school principal in Athena-Weston
School District from 1989 to 1995; and a high school principal in Rainier
from 1995 until he became superintendent two years later.
When asked if he has been
able to keep in touch with music since becoming a full-time administrator,
the peripatetic educator said: "Yes, and I'll tell you how. A couple of
times every year I go down and sit and play with the pep band."
He usually plays the trombone,
although he can play a number of instruments.
"But I don't last long. My
chops don't last long at all."
As for the Sisters job, he
said: "I've heard a lot of good things about the Sisters School District
and the direction they're headed. The community supports the school district
very strongly and that's very appealing. I also know that Sisters has
been on the leading edge of technology for some time and at Athena and
Rainier I led the charge to put in their technology backbone and put computers
on teachers' desks.
"I think there are some really
positive things about (the district) that seem really exciting...I think
it'd be fun." |
|
||||||||