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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. |
Sisters
High School principal to step down Sisters High
School Principal Boyd Keyser will resign his post at the end of this school
year. He made his long-rumored departure plans public last week in a front-page
column for The Stampede, the monthly newsletter mailed to parents and other
interested residents.
Keyser, 44, came to Sisters
High four years ago after two years in his first job as principal, at
Central High in Monmouth-Independence. He is under active consideration
for several administrative posts, some outside of Oregon.
"One of the tough things
about being a principal in Oregon," he told The Nugget, " is that any
more all of us are simply butchers. We are just butchering up our budgets.
All you do is cut, cut, cut and that's a hard thing when what you want
to do is build programs and be able to say that you made a significant
contribution."
Keyser cited several factors
contributing to his decision, the primary one being the large number of
administrators around the state retiring because of Public Employee Retirement
System worries. This has produced "a lot of great administrative openings.
The success that Sisters High School has enjoyed during the past four
years helps me be a strong candidate for many of these positions."
Sisters was one of only four
Oregon high schools to receive an "exceptional" rating on the annual state
school report card last month.
Keyser tied the timing of
his announcement to the fact that budget pressures may require some administrative
cuts in Sisters next year.
"Rather than having to lay
off another member of our administrative team and then have me leave,
it is better to announce my intentions now."
Superintendent Steve Swisher,
whom Keyser described as "a great mentor," expressed appreciation for
Keyser's timing, saying it "helps us do a little financial planning and
will give the new superintendent an opportunity to really put his or her
team together and select a new principal through a real thorough process
next year."
Swisher said he will make
Bob Macauley interim principal of the high school when Keyser leaves and
will give Jim Golden some of Macauley's former duties. Macauley is currently
the vice principal as well as football coach. Golden is a special education
teacher and coordinator of special education for the school.
Keyser will be leaving just
as the Sisters district acquires a brand new superintendent and prepares
for big physical changes (see related story, page 4). A new high school
will receive its first students when the 2003-04 academic year opens in
September. At the same time, the present high school building will become
the district's new middle school. No decision has been made on the disposition
of the current middle school building on East Cascade Avenue.
Keyser grew up in Milton-Freewater
and La Grande and went to high school in The Dalles. He obtained a bachelor's
degree from Western Oregon University in Monmouth and a master's from
Linfield College in McMinnville. He was a teacher and head basketball
coach at McMinnville High School for 10 years before taking the principal's
job at Central High.
Reviewing his accomplishments
at Sisters High, Keyser said "programs that affect kids directly" have
been the most rewarding, including the IEE (Interdisciplinary Environmental
Expedition) program, the Americana Project, the annual Veterans Day assembly,
the Link adult-student mentoring program, changes in the alternative education
program and several others.
When asked if he felt pushed
or pressured to leave his job, Keyser said, "No. I'm going to leave feeling
good about my time here. It's been a very great learning experience. I
came in here as a really new administrator and so was able to try a lot
of things. I appreciate the people who supported me in that effort, and
I think it's paid off in a really fine program." |
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