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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Public
can meet school candidates "Come and meet
the candidates."
That invitation is being extended
by the school board to all Sisters School District residents this week.
From 5 to 7 p.m.Thursday, April 17, the two finalists in the district's
search for a new superintendent will be in the cafetorium of Sisters High
School to meet local people and answer questions.
Chairman Jeff Smith says the
public "is not just invited -- encouraged" to take advantage of this opportunity.
It will probably be school patrons' only direct access to the candidates
before the board makes its own choice, a decision that is expected to
come after the board interviews each man again Friday morning.
The two finalists have emerged
from a process that began with a list of 24 applicants. Ironically, the
final two are almost neighbors. Both live in Medford, even though neither
works for Medford schools.
Doug Jantzi, 47, is a native
of Oregon who serves as director of secondary education for Central Point
schools. He began his career as a teacher of business-related subjects
at North Medford High School for 10 years. After a brief following year
at Treasure Valley Community College in Ontario, he then worked for two
years in the Oregon Department of Education, helping to implement the
1991 state school reform law.
He was a school reform coordinator
in Greater Albany Public Schools for six years before taking his current
post in Central Point in 1999.
Charles Hellman, 59, is the
superintendent of Rogue River School District, just a few miles up Interstate
5 from Central Point. But geographically, his career path has been quite
different from Jantzi's.
Born in Brooklyn, he began
teaching in New York City elementary schools. After four years in that
system he moved across the country to San Francisco, where he worked as
a teacher, counselor and eventually assistant principal in elementary
and middle schools. He came to Rogue River High School as an assistant
principal in 1989 and two years later was made district superintendent.
In the Thursday afternoon
session, one candidate will be stationed in the high school band room
and the other in the choir room. School board members will occupy a different
site in the cafetorium and will invite visitors to share their impressions
of the candidates on their way out.
All five members of the Sisters
School Board made "site visits" to the candidates' home communities last
week, spending a day in each district talking with a variety of people
both inside and outside the school systems.
"We got very positive pictures
about each of the candidates," Chairman Smith reported. "We didn't uncover
any serious concerns about either of them. And certainly both of them
are alive and well in our pool."
Both men have been asked to
be in Sisters Thursday and Friday of this week, in part to meet the public
but also to tour the three local schools (and presumably the new high
school building under construction) and to check out local living conditions.
Like anyone considering a job in Sisters, they are bound to be concerned
about the availability and cost of housing.
The person who is finally
selected -- and who accepts the terms offered by the board, including
salary and benefits -- will be expected to assume office by the beginning
of the next fiscal year, July 1.
He will succeed current Superintendent
Steve Swisher, who officially retired in January but has agreed to work
on contract through the end of the current school year to help with the
transition. |
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