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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
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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. |
Swisher
looks back on his time as school chief He didn't
talk about the new high school, or even the local option levy.
When Steve Swisher, superintendent
of Sisters schools for the past seven years, was asked last week about
his greatest accomplishment and disappointments during those years, he
began this way:
"The piece that I feel positive
about was that we put together processes, a way to look toward the future,
kind of where we're going, and in particular keeping an eye on the academic
achievement issues. And over time, I think we improved those processes
through curriculum and instruction committees, looking at how technology
becomes more integrated into the classroom and in particular paying a
lot of attention to our assessments. So, that part, I think we continued
to improve and did well."
Swisher talks like that. His
thoughts may be abstract but his manner is more farmer-neighbor than educator.
Which may stem from his roots in the potato-growing soil of Klamath County.
The second thing he mentioned
was:
"Seven years ago we didn't
have a middle school. It was a seventh through 12th grade alignment, and
K through six. And I think our students in the middle were being left
out a bit. So the ability to get a real middle school was real important
for the continuum there."
Sisters added a high school
in 1991. So when Swisher came in 1996 "it was kind of a district of two
schools as opposed to a school district with schools. There was a bit
of a disjuncture in terms of consistency and really making a K-12 school
district out of it. So we did quite a bit of infrastructure work on that."
He added a third item to his
list of positives: "I think it would be very difficult to find anyplace
around the state where a community gives as much as the Sisters community
does to the schools. Just being able to work in a community like that
was a highlight; it was exciting."
Swisher was reluctant to
dwell on the negative parts of his tenure. He cited two, briefly: financial
problems that afflict all Oregon school districts and the occurrence of
child abuse involving students, the most notorious case being that of
Stephen Gage, who operated a Sisters-area school for troubled teenage
girls. A number of his wards attended Sisters High School. He was sent
to prison for abusing them.
The worst thing that happened
to Swisher personally during his time here was a traffic accident in 2001
that left him near death. He was on his way to visit his mother in Klamath
Falls, who was recovering from a back operation, when just east of town
he drifted off the pavement, overcorrected and swerved in front of an
oncoming hay truck. His recovery took months.
But looking back, he remembers
two happy outcomes.
The first is that he did recover,
and was able to resume his full duties.
"As I was walking down through
a bunch of rocks on the beach today I commented to my wife, 'Who would
have thought two-and-a-half years ago that I'd be able to maneuver these
kinds of rocks?'"
He was on the beach because
he has taken a job as interim superintendent of the Brookings-Harbor School
District on the southern Oregon coast. He assumed that post officially
July 1. His telephone interview with The Nugget took place the evening
of July 4.
The second pleasant outcome
was "the tremendous outpouring of support" he received from school district
residents during recovery.
"There was a lot of genuine
love and care and concern and that certainly helped me through a very
difficult time," he said.
The Sisters superintendency
was the second of Swisher's career. From 1990 to 1994, he was superintendent
of South Lane School District in Cottage Grove, just south of Eugene.
During his first 20 years as an educator, Swisher was a math teacher and
mid-level administrator in school districts ranging from Beaverton to
Eagle Point.
Swisher grew up on "the kind
of family farm that doesn't exist any more" in Klamath County.
"We grew potatoes, alfalfa
and barley and had some cattle up on the Klamath marsh. I don't think
we had much money but we were able to eat well from what we grew, the
clothes were washed and all of that stuff and there were a lot of family
farmers like us so none of us really recognized that we were poor."
He and his older brother attended
Henley High School, where Steve graduated as salutatorian in 1968. His
future wife, Novella, lived about a mile away but "she went to Klamath
Union (High School). She was one of those big city girls." They met while
attending "a summer thing for culturally deprived kids" at what was then
Southern Oregon College in Ashland in 1967. They were married after Steve
finished his freshman year at SOC.
Novella, a year behind him
in school, was interested in art. "But it would be cheaper if we were
both math majors and could share the same books so she changed her major
to math. She did do a business minor." She stayed on "the business side"
of things, working for insurance companies while Steve pursued his career
at a math teacher.
The most unusual item on his
resume covers two years he spent as state Director of Apprenticeship,
during 1995 and '96. The short version of the story behind that job is
that Republican Jack Roberts, a Lane County Commissioner who shocked the
state's political establishment by winning election as Labor Commissioner
in 1994, called Swisher and asked him to take the job because of what
he'd heard about South Lane's accomplishments in school-to-work and related
efforts.
Looking back, though, Swisher
is sanguine about his time in Sisters.
"I'm really happy that the
board seven years ago chose to hire me and it's been a great experience
working in the schools there.
"I believe I've added some
things that have made the system better, but from the other perspective
it's been a real privilege to work there."
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