Monday, November 3, 2008

Kelvin Adams takes helm of 25,000-student district today

Kelvin Adams arrived here a week ago Sunday, the better to get the lay of the land before reporting for work as the 36th superintendent to head the St. Louis Public Schools.

Today, he begins navigating the terrain—sometimes rocky and always unpredictable—that has seen eight of those leaders come and go since 2003.

Adams' arrival from New Orleans, where he served as chief of staff in the Recovery School District restoring that city's education system in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, signals a noteworthy move by the Special Administrative Board to put its imprint on the district it has governed for the past 17 months.

Adams plans to tread cautiously between now and the winter break, evaluating the curriculum and filling three key posts in his administration, most notably that of chief academic officer.

From that point forward, he indicated the St. Louis schools could start to look significantly different. Parents, students and teachers seeking a hint to the direction Adams may take the city schools, need glance no further than New Orleans where, among other reforms, the recovery district tacked an extra 75 minutes onto the school day this year.

"You have to look at extended time to give students an opportunity to achieve," Adams said in an interview Saturday, squeezed around the movers bearing his belongs from Louisiana.

That could mean a longer school day, an academic year that stretches well into summer or even Saturday classes. At this juncture, said Adams, everything is on the table.

Whatever time St. Louis students spend in class will occur in schools supervised by principals granted unprecedented autonomy over what transpires in each building.

The trade-off for shifting responsibility for learning from a central office to the leaders of individual schools will be accountability.

The premise is simple: Principals who elevate student achievement will survive; principals overseeing schools where learning slips or stagnates will not.

The principals will be held to no less a standard than the academic performance benchmarks built into the terms of Adams' three-year, $225,000 annual contract.

"We will give them the support," Adams said. "But once you provide that support, how can they not be held accountable?"

As Adams takes over a 25,000-student district barely hanging onto its status as the largest school system in Missouri, another question hangs in the balance.

Exactly how many principals will be needed in St. Louis come the start of next school year?

Last week, the administrative board awarded a $625,609 contract to a facilities management firm that will determine which of the district's schools could be shuttered when classes end in June.

The evaluation by MGT of America Inc. will focus on the physical condition of the buildings, educational suitability, technological readiness and other factors. MGT will also hold a series of community forums to gather public input. The firm will report its findings to the administrative board — which has estimated that 14 to 22 schools need to be closed.

Just seven years ago, 42,000 students attended city schools. In response to the drastic drop in enrollment, the district has already shuttered 25 buildings since 2003.

"Everyone needs to be open-minded enough to let (MGT) do its work. But I think everyone also needs to understands that more schools need to be closed," said Adams. "The question needs to be: How many more schools? And I think, right now, it's premature to say we're going to close 20 schools. At this point they're just making an educated guess."

After the decision on closings is made, Adams said, he may ask the administrative board to consider breaking some of the remaining properties into "schools within schools."

A version of the "small school movement," such a plan could assign designated sections of a school building to specific grades or specialized "learning communities" (such as students concentrating on health careers).

Adams said he would not rule out St. Louis following the lead of New York City and New Orleans by perhaps integrating a charter school into a building where traditional public education is taking place.

The post-Katrina conditions in New Orleans, he pointed out, made shared charter and traditional schools a necessity. "It works," he said. "But I don't know if can work permanently."

Adams was the director of human resources during a short stint with the St. Louis schools in 2006-07. He said he is returning to the district without preconceived notions.

"We may not see a lot of changes before Christmas," he said, leaving plenty of room for speculation on the shape of the district, in the classroom and at its downtown headquarters, in the new year. Courtesy of Steve Giegerich, St. Louis Post-Dispatch.


SLPS Parents Movement to Support Dr. Kelvin Adams.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Finally somebody has come who will give the principals autonomy. They have been running the schools from downtown through some of theie education officers that failed as principals in their own schools. I hope Dr. Adams goes back to the achievement records of some of the key people running curriculum and assessment.

I look forward you to weeding out those who have failed this school district. Begin from downtown and then go to the schools.

Cassandra T.
Parent supporting Dr. Adams.

Anonymous said...

I believe a real man is coming to clean up the rotten academic system beginning with those who are making tons of money, enjoying air conditioned offices, doing very little.

Sam and Cindy Coleman
slps Parents

Anonymous said...

Welcome Dr. Adams. Don't grandfather the people who have not achieved anything. They will be right under your nose i.e. downtown. Begin the cleanup from downtown. Every superint came and inherited the mess downtown and never succeeded. Clean up downtown first. Many of those people managing curriculum, assessment etc. failed as principals in their schools. Dr. Bourisaw wouldn't have succeeded because she inherited those do nothing education officers and the like.

If you want to streamline the schools start with downtown. I'm glad you are giving principals autonomy and resources. Some of the education officers failed as principals before they were brought downtown and they give principals directions. I am a parent volunteer who works with a competent principal (school doing well on MAP)so much frustrated by the education officer. I just feel so frustrated as a parent by the downtown bureaucracy.

K. Boykin
Parent

Anonymous said...

Dr. Adam: Please open a line of communication with parents.

Anonymous said...

I'm delighted by the article about the changes that Dr. Adams will bring about. It is overdue. Every SLPS chief inherited the people who have been responsible for the mess for many years because they controlled principals and teachers from downtown. Look at their records-many of them are princiopals who failed their schools and then got promoted to manage those schools from the district level. It is a mess. I'll request Dr. Adams to ask for the MAP achivement of the schools some of your education officers led before promotion!

Amina Jefferson
Parent

Anonymous said...

I support you Dr. Adams. Please bring the long overdue changes. Begin downtown. That is where the problem staerts. You'll not acahieve any progress unless you clean up the academic system top-down.

I like your philosophy of "Shape up or Ship Out". I read in the papers you are "focused" and "achievement-oriented" from your track record in New Orleans. We need you hear. Be brave! Do the right thing.

Give the principals autonomy and resources and hold them accountable.


Alvin Murray
parent

Anonymous said...

Dr. Adams is a no-nonsesnse man. I support him to improve our schools. He needs time, resources and support from all quarters including patrents like myself.

Shadrack Philips
Parent, St. Louis CCity.

Anonymous said...

I'm very hopeful and optimistic. From what I've read the chief of SLPS is a capable man who can turn the failing schools around.

Sam McCnary
Parent, St. Louis.