6/28/2016 7:29:00 AM
New 'Gansett principal ready to go
Likes the fact that school is a key part of the community |
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Courtesy photo Mandy Vasil |
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Christine Smith
TEMPLETON
She does not really mind the snow and is thankful to still be near the
ocean, so if new Narragansett Regional High School Principal Mandy
Vasil misses the south, it is most sharply felt in the spring.
But,
she found a way to make things bloom at her central Massachusetts home
with the intensity of color she remembers from her days in West Virginia
and Kentucky. In her distinctive southern accent, she notes that they
chat about the spring flowers and colors down there with the same
passion the way New Englanders do about the leaves when they change here
in the fall.
Colors are important to Vasil — colors and team
spirit. It is what attracted her to the school district in the first
place, she said.
While serving most recently at Millbury High
School, three years as principal and three before that as assistant
principal, she heard the old stories about Narragansett from a teacher
who had graduated from there.
Vasil said this teacher spoke
about Narragansett and its strong displays of school spirit and team
colors in a way that resonated heavily with the memories of her own
experiences as a youth.
She said she has found that much of what
happens in the Templeton and Phillipston community is rooted in events
at the high school.
Vasil applied along with 16 others for the
top job at the high school in December. She was one of three finalists
and was eventually offered the position in February.
Since that
time, she has been in the district at every opportunity to meet teachers
and parents, and go to a number of school events.
She is looking forward to meeting the students later this year.
“I want to be able to come in and effectively support the positive
initiatives that are taking place at this time,” said Vasil, adding that
she also wants to “gain the trust of the public and the faculty” as the
district moves forward.
Vasil has her eye on Narragansett’s
annual Freshmen Academy, held each summer to help last year’s
eighth-graders acclimate to high school.
Vasil envisions a more
expansive approach to this program that supports and encourages students
not only at entry to high school, but throughout all four years.
She
said she is passionate about seeing students’ needs met, their
questions answered, and that they make peer connections to support the
goals they have for the future.
She wants to see 100 percent of
Narragansett’s high school students graduate. “As educators, it is
really why we’re here,” said Vasil.
As someone new coming in to
lead the high school, she knows she will serve in some measure as an
agent of change, but she insists her modifications will be “purposeful.”
She hopes to bring the high school up from a Level 2 to a Level
1 status, as determined by the State Department of Elementary and
Secondary Education.
She wants her faculty and staff to know that she will support their efforts and through them, the students.
“I want to be in a school where the teachers want to be, and they’re
invested in what’s happening in the school and what’s going to benefit
the students,” she remarked.
She has learned since her meeting
with many teachers and members of the administration in the district
that there are a number of students who are opting for School Choice or
seeking alternative methods of education.
She wants to learn the
reasons why students might be choosing other options and what the
district needs to do to keep the students at Narragansett and bring
enrollment back up to over 400.
Vasil will look for ways to
refocus and redirect both classroom teaching and learning by improving
the literacy and writing programs at the high school.
She
believes in a student population that will be at or above reading level
across the curriculum and that this can be achieved by working on skills
in these particular areas and determining where gaps may exist.
She
said a state-mandated Common Core is important for the school, noting
the need for a somewhat matching curriculum across school districts or
even from state to state.
She pointed to students whose families
might move from one location to another due to personal circumstances
as her basis for supporting these shared standards.
Vasil plans
to hold an open house sometime in late July for the community, including
officials in the towns, parents and others who may not have children
attending the school but would like to attend.
“I would like it that whenever people come in, they feel welcome,” said Vasil.
“When they hear the name, it invokes good, positive thoughts – that Narragansett is where they want to be and go to school.” |
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ReplyDeleteShe wants to see 100 percent of Narragansett’s high school students graduate. “As educators, it is really why we’re here,” said Vasil.
Well put Ms. Vasil! Unfortunately that is not the case with what was once called education and is now called school. According to the book The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto "education" in its present form retards our youth in many ways. Here is some of the history that Gatto speaks. PurposeofSchooling