Analysis of Seattle Schools and Its Issues with Principals, Part 2

I have frequently written about that one issue that scares ALL parents with kids at schools with a good principal. And that issue is the district deciding to poach a good principal to prop up a troubled school. Even a principal retirement is reason to sound the alarm. Why?

Because the broad issue is the refusal - by ALL superintendents - to explain to parents how principal selection and placement works. This issue has come up again and again. 

It is especially galling to parents who see some school communities participate in the selection of their next principal and then just have a principal plopped into their own school. (I used to say that the district always allows high school communities to be part of principal selection because, for a long time, it was true. Today, not so much.)

One problem is simply that there is no Board policy on principal placement. Most would say, nor should there be because that is purely a superintendent decision. It is a personnel decision and, except for extreme situations, it remains in the superintendent's purview. 

I note this from the Times' story on the Board meeting:

District 1 Director Liza Rankin requested that the board conduct an audit of the district’s human resources protocols, including timelines of and investigations, hiring decisions and leaves. 

I appreciate that Rankin wants to do this but my sources say there have been not one but two audits already. But maybe they did not cover what Rankin would like to see and given how many investigations go nowhere, it might be a good idea. 

Naturally, principal placement is situational. A superintendent wants to match up that school's community vibe (for both teachers/staff and parents/students). What's the right Goldie Locks fit for this school? The superintendent does want to get it right because if you have the right fit, it might be the beginning of a long tenure for a principal. So when that fit is right, the school is on much more solid ground to make positive advances for their school population. 

Plus, it's one fewer school for the superintendent to worry about if he knows it's in good hands.

I want to point out that in the Times' story they are asking this:

What questions do you have about the appointment process for Seattle Public Schools principals?

So to the issue at hand - Principal Anitra Jones at Adams Elementary School. 

In this situation, the current principal, Doug Sohn, is retiring for medical reasons and is beloved at the school. My intel says Principal Sohn may be gone before the end of the school year so not a long crossover time with him guiding Principal Jones. 

At the same time, Jones had either been pressuring the district for another school and/or the district felt it was time to get her back into a school. (She had been removed from Rainier View ES, going first to the district to do what? and then to Rainier Beach HS on some "special" placement.) 

At the Board meeting, Shuldiner referenced that Jones was an award-winning principal. That is true except that the groups that gave her praise and awards did it in her earlier tenure at Rainier View ES. It's interesting that she received a Milken Educator Award AND an Alliance for Education award all in the same school year, 2018-2019. 

So what happened between 2018-2019 and 2023-2024 to cause this kind of upheaval at a school that was doing so well? 


Of course, what is problematic for the current situation is this knowledge (comes from The Seattle Times):

Earlier this month, the district appointed Jones to be the new principal at Adams Elementary, shocking community members who were surprised she still had a job after an onslaught of complaints arose in 2024, including allegations she created a “toxic” learning environment at Rainier View Elementary in Southeast Seattle, and a state agency’s determination that she unlawfully discriminated against staff.  

The district had what I would have believed is a mountain of evidence against Jones but none of it made it to her personnel file. That "state agency" report came from a Labor RelationsAdjudicator/Mediator at the state who concluded that Jones had "targeted" 3 employees with negative and disparaging comments in their evaluations and had recommended to HR that they should have even harsher evaluations. 

Plus, she was found to trying to discriminate against an employee when the employee talked in an email about union activity. 

The examiner directed SPS to stop interfering with employees’ right to organize and collectively bargain and to no longer consider employees’ union activities in job evaluations.

The examiner also told SPS that it cannot discipline employees for including union representatives and co-workers on emails about wages, hours, working conditions or potential grievances. 

But what of all the complaints that came from parents/guardians? Maybe some were just verbal but I'd bet many parents wrote an email or letter. How did all those get disregarded at that time? In March of 2024, there were many RVES parents coming to Board meetings begging for help. Those pleas are on record.

One thing I can tell you from personal experience is that you can write a letter of complaint about a teacher or principal and it will NOT make it into their personnel file. I know this because I wrote one about a teacher at my son's school who would not allow my husband who was in the hospital to view a test my son had taken. (This was around math and my husband had tutored my son in math so he wanted to see the test to see where our son failed.) 

I don't know where it is in the contracts for teachers and principals that any written complaint will not go in their file but it seems to be true. 


What did the district do when these issue were revealed in 2024?

SPS said in a statement that it was still reviewing the findings. While some of the allegations had been dismissed, “district leadership is considering next steps due to the allegations that were upheld,” the statement read.

One key that the district, somehow, did not do much is to be found in current superintendent Ben Shuldiner's remarks at the Board meeting. He was explaining why he couldn't discipline Jones now if there was nothing in her personnel file to warrant it AND he mentioned "an internal document." 

Nothing about ANYTHING at RVES in her file? How could the state findings NOT be in there?

And, where did this internal document in Jones' file come from? Superintendent Brent Jones? HR head Sarah Pritchett? SPS HR is one place where it seems some people get protection from real consequences. 

SPS needs an HR professional at its head. By that I mean, someone who has real training background in human relations, not just someone who the district  (again) needed to place.

Shuldiner says that's one department that needs a very hard look and good for him.


Next up, my analysis about what was actually said at the last Seattle School Board meeting on this topic. 




Comments

Anonymous said…
“Internal document” is the unique contract her bro Brent Jones crafted with the help of Anitra’s friends Sarah Pritchett and Katrina Hunt. Why is everyone acting so surprised? We know (now at the very least) Brent Jones is the worst thing that could happen to Seattle Public Schools. The man has an ego the size of Mongolia. He did not care about students and despised parents. How many here can honestly say they had a meaningful conversation with him??????????? I thought so.
Now we are desperate for this new guy to be “the one”. We will forgive minor offenses and always hope he IS the one. Even with his sometimes annoying newsletter or his claims friends warned him Seattle was BAAAAAD. We still want him because the bar is so, so low.

Hopelessly Devoted

Anonymous said…
Are the Superintendent and the Regional Directors all in PASS with the Principals and Assistant Principals?

Northlander
Bob S said…
Let me preface this by saying that sarcasm has sustained humans throughout history when dealing with bureaucratic nonsense and obvious injustice such as this story.
That being said, looks like there are grounds for multiple lawsuits here. First, it seems that SOS removed an award winning principal from RVES for no reason as there are no records in her file of any wrongdoing, so she should sue. She should also sure local media for defamation for running stories suggesting parent and teacher complaints over the "award winner's" conduct since there are no records of such complaints: surely a district focused on anti racism and equity would not dismiss complaints by the not so wealthy people of color from the RVES community? Speaking of which, isn't it the opposite of equity to remove an "award winning" principal from a South Seattle school and assign it to the "wealthy", "mostly white" school?
By the way, upping the test scores and making numbers look good in Excel is not the same as success, which what those "awards" were for.
Where is SEA on all this?
Northlander, PASS is the group just for principals and assistant principals. I would assume that Executive Directors are up the food chain and negotiate their contracts individually. The Superintendent's contract is negotiated and signed by the Board.

Bob S, here is what is stated the Nov. 13, 2024 Times' article about the Jones review:
"Meesh Vecchio, president of the Seattle Education Association, which filed the complaints, said the ruling acknowledged that “educators’ concerns were being ignored.”

“After years of sounding the alarm, we’re hopeful that SPS will ensure that no SEA member faces retaliation for speaking up for their rights,” they said. “It sets a precedent, especially in a time when educators feel like their profession is under attack. … It’s unfortunate that Seattle Public Schools allowed this level of retaliatory behavior from their leader at Rainier View.”

The Seattle Education Association filed three unfair labor practices cases against the district in 2023, alleging interference and discrimination by Jones. The broader interference claims were dismissed, mainly because the union didn’t file within the required time frame.

The examiner found that Jones discriminated against two teachers and an administrative secretary. They were active in the union and on the school’s building leadership team, a group made up of the principal, staff and parents who decide how to spend the school’s budget.

The union did not prove that Jones discriminated against another staff member."

What happened after all that, I don't know. I would assume the union rep at Adams has likely gone to their leadership and told them that Adams teachers will not be happy if the same kind of treatment by Jones that happened at RVES happens at Adams ES.
Anonymous said…
The union has to pick and choose their battles. Fighting for the active union members is an easier battle. And discrimination is hard to prove unless it’s racism or against a protected group.

And according to the contract, the principal investigates complaints against her, so no wrongdoings could be found. Case closed. And if her supervisor, who was probably her sorority sister, agreed with the principal’s findings, then there’s nothing the staff could do. And the Office if Investigations only examines whether the principal followed procedures.

So if the principal abused the students, and the principal determined that no abuse occurred, and she followed procedures outlined in the contract, then she has the free pass to do more abuses as long as she followed procedures investigating herself.

Researcher
Bob S said…
Thanks for the update. All of what the Seattle Times article mentions should be in Jones's file, and yet Shuldiner claims otherwise. Let's not forget that turning RVES into an HC site is in part an effort to clean up the mess created by the "award winner".
Anonymous said…
@Researcher

PASS is not a union. It’s an association. There’s a difference.
And a principal or assistant principal cannot investigate themselves.

-Anonymous School Employee
Anonymous said…
From PASS’ Collective Bargaining Agreement with the district:

“ The Seattle School District believes the principals are empowered to and should address complaints about or concerning
themselves in a fair, expeditious, and appropriate manner.
Therefore, unless exigent or emergency circumstances exist, the Board of Directors, Superintendent, and Senior Leader
staff should refer complaints or problems about a principal to the principal with the expectation that the principal will
address the complaint collaboratively, if appropriate, timely, and in a manner that best meets the needs of the
educational setting.”

Researcher
J425 said…
So much about this Anitra but none of you are talking about Annie Patu? Annie Patu was interviewed by the FBI and disclosed she made a payment ro a drug mule on behalf of her sister - and previous RBHS security contractor Marty Jackson. Who is under federal indictment. This seems orders of magnitude bigger than the other principal you’re all talking about but maybe i missed something.
Anonymous said…
@J425

I want to know more about Annie Patu, too. It should be noted that she was not charged.

Earlier court documents are interesting.

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