'Shot of Reality' Empowers His Career.Milt Pippenger's epiphany Epiphany (ĭpĭf`ənē) [Gr.,=showing], a prime Christian feast, celebrated Jan. 6, called also Twelfth Day or Little Christmas. Its eve is Twelfth Night. , professional and spiritual, came about in a 6th grade classroom in inner-city Omaha. It occurred early on in his educational career when Pippenger was a neophyte ne·o·phyte n. 1. A recent convert to a belief; a proselyte. 2. A beginner or novice: a neophyte at politics. 3. a. Roman Catholic Church A newly ordained priest. teacher in his mid-20s. He stood before a class bulging with 34 pupils, many of them from a subsidized, low-income housing project nearby. Only six could read at grade level and nine couldn't read at all. "I basically lost that class," he says, admitting his cluelessness. "I couldn't deliver thc content. ... It took me five or six weeks to even understand some of them." What Pippenger says he learned to appreciate from that painful shot of reality is you must "focus on the whole child in a situation like that." His stint in Omaha, Neb., blessedly lasted only a year before Pippenger returned to his native Kansas, where he's spent most of his career since. But the overriding lesson of that trying school year has become an operating principle that undergirds all of his work today as the superintendent in Garden City, Kan. Since 1993, when he became its fifth superintendent in 10 years, Pippenger has guided the dynamic 7,750-student school system, situated 200 miles west of Wichita in the state's southwestern corner. Garden City, defying the stereotype of the Plains states, just might be one of the most unlikely places in America with an ethnically mixed student population. With an enrollment that's 60 percent nonwhite non·white n. A person who is not white. non white adj. and growing, the
district's makeup resembles those of urban centers on the East and
West coasts. "When you say 'Kansas,' people think white
kids running around," says Pippenger. "One day some foundation
representatives walked into one of our buildings and said to me,
'You've got everything here we've got in Philadelphia and
New Jersey except your buildings are cleaner."'
The reason behind Garden City's diverse and highly transient student population are two major meat-packing plants that began operating in the early 1980s. Together, they employ more than 4,500 workers, most of them from Mexico, Central America Central America, narrow, southernmost region (c.202,200 sq mi/523,698 sq km) of North America, linked to South America at Colombia. It separates the Caribbean from the Pacific. and Southeast Asia Southeast Asia, region of Asia (1990 est. pop. 442,500,000), c.1,740,000 sq mi (4,506,600 sq km), bounded roughly by the Indian subcontinent on the west, China on the north, and the Pacific Ocean on the east. . Since his arrival, the superintendent has attempted to elevate the academic expectation levels for all students by raising the graduation standards, devising grade-level benchmarks in core subjects, as well as behavior, and starting a school-to-career program. Intake centers for all non-English speakers in grades 5 to 12 provide academic screening, teach basic English Noun 1. Basic English - a simplified form of English proposed for use as an auxiliary language for international communication; devised by C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards artificial language - a language that is deliberately created for a specific purpose vocabulary and ensure the newcomers fully understand school rules and routines before they transfer into mainstream programs. By next fall, 15 district schools will offer English as a second language, and many high school classrooms of 25 students are staffed with two tea hers, one of whom is bilingual or ESL-certified. And Pippenger insists that any student who fails to reach mastery on at least 80 percent of the benchmarks in a subject by year's end is required to take summer school classes or participate in after-school tutoring, which runs until 7 p.m. daily at the secondary level. "He's a man who looks toward the future of education and probably has put us on the cutting edge of what we need to be doing," says Garden City's board of education president, John Scheopner. "We're definitely ahead of the pack." Perhaps most importantly Adv. 1. most importantly - above and beyond all other consideration; "above all, you must be independent" above all, most especially , Pippenger has cultivated ownership among school staff for those initiatives. "It's the way he asks the teachers to be the leaders here," says Carol Wethington, an elementary school elementary school: see school. teacher who serves as union president. "He steps back and says, 'Teachers will take us in this direction."' Scheopner says it's clear to him that Pippenger isn't obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. with details. "He's good at delegating to those who know more than he does in a particular area. But he's a great idea man." The board president, who runs a water distribution business in Garden City, admires that style of management. "So many in charge want their fingers in anything that's going on. He can stand back and let an idea grow from a distance." For Pippenger, who once took a five-year break from his education career to work as the administrative pastor of a church, the task at hand is made somewhat simpler by the quality of colleagues. "It's not hard to look good when you've got creative people around you," he says. Jay Goldman Jay Grant Goldman (Born 12th December 12, 1975) is an Australian radio personality. Known as Goldie on local Brisbane radio station River949fm he has been the afternoon announcer there since 2/5/2000. is editor of The School Administrator. BIO STATS: MILT PIPPENGER Currently: superintendent, Garden City, Kan. Earlier: superintendent, Hiawatha, Kan. Age: 59 Greatest Influence on Career: Teaching in an inner-city school in Omaha, Neb., which gave me a shot of reality. Best Professional Day: The first day of school. It makes little difference what year, only that students and staff retum to their buildings. This has been true since my first day of teaching. Books at Bedside: The Bible; The Prophet by Frank Perriti; Come Before Winter and Share My Hope by Charles Swindoll; Inside the Brain by Donald Kotulak; Close Combat by W.E.B. Griffin. Biggest Blooper: At our annual staff appreciation dinner, school board members and central-office administrators traditionally provide some "entertainment," usually something just short of dignified. I was talked into performing (via karaoke karaoke (Japanese; “empty orchestra”) Use of a device that plays instrumental accompaniments to songs with the vocal tracks removed, permitting the user to sing the lead. ) "The Purple People Eater" while costumed in purple tights, tutu tutu coriariaarborea. , headdress headdress, head covering or decoration, protective or ceremonial, which has been an important part of costume since ancient times. Its style is governed in general by climate, available materials, religion or superstition, and the dictates of fashion. and so forth. Three years later I'm still haunted by the event. Reason Why I'm an AASA AASA American Association of School Administrators AASA Asian American Student Association AASA Association of Academies of Sciences in Asia AASA Aging and Adult Services Administration AASA Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army Member: Throughout my career, the support I have received from other professionals in AASA has been an important vehicle to get me through both good times and bad. |
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