Showing posts with label Michael Looney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Looney. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

WCS Board goes with Looney

The Williamson County School Board voted unanimously Wednesday night to offer Michael Looney the position of Director of Schools at a base salary of $168,000. Contract negotiations will now begin with Looney, currently the Butler County School District Superintendent. The board chose Looney over Dennis Dearden.

According to the Greenville Advocate's online edition, Looney informed the Butler County Board of Education President late Wednesday night that he intends to accept the offer in Williamson County.

Now that Looney is the choice of the School Board, we'll have to take a look and see just how much this transition from Dr. Rebecca Sharber to Interim Director Dr. David Heath to Michael Looney cost the Williamson County taxpayers. Hopefully the expense will prove to be worthwhile in the coming months and years. And hopefully the WCS Board learned some valuable lessons from this lengthy search. Congratulations, Michael Looney. And welcome to Williamson County.

Signs Point to Looney as New Director of Schools

When the Williamson County School Board convenes tonight at 8pm to (hopefully) bring the eight-month search for a new Director of Schools to a close, it's likely that former Marine Michael Looney will be offered the job over Dennis Dearden.

Looney, now in his fifth year as Butler County School Superintendent in Alabama, has placed first in two non-binding matrix evaluations conducted by the WCS Board in recent weeks. Looney was an overwhelming choice when considered against the other four semi-finalists. In that head-to-head comparison, Looney earned 44 points by being ranked above each of the other four candidates by eight of the 12 board members. Dearden earned 28 points while being ranked above each of the other four candidates by only two board members.

According to WCS Board Chair Pat Anderson (who ranked Interim Director Dr. David Heath above each of the other four candidates on the first matrix), the matrix results were much closer between Looney and Dearden after the second round of interviews. Those results, however, were not made public.

Interestingly, Board Member Terry Leve announced on his website that while he had ranked Dearden first on the initial matrix (one of the two board members to do so), he has since moved Looney into the top position after the second round of interviews.

Based on the foregoing, and the previous interview, my original ranking of 1) Dearden, 2) Looney and 3) Carroll, is now 1) Looney, 2) Dearden and 3) Carroll. I think it’s close. I think they all have strengths. I know they are different. Mr. Looney is a high energy motivator who immediately connected with staff and students during his tour of schools. It is my impression that he came in first with both staff and students, while I perceive that Dr. Carroll came in second with students, and Mr. Dearden came in second with staff.

The NBC affiliate in Montgomery, Alabama, WSFA Channel 12, reported on August 28 in a story by Bryan Henry that Looney's current salary of $121,000 to oversee 4,000 students spread across eight schools would likely increase by $60,000 if he's offered the task of handling 30,000 students and 37 schools in Williamson County.

Henry's story, filed the day after WCS Board members Barry Watkins and Susan Graham made a site-visit to Butler County, also notes that the average SAT score in Butler County (where students are not required to take the test) is 18.2. In Williamson County in 2008, the observed ACT composite was 22.77. (Henry's story incorrectly lists the Williamson County average score as 24 -- which is the district's current goal).

Tonight's 8pm meeting is open to the public. The decision the 12-member board makes will impact not only the parents and students of Williamson County, but every resident. Here's hoping everyone gets behind the ultimate choice once it's made.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

WCS Board Members Making "Site Visit" to Alabama

Two members of the Williamson County School Board will visit Alabama's Butler County School District Thursday, August 27, to get feedback from individuals there regarding the possibility of Michael Looney becoming Williamson County's next Director of Schools.

According to a story by Kevin Pearcey in Tuesday's Greenville Advocate, a third Williamson County School Board member will check Looney's references via telephone in preparation for a meeting next Wednesday, September 2, during which the board is expected to choose between Looney and Dennis Dearden. Board members will make a similar visit to Dearden's most recent district in Arizona, and check his references as well.

During a non-binding matrix evaluation during a meeting this past Monday night, Looney received the most support, with Dearden placing second. Dr. Barry Carroll was eliminated from consideration for the post during the meeting. Several board members expressed an interest in site visits and reviewing the references already collected and verified by search firm Ray & Associates.

The first three comments about the story on the Greenville Advocate's website offer a bit of insight into at least how some locals there view Looney's possible departure for Tennessee.

Posted by BLOKE1 (anonymous) on August 26, 2009 at 8:49 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Everybody cross your fingers....he might be gone??? ;-)

Posted by talks2much (anonymous) on August 26, 2009 at 9:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Amen!! Let's all be on our best behavior and having glowing comments about him. Maybe they'll see they can't live without him!!!

Posted by jmcoleman (anonymous) on August 26, 2009 at 9:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)

These kinds of trips remind me of the movie Funny Farm. What do the TN people expect? If the Butler County people want to keep him, then will they speak glowingly about him? I don't know understand what the I would be looking for if I were on the search committee.

Hopefully our School Board representatives will search out Looney's supporters as well as some detractors (they can be found on the Advocate's website!) as they attempt to gain a more complete picture of the man who seems to be the front-runner to become the next Director of Williamson County Schools. Once the contract is signed, sealed, and delivered it will be time to move forward with the new director. The time for due diligence is now -- anything less is unacceptable.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

WCS Director Interviews: Round Two Schedule

The three finalists for Director of Schools in Williamson County will each spend a day next week touring the district, visiting schools, and participating in a second interview with the School Board. The public is invited to a morning reception all three days (August 18, 19, and 20) from 8:15am until 9:15am in the Carolyn Campbell Conference Room at the Central Office. In addition, the evening interviews from 6:30pm until 8:30pm each night in the same location are also open to the public.

Michael Looney, current Superintendent of Butler County School District in Alabama, will visit on Tuesday, August 18, 2009. Looney received the highest number of "points" when the School Board completed a matrix system comparing the candidates following the first round of interviews.

Dr. Barry Carroll, current Superintendent of Limestone County Schools in Alabama, will visit on Wednesday, August 19, 2009. Carroll received the third highest number of "points" on the matrix, behind both Looney and Dennis Dearden.

Dennis Dearden, a Senior VP for the Partnership for Excellence, will visit on Thursday, August 20, 2009. Dearden, who received the second-highest "point" total on the matrix, is a former assistant superintendent from Fairfax County Schools in Virginia, and most recently served as Superintendent of Marana Unified School District in Arizona.

The daily candidate schedule is as follows:

8:15-9:15am - Public Reception
Carolyn Campbell Room

9:15-10:15am - Meet with Senior Staff
Carolyn Campbell Room

11:00-11:40am - Tour elementary school
Chapman’s Retreat

12:00-1:15pm - Tour middle school & lunch with students
Page Middle

1:45-2:30pm - Tour high school
Ravenwood High

2:30-3:45pm - Tour district

4-5:30pm - Return to hotel

5:30pm - Travel to dinner

5:45pm - Dinner with School Board
Technology Conference Room

6:30-8:30pm - Public Interview with School Board
Carolyn Campbell Room

Let the School Board members hear your thoughts about each of the candidates. You can find their email addresses here.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Looney, Dearden, and Carroll Finalists for WCS Director

Michael Looney, Dennis Dearden, and Dr. Barry Carroll are the three finalists chosen by the Williamson County School Board to be invited back for a second interview. Eliminated from consideration during the special board meeting were Interim Director Dr. David Heath and James Wilson of Georgia. The three finalists will be invited to schedule tours and interviews August 18-20.

The Board members used a matrix evaluation form provided by search firm Ray & Associates to compare the candidates head-to-head (Candidate 1 to Candidate 2, then Candidate 1 to Candidate 3, etc.) without discussion of individual candidates. The matrix was completed by each board member during a recess and the results were tabulated before the meeting reconvened and the results were announced.

Looney, the Superintendent of Butler County School District in Alabama since 2005, scored a total of 44 on the matrix. Dearden, a retired superintendent from the Marana Unified School District in Arizona, scored 28 on the matrix evaluation. Dearden is currently a senior VP with the Partnership for Excellence, he formerly was an assistant superintendent in Fairfax County, Virginia. Dr. Carroll, superintendent of Limestone County Schools in Alabama, scored 23 on the matrix.

Dr. Heath scored 15 on the head-to-head matrix and Wilson scored 10. Of note is that Board President Pat Anderson and Janice Mills both placed Dr. Heath above every one of the other four candidates. Comparatively, seven board members did not score Dr. Heath above a single one of the other four candidates. Looney was second behind Dr. Heath on both Pat Anderson's and Mills' matrix. Eight board members placed Looney ahead of every one of the other four candidates, with the remaining four board members placing only one candidate above Looney (two had Dearden above Looney, and two had Dr. Heath above Looney).

So, Brentwood Watchdog's assessment that all signs pointed to Dr. Heath being elevated to the position proved not to come to fruition. Instead, the School Board members (for the most part, at least) appear to have witnessed the interviews with open minds in search of the best candidate to lead our schools. Kudos to each of them for a job well done on this phase. It's possible that by the end of August the new Director of Williamson County Schools will be hired from among Looney, Dearden, and Dr. Carroll. Stay tuned!

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

School Board Interviews Carroll and Looney for Director

Dr. Barry Carroll and Michael Looney comprised the second night of interviews among five semi-finalist candidates for the position of Director of Williamson County Schools. The two candidates answered the same slate of 25 questions posed on Monday night to candidates Dennis Dearden and Dr. David Heath, the current Interim Director.

Sparks flew during the night's second interview as powerful storms knocked out transformers and plunged the meeting room into darkness in the midst of Michael Looney's interview. The entire board was forced to move into the lobby for the bulk of Looney's interview that lasted past 10 pm.

Looney, current superintendent of Butler County School District in Alabama, never lost focus during his interview despite the power outage, cited specifics when asked, displayed a sense of humor, and communicated throughout the evening his passion for education and achieving greatness.

"Curriculum is what makes my blood pump. Instruction is what excites me," Looney said regarding closing achievement gaps. "I consider that to be my specialty." Looney went on to cite double-digit improvement numbers in math and reading as examples of his leadership in that area.

An almost eight-year veteran of the United States Marine Corps, Looney was born in Germany and moved to the US when he was in the fourth grade. He shared that he became a serial runaway from an abusive parent, found himself homeless and living under bridges, spent time in juvenile hall, and earned a GED before enlisting in the Marines as soon as possible. From there he earned a college degree in business administration and while taking night classes towards an MBA, a friend of his wife's -- a friend who happened to be a school principal -- suggested Looney become a substitute teacher. That led to a job as a teacher, then an assistant principal, a principal, and now an administrator.

Looney went on to share that he has completed all of his doctoral course work, has defended three of the four chapters of his dissertation, and expects to defend the final chapter this October. He is a married father of four, and three of his children are still in middle and elementary schools.

"If you're satisfied with the status quo, don't hire me," Looney stated at the very start of his interview. "If you're satisfied with where you are, don't hire me. I define leadership as facilitating thoughtful change. If you're looking for somebody just to keep the ship steady going down the same path, slowly turning, I'm probably not your guy."

In terms of his visibility within the district, Looney said he's a "boots on the ground type of manager" and explained how he personally taught reading one hour a day for nine weeks while implementing a new program because he wanted to be familiar with what was being asked of the teachers.

Looney discussed cutting utility bills in his district by 40 percent in order to maximize dollars so that, if possible, cutting athletics, arts, extra-curricular activities, or personnel didn't need to be an option. "I value the whole child and all the elements that make the whole child equally," Looney said.

Asked about his vision, Looney responded, "It wouldn't be my vision. I don't have any magic bullets tonight. What I can offer is a fresh perspective, boundless energy, and a passion for lifting up students. I have a laser focus . . . I can communicate a collective vision." Pressed on his personal vision, Looney said, "Excellence in academics, arts, and character. Educating the whole child. Good is not good enough. Above average is not good enough. Excellence isn't good enough. You all can be perhaps the best district in America."

A subsequent follow-up question asked Looney how important it is to be a visionary. "I think it's imperative," he said. "You have to be a visionary but you can't ram your vision down people's throats. . . . A leader needs to facilitate improvement change over time."

Looney said that one way he accomplishes goals and earns the trust of his colleagues, teachers, parents, and students is by giving out his cell phone number to everyone.

"I have three rules of engagement for using that number. Don't call me before 5am, because I'm getting kids ready for school. Don't call me after 9pm, because I'm reading bedtime stories. And don't call me over someone else's head," he said.

Such a policy of accessibility led to having a high school senior with no place else to turn move into the Looney's home last year and live with them for nine months before graduating. "It was a great experience for him and us," Looney said.

"You will not find another superintendent in America that will be more engaged, involved, and available to your constituents and students than I will be," Looney said. "I live, eat, and breathe the school business."

Asked about charter schools, Looney said, "I am an opponent of charter schools. I think that any time the federal government gets involved in local issues it's a bad idea."

During the course of his interview, Looney referred to Rigor, Relationship, and Relevance as being key elements of success in achieving goals.

"I've got to challenge this board's thinking -- if I don't do that we're not going to be successful," he said adding that the board must challenge his thinking in the same way.

On the topic of making decisions that may be publicly unpopular but educationally necessary, Looney said, "The outcome to me is secondary to the process. If you involve people in the process, more times than not you're going to have buy-in to the outcome."

A follow-up question on whether or not Looney expected to find "low-hanging fruit" ripe for improvement in Williamson County was answered without hesitation. "Absolutely. Look at your math scores," Looney said. He went on to say that he would like to have a discussion about not just meeting Tennessee's state requirements for graduation, but exceeding them. He added that the central office's primary role in a school system is one of support.

"I view 'principalship' as the single most important determinant of a school's success," Looney said.

The three critical issues Looney cited as facing the district in the next five years are: funding, the continued growth of diversity and emergence of foreign language speaking students, and "The continued decline in our nation's morals."

Asked why he was the best candidate for the job, Looney was direct.

"I am the perfect candidate. I'm young, I'm energetic," he said. "Frankly, this is a dream job for somebody. Being the best in Tennessee isn't good enough. I don't want you to be satisfied with that. . . . You're good. You're really good. I will not rest, nor will I leave, until you're better. . . Leadership is about change, it's about not staying static. There's a need to keep moving the bar higher and not being satisfied with what you've got."

While Looney said he believes the role of technology is important in the classroom it is, ultimately, just another tool.

"It's not a replacement for instruction," he said. "There is no replacement for a good teacher that has mastered the art of teaching, is a technician of teaching, and is a surgeon -- who can dice and slice to diagnose a problem and fix it."

Dr. Carroll, current superintendent of Limestone County Schools in Alabama, told the board, "I hold myself accountable for every decision that I make and every word that comes out of my mouth."

Asked the difference between a leader and a manager, Dr. Carroll said, "There is a fine line between leading the band and being marched out of town. You don't lead by being a dictator . . . lead people by influence."

Regarding his visibility within the district, Dr. Carroll said his goal is to spend 50 percent of his time in the office and 50 percent out in the schools. Asked directly about creating individualized learning plans for all students Dr. Carroll said, "I'd love to do that."

On diversity Dr. Carroll shared that he was the second ever white football player at Alabama A & M University where he played for four years and graduated in four years. That experience gives him a special perspective on diversity he explained.

On the issue of charter schools and magnet schools, Dr. Carroll said, "Personally and philosophically I'm not in favor of charter schools."

As for developing and prioritizing a budget Dr. Carroll said there were three questions that must always be asked: Is it good for kids?, Can we afford it?, and, Is it going to improve student achievement?

Dr. Carroll stated, "This is not your school system and it's not mine. It's the people's school system," while explaining how short and long-range goals must be developed by the entire community.

Achievement gaps, Dr. Carroll said, can be divided into two types: gaps resulting from socio-economic, racial, or gender differences; and a global achievement gap. "The number one reason for drop-outs in America is boredom. We're boring kids to death. We should be teaching our kids for our future, not for our past."

Dr. Carroll went on to explain that we must learn to use technology to teach kids the way they learn -- in a multi-tasking environment. He said his teenage daughter, when asked what she did in school, will talk about listening to a lecture and taking notes. Prior to being asked the question though, Dr. Carroll said, his daughter is surfing the internet, listening to an iPod, and text messaging on her phone with the television on in the background. That's a stark contrast from how we expect kids to learn, he said.

Asked what the greatest compliment those in his district would pay him, Dr. Carroll said, "They've never seen me without a suit on. He dresses professionally every day and he acts professionally every day."

Regarding critical issues, Dr. Carroll said that technology and how to utilize it would be one along with national standards and assessments and a restructuring of the "antiquated school day". Dr. Carroll said he believes in finding new ways to meet the needs of kids spanning everything from interactive videoconferencing to flexible school hours and even weekend school -- "If we can fund it."

Dr. Carroll described himself as very competitive as an individual and expressed what he would like to see the district achieve. "Williamson County is a great school system. Our goal is to be the greatest not in Tennessee but in the nation. . . . There are those districts that are getting better and there are those that are the others."

In conclusion Dr. Carroll stated that his experience, background, knowledge, expertise, and vision would help propel Williamson County Schools from "great to greatest". Asked specifically what district he currently considers to be the best in the nation, Dr. Carroll said, "Fairfax County is a pretty good district."

Interestingly, Dr. Terri Breeden (one of the two finalists rejected by the School Board for the Director position earlier this year), and current semi-finalist Dennis Dearden have worked in administrative positions in Fairfax County recently. While Breeden was rejected, Dearden is still in the running for the Williamson County position.

The final semi-finalist interview, with James Wilson of Georgia, is set for tonight at 6pm in the Administrative Complex in Franklin.