Educator at heart, consensus builder by reputation
Andrew Wainer
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This is part of a series of articles profiling the
superintendents who run our local school districts.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- His dad wanted him to be a lawyer, but Marc Ecker
ended up superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District.
How did that happen? It wasn’t easy.
“My dad wanted me to go to law school,” Ecker said. “After graduation, I
applied to several law schools and got into several good ones.”
But it just wasn’t what he wanted to do. So at the last minute, he
decided to pursue his true love -- education.
“When I decided to go into education after college, my dad didn’t talk to
me for three months,” he recalled.
But the law world’s loss was Fountain Valley’s gain. And his father
finally came around.
“He has accepts it now,” Ecker said.
It has been 28 years since he entered the field of education. He is now
superintendent of a district with some of the highest-achieving schools
in the county.
His interest in teaching started early.
“I was always interested in kids,” said the San Fernando Valley native.
“I had several summer jobs with the YMCA.”
While earning his bachelor’s degree at UCLA, Ecker began working as an
aide in the classroom.
When he enrolled in the school’s teaching credential program, he was
sold.
“I loved it,” Ecker said.
He studied under internationally renown educators such as Madeline
Hunter.
“It was a real treat being in her class,” Ecker said.
Hunter’s progressive educational philosophy clinched Ecker’s interest in
teaching kids.
Armed with a credential from UCLA, Ecker landed his first job as a
teacher in Los Alamitos in 1972. He stayed there for seven years.
“It was a very progressive district,” Ecker said. “They still have a very
high standard for education.”
Ecker taught first through sixth grade, giving him a broad overview of
elementary school education. While he “liked teaching,” he said he
“wanted to have a different impact on children.”
In 1979, his interest in administration landed him a principal’s job in
the Fountain Valley School District.
Ecker said he knew from the start that administration suited him.
“I enjoyed the greater control over establishing goals and objectives,”
he said.
Plus, being a principal suited his personality.
“I always enjoyed marketing and selling,” Ecker said.
In 1983, Ecker had to put his marketing skills to work.
“The district underwent a major organizational change,” he said. “We
began using middle schools.”
He said some members of the community and trustees opposed the switch to
middle schools. He was appointed principal of Masuda Middle School, in
part, to sell the idea of middle schools to the community..
“We had to be perfect,” Ecker said. “We had to prove to the community and
the board that middle schools work.”
Within a few years, Ecker’s marketing and public relations skills, not to
mention administrative acumen, had created what he called “a city on a
hill”.
“We had a waiting list of kids who wanted to enter,” Ecker said.
In 1990, after helping advance the cause of middle schools in the
district, then-Supt. Ruben Ingram asked Ecker to work on the district’s
surplus school sites.
“My job was to get the community to accept the idea of surplus sites,”
Ecker said.
At the time, district enrollment was going down rapidly. Under his reign,
the district closed eight sites. Two were sold.
Ecker faced many of the same community concerns that face neighboring
districts today.
“The community was opposed to closing sites because they didn’t want
their children to leave the neighborhood to go to school,” Ecker said.
“They also didn’t trust us. They thought the money we would gain selling
or leasing the sites would be wasted.”
Again, Ecker used his marketing skills and ability to draw people
together.
“I tried to change perceptions,” he said. “I created an action committee
for education.”
Ecker said he reached out to the community to relate to the district’s
facilities situation.
“We made a point of including the business and retirement communities in
our discussions,” he said. “We were up front and personal, and we managed
to convince the community that we were honest and competent.”
The effort was successful, Fountain Valley is now one of the only
districts in the area that is at peace with the community regarding
school sites.
Following Ecker’s success in pushing forward the district’s school sites
agenda, he was promoted to assistant superintendent in 1993. He became
superintendent three years later.
District board member Julie Hoxsie lauds Ecker’s “consensus building”
efforts.
“Marc has the ability to draw a community together,” Hoxsie said. “The
greatest asset he has is that he can take people from varying points of
view and bring them together for the good of the district.”
Hoxsie called Ecker’s sense of community amazing.
Recently, the district scored exceptionally high on the state’s Academic
Performance Index. Ecker credits its academic prowess to the “peace” in
the district.
“I tell the board to always focus on maximizing the time we spend on
educational issues rather than side issues,” Ecker said. “We’ve overcome
our differences without turmoil.”
He said his “partnerships for education philosophy” has sown the seeds of
peace in the district.
“I’ve always tried to build links and ties to different constituencies in
the district,” Ecker said. “It gives us greater ability to overcome
problems.”
FYI
WHO: Mark Ecker, Fountain Valley School District superintendent
AGE: 50
MARITAL STATUS: Married, two children
EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree from UCLA, master’s from Cal State
Fullerton, doctorate from U.S. International University in San Diego
HOBBIES: Reading, racquetball and music
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