District makes two more principal moves
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH - The game of musical principals continues in
Newport-Mesa.
When the music stopped this week, Pam Coughlin, former principal of
Wilson Elementary School, landed in the principal’s chair at Mariners
Elementary School in Newport Beach.
Brooke Booth, formerly the principal of Newport Heights Elementary
School, took the vacant seat as the assistant principal at Corona del Mar
High School.
After 11 years as an elementary school principal, Booth was looking
for a career change and advancement by making the leap to secondary
education, said Jaime Castellanos, assistant superintendent of secondary
education.
“First of all, this is a really career enhancing move for me,” Booth
said. “I’m really looking forward to it. I’m always interested in making
changes, as I’ve been in this district for 30 years.”
These personnel moves mean nine schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District will have had a change in the top leadership positions
this year.
Principals from Adams, Killybrooke, Lincoln and Mariners elementary,
Ensign Intermediate and Costa Mesa and Newport Harbor high schools each
resigned from their respective positions this year.
The news of Coughlin’s appointment to Mariners comes as a great relief
to parents who have seen five principals come and go in the span of 10
years.
“I think everyone is very much in favor of her taking leadership at
Mariners,” said Ann Ramser, one of many parents who met with Coughlin
since last week. “I think people asked some very fair questions, but they
were very direct. They asked all the questions that needed to be asked
and she came across as a good and solid person.”
But while the Mariners community rejoices at Coughlin’s decision to
change schools, it leaves Wilson in the lurch with less then a week
before school is scheduled to begin.
“We are really sad -- my kids are sad,” said Reina Martinez, PTA
president at Wilson. “We’re very worried and we don’t really have any
information about [Coughlin’s leaving]. We’re very surprised and we
didn’t know when or why she left.”
Coughlin however, said she believes Mariners will be a better fit for
her.
“I do not speak Spanish and I was finding it difficult to communicate
with parents at Wilson,” she said. “That was a piece of the principalship
that I really missed. I think one of my strengths lies in working with
parents.”
Another area of expertise Coughlin said she would be able to better
use at Mariners was her extensive background in the Gifted and Talented
Education program.
Although she does worry how her departure will affect the Wilson
community, Coughlin said Cathi Peirson, the former principal of Pomona
Elementary School, will be an excellent acting principal until a
permanent one can be found.
“I’m concerned because they don’t have a principal, but they do have
an interim principal, so I feel like they have been left in very good
hands,” she said.
The search for principals for both Wilson and Newport Heights is well
underway by Newport-Mesa Supt. Robert Barbot.
Of the 25 applications received for the elementary school principal
positions, Barbot said nine of those applicants are contenders.
What has become an alarming trend here in Newport-Mesa, however, may
be a larger problem. An increasing number of school districts across the
country have reported a shortage of principals this year.
“There’s no question that statewide there is a problem with a shortage
of administrators,” Barbot said. “Not the number of principals, but the
percentage of principals to the proportion of schools.”
In Los Angeles Unified School District, 38 of 660 principal positions
remain vacant this year.
“Currently we have 38 schools where temporary principals are filling
in while a permanent principal can be found,” said Shel Erlich, spokesman
for the district.
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