Showing posts with label search. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Four candidates revealed for Franklin Public Schools Superintendent

Reporting via Twitter for the special School Committee meeting rescheduled due to the snowstorm on Tuesday, Mar 14, 2017.

Four candidates scheduled for interviews on Friday, March 17

(not in any special order, assuming my spelling of their name is accurate)

  1. John Marcus
  2. Peter Light
  3. Jay Cummings
  4. Sara Ahern


(be sure to scroll within the Storify widget to review all the entries)



Sunday, March 5, 2017

Superintendent Search - Meet the Candidates - March 20

The Franklin School Committee has reopened the search for the superintendent of schools to replace the outgoing superintendent, Dr. Maureen Sabolinski, who is retiring after serving eight years in that position.

Please join us on Monday evening, March 20 at 6:30 in the town council chambers (second floor of the Franklin Municipal Building, 355 East Central Street) to meet the finalists. 

The finalists have not yet been named, but once they are announced their resumes will be posted on the Franklin School Committee website. Citizens who attend the forum will be invited to complete a survey providing input on each candidate.

We greatly value your input as citizens of Franklin.

Franklin High School - one of the 10 schools in the District
Franklin High School - one of the 10 schools in the District

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Re-opened Superintendent Search Timeline

As reported earlier this week, the School Committee voted to re-open the search for the next Superintendent. The job was to be re-posted the next day and the remaining key milestones leading to a decision by April 4 are as follows:


  • Advertise the Position of Superintendent  = Feb 8 to 28, 2017
  • Presentation of slate of candidates to School Committee = March 14, 2017
  • Interviews with School Committee and 4 non-voting members = March 17, 2017
  • Candidate visits to Franklin = March 20 to 24, 2017
  • School Committee visits (candidate district(s)) = March 27 to 31, 2017
  • School Committee meeting to select next Superintendent = April 4, 2017


In case you missed the decision, the meeting recording is available for replay here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2017/02/school-superintendent-search-starts.html

HYA representative discussing the new timeline with the School Committee
HYA representative discussing the new timeline with the School Committee

The position has been posted on the web
https://ecragroup.com/job/superintendent-franklin-ma/

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

School Superintendent Search starts again

This special School Committee meeting was called to cover the discussion and decision on the School Superintendent search process. The Committee voted 7-0 to re-open the process as the two final candidates were not a 'good fit'.



Randy from HYA talks with the School Committee
Randy from HYA talks with the School Committee


My notes during the meeting were posted via Twitter and recaptured here


Tuesday, January 31, 2017

"the community support has to be there"

From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:
"Local residents were invited Monday evening to meet the candidates vying to be the next leader of the school district. 
More than 20 members of the public came to ask questions of the three finalists for the superintendent position: Blackstone-Millville Assistant Superintendent David Thomson, Chelmsford Assistant Superintendent Linda Hirsch and Weymouth Assistant Superintendent Susan Kustka. 
The candidates were each asked about moving high school start times in light of data showing that teens perform better with a later start. 
Hirsch stressed the importance of researching the change, suggesting a committee of stakeholders examine the issue."

Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170130/franklin-community-meets-superintendent-candidates


  • The audio from the Forum can be found here

http://www.franklinmatters.org/2017/01/franklin-schools-superintendent-search.html


  • Franklin MAtters quick notes from the Forum can be found here

http://www.franklinmatters.org/2017/01/school-superintendent-search-forum.html

Susan Kustka is introduced by Vanessa Bilello
Susan Kustka is introduced by Vanessa Bilello

Monday, January 30, 2017

Franklin Schools: Superintendent Search Forum - Jan 30, 2017 (audio)

The audio recording of the Superintendent Search Forum conducted by the Franklin (MA) School Committee on Monday, Jan 30, 2017.





Linda Hirsch resume
http://franklinschool.vt-s.net/Pages/FranklinCom_News/0252F367-000F8513.0/L%20Hirsch%20RESUME.pdf

Susan Kustka resume
http://franklinschool.vt-s.net/Pages/FranklinCom_News/0252F367-000F8513.2/SKustka-Resume.pdf

David Thomson resume
http://franklinschool.vt-s.net/Pages/FranklinCom_News/0252F367-000F8513.1/D%20Thomson%20Resume.pdf


My notes from the session can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2017/01/school-superintendent-search-forum.html

----    ----    ----
This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but I can't do it alone. I can use your help.
How can you help?
  • If you like this, please tell your friends and neighbors.
  • If you don't like this, please let me know.

Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements.
Thank you for listening.
For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.org/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com

The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana"  c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission

I hope you enjoy!
subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters on iTunes
subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters on iTunes

Monday, January 23, 2017

Superintendent Search Public Forum - Jan 30, 2017

The Franklin School Committee along with four individuals representing school principals, town officials, teachers, and parents has narrowed the superintendent search down to three candidates: Dr. Linda Hirsch, Ms. Susan Kutska and Dr. David Thomson. 

To be as inclusive as possible we are encouraging citizens to meet the candidates and bring your questions and concerns! Beginning at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, January 30, the three candidates will be available in thirty minute time slots to address those questions/issues. 

Your input is valued and appreciated:


When: 
Monday evening, January 30 from 6:30 p.m to 8:00 p.m.

Where: 
Town Council Chambers
Franklin Municipal Building
Second Floor, 355 East Central Street



Horace Mann/Oak St early in the morning before school opens
Horace Mann/Oak St early in the morning before school opens

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Superintendent Search narrows to 4 Candidates

The Franklin School Committee is progressing as they continue the process of seeking to replace Superintendent, Dr. Maureen Sabolinski who is retiring in June 2017.

The Committee hired the national consulting firm of Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates to assist them in the search. HYA was able to generate 57 applicants for the position.

From this number, they recommended 4 semifinalists to be interviewed by the search committee. The 4 semifinalists chosen are:

  • Linda Hirsch, Ed.D.
  • David Thompson, Ed.D.
  • Kimberly Shaver-Hood, Ed.D.
  • Susan Kustka


Joining the search committee for these interviews will be 4 representatives of the Franklin Community:

  • Sarah Mulcahy, Parent
  • Tom Mercer, Town Council
  • Paul Peri, Franklin High School Principal
  • Donna Grady, Franklin Teachers Association


The Search committee will interview the semi-finalists on January 19 at 9:30 AM. At the Franklin Municipal Building in the Council Chamber (2nd Floor). 

The public is invited to observe these interviews. Next steps in the superintendent search will be developed after these interviews are complete.


sunrise over Spruce Pond
sunrise over Spruce Pond

Thursday, December 15, 2016

In the News: 46 superintendent candidates; student held without bail

From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:

"The school district has received 46 applications for its superintendent position, officials revealed this week. 
School Committee Chairman Kevin O'Malley, speaking at Tuesday night's committee meeting, gave an update on the process, saying he hopes the search will end early in 2017. The district is looking to replace current Superintendent Maureen Sabolinski, who will be retiring at the end of the school year. 
O'Malley said the district's search consultant - Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates - reported the applicant figure as of earlier that day. He indicated that he was pleased that there was high interest in the position."

Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20161214/franklin-receives-46-applicants-for-superintendent-position

The report from HYA defining what they believe to be the profile of the new Superintendent can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2016/12/the-leadership-profile-for-franklin.html


Franklin High School
Franklin High School



"A Tri-County Regional Vocational Technical High School student was ordered held without bail in Wrentham District Court Wednesday for charges that he allegedly threatened to "shoot up the school." 
Julius Willis, 18, of 503 Ellis Road in North Attleborough, pleaded not guilty to charges of threatening to commit a crime, making a threat that caused serious public alarm, disturbing a school, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. Judge Emogene Johnson Smith ordered Willis held without bail pending a dangerousness hearing on Dec. 22. 
Franklin Police Lt. Mark Manocchio wrote in an affidavit that police were called to the school at about 11 a.m. on Tuesday for reported threats."

Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20161214/tri-county-student-accused-of-making-school-shooting-threats

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

The Leadership Profile for the Franklin Schools Superintendent Search

Hello

Attached is the Franklin Leadership Profile developed by HYA, the consultant firm hired for the Superintendent Search for the Franklin Public Schools.





You can also find this on the Schools Town of Franklin webpage
http://franklindistrict.vt-s.net/Pages/FranklinDistrict_News/0251815B-000F8513

Franklin High School
Franklin High School

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Your input looked for to help develop the leadership profile of the next Franklin (MA) Superintendent of Schools

Dear Sir/Madam:

The Franklin School Committee has begun the process of selecting the next Superintendent of Schools in Franklin. To facilitate this important process, the Committee has enlisted the firm of Hazard, Young and Attea Associates, a national consulting firm. A critical first step in the selection process is to develop a profile of desired leadership characteristics based on feedback from the community.

The Franklin School Committee would like to cordially invite you to offer your feedback to help inform them in this phase of the selection process. This will be invaluable in developing the leadership profile of the next Superintendent of Schools.

If you would like to offer your feedback about the desired leadership characteristics of the next Superintendent of Schools, please follow the link below to a brief survey. This survey will be open until November 15, 2016.

http://ecrasurvey.com/franklin


Thank you for your interest and support

The Franklin School Committee
HYA Associates

help develop the leadership profile of the next Franklin (MA) Superintendent of Schools
help develop the leadership profile of the next Franklin (MA) Superintendent of Schools

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Real time reporting: Superintendent Search - MASC

2. Guests/Presentations
a. MASC Superintendent Search - Jim Hardy 


technology reason, not glamourous for missing last meeting
he had added to his calendar but for 2017, not 2016

looks to help identify the skill set being looked for
survey and focus groups used to solicit input from the various stakeholder groups
utilize national in kind advertising through membership in national organizations they do use mailing to help attract some candidates; mailed to all superintendents in New England
recommendations on the charge from the School Committee to the search committee
size of the search committee, 11-13
number of candidates to bring for decision, no less than 3, no more than 5
once candidates get to the School Committee, the applications are public records
timeline backs of from the desired start date
interview with candidate, public portion, 
his job is to ensure a fair and equitable process
at the end of the day, it is nice to know that everyone is behind the choice
the optimum outcome is that it is a real hard choice among three great candidates
model contracts available, legal advice is available
the range has already been announced, so most of the negotiation would be around the fringe benefits

Dorothy Presser would be the key as this is her region but it is your choice

we work for you, if you want me, I would still have folks help each other out

Q - are you advising that we have a search committee?
A - if you have a number of stakeholders then they have a vested interest in the selection. (2) the only other reason is that you can get a preliminary interview without public knowledge of the candidates.

only 2 searches done by consultant at a time, there is a process to keep things separate. searches are specific to the district

need to be careful to not let the hiring guidelines become skewed due to a 'issue of the day'
the priorities should be aligned by the group that the item rose from

Lisa Trainor, HR for Franklin
question on the nature of the committees and the pre-interview process

narrow 30 down to 10, then down to 3
group review of the candidates for initial interview
done by consensus
there is a spreadsheet with a rubric built on the identified qualifications for the ideal candidate

the questions should outline what the scoring or answers were looked for

did not have a search committee not deliver a candidate

does not consider a search successful unless there is a renewal for the contract

one year notice for non-renewal
one search in 20 years did not renew, other than retires


Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Real time reporting: 2nd Search Firm - ECRA Group

2. Guests/Presentations
a. Superintendent’s Search Process – Presentations 

  1. NESDEC - Dr. Art Bettencourt (covered earlier in meeting)
  2. MASC- Jim Hardy (not yet present)
  3. ECRA Group – John Connolly
high emotional intelligence is a key to leadership
3 times I tried to make a left turn and all three times I was waived on
a quality of culture of the community

was superintendent in NY and TX
his joy and career has been matching good choices and good people
my track record is good, close to 60 searches
Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, Lexington and others

my greatest skill is recruiting people
the difference between an applicant and the candidate
the applicant is one who applies, the candidate is one who wants the job

superintendent in Lexington
had a good candidate lined up, took five phone calls before she became one of the five final list and she was selected and still there today

document delivered with proposal to committee

the firm did over 1,000 searches nationally

anytime I do a search, a piece of me stays within the district
I work for you as the School COmmittee
I have equal obligation to the people I recruit

planning meeting, criteria development
focus groups, groups teachers, business people

  1. what is the strengths of the district
  2. what is the area of concern for the district
  3. what are the major characteristics of the new superintendent

I talked about emotional development, I did a search in Virginia Beach and the district has had me back for several summers to do seminars

courage, the ability to make tough decisions

there are two types of ego, one is the personal ego, the other is the one who basks in the success of the group

leadership profile report a critical component
from the report, what are the priorities, those are my marching orders

there are a hundred people in y group, we use our network
employ a national network, you need the opportunity to draw from outside

90% are still in their position after 5 years






Real time Reporting: School Committee - Aug 23, 2016

Present: Bilello, Scofield, Bergen, Douglas, O'Malley, Schultz, Jewel
Absent: none


1. Routine Business
Citizen’s Comments

  • none


Review of Agenda

Minutes: I recommend approval of the minutes from the August 9, 2016 School Committee Meeting.

  • motion to approve, seconded, passed 7-0


Payment of Bills Dr. O’Malley
Payroll Mrs. Douglas
Correspondence:

  • None


2. Guests/Presentations
a. Superintendent’s Search Process – Presentations 

  1. NESDEC - Dr. Art Bettencourt, Executive Director
The New England School Development Council   http://www.nesdec.org/

based in New ENgland but capable of searching nationally
will search to fulfill the needs of the committee/community

will work to develop a 'leadership' profile of what the needs should be based upon the input from all the stakeholders

do not recirculate candidates from one search to another, all targeted marketing and searches

New England based firm with national recognition
school districts vary culturally

Dr Carolyn Burke, Dr Sally Diaz

understanding that there is a sharing between the municipal side and schools
have had stability in the leadership area

What do candidates want? There are three things in particular
  1. want a school committee that they can work with
  2. quality of life, schools and resources for family
  3. salary considerations

Q - how do you go about learning about us?
a great deal of talking with the teachers, staff and community via focus groups, surveys, etc.
what are the strengths, the weaknesses, what is the culture of the community


Q - how do you help us abide by the screening process rules?
we have had success working in all the communities
we have not had any issues, working with the open meeting law is part of our normal course of business

ask the constituent groups to nominate a representative of the group
it shows trust in their judgment, not always done that way

we will walk you through the entire process
we know the law, we have done the searches, we will work closely with you

6 focus groups usually fills the bill
we will also do individual stakeholders: town administrators, police chief, planners, etc. 

the timeline for the search takes about 120 days
electronic advertising, special bulletin placements also available
timing of the focus groups, mixed or single
how your going to put together the screening committee
the application process, and invitations for recommendations

how do you want to handle the candidates, individual visits, phone screens, a mix of them
this is your search, we will guide you
want to design the search that is based upon your standards

NESDEC uses their network, leveraging their individual connections, who would be a good fit for the opportunity, would also use LinkedIn, it is becoming more of a resource for educational searches

there is a warranty
1 - we are with you until a choice is made
2 - if your superintendent leaves for any other reason, we would come in to do it again for no consulting fee (just expenses)

Q - on the 'regional' candidates
some states have very different budgetary process, have had successful candidates from NY, NJ, Florida and Ohio. You need to look carefully at those candidates, it may not be the location but the operation may be alike. Folks from New England may be looking to return.

we are seeing principals moving to superintendents spots

this is the first of three presentations
there are two more coming before making a vote to choice one to go forward with


Tuesday, November 29, 2011

What is turquoise?

What to find out something? Google it.



It is fascinating when you stop and look back at how search has evolved.

Google search is enabled on this site to help you find things once you are here. More than half of you have arrived here via a search result!

Welcome. I hope what you find here is useful.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Insight on how Google brings you here


A good number of folks type "Franklin Matters" in Google (and other search engines) and end up coming here.

A screen shot of what I saw with "Franklin Matters" in Google today:



How does Google do this? Google engineer Matt Cutts explains in this brief video.




You can also use Google search to focus within Franklin Matters by using the search box on the top right corner of the this page.

I'll continue to create good content on what matters to me and you about Franklin so you can find what you need here.


PS - My thanks to Geoffrey Zub for giving Franklin Matters a Google+

PPS - Try typing in "school business administrator interview questions" and you also will likely end up on Franklin Matters. That was posted on March 12, 2008 and has been the #1 search term to bring folks here since. Folks from all around the English speaking world arrive here looking for those results. The interview questions were used by the School Committee when they did the interview process that resulted in bringing on Miriam Goodman to the Finance Director position.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Better searching for just the recipe you need!

Google has some wonderful news to help find recipes for special days, to use specific ingredients, or even for how long it will take to prepare! This brief video shows how:





Yes, the Franklin Food Pantry is pulling together a set of recipes for publication on the web as well as in a cook book that would be a possible fund raiser for the Food Pantry. Google's search enhancements will make the recipes you create and share easier to find!

If you have a recipe or two you want to share, please let me know or contact Michelle Clay who has graciously volunteered to head up this effort for the Food Pantry.


Franklin, MA


Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Twitter search

The folks at Common Craft have released another great explanation video. This time they explain how searching Twitter makes the information more valuable.



This is another in the continuing series on Web 2.0 tools.

Thanks to the folks at Common Craft for helping to make this possible.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

"You can't just sit around at home"

If a layoff can happen to the president of the local Rotary chapter, it can happen to anyone.

"We're in a crisis," said Ken Masson, who heads the Merrimack Valley Rotary Club and lost his job in December, several months after his employer, Massbank Corp., was bought out by Eastern Bank Corp. "With 11 million people in the US without a job, going through hardships, that's a crisis."

Increasing unemployment across Greater Boston prompted the former service marketing director to call on his fellow Rotarians to consider a twist on one of their organization's core missions, vocational service, by helping out the laid-off workers in their own backyards.

"You think of Rotary coming to the rescue of people who have polio or need water in developing countries, but there are things we can do right here," Masson said.

You can continue reading the article in today's Boston Globe here.

Yes, being without a job can happen to anyone. For the job search notes that I have compiled from my own experience follow this link here. If you want to compare notes and network, please feel free to contact me via comment or email.