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Superintendent (education)
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In the American education system, a superintendent or superintendent of schools is an administrator of a school district, a local government body overseeing public schools. All school principals in a respective school district report to the superintendent.
The role and powers of the superintendent vary among areas according to Sharp and Walter, a popularly held opinion is that "the most important role of the board of education is to hire its superintendent."[1]
History
[edit]The first education laws in the United States were enacted in the colonial era, when various New England colonies passed ordinances directing towns "to choose men to manage the important affairs of learning, such as deciding local taxes, hiring teachers, setting wages, and determining the length of the school year."[2] The persons responsible were frequently selectmen who had additional government responsibilities.[3] Boston established America's first permanent school committee in 1721; this became America's first school board. Massachusetts and some other regions retain the term school committee, but school board and board of education are the more common terms nationwide, and a variety of other labels have been used.[3] In 1986, about 95 percent of school board members were elected, with the rest appointed by town boards, mayors, or others.[4]
In early America, school board members handled the day-to-day administration of schools without the need for a superintendent. By the 1830s, however, the increasing numbers of students, as well as the consolidation of one-room schoolhouses into larger districts, led districts to begin appointing the first superintendents. Buffalo, New York, became the first location to appoint a superintendent, on June 9, 1837, with Louisville, Kentucky, following on July 31 of the same year.[4] Large cities, which had the greatest administrative needs, were the first to appoint superintendents, but as schools consolidated into districts, the practice of appointing a superintendent became more popular.[4]
A major event in the history of education in the United States was the "Kalamazoo school case" (Stuart v. School District No. 1 of the Village of Kalamazoo).[4] In 1858, Kalamazoo, Michigan established its first high school, and the following year, the Michigan Legislature enacted legislature authorizing the election of school districts and the establishment of high schools funded by local taxes.[5] In January 1873, three Kalamazoo property owners filed a lawsuit challenging the law.[5] In a unanimous decision of the Michigan Supreme Court in 1874 written by the prominent Justice Thomas M. Cooley, the law was upheld.[5] This decision led to a dramatic increase in the number of high schools operating both in Michigan and other states, which led to an increase in the number of superintendents.[4][5]
Early superintendents tended to focus on instruction, with "overall fiscal affairs, school building construction, and maintenance" remaining under school district control, becoming normal responsibilities of superintendents only in the early twentieth century.[6] By the early twentieth century, superintendents emphasized business affairs.[7] Important leaders in American education at the time were George D. Strayer, Ellwood P. Cubberley, and Edward C. Elliott, who all wrote doctoral dissertations on education finance at Columbia University in the first decade of the 20th century.[7] Cubberley served as superintendent in San Diego and later taught at Stanford University, Strayer taught at Teachers College, Columbia University, and Elliott taught at the University of Wisconsin.[7]
In 1911, the idea of the superintendent as a separate professional emerged.[7] The emergence of the superintendency was linked to the adoption of a business organizational model in education.[7] Beginning in 1914, Columbia and other universities began to teach courses on educational administration, including school finance, business methods, budgeting, and organization.[7] Cubberley wrote a book in 1916 on this "New Profession" and emphasized the role of superintendent as chief executive of schools.[8] In 1914, the US Commissioner of Education wrote that the US was moving "unmistakably in the direction of a profession of educational administration as distinct from teaching."[9] By 1925, journals and books on educational administration had adopted a view of superintendents as executives, as Cubberley had advocated.[8]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Sharp & Walter 2004, p. 1.
- ^ Sharp & Walter 2004, p. 2.
- ^ a b Sharp & Walter 2004, pp. 2–3.
- ^ a b c d e Sharp & Walter 2004, p. 3.
- ^ a b c d Timmerman, Elizabeth (2012). "The Kalamazoo School Case: Supporting High School Education". Kalamazoo, Michigan: Kalamazoo Public Library. Archived from the original on June 8, 2015. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ Sharp & Walter 2004, pp. 3–4.
- ^ a b c d e f Sharp & Walter 2004, p. 4.
- ^ a b Sharp & Walter 2004, p. 5.
- ^ Sharp & Walter 2004, pp. 4–5.
Bibliography
[edit]- Sharp, William L.; Walter, James K. (2004). The School Superintendent: The Profession and the Person (2nd ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Education. Retrieved June 6, 2015.
Superintendent (education)
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Role
Core Responsibilities
The superintendent serves as the chief executive officer of a public school district, responsible for executing policies established by the elected school board while overseeing the district's operational, instructional, and fiscal functions to support student learning and district goals.[16][5] This role demands translating board directives into actionable plans, ensuring alignment with state and federal education standards, and maintaining accountability for district performance metrics such as graduation rates and standardized test outcomes.[17][18] In instructional leadership, the superintendent directs curriculum development, professional development for educators, and evaluation of teaching effectiveness to improve academic outcomes, often using data from assessments to identify needs and allocate resources accordingly.[19][5] They supervise principals and central office staff, recommend personnel hires and terminations to the board, and foster environments that prioritize evidence-based practices over unverified initiatives.[20][2] Administratively, core duties include managing daily district operations, such as facilities maintenance, transportation, and technology integration, while ensuring compliance with legal requirements like special education mandates under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and civil rights laws.[6][19] The superintendent also handles crisis response, including safety protocols for events like active shooter incidents or natural disasters, drawing on empirical risk assessments rather than precautionary overreactions.[2] Financial oversight constitutes a primary responsibility, involving preparation of the annual budget—often exceeding tens of millions in larger districts—for board approval, procurement of grants, and efficient allocation of funds to maximize educational impact without wasteful spending.[5][21] This includes advocating for funding through legislative channels, negotiating labor contracts with unions, and conducting audits to verify fiscal integrity.[20] Stakeholder engagement requires the superintendent to communicate transparently with parents, community members, and local government entities, reporting progress on key performance indicators and soliciting input to refine district strategies, thereby building public support for reforms grounded in measurable results.[16][18]Relationship to Stakeholders
The superintendent serves as the chief executive officer of the school district, reporting directly to the elected school board, which holds ultimate accountability for hiring, evaluating, and potentially dismissing the superintendent based on performance in implementing board policies and achieving district goals.[22] Effective relationships with the board emphasize open communication, mutual respect, and defined roles, where the board sets strategic direction and the superintendent provides operational expertise and data-driven recommendations to foster student success.[23][24] In interactions with teachers and district staff, superintendents typically engage indirectly through principals and administrative teams, focusing on professional development, policy enforcement, and collective bargaining to build trust and align efforts with instructional goals.[25] Surveys of educators indicate that superintendents who prioritize transparent feedback mechanisms and collaborative decision-making on issues like curriculum implementation report higher staff morale and retention rates, with trust levels correlating to improved classroom outcomes.[26] Labor relations remain a key tension point, as superintendents negotiate contracts amid fiscal constraints, often facing pushback from unions representing over 3.2 million public school employees nationwide as of 2023.[27] Superintendents engage parents and community members through public forums, advisory committees, and outreach initiatives to garner support for bond measures and policy changes, recognizing that community buy-in influences funding stability—districts with active parent involvement see up to 15% higher voter approval for levies, per analyses of ballot data from 2018-2022.[28][29] These relationships demand proactive communication to address concerns like academic performance and safety, though accountability flows primarily through the board rather than direct public oversight, leading to criticisms in low-trust environments where superintendents rotate frequently—averaging 5-7 years tenure amid stakeholder dissatisfaction.[26][30] Broader stakeholders, including state education departments and federal regulators, impose compliance requirements on superintendents for standards like standardized testing and equity mandates under laws such as the Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015, with non-compliance risking funding cuts exceeding $1 billion annually across districts in fiscal year 2023.[18] Superintendents thus balance local stakeholder input with these external accountabilities, often mediating conflicts to maintain operational autonomy while advancing measurable student achievement metrics.[31]Historical Development
19th-Century Origins
The role of the school superintendent emerged in the United States during the mid-19th century amid the expansion of urban public education systems driven by industrialization, immigration, and the common school movement. Prior to this, education was largely decentralized, with small district schools managed by local committees or part-time clerks lacking specialized oversight. The position was first formally established in 1837 in Buffalo, New York, and Louisville, Kentucky, where growing enrollments necessitated a dedicated administrator to coordinate multiple schools, standardize curricula, and enforce attendance.[3][32] Early superintendents focused on administrative efficiency and uniformity, visiting schools to evaluate teachers, procure supplies, and address fiscal irregularities in fragmented systems. In cities like Philadelphia and Boston, the role evolved from ad hoc committees by the 1840s, reflecting reformers' emphasis on professionalizing education to accommodate rising pupil numbers—Buffalo's enrollment, for instance, surged from under 1,000 in 1836 to over 4,000 by 1845. This development aligned with state-level initiatives, such as Horace Mann's tenure as Massachusetts' secretary of the Board of Education starting in 1837, which promoted centralized supervision but primarily at the state rather than district level.[33][4] By the 1850s, the superintendency spread to larger municipalities, with responsibilities expanding to include teacher certification and building maintenance amid debates over public funding. The National Association of School Superintendents, formed in 1865, marked professionalization, convening educators to share practices on issues like graded schooling and moral instruction. However, adoption was uneven; rural areas lagged until the late century, as urban centers grappled with heterogeneous populations requiring systematic governance over what had been informal, community-led instruction. By 1900, over 90% of cities with populations exceeding 8,000 employed superintendents, solidifying the role as essential to scalable public education.[34][35]20th-Century Expansion
In the early 20th century, the superintendent's role shifted from instructional oversight to a managerial focus influenced by the efficiency movement and scientific management principles, emphasizing budget control, personnel administration, and operational standardization amid urban growth and compulsory schooling laws.[36] By 1900, most urban districts employed superintendents, who adopted business-like practices to handle expanding systems serving immigrant populations and industrial workforces.[36] This period marked professionalization, with the National Association of School Superintendents—founded in 1865—evolving into the American Association of School Administrators (AASA) by the 1930s, promoting standardized training and ethical norms.[34] Superintendents gained delegated authority from lay boards, functioning as chief executives with long tenures and civic influence in growing districts managing thousands of employees and substantial tax revenues.[3] School district consolidation accelerated this expansion, reducing the number of U.S. districts from over 130,000 in the early 1930s to fewer than 20,000 by mid-century through state incentives for mergers, transportation funding, and economies of scale during the Great Depression and post-World War II era.[37] This restructuring increased average district size sixteenfold by the late 20th century, necessitating superintendents skilled in large-scale coordination rather than small rural oversight.[38] Enrollment surges—from 25.7 million students in 1940 to 45.9 million by 1970, driven by the baby boom and suburbanization—further amplified demands for resource allocation, facility expansion, and curriculum adaptation to secondary education growth under the high school movement.[36] Superintendents assumed broader responsibilities, including lobbying for state funding and integrating vocational programs via federal acts like the Smith-Hughes Act of 1917.[36] By the mid-20th century, role expectations incorporated democratic leadership (1930s–1950s), focusing on community relations and political advocacy, followed by an applied social science orientation (1950s–1970s) that applied empirical research and behavioral theories, bolstered by foundation grants exceeding $7 million for leadership studies.[36] The number of superintendents peaked at over 35,000 by the 1960s, reflecting widespread adoption in consolidated systems, though licensing requirements emerged, with 82% of states mandating graduate education by the 1980s.[3][36] These developments transformed superintendents into multifaceted administrators navigating federal interventions, such as the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which introduced accountability and equity mandates.[3]Post-2000 Reforms and Shifts
The enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) in 2001 marked a pivotal shift toward heightened accountability for school superintendents, mandating annual testing in reading and mathematics for grades 3-8 and once in high school, with consequences for schools failing to meet adequate yearly progress targets.[39] Superintendents assumed expanded responsibilities in developing district-wide improvement plans, reallocating resources to underperforming schools, and intervening through restructuring options like reopening schools under new leadership or converting to charters, which intensified their focus on data analysis and instructional oversight.[40] This reform elevated superintendents' roles in centralizing curriculum alignment and teacher professional development to address achievement gaps, though surveys indicated many viewed NCLB's mandates as imposing undue pressure without sufficient flexibility, with limited perceived impact on broader educational leadership development.[41] [42] Concomitant with NCLB, post-2000 reforms promoted data-driven decision-making as a core superintendent competency, requiring districts to use student performance metrics for budgeting, staffing, and program evaluation to meet federal and state accountability standards.[43] Superintendents increasingly led the integration of assessment data into strategic planning, fostering cultures of continuous improvement through tools like formative assessments and dashboards, which empirical studies linked to targeted interventions but also to challenges in overemphasizing tested subjects at the expense of others.[44] In urban districts, this era saw the proliferation of mayoral control models, starting with New York City's 2002 overhaul where the mayor appoints the schools chancellor (a superintendent equivalent) and controls the budget, aiming to streamline decision-making and enhance accountability amid chronic underperformance.[45] Similar shifts in cities like Chicago (1995, expanded post-2000) and Boston reduced elected board influence, positioning superintendents as executive appointees accountable to mayoral priorities, though evaluations showed mixed student outcome gains and recent reversals, such as Chicago's phase-out by 2027 due to governance critiques.[46] [47] The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) of 2015, replacing NCLB, devolved greater authority to states and districts, alleviating some federal micromanagement while requiring superintendents to collaborate on state-designed accountability frameworks incorporating multiple measures beyond test scores, such as graduation rates and school climate indicators.[48] This shift empowered superintendents with flexibility in identifying and supporting low-performing schools via evidence-based interventions, though it maintained reporting obligations and emphasized equitable resource distribution, prompting districts to refine local data systems for compliance by the 2017-18 school year.[49] Overall, these reforms have trended toward performance-oriented leadership, with superintendents navigating competitive pressures from charter expansions and choice policies, evidenced by increased tenure instability in high-accountability environments but sustained emphasis on empirical outcomes over procedural compliance.[50]Qualifications and Selection Process
Required Education and Certifications
In the United States, formal requirements for school superintendents are established by state departments of education, with no uniform national standard. All states mandate certification or licensure specific to the superintendent role, typically requiring completion of an approved preparation program at a regionally accredited institution, alongside demonstrated administrative experience. For instance, Washington's Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction requires a master's degree, either completion of a state-approved superintendent preparation program or three years of full-time K-12 administrative experience, and passage of relevant assessments.[51] A master's degree serves as the minimum educational threshold in most jurisdictions, often in educational leadership, administration, or a closely related field, reflecting the need for advanced knowledge in policy, finance, and instruction. Doctoral degrees, such as an Ed.D. or Ph.D., are frequently preferred for larger or urban districts, with surveys indicating that over 70% of superintendents hold such credentials, though not always required by statute. Texas, for example, requires a master's degree from an accredited university as a prerequisite for principal certification, which forms the foundation for superintendent endorsement, plus additional graduate-level coursework in superintendent-specific standards.[52][53] Superintendent certification programs emphasize competencies in district-level governance, legal compliance, and strategic planning, usually entailing 24-36 credit hours beyond the master's level. Maryland's State Department of Education, for Superintendent II certification, demands a master's or higher degree, 27 months of satisfactory teaching or central office experience, and either an approved preparation program or a valid out-of-state equivalent certificate. These state-driven frameworks aim to ensure candidates possess both theoretical expertise and practical acumen, though empirical studies on certification's impact on district performance remain mixed, with some analyses questioning whether advanced degrees correlate strongly with improved student outcomes.[54][55]Professional Experience and Competencies
Candidates for the superintendency in U.S. public school districts typically accumulate 10 to 15 years of progressive experience in education, beginning with classroom teaching and advancing to administrative positions. Most states mandate a minimum of three years of teaching or related experience, often paired with three to five years in school-level administration, such as principal or assistant principal roles, to qualify for superintendent certification.[56] [57] For instance, Pennsylvania requires six years of teaching with at least three in leadership capacities, while Arizona stipulates three years of full-time administrative experience.[58] [59] This sequence ensures familiarity with daily instructional demands and site-based management before district-scale oversight. Empirical analyses of superintendent backgrounds reveal that over two-thirds of new appointees have prior principal experience, though only about one-third have served as assistant superintendents, highlighting a common bottleneck at the building level.[60] Essential competencies for superintendents center on strategic leadership and operational efficacy, as delineated in professional evaluation frameworks. The American Association of School Administrators (AASA) identifies six core domains:- Instructional Leadership: Communicating a clear vision, overseeing curriculum alignment, selecting qualified personnel, and integrating technology to enhance teaching effectiveness.[61]
- Organizational Management: Ensuring safe facilities, managing board relations, allocating resources efficiently, and implementing personnel policies.[61]
- Planning and Assessment: Employing data for decisions, formulating strategic plans, and evaluating instructional programs against measurable outcomes.[61]
- Communications and Community Relations: Building trust through open channels, addressing diverse stakeholder needs, and promoting district initiatives.[61]
- Policy and Governance: Developing compliant policies, advising school boards, and maintaining operational integrity.[61]
- Professionalism: Upholding ethical standards, pursuing continuous development, and contributing to the broader education field.[61]
