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I have personally interviewed and been directly involved in the
hiring of hundreds of teachers, and quite a few administrators.
Hiring a football coach, though, was a new experience for me.
Actually, I wasn’t closely involved until the field of 49
applicants had been narrowed to four finalists. Our Athletic
Director, Jim Sherard, working closely with the high school
principal, Paul Waller, led that process. And last week we named Doc
Gamble, the coach at Withrow High School, as our new varsity head
football coach.
There was certainly a great deal of community interest in the
selection. I believe people expect us to be the experts when it
comes to hiring teachers, and we have worked hard over many years to
develop a very structured process to ensure we are recruiting the
best teaching candidates and then hiring the individuals with the
greatest likelihood of being successful in the classroom. But when
it comes to football, everybody’s an expert (except me…I admit it).
As the different rounds of interviews were going on, our fans were
offering lots of input, as well as making predictions about the
outcome.
Some fans were frustrated when it seemed the process was going
slowly. But there were reasons why it took the time it did. All four
of the finalists are outstanding football coaches. But we were also
hiring a full-time employee. That meant four sets of discussions
about how the total employment situation for that individual might
be structured. It needed to be a job that served the needs of the
district and its students, and was also a good match for that
person’s experience and career goals.
I’d like to explain what I mean by “total employment situation.”
The football coaching job is actually a supplemental contract to the
person’s full-time employment with our district. And a coach
frequently has other supplemental contracts as well, connected to
other sports or other duties. As we talked with all four finalists,
and discussed what that total set of contracts might look like for
each one of them, those discussions took a lot of time.
We also did a lot of work making reference checks and phone
calls. We had said at the outset that we were going to be prudent
and careful with the process, and we were.
I was very pleased we were able to hire one of the four
finalists. Doc is a terrific football coach. But he’ll be doing much
more for us than coaching football. His full-time job is Manager of
Student Services. He’ll be involved at the high school in student
attendance and tardies, detentions, building usage schedules, and
building security. (This is a new position, but not an increase in
the number of employees, because we restructured the duties of an
employee who was retiring.) Doc will also serve as assistant
athletic director, a position that had been vacant. Also, just for
the rest of this school year, he’ll supervise the school’s athletic
training facility. But we’ll need to find another person for that
position before football starts next season. As you can imagine,
he’s going to be very busy.
* * * * * * * *
I was honored that last week the Fairfield Board of Education
asked me to stay on as superintendent for three more years. We have
a wonderful school district in Fairfield, with a great staff and
10,000 energetic, enthusiastic kids. I am proud to be a part of
it.
Published in the Fairfield Echo, Jan. 24,
2008. |