In an event hosted by the DeKalb County Chamber of Commerce and Leadership DeKalb on March 27, 2013, Interim Superintendent Michael Thurmond shares his vision with Denis O'Hayer for revitalizing the school district and restoring full accreditation.
Denis O’Hayer
Many
 of you have known Michael Thurmond, if not as Interim Superintendent in
 the brief time he has held the job, certainly in many of the other jobs
 he has held.  He has been the state director of DFCS. Prior to that he 
was a state representative, former labor commissioner.  But he said the 
thing he's proudest of are author, historian, and a proud father of a 
daughter who somehow lost her way and is now in the media.  Please 
welcome DeKalb's Interim Superintendent, Michael Thurmond.
Michael Thurmond
Good Morning.
Denis O’Hayer [1:55]
We'll
 start just with a real tiny little question.  The accreditation process
 from SACS talks a lot about governance.  But one of the most important 
things, obviously, is to try to take what happens at the board level and
 bring it down into the classroom, or keep the focus on the classroom. 
 What's the link among governance, board, teaching, and then ultimately 
what goes on every day for every child in this county?
Michael Thurmond [2:33]
Great
 question.  First, I want to recognize the 4 members of our newly re 
constituted board.  Of course governance begins at the top.  But, as you
 really understand the definition and I think there was some confusion 
that when SACS mentioned the issue of governance in the DeKalb County 
School District, we focus almost exclusively on governance at the board 
level.  But, governance actually encompasses the entire organization. 
 It's how, not just board members interrelate to each other, but is how 
we relate and communicate with every person that works in the school 
district as well as all of our stake holders.  So, what we've done is 
taken a more holistic approach.  We're reaching out through the MLA 
governance center to interview various stake holders through out the 
district.  From the various communities, parents, teachers, with focus 
groups but also some parent groups that may not have been heard from. 
 We're also talking to students.  We're talking internally.  But the 
first thing we have to do is open up the lines of communication.  We 
have to be transparent.  And in order to govern effectively, and in the 
invocation this morning, I think the gentleman spoke best.  The first 
criteria is, in order to govern anyone first you must be willing to 
listen and you have to communicate the fact that you will respect the 
opinion of all people even those that may not necessarily disagree with.
Denis O’Hayer [4:00]
One
 of the things and Arnie mentioned the conversation I had with 
Oglethorp's president, Dr Lawrence Shawl.  It was yesterday, he brought 
up what we were just talking about.  The link between governance and 
student achievement and his argument was certainly the new board members
 will help with the governance and getting that going, but he's not sure
 how directly they can affect what goes on in the classroom.  DeKalb has
 tried to get off of an achievement plateaus, so how do you then put all
 of those together so that achievement goes up.  Listening is a start, 
but what specifically do you have in mind to work on what happens in the
 classroom.
Michael Thurmond
Well
 this board and myself has set improving academic achievement as a 
priority.  Resolving the issues with SACS is immediate.  The long term 
we have to focus on redirecting our focus, attention, and resources to 
improving academic performance in the classroom.  We do that through 
governance.  Number one, and hopefully, you will hire a Superintendent 
who is focused. And that has to be communicated through the senior 
management, two regional Superintendents, principals, then the people 
that they hire.  You set the model by, and one of the things that we're 
doing at the last board and even in my discussion, it's not just the 
compensation about SACS.  But it's about recognizing that number one, we
 have an extremely diverse student population.  But excepting and 
believing that every child given the opportunity can achieve and can 
learn.  It's about refocusing priorities and the agenda in that ???
Denis O’Hayer [5:42]
What
 about resources though, it's one thing to say OK we want the children 
to be, each child to believe that he or she can achieve.  How do you 
plan to dedicate the resources and can you move things around to do 
that, to get them more focused at the classroom level?
Michael Thurmond [6:00]
Well first, we have to get our fiscal house in order.
Denis O’Hayer
That's one of SACS' mandates.
Michael Thurmond
Right,
 and that should be one of our mandates irrespective of SACS. We've been
 granted the public trust.  That requires us to manage the resources 
that we have in a way that will support academic achievement and 
accomplishment in our classroom.  Obviously, we are suffering like every
 other school district cause of a lack of resources.  But that does not 
excuse us from taking advantage of the resources that we do have.  Think
 about it, the DeKalb property digest 6 years ago was about 27 billion 
dollars.  Today it's roughly about 18 billion dollars.  You and I know 
that the primary source of revenue of any local school district is ad 
valorem tax.  That's had an impact.  Also recognizing that the state of 
Georgia, facing budget challenges, has cut local funding by several 
billion dollars since the beginning of the recession.  This is a 
confluence of events that makes it extremely difficult to manage.  But 
we will not offer as an excuse what the state is doing or the state of 
the economy.  We have a corporation that actually oversees the 
expenditures of nearly $1 billion dollars.  $730 million general fund 
dollars.  We will do a better job of using the resources that we have to
 accomplish the goals that we set. I think we've lost our way at some 
point to be honest with you.  We've gotten caught up into the politics 
and to what I call the adult mess.  We've gotta refocus our attention 
from the adult mess and focus it on making sure we support the efforts 
of our students.
Denis O’Hayer [7:54]
Does
 that mean, specifically, moving resources from central office to 
classroom?  Or, is there enough really to make a difference there?  Or, 
at some point, do you have to, despite everything that this district has
 gone through and there is a timeline on the back of your program that 
gives you the recent history.  Do you go to the voters and say look 
we've lost property tax revenue.  We're going to have to ask for a tax 
increase.
Michael Thurmond [8:26]
I
 don't think we can do that until we first demonstrate to the public 
that we are properly managing the resources that we have. Then and only 
then will we be able to ask anyone to provide additional resources.  In 
many instances, we need more money, but money is not necessarily the 
issue. It's how we govern.  It's our principles and whether we stick 
with those principles.  We're eliminating right now a $16 million dollar
 deficit in the current fiscal year.  My CFO came to me shortly after I 
was appointed and stated that we think we are on track to significantly 
reduce the deficit this fiscal year.  But in order to be certain that we
 are moving in the right direction, he recommended, and I agree, to 
implement a hiring freeze across the district.  But, with a caveat.  The
 hiring freeze will not impact teachers or indirect/direct classroom 
instruction.  The hiring freeze is at the central office.  To me, that 
??? articulating to our employees and to the broader public that we are 
putting the classroom and teachers first.  Even if we don't have but one
 dollar, that dollar ought to be spent supporting our classrooms, 
supporting our teachers, and improving academic performance.
Denis O’Hayer [9:48]
Brings
 up a question that we got from the teacher point of view.  DeKalb, 
right now, is losing teachers to neighboring school districts.  We've 
had four years of furlough days in the system.  So, you've got to retain
 the teachers you have.  The experienced teachers.  Number one, do you 
have a plan to retain them?  And, number two, how do you evaluate the 
teachers you have to make sure you have the best ones?
Michael Thurmond [10:23]
Well
 that's an ongoing process.  And there were non renewals this year for 
some teachers who were not performing up to standard.  But that's true 
in any profession.  You will always have individuals, for whatever 
reason, who don't perform up to standards and you have to make those 
decisions.  But, at the same time, the reality is what it is.  And, this
 is what I've said as I've traveled around the district talking to 
teachers.  And not just teachers.  And one of the things I want to 
clarify.  Everyone is important.  Obviously our teachers are primarily 
important.  But, if our bus drivers don't deliver the kids to school on 
time and safe, there is no school.  If our cafeteria workers are not 
there providing the food for breakfast and lunch for our students, it 
makes it even more difficult to learn.  One of the principles, one of 
the ideas, one of the concepts, is that I'm communicating.  There will 
be no big 'I' and little 'U's.  Everyone is important.  And by 
encouraging that type of understanding I think that ???.  Being honest 
with individuals.  One of the challenges, one of the aha moments from 
talking with many of our employees is that they have not been properly 
informed or educated to understand the connection between not receiving 
salary increases or increase in furlough.  And, the budget crisis.  And 
some of you all will be surprised.  But there was a disconnect between 
connecting the current economic crisis with some of the financial 
decisions that have been made.  So, what you have to do is, you have to 
be honest.  Many teachers, administrators, stay members said look.  This
 is the first time in years we've had an opportunity to engage the 
Superintendent and the senior staff in a conversation.  You cannot lead 
if you do not communicate.  Even bad news, delivered honestly and 
fairly, will generate support from the people you are trying to lead and
 for the people you are trying to serve.
Denis O’Hayer [12:29]
Is there a plan right now to set up evaluation systems for, not just teachers, but then all of the folks you just talked about?
Michael Thurmond [12:38]
Well
 absolutely.  That's in place.  There's a lot of good news and good 
things occurring in DeKalb.  And, two of the best things you will hear 
from a two hour star student.  When I was talking in a situation in a 
gathering similar to this.  And one of the things I encourage all 
leaders and I talk to Leadership DeKalb.  I had a conversation with 
them.  The current class who claims that they were the best class ever. 
 That when you go into a crisis situation, you should always avoid 
deficit driven strategies.  And it's not just a crisis situation, but 
that's life.  You've been in meetings in your community, in your church,
 at your business, in your neighborhood, where you spent minutes if not 
hours discussing all the things that are wrong.  That is a deficit 
driven strategy.  I suggest that what I have adopted are asset driven 
strategies.  I look first at assets in a situation. And for all of my 
friends that come up and offer me my condolences because I've taken this
 position, I look at 'em and wonder.  I really don't understand what 
you're talking about.  Because there are challenges and there are 
problems, but the assets and the opportunities outweigh the challenges. 
 And one gentlemen asked, what asset do you have in DeKalb right now? 
 And I said, Look.  First thing is we have 98,000 assets and those are 
our beautiful, bright and intelligent students.  And once you recognize 
that, the other problems pale in comparison to the opportunities that we
 have.  
Denis O’Hayer [14:18] 
Let's
 pick up then on what you had when you came in.  Dr Atkinson, when she 
was here,  was starting to put together a plan for the district going 
forward.  And, so have you had a chance to look at that?  Is there 
anything about it that you want to carry forward?  One specific question
 was, Do you have any plans to restart the DeKalb Education Foundation 
which was, at least for the moment, stopped under Dr Atkinson?
Michael Thurmond [14:46]
What
 I've done. I've reached out to some of our corporate friends.  And as 
we become more healthy in the district, we will be asking them to 
support the foundation so that we can provide some non profit support 
for the efforts that we are ongoing in the school system.  I didn't have
 the opportunity to meet Dr Atkinson.  And every leader comes with a 
vision, with a plan, with a program.  Some strategies, some initiatives 
are successful and some are not.  But you can learn from both.  And one 
of the things I've come to understand is that you can learn more from 
one failure, one defeat than you can from a thousand victories.  And one
 of the lessons learned, that we are engaged in right now, is that you 
must communicate.  And you must be transparent and you must engage all 
of your stake holders, internal and external.  You can't make it.  The 
second thing I'm learning.  It's really been fascinating, the tour of 
DeKalb County.  Last night I was in Brookhaven.  I met with the mayor 
and council in Brookhaven.  And the mayor, by the way, is the son of a 
former colleague, Max Davis you covered in the General Assembly way back
 in the '20s.  Denis O’Hayer and I have been around a long time.  Just 
in talking to the residents of DeKalb County.  North and South, East and
 West, and if you listen intently and with purpose, and actively.  You 
can find so many opportunities for common ground.  But yet, if I travel 
from my house there in Stone Mountain, as I did one Sunday afternoon up 
to Dunwoody.  It was just a 15 minute drive.  But sometimes, 
politically, it felt like two thousand miles. 
What we have to recognize
 is that some of the dysfunction that we face at the school board is 
really dysfunction in the county.  And it was representative of the 
dysfunction in the county.  But we have to find common ground via 
bridges and do what's best for our citizens and particularly our 
student.  We had a great meeting in Brookhaven last night.  A former 
state senator, Dan Weber, he has a plan that focuses on creating high 
school charter systems where you really decentralize authority all the 
way to the high school level.  That's not necessarily my belief, but I 
do believe where we do share common ground is that we are going to 
decentralize some decision making, some resources from the central 
office to the regional level.  Right?  When our Area Superintendent, Dr 
Pringle, sitting there ????.  We need to, I've always believed in any 
situation I've gone in is that decisions made closest to the delivery of
 the service of the product are better, more effective and efficient. 
 So, we have over centralized some of the decision making into the 
central office at DeKalb.  We are going to change that and you will see 
evidence of that in our F.Y. '14 budget.  Because we are so diverse, I 
can't sit like the Wizard of Oz behind a curtain.  And make decisions 
about the 138 schools that serving an extremely diverse population 
without input from the people who are closest to the point of delivery. 
 And those people are the teachers and principals, and the support staff
 in the school.  That will change.  And I think we will end up with a 
more effective school district with better results.
Denis O’Hayer [18:34]
Is
 there anything in what you inherited from either Dr Atkinson or going 
back to Ramona Tyson.  Is there anything they did you said, We can go 
forward with this?  Or, are we really starting from scratch?
Michael Thurmond [18:52]
Absolutely
 not.  We're not starting from scratch.  This is a result.  What we have
 today is a system that was developed over decades, decades.  One of the
 things, because I'm a historian, you have to really do what I call, 
 develop an institutional history of any and every agency.  And we may 
be upset or confused by a particular policy or regulation.  But you have
 to understand the history of that policy and the history of the 
regulation even before you can determine whether or not you will 
continue it or change it.  So, you learn from mistakes as well as from 
successes.  And there have been more successes than failures, but you 
have to be honest.  You have to recognize it, learn from your mistake 
but don't dwell on it.  And that's what I'm saying to DeKalb county and 
to the people I work with every day as well as the citizens.  We will 
learn from the mistakes that have been made and I will be the first to 
admin there have been mistakes that have been made.  But I'm telling 
you, I'm not dwelling on them.  My focus, my attentions is on the future
 and doing what's best for the young people in this district.  What I 
encourage, and I've talked to Ernie, and we've had several conversation 
and I want to thank Ernie for his leadership.  And Leonardo and Diane, 
who decided not just to criticize, but to engage and try to support and 
assist.  What we have to understand, and it's interesting, and I hear it
 a lot when people say, Well you know twenty years ago, thirty years 
ago, we had a great school system in DeKalb.  How many times have you 
heard that?  And there's no question that we did.  That does not prevent
 us from having a great school system now.  But what we have to 
recognize is that the school system that existed in DeKalb 30 years ago,
 that population, is not necessarily the population we are trying to 
educate today.  That population did not have 71% of its students 
qualifying for free and reduced lunch.  Just didn't.  Not that children 
who qualify for free and reduced lunch can't learn and can't be 
successful.  And I know for a fact that they can, because I qualified 
for free and reduced lunch.  I am a living, breathing example of the 
power of public education. Right?  The son, grandson, and great grandson
 of 3 generations of Georgia share croppers that could not read or 
write.  Right?  And so for people that doubt or don't believe that 
public education can't be successful and is being successful every day, 
look at me.  Now, what I also know is that we have to be honest about 
who we are.  One of the most surprising things about, what I've learned 
about DeKalb, nearly 20% of our student population are either English 
learning or their parents speak English only as a second language if 
they speak English at all.  We've not engaged or understood the great 
opportunities that presents.  Now one of the mistakes that we did make 
was that we fired all the interpreters.  OK ... right?  We did it.  Now 
that's a mistake that I will acknowledge.  When 20% of your population, 
and I don't know why I'm surprised, because when I was practicing law 
over at ????, our office was over on the Beauford Highway.  I used to 
ride up and down Beauford Highway to go to lunch and I would see 
Vietnamese, hispanic and the different signage and various businesses 
from all over the world.  I love to go to the Supermarket over there in 
Clarkston.  I see foods and exotic vegetables and fruits and desserts 
from all over the world.  And I used to wonder who's buying this?  I 
have no idea, it was just amazing to me.  And then there's the Farmer's 
Market on Beauford Hwy is even more exotic.  That is because there is a 
socio-economic demographic transformation taking place.  Our school 
district is still operating in the 20th century mode.  We have not made 
the transformation which we will have to make, which we are making, 
which we will make because that is the future.  Children 18 and under 
represent 20% of the population.  They represent 100% of our future. 
 All children. And all children with the right support and right 
resources can learn and can be successful.
Denis O’Hayer [23:48]
And
 you just opened the door to the elephant that is already in the room. 
 Which is, race and class and not just black and white as you have 
already implied.  The question is then, how do you keep the people who 
are thinking about saying, I've got to get my kids out of the school 
system because of the problems it has or because of reasons of their 
own.  And keep them involved and their political leaders involved to 
make sure the district has the kind of support it's going to need 
financially and politically to move forward.
Michael Thurmond [24:14]
That's
 the question that often times and not just in DeKalb, but throughout 
America.  Public education is a euphemism for race and class.  We 
understand that.  We studied the history of public education, 
particularly in the South, and it's always been racially charged.  From 
its inception, post ???, post Civil War, Georgia, all the way up today. 
 Often times the steps are ordered and you don't really know how or why.
  Forty two years ago I graduated from far central high school.  It's 
interesting.  In the fall of 1970,  those of you from Georgia, something
 historic from the South in Georgia.  That was the year we consolidated 
all black school districts which were then with predominantly white 
school districts.  We were the first consolidated class of clark central
 high school ????.  I was 18 years old and that was the first time in my
 life I had a conversation with a white person my age.  And that was the
 South.  For eleven years I went to all segregated schools and the only 
people I interacted with were other African Americans.  During the 42 
years hence, the classmates I didn't get a chance to meet or desired not
 to meet when I was in high school, I've had a chance to get to know 
them over the years.  It's been interesting.  My most famous class mate I
 wanted to meet and stay in touch with was Kim Bassinger.  For some 
reason she does not return my calls.  But we've changed.  We like to 
think that 40 years, and that's 4 decades, but look folks.  For nearly 
400 years you had nearly 250 years where African Americans were denied 
any access to education.  Right?  Then you had another 150 years where 
we were separate but equal.  And in 40 years, look at how much progress 
has been made.  You cannot undo and change three to four hundred years 
of history in 40 years.  But we have to recognize and celebrate where we
 are, but keep in perspective where we need to go.  That's why it 
doesn't bother me when I meet people who may have not evolved on the 
race issue.  Or may have subtle or unrecognized issues.  This nation 
addressing the vestiges of a history that luckily we put behind 
ourselves.  I don't damn anyone for it.  I would challenge you to reach 
out and help people to understand.  You have to go to the various 
communities.  You have to open yourself up.  That's what I've tried to 
do over these 40 years and we've made progress now.  What's interesting 
and apt, is during those 40 years we had class reunions, but we still 
had 2 class reunions.  We've come a long way, but we still have a long 
way to go.  This young man, who was in the vanguard of this new history 
of public education now has an opportunity to begin to address the 
future of public education in Georgia.  We might wish for the good ol' 
days when it was just white folk and black folk at each other's throats.
  It was simple then wasn't it.  But, it's not that simple anymore. I 
think this presents us with a great opportunity to change the 
conversation, to be more inclusive, to open up our own minds and 
attitudes, and recognize that if you're going to have a successful 
business, if you're going to be a successful leader, if you're going to 
be a successful anything in the 21st century, you must have skills sets 
that will allow you to engage and work with and understand people of 
different races, cultures, creed and ethnical and ????.  You just have 
to.
Denis O’Hayer [28:41]
Then
 on top of that, you have people saying I need to get out of this school
 district because of what's happened in the last 5 years, the last 10 
years, the problems this district has.  So, you've got Dunwoody talking 
about leaving. How do you go about keeping folks involved because of 
their moral, financial, political, support.
Michael Thurmond [29:14]
And
 it's not just Dunwoody.  See, I was talking to Dr Howe who is over 
instruction.  We look at Dunwoody and we might criticize them, but if 
you really think about it.  Majority to minority, is a system to move 
what exceptional bright kids from a large population of kids that may 
not be as equally as bright to a more segregated location.  Right? 
 That's what that is.  If you really look at it.  Theme schools as well 
as charter schools as well as private schools and all of those are ways 
in which we are trying to deal with a problem.  What I'm saying, what we
 have to do know is, of course, continue to support our gifted kids. 
 But, at some point, we got to deal with the problem of people, young 
people, students, who come from high poverty background. Right? Who may 
not live in our neighborhood, who may not attend my school, or may not 
even live inside my district and recognize what we have ... and it's OK 
to be self interested.  This is what I say to parents a lot on that 
issue.  You must be self interested about your children.  You don't have
 to apologize because you're self interested in ensuring your child gets
 a good education.  Should you ... no.  Not to me, not anyone.  But 
leaders, this is what we talk about in Leadership DeKalb.  You must 
develop what I call enlightened self.  Because enlightened self interest
 will help you understand why it's important for you to be involved in 
helping other people's children get a quality education.  Let me tell 
you why, and I love to do this.  How many of you all were born, raised 
and graduated from a high school in DeKalb county?  Raise your hand. 
 Always less than 5%.  That meant that the rest of us were educated 
somewhere else, right?  And it was paid for by taxes from other people. 
 You can't raise my daughter and your daughter and your children in an 
enclosed, insulated bubble.  I want my daughter to come of age in a 
world where there are opportunities, not just for her, but also for her 
friends and colleagues.  Don't you?  The challenge in DeKalb, and we can
 do this, all we got to do.  Let me tell you what we need to do to 
ensure that, not only do we respond to SACS, but that we create an elite
 school system.  All we have to do is develop the talent to understand 
the power of enlightened self interest.  Be self interested about your 
child.  But then, and particularly as leaders develop the ability to be 
legitimately concerned about the education of other people's children. 
 Let me tell you why.  God forbid I get sick one day and have to spend 
the night at DeKalb Regional or any hospital.  But if I do, I want my 
nurse that comes around to know how to read and write who be scribblin' 
the medicine.  Right?  That's why it's important.  If you're a business 
owner, we got business people here.  Think about your work force.  You 
want to be profitable 5, 10, 15, 20 years from now.  Your future work 
force is sitting in a classroom somewhere in DeKalb county.  You want to
 sell your widgets and your products and you need people who have the 
resources and can purchase them.  Your future consumers are sitting in a
 classroom somewhere in DeKalb county right now.  
Denis O’Hayer [32:45]
Moving
 to questions.  How soon will you make decisions regarding which senior 
staff, from Dr Atkinson's team, will stay and which will go?  We were 
talking about decentralizing the central office.  How soon will we have 
decisions there?
Michael Thurmond [33:07]
First
 of all, I allow, whenever I go into a situation, I evaluate current 
personnel.  The biggest mistake that leaders make, and we've seen it 
over and over again in the media, is you walk in on the first day and 
you fire everybody that's there.  That's a horrible leadership decision.
  That means I'm going to spend my first six months dealing with the 
fallout from that type of decision.  Plus, there are some people you 
need and some people you may not need, but you have to be honest and 
objective in making that evaluation.
Denis O’Hayer [33:47]
Is
 there a plan to develop DeKalb county school's leaders like district 
principals, or district staff principals.  And teachers in alignment 
with the district's priorities to advance student learning?  In other 
words, have you matched that up yet.  The big plan with the development 
of staff and the evaluations.
Michael Thurmond [34:05]
The
 first effort you will see is with the F.Y. '14 budget.  When you begin 
to realign the resources to support the prime objective, which is to 
improve academic achievement, you will see that.  There's some things we
 are looking at that we will change and we are changing to support that 
effort.   But you need a budget to support it.  And the fist time I'll 
have an opportunity to help to develop a budget that I can present to 
our board members will be F.Y. '14.
Denis O’Hayer [34:36]
Any idea when the first draft of that will be?
Michael Thurmond [34:39]
It's
 an ongoing process now.  I'm meeting with my CFO.  Money is tight, but I
 was felt that money was never really the primary challenge.  Often 
times, it's the lack of will, lack of ideas, lack of innovation that 
prevents all of us from being more successful than what we are now. 
 $750 Million dollars is still a lot of money.  If you are focused and 
if you are purposeful, and if you are committed to a goal or an 
objective.
Denis O’Hayer [35:09]
One
 question we hear a lot is, well OK.  You talk about 138 schools. Do we 
need fewer?  Ramona Tyson had a school closure plan. School closure came
 up again right before Dr Atkinson left.  Is that on the table?  Is 
there a plan to develop which schools?
Michael Thurmond [35:30]
Actually,
 we are implementing the plan that was actually developed just prior to 
my coming.  By the way, and I see Mr Wilkins here ???, we are currently 
right now nearly over $200 million dollars in capital projects ongoing 
in the district right now.  We are on the cusp if we can address these 
other issues, of being able to build a model 21st century school 
district.  A highly diverse, socio-economically demographically all the 
ways you can do it successful.  And I can tell you there are not many 
models that will be similar to the one we have.  But this is what I told
 the State Board of Education.  We're criticized because we're dealing 
with, unfortunately the issue bubbled up.  But if you live in a school 
district where these issues are not being discussed, then you really 
need to talk to your school leaders.  Because just because you hear 
about 'em and read about 'em in DeKalb, doesn't mean they don't exist 
somewhere else.  They have not dealt with them yet.  The blessing we 
have is that we have the opportunity to address them in a progressive 
positive way.  No apologies, but we have to learn to be honest and to 
talk and do what's right for the broader community.
Denis O’Hayer [36:47]
Does that mean at this point then, fewer schools?  Some will close?
Michael Thurmond [36:51]
Some
 are closing, yes.  Just at the last board meeting, there was a proposal
 presented to the board which they approved.  Coming up we are building 
three new, seven new elementary schools.  3 of them will start this year
 in 2013.
Denis O’Hayer [37:08]
One
 question from the audience.  What efforts will be made to expand 
successful academic programs like early college that significantly 
increase the likelihood of high school to college.  You've got some 
successful models that are operating right now.
Michael Thurmond [37:25]
We
 do. And I know Georgia Perimeter College is here and they have 
administered one of those successful models.  We have to continue to 
support the things that are working, but we also have to recognize that 
success is not just going to college.  There has to be multiple avenues 
to success.  I was looking at a study just last week.  Nationally, only 
20% high school graduates go and graduate from a liberal arts ??? 
institute.  We have to recognize there are technical opportunities, 
technical colleges, two year colleges, proprietary colleges, that offer 
avenues of success for our children.  As a labor commission I can tell 
you something.  Those young people and if you choose college, great. 
 There's nothing wrong with that.  But we have to recognize that not 
every student may or shouldn't choose college.  Right?  My parents, 20 
years ago, 40 years ago, 50 years ago, all they told us was Go to 
college.  You gotta go to college son.  They never talked to me about 
what the major is.  But in that economy, a college degree was almost a 
guarantee for employment.  Right?  So, I went to college and I got a 
degree in philosophy and religion.  There were no job openings for 
philosophers when I got out of college.  But, the reality is that 
technical arenas, even as automobile technician, heating and air, those 
jobs, many of them pay high salaries.  so, we have to learn to celebrate
 our young people who choose these alternative paths, just as much as we
 celebrate those who decide to go to college and do well.  That's my 
thought.
Denis O’Hayer [39:13]
The
 CEO has joined us.  Welcome Mr Ellis.  Good to have you.  Are there 
collaborative operational opportunities, talking about money and 
innovation, that you can foresee between the school system and the 
DeKalb county government?  Whether it's like fleet management or working
 in collaboration with some of the county departments or police and 
sheriff.  What kind of opportunities are there if any?
Michael Thurmond [39:45]
The
 CEO and County Commissioner, I have met with him on more than one 
occassion, several.  I guess 10 days ago I went and we talked to and met
 with board members, members of the DeKalb county commission.  We all 
agree that the relationship had not been what it should be.  More 
important than that than belaboring the past, we all committed to work 
closely together to do what's in the best interest of the children and 
the tax payers and the citizens of this county.  I've been very 
impressed by the outreach and honesty and sincere ??? I received from 
the CEO as well as the members of the county commission.  And the DeKalb
 county delegation.  Republican and Democrat.  Let me just say it, 
Republican and Democrat have all come forward and offered and are 
working with us to overcome the challenges that we face.
Denis O’Hayer [40:38]
Then
 one key here, in addition to the leadership, is the parents.  That 
brings up the next question.  How do we get the parents involved in the 
lives of our children?  That's an ongoing question in education.  But 
this person says, we are spending about the same amount per child as 
children in private schools.  So, why the difference in results?
Michael Thurmond [41:00]
First,
 it's important, study after study, go on the internet when you get home
 and look up parental involvement and academic achievement.  Study, 
study, study show that the individual who has the greatest impact a 
child's academic achievement is not the Superintendent, not the school 
board member, not the principal, not the teacher.  The individual that 
has the greatest impact on the success of a child's career are who? 
 Parents.  Parents.  Fuss all you want about school board members. But 
the individual that has the greatest impact are parents.  We have some 
strong PTAs and parent  councils in the district.  But in some schools 
they are very weak or nonexistent.  Look at the schools where you have 
the highest achievement.  One of the things that almost always exist is a
 strong PTA.  Look at the schools that are more challenged and you find 
that the PTA and the parental involvement is weak.  Under Title I there 
is money that can be used to support improving and strengthening 
parental involvement.  I was disappointed in the plan or lack of plan 
that we had that focuses on or encourages parental involvement 
particularly in the high poverty schools.  That is going to change. We 
are looking at developing a plan.  Making a difference.  I know what 
you're saying, well some kids don't have a pair.  Let me tell you. 
 There's an adult.  There's an uncle.  There's an aunt.  There's big 
momma.  There's somebody that's interested that we can reach out to. 
Even if it's not 100% of you teachin', one of the big mistakes i think 
we made, we've allowed politicians like me to shift all of the burden 
for educating our children on the teachers.  It's just not right and the
 studies show that the greatest influence is whom?  Parents.
Denis O’Hayer [43:23]
So, stronger PTAs.  Then what.
Michael Thurmond [43:29]
And
 an administration that recognizes that you've got to have a partnership
 between the school, the parent and the school in order to really be 
successful.  Particularly if you're dealing with young people who come 
from a more challenging background.  If you look at the school whether 
it's North, South, East or West, whether it's Arabia Mountain or 
Chamblee or Dunwoody.  One of the things that are consistent, regardless
 of demographics, in those schools that are succeeding and it's 
successful is strong parental involvement.  That's what distinguishes 
the charter schools.  That's the one thing I really like about charter 
schools is that in order to get a child into charter school, the parent 
has to commit to do what?  And they wonder what it is about charter 
schools.  That is the critical element as to why charter schools and 
public schools are successful.  It's the parental involvement.  And 
we're gonna have to teach it.  We're gonna have to understand it. And I 
gotta tell you this story.  One of my favorite things in life was coming
 home and my dad helping me with my homework.  Right?  I still remember 
it to this day.  I can see him, even when I'm sitting  of there 
sometimes over in Mountain Industrial sitting with my by desk.  I look 
in the corner and my father who is decease, I can still see him 
watching.  And doing my homework.  I was in middle school when my mother
 told me, you know your daddy can't read or write.  I was like, hold up,
 wait a minute.  How ... what ... he can't read or write, but he's been 
helping me with reading and writing.  What I've come to understand as a 
parent, he could offer me no assistance, technical.  But he was present.
  By his present. The fact that he was present in the room.  And I tell 
my parents I see us when Stephenson played Martin Luther King, I see us.
  Right?  In the stands, shoulder to shoulder.  But you also have to be 
present at PTA and parent teacher conference.  Children, young people 
have to know it's important.  I've got parents here.  Your son is 
sitting here today because he knows it's important to you that he is 
successful in school.
Denis O’Hayer [45:39]
Quick
 yes or no.  Will that be one of the criteria by which you evaluate 
principals for instance when it comes to looking at all of those 
schools?  How they have been able to increase parent involvement?
Michael Thurmond [45:57]
Yes.
  What we are doing, is we are inventorying for, I think for the first 
time, the relative strength or weakness of our PTAs at every school. 
 And that's on going.  I know Dr Howard working on it.  Working with Ms 
Marcia Cowen who is over PTA.  And those PTAs, or parent council that 
are weak, we are going to come in and provide technical assistance to 
support them.  The teachers are already busy, so we gotta create more 
resources to strengthen the parent teacher ??? who will ultimately 
strengthen the classroom where our teachers are.
Denis O’Hayer [46:30]
We've
 talked a lot about focusing on students now.  A big part of that is 
hearing from them.  I want to bring up our start students who are going 
to ask the Superintendent some questions.  First we have Kerry Thomas 
from Arabia Mountain High and Kadeem Tremble from Druid Hills High.
Kadeem Tremble [47:18]
I'm
 Kadeem Tremble from Druid Hills High School.  My first question to the 
Superintendent, is how would you keep up teacher morale although new 
teachers are working more with less pay?
Michael Thurmond [47:30]
Great
 question.  First, I can't offer them more pay.  I can't do it.  But, 
survey after survey with employees, will tell you the primary reason for
 dissatisfaction with their supervisor is not necessarily pay.  It's not
 feeling like you're appreciated.  And so, since I can't offer pay, one 
of the things we are doing.  New Superintendents always come in with new
 programs, new ideas, more work for teachers to do.  I don't know 
whether you all have noticed, I've not announced my new ... golden ... 
you know ... quiz bang ... magic wand ... to change academics in the 
district.  What we are doing is inventorying to see what we can 
eliminate.  Some things are mandated by the federal government, some are
 mandated by the state.  But things that we have control over, I've 
directed the people at the senior level to inventory what we are doing 
and things that we can eliminate will be eliminated before we go 
forward.
Kerrie Thomas [48:34]
Good
 morning everyone.  My name is Kerrie Thomas.  I'm from Arabia Mountain 
High School.  My first question is, with a change in leadership 
obviously there is going to be a change within the schools.  What kind 
of effect do you see as far as students are concerned from this year to 
the next year?
Michael Thurmond [48:52]
First,
 the part of the job I enjoy the most is interacting with the students. 
 I was at Arabia Mountain last week.  I was telling somebody coming in. 
 It's exhilarating being around young people who have limitless 
potential.  One of the things I hope to be, working with my student 
adviser councils, students.  I want to know and be a part of their 
decision making, their careers and to support them.  And I want us to 
enjoy what we do. I want to find employees to continue to enjoy your 
work.  And to recognize that your work is important and that you're 
important.  The attitude.  There was a cloud hanging over the district 
when I came.  And so what we had to do early was try to lift that cloud 
and let people know that we are all in it together.  And the one thing I
 did tell them, I will not lie to you.  I will be honest.  I will tell 
you the truth as I see it.  And one of the truths that I will tell you, I
 see a way forward from the challenges that we face.  
Kadeem [49:53]
To
 piggy back on the question about old teahcers leaving and new teachers 
coming in, what is in place to teach and train the new teachers how to 
deal with classroom management and other obstacles they might face?
Michael Thurmond [50:04]
That
 goes with us having a better understanding of the population that we 
are serving.  And then providing Dr Howe, we talked about this 
yesterday.  Technical support and expertise and finding schools where 
it's working.  Asset driven strategies.  Find those schools that are 
succeeding and model and emulate what they are doing and allow them to 
teach and train other teachers and principals how to do it.  We really 
don't have to reinvent the this wheel.  There are schools in this 
district and all over this country dealing with similar population.  And
 being very successful with it.  It's not an impossibility.  It's not a 
mountain to high.
Kerry [50:48]
Earlier
 you talked about how much DeKalb county school system has changed 
regarding its demographics.  From a student's perspective a change in 
technology is also taking place but is not necessarily at a great pace. 
 During Clinton's administration, they called for an investment in 
technology.  That's something that's been pushed nationally ever since. 
 In your fiscal plan, how are you planning to advance technology with 
the schools?
Michael Thurmond [51:10]
I
 want to thank the voters for approving the most recent ESPLOST. 
 Included in that I think was $40 million dollars that will be invested 
in improving technology throughout the district.  Right now we are 
already working in 37 schools to install wireless connectivity.  7 have 
been completed. We expect to have the entire district completed by 
September this year.  And 100% connectivity on hard wire.  We're gonna 
have smart boards in every classroom.  The money has already, you all 
voted for it, and it is being implemented as we speak.  And this will 
maintain DeKalb's position as a state, regional and national leader in 
technological innovation in our schools.
Kadeem [52:00]
You
 can put 100 ipads in a classroom, but if you don't have an adequate 
teacher to teach the information to the student, how would you keep the 
seasoned teachers in the classroom?
Michael Thurmond [52:11]
We
 have teachers that love DeKalb county. And sometimes, when it's a 
difficult decision, no matter how much you love teaching, you still have
 to pay your bills.  Often times our teachers may leave DeKalb to go to 
other districts.  What we are doing, what I'm going to try and do going 
forward.  Number one, maintain as many of our veteran teachers as 
possible.  But also, to build a cadre of new teachers who are motivated 
and understand they are a part of something.  One of the things I would 
say is, remember who is in the room when the times were hard.  Remember 
who stayed with you when your business was just starting and when you 
weren't getting your bills paid, or when began your political career and
 no one knew who you were or what your name was.  Those are the people 
you want by your side.  So, what I'm saying to the stake holders and 
teachers and everyone in DeKalb, remember who was in the room cause in 
the near future, DeKalb will be recognized as a national model for how 
you deal with highly diverse, very different socio-economic group.  You 
can't see it now, but you'll see it.  You'll come back and say, Yeah, 
you told me.  This is where we are going.  This is the direction we're 
moving in.  Sometimes we see challenges that in life, but sometimes your
 blessings are a disguise.  Out of controversy and conflict, you can 
create great opportunity.  I think that is what is happening here in 
DeKalb.  
Kerrie [53:41]
Another
 thing about teachers leaving.  A lot of them that I know of say that 
they think that it's parents.  How do you want to improve parent 
involvement like PTA and expand programs and communications between 
teacher and parents?
Michael Thurmond [54:02]
Please explain further.
Kerrie [54:08]
A
 lot of my teachers say that parents aren't necessarily involved.  They 
don't know what's going on in the classroom.  And they are focused on 
their child, self driven and it's not really relating to what's going on
 in the classroom.  And it's making a burden on the teacher.  And that's
 one of the reason they are leaning towards ...
Michael Thurmond [54:33]
I
 agree with you 100%.  If you look throughout the district, and one of 
the other ways this manifests itself, is in this whole North/South 
divide.  Part of the narrative is, and some of it's true is that schools
 in the North have more resources than schools in the South.  That is 
the demarcation line in DeKalb county.  Bridging that will be a 
challenge.  But let me tell you one of the things that going to your 
question.  You might walk into Fernbank or one of the schools in the 
North and you might see all new band equipment.  Right?  And the first 
thought is Michael Thurmond sent a check to the north side to buy new 
band equipment, but he didn't send one down south side.  What we ignore 
is, through PTAs, parents raise and contribute hundreds of thousands of 
dollars to support the education.  They do.  That help creates 
dissension in the district because you have some schools where you have 
really outstanding parental involvement and then you have some where 
there is not.  What you are seeing is the dichotomy in funding but not 
necessarily from the central office.  I know what you're thinking. 
 Obviously some parents.  I have more money to contribute than another 
parent. You've got to recognize that.  That's why we have to put in 
support.  I've also done a whole lot of men day and women day speeches. 
 We raise a lot of money don't we.  Some folk don't get that.  Alright 
... I'll leave that.
Denis O’Hayer [57:07]
You
 talked about finding a new Superintendent.  How long will you be in 
this job as interim and would you be interested in the job permanently?
Michael Thurmond [57:13]
I
 came to help.  I'm on leave from my law firm, but what I said the first
 day when Marshal Orson and those called me over and Jim.  I'm here to 
help.  That's what I'm here to do.  As long as they need me to help, 
I'll help.  As the interim, I know I have some tough decisions to make. 
 The next Superintendent shouldn't be burden with some of the tough 
decisions that I'm going to have to make.  That's one of the reasons, 
part of the strategy that I came as an interim.  I'm not here trying to 
make a way for the future.  These issues have to be addressed now and 
that will increase the probability of success for your next 
Superintendent.
Denis O’Hayer [57:55]
So there's no definite timeline?  It's just as long as it takes?
Michael Thurmond [57:59]
I have a 12 month contract.  Robert Brown was the monitor from the Governor's office.  He's here.
Denis O’Hayer [58:19]
Just
 as a quick example to follow up.  One of the neighboring districts, 
Earl Davis came in for what he thought was going to be a particular 
period of time and he's staying just a little longer.  Is that something
 you're thinking "OK. After 12 months I might have to stick around"?
Michael Thurmond [58:49]
No,
 no. I'm here to do what I was called to do.  I'll be honest with you. 
 The morning Marshal and those called me, I didn't wake up.  I wonder if
 they are going to call me over at the DeKalb school district.  That was
 not on my agenda.  But I believe the steps are ordered, I'm here for a 
purpose, for a moment and to do a certain job.  And then I'll be 
perfectly willing to go back to doing what I was doing before they 
called.
Denis O’Hayer [59:12]
Will there have to be a Superintendent in place before you go?
Michael Thurmond [59:13]
Absolutely.
  You can't leave the job vacant.  We'll have a great Superintendent in 
place.  And he or she won't come into the situation that I walked in to.
  People deserve better than that.  That will give the next 
Superintendent a much greater probability of success. 
John-
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this!