Pittsfield Schools Add 'Transformation & Accountability' Post

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The school district's former special education director has been appointed as the assistant superintendent for school transformation and accountability.

The School Committee on Monday unanimously voted Jennifer Stokes into the role. A special meeting was held at the Mercer Administration Building following a formal interview process.

"I'm very honored," she said. "I feel like it's a privilege to be in this position, that the district has put their faith in me to try to make some big changes."

Stokes will lead initiatives for transforming schools that have been designated in need of targeted assistance from the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education: Taconic High School, Reid Middle School, Herberg Middle School, Morningside Community School, Conte Community School, and Crosby Elementary School.

She has worked for the Pittsfield Public Schools for more than a decade as a school adjustment counselor at Morningside, dean of students for Pittsfield High, principal of Morningside, and special education director. Stoked also did district-level work with a safety and prevention grant.

The first order of business will be to work with principals of underperforming schools to determine their leverage point for improvement. Stokes has committed to the role for at least three years, disclosing during the interview that she is "getting close to retirement."

"I think it's really important to follow the principal's leadership in terms of where they want their leverage point, and then to start to create structures around that leverage point and create supports for the principal around that," she said.

Stokes has seen that the mental health needs of students have increased during her time at PPS.

"I wouldn't say that's totally about COVID so I think our teachers need to be trauma-informed and need to be able to look toward mental health needs of our students," she said. "I would say that's the No. 1 factor. I think the number of students with disabilities has increased also."

New to the fiscal year 2025 budget, the position is half grant funded with $70,000 in the school budget.  The deputy superintendent and the curriculum director positions were eliminated.


School Committee member Sara Hathaway said the process for vetting candidates was "very thorough and very fair." Stokes was one of two candidates.

"The feedback from the screening committee, I think we realized we needed more voices and [Superintendent Joseph Curtis] very wisely included district leadership so every principal had a chance for some input," she said.

"It was a very, very difficult choice, I think. Two very strong candidates came through the screening process and it's exciting to finally be able to get somebody to fill that desk and to get to work."

Committee members asked a few additional questions before the vote.

William Cameron asked if the schools' organization is creating a sawtooth effect in which cohort performance on high-stakes assessments drops after assessment reform and then improves over time as test familiarity increases.

Stokes said Morningside found success when staff members embraced professional development for highly effective teaching.

"We were always learning together," she said, explaining that the principal became the leader and it created a culture of learning that was passed down.

When Hathaway asked how the teachers will know that they are a part of the district transformation, Stokes said the principal is the key leader in creating a highly effective instructional team with representation from all teachers in the building.

"It's being present," she said. "I would say to teachers, you should expect to see me in your classrooms every week and you expect to be able to reach out to me and talk to me every time you have a question. So I think it's being present for teachers and being accessible and accountable."

Mayor Peter Marchetti asked how the district can cultivate a professional culture that balances the need for immediate change with a goal of long-term sustainability. 

She emphasized the importance of bringing forward a sense of urgency and keeping it present. The district also has to keep its teachers and be able to fill positions with licensed educators. 


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BCC Trustees Vote to Hire Hara Charlier as Next President

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Catheryn Chacon Ortega, the alumni appointment, liked how Hara Charlier easily connected with students faculty; Melissa Myers, alumni representative, also noted how comfortable Charlier was with various groups. Charlier, right, was called after the vote and accepted pending negotiations and state approval. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It wasn't hard for BCC's Board of Trustees to elect a new president from Minnesota on Monday.

One by one, during a special meeting at Berkshire Community College, board members expressed their conviction that Hara Charlier was the best candidate to lead after Ellen Kennedy retires. They unanimously recommended Charlier as the next president of BCC to the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education.

"We're not trying to hire a replacement for Dr. Kennedy; We are trying to hire our next leader," Chair Julia Bowen said.

Charlier, currently the president of Central Lakes College in Brainerd, Minn., was one of four finalists identified by the Presidential Search Committee who visited the campus. She was not on site, but was called after the vote.

Catheryn Chacon Ortega was impressed by how Charlier connected with students and faculty, as well as her passion and breadth of experience.  

"As the appointed alumni, I put myself in the students' shoes when I was thinking about this, and I think I feel very represented by her, like if I come back as a student here, I think she will be a person that will be open doors to me, to my community, to the immigrant community, to everybody," she said.

Danielle Gonzalez feels Charlier has a "very" clear commitment to the community part of community college, and a deep experience of serving underserved populations, "really just with great enthusiasm."

"I think that in addition to having really deep community college leadership experience, she was able to articulate a very thorough understanding of the issues of the college of Berkshire County, of what those opportunities might look like, and how she would connect what her experience has been with how she could drive the school forward," said Julie Hughes, a newer member of the board.
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