Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

No cookies to display.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

No cookies to display.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

No cookies to display.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

No cookies to display.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

No cookies to display.

hopkinton-independent-logo2x
Hopkinton, MA
loader-image
Hopkinton, US
9:30 pm, Friday, March 7, 2025
temperature icon 31°F
Humidity 49 %
Wind Gust: 24 mph

SIGN UP TODAY!
BREAKING NEWS & DAILY NEWSLETTER



House Event Web Ad 500 x 150 WEB V2
Radio Musikola


School Committee addresses superintendent search, school calendar

by | Nov 22, 2024 | Education,

The School Committee on Thursday discussed plans to search for a new superintendent in the wake of Carol Cavanaugh’s impending retirement in June 2025.

Members also addressed possible changes to the school calendar and the process they should undertake to gauge public opinion.

Chair Nancy Cavanaugh said hiring a superintendent is one of the School Committee’s “biggest duties. Unlike other positions, we are the deciding body.”

She said she reviewed the last four search processes, with emphasis on the 2016 search when Carol Cavanaugh was hired.

The process took 3 1/2 months that time.

Nancy Cavanaugh said the committee had used the services of consultant NESDEC, and the Massachusetts Association of School Committees (MASC) is another resource. She will bring three proposals forward before the next meeting for members to consider.

“They help guide us in the process, but we are the driving force,” the chair said of the consultant.

She explained a screening committee generally sorts through resumes, recommending three or four finalists for them to interview.

Site visits, tours of Hopkinton schools, a community forum and School Committee interviews all are part of the process, Nancy Cavanaugh said.

The last time, the screening committee had 15 members, with the School Committee representative serving as chair. Members included a Special Education Parent Advisory Council (SEPAC) representative, community members, teachers, a secondary and elementary school principal, and individuals from groups like the Hopkinton Parent Teacher Organization (HPTO).

Past searches resulted in three superintendents who were short-term and Carol Cavanaugh, who stayed longer, Nancy Cavanaugh added.

If the committee starts the search in December, she said, the district could hire someone in March or April.

The cost for NESDEC in 2017 was $9,000.

“Search firms cast a broader net nationally,” the chair said.

Calendar survey requested

Revisiting the topic of the school calendar, non-federal holiday observances were brought up.

Committee member Kyla McSweeney said she thought repeating a community survey would not bring about “wildly different results.” She said the calendar should reflect the values of the town and allow everyone to “see themselves.”

Committee member Chris Masters spoke in favor of repeating the survey if there is time to do so.

Nancy Cavanaugh said the survey is “not a stand-alone process,” and it has taken a few months historically.

Carol Cavanaugh said families are interested in knowing the calendar at this time of year because they are looking at summer camps and other plans.

“Anecdotally,” Masters said, he has noticed a “very split reaction” from the public. “It’s worthwhile to give everyone the opportunity to give feedback and voice their opinion.”

Masters recommended editing the survey and sending it to families quickly.

Nancy Cavanaugh said she would not want to “short cut” the process. In the past, she said, religious leaders came in to speak about why certain observances are important to them.

“Let the results of the survey steer where we go from here,” Masters suggested.

The superintendent noted that the last survey for the 2021-22 calendar had 1,490 responses. Surveys are kept open for 10-14 days, she said.

At the last meeting, committee member Susan Stephenson asked about consolidating or shortening the two school vacations to make the last day of school earlier.

Currently, it is set for June 18.

McSweeney suggested putting a question on the survey about the two-vacation issue.

No matter what decision is made on this calendar, Nancy Cavanaugh said, “there is value to having a larger community conversation over the summer” regarding future calendar cycles.

“No matter what we do, we are going to generate some happy people and some very angry people for reasons that all of us can understand,” Nancy Cavanaugh said.

Vice chair Jamie Wronka said she saw no downside to sending out a survey so long as its intentions are clear, “so [people] don’t think if 53% want removal of everything, that will be the case.”

Working collaboratively with a subcommittee (in the future) would be a benefit, Wronka said.

The committee ultimately voted to send out a survey as a starting point.

Carol Cavanaugh said her office would do so after Thanksgiving so that it could get the full attention by families it deserves.

HopIND-Test-Web-Ad

0 Comments

Related Articles

School Committee gets updates on Hopkins, Charleswood, superintendent

Updates on the Hopkins School and Charleswood School construction projects were among the items on a packed School Committee agenda Thursday. On the Hopkins project, the School Committee approved a $101,404 contract with BCM Controls, a security vendor that will...

Hopkinton Public Schools Administration sign

School Committee tasked with reducing FY 26 budget by $415K

The conversation will continue at the Feb. 27 School Committee meeting about how to reduce the fiscal year 2026 school budget by $415,000 as requested by the town manager’s directive. The School Committee previously approved a budget of $67,190,630, and this change...

Hopkinton Public Schools sign

School Committee approves adaptive playground article for warrant

During a brief Zoom meeting Thursday night, the School Committee voted to sponsor a warrant article for an adaptive playground to be located at Marathon School. With its current wording, the article would ask the town to “vote to raise and appropriate, transfer...

Hopkinton Public Schools sign

HHS principal presents competency determination plan for graduation

In November, Massachusetts voted to remove MCAS test results as a requirement for high school graduation. Hopkinton High School Principal Evan Bishop on Thursday appeared before the School Committee to talk about competency determination (CD) going forward to...

HHS graduation 2024

At joint meeting, boards examine proposed school budget again

Another look at the proposed fiscal year 2026 school operating budget was taken by members of the School Committee, Select Board and Appropriation Committee on Thursday. Superintendent Carol Cavanaugh and Assistant Superintendent for Finance and Operations Susan...

Hopkinton Public Schools sign
Key Storage 4.14.22