NAESP President-Elect: 2010 Candidates
2/1/2010 12:10 PM

ROBERT L. MONSON
Parkston Elementary School
Parkston South Dakota

Do what is best for the children first….do everything else next.  I wrote that down on a piece of paper 13 years ago and stuck it to my office wall.  When we moved from our old building to our new building, it was one of the first items I put up on the wall.  I use it to guide my decisions on a daily basis.  It really helps to keep me focused on why we do what we do, and who we do it for.

I have always been a person who has had a desire to take on leadership roles with the anticipation and thought that I will have a greater opportunity to make a difference.  That is exactly what drove me to work my way out of the classroom and into an administrative role.  I wanted to make a greater difference in the education of the children I was charged with.  It was the same desire that lead me to work my way up through our state organization, and it is certainly what pushed me to run for President-elect of the National Association of Elementary School Principals.

We are all busy in our own schools, but I look for ways to serve the greater cause.  I know how important servant leadership is to all organizations, and have always tried to do my part.  I was the treasurer for our state organization for at least three years.   I have been through the ranks of President Elect, President, and Past President for the South Dakota Association of Elementary School Principals.  I saw the vacancy in the Zone 7 Director position as an opportunity to serve my fellow principals.  I was selected by the Board of Directors and filled that position from 2007 to 2009.  I have also served on numerous committees and panels throughout South Dakota, as well as at the national level. 

I look at the opportunity to serve as President-elect of NAESP as a growth opportunity for myself, but more so for my staff and students.  I believe I will be able to take many learning opportunities with me from the experience, but I also feel I will bring a lot to the organization.  I come from a small rural PreK-6 school in Parkston South Dakota that faces many different challenges than the larger schools face.  My community population is about 1,500, and my school population is around 320.  I also have two Hutterite colony schools under my charge.  I wear many hats and am involved in numerous daily functions of the school.  I believe that gives me a great perspective on where we are it in education today.  I shared with my students that it doesn’t matter what size school you come from, you only have to have the desire to do big things to achieve your dreams.  Having been selected as a candidate for this position embodies that statement!

I do feel that we need to work on strengthening the leadership role of the elementary principal, and we also need to work on slowing the exodus of our veteran principals from the profession.  The two of these issues tend to go hand in hand as our veteran principals are saying “enough is enough”, we are losing the leadership in our schools.  The mandates and expectations that are being placed on the elementary principal in many cases are just too much for any one person to handle.  Far too many administrators are considering leaving the leadership roles in their buildings.  I will work with NAESP and its members to find the professional development and resources to help with these challenging situations.

I would appreciate and be ever so humbled to have your support in my candidacy for President-elect.  If I am elected, I will work as hard as I can to make sure that NAESP remains the guiding force in education that it has become over the last 89 years!


           

EDDIE POLLARD
Tyrone Elementary School
Tyrone, Georgia

Moving Forward, Ready for the Challenge

I am proud to be a principal. Principals have a positive influence on children, school staffs, and communities surrounding the schools they lead.  I am proud to be a member of NAESP. As a NAESP member for more than 20 years, I see the influence our professional organization has to affect the changing role of the principal, the influence for positively affecting education legislation, for providing professional development
opportunities, and promoting the need to identify and mentor new leaders.  I will be proud to serve as your NAESP President-Elect.

While serving as the Zone 4 Director, I contributed to the development of Vision 2021, an important document which provides a roadmap for NAESP to influence decisions affecting the role of the principal and to guide the operation of NAESP.  I believe we must examine the four broad areas of Vision 2021 by Talking, Thinking, Targeting and Telling about each goal: Leading, Learning, Community, and Organization Transformation. We must talk with our membership, think about the information we have learned, establish target goals with timelines for achievement, and then tell how we have attained each goal to meet the needs of our members. We must acknowledge that none of our members will care until we demonstrate care for them and the challenges facing our profession. 

Many of the challenges we encounter result from legislation with limited input from principals. The NAESP President must influence our members to advocate positive changes by relying on wisdom gained serving as school leaders.  As President I will draw upon wisdom gained from serving 25 years as a principal so our members will see such influence.

Principals must have opportunities for professional development. Leadership is never mastered and improves only with time, professional growth and experience. I believe NAESP must provide opportunities to learn from respected leaders and offer experiences for leadership development.

Consideration must also be given to the future of our profession by identifying aspiring leaders and mentoring them to become strong principals who will become active NAESP members. We know that the average principal is 50 years old and likely to be entering the final years of their chosen profession. As president-elect I will lead our members to identify aspiring leaders and assistant principals and convince them of the importance of effective leadership necessary for serving our children.

I would be honored to serve NAESP as President – Elect and seek your vote. We must continue moving forward, ready for the challenge to create a promising future for our profession and for the children and communities we serve.



Get Acrobat Reader  Election2010_President-elect.pdf  
Information on both NAESP President-Elect Candidates, provided by NAESP.
Get Acrobat Reader  Monson_Candidate_Statement.pdf  
Get Acrobat Reader  Monson_Resume.pdf  
Get Acrobat Reader  Pollard_Candidate_Statement.pdf  
Get Acrobat Reader  Pollard_Resume.pdf  



Rob Monson
Rob_3x5_4
Robert L. Monson
Parkston Elementary School
Parkston South Dakota


NAESP Welcomes New President-Elect
(Alexandria, VA—May 18, 2010) —The National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP) welcomes Robert L. Monson, principal of Parkston Elementary School in Parkston, South Dakota, as the recently elected president-elect of the 15-person board of directors of NAESP. Gail Connelly, NAESP’s executive director, announced the results from the Association’s headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia.
 
Monson, a member of NAESP since 1997 who served on its board of directors from 2007 to 2009, has also held memberships in the School Administrators of South Dakota and in the South Dakota Association of Elementary School Principals, serving in the latter as president (2005-2006) and treasurer (2001-2004).   
 
“Facing today’s challenges and those yet to come will require a president-elect who has leadership experience and forward-looking vision,” Monson said. “We must be advocates on many levels and in numerous areas to provide the best education for all of our students.”

In NAESP zone elections, the following individuals were elected to the board of directors: Dean Warrenfeltz, principal of Berkeley County School in Martinsburg, West Virginia, will represent Zone 3 principals in the District of Columbia, Maryland, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia; Nancy Flatt Meador, principal of Madison Middle School in Nashville, Tennessee, will represent Zone 4 principals in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, and the Virgin Islands; and Mark J. White, principal of Hintgen Elementary School in La Crosse, Wisconsin, will represent Zone 6 principals in Iowa, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
 
Barbara A. Chester, principal of Cherry Park Elementary School in Portland, Oregon, will be installed as NAESP 2010-2011 president on July 1 and Monson will assume the office of president one year later.


Eddie Pollard
Pollard_09-10
Joseph Edward (Eddie) Pollard, Jr.
Tyrone Elementary School
Tyrone, Georgia




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