District staff used the administration section to outline a multi-part system to identify, prepare and support school leaders from teacher-leaders to principals and district leaders.
Miss Capp and Doctor McDonald summarized the continuum: teacher identification and supports (LEAD Institute and the Aspiring Principal programs), a district-run Leader Academy aligned to state principal standards, side-by-side coaching and on-site mentor networks, and new executive-leader programming for district-level succession. They highlighted the Wallace Foundation and University of Washington work that informed the district's model and said the Wallace support has been primarily consultative rather than direct grant dollars.
The district detailed financial supports: selected participants in an Impact Leadership cohort with Clemson receive half tuition paid by the district; Clemson reduced its base rate and the district covers half of the remainder. Staff said the district also operates a broader tuition-reimbursement program that pays half the cost of up to four master’s courses per year in certain content areas, and that some grants have funded full counseling program tuition in specific cases.
Presenters reviewed evaluation and coaching: principals and assistant principals are assessed against PADEP (state) standards on a three-year cycle, including annual formative feedback and targeted improvement plans when necessary. Staff described coaching cycles, PLC monitoring, spiral-review math units for middle grades and other instructional interventions used in underperforming schools.
Why it matters: presenters framed the work with research that an above-average principal can produce roughly three additional months of learning in math and reading each year, and they said leadership pipeline investments aim to expand those gains systemwide.
Next steps: district staff will continue cohort recruitment and shared they will solicit board input on priorities for future pipeline expansion and funding.