About NSPRA
Become a Member
The Superintendents to Watch award recognizes up to 25 school district leaders each year who have fewer than five years of experience as a superintendent and who demonstrate dynamic, fast-paced leadership with strong communication at its core.
What does leadership mean to you? All students deserve a quality education where choice, interests and engagement are valued. Making a difference for students should be at the heart of all decisions. Professional and personal integrity must be demonstrated by all educators at all times. We must hold ourselves personally accountable for the success of our students and our district. Connection through diverse, transparent and collaborative communication is key. Leaders must be an active, visible part of the schools, district and community. Learning at all levels is achieved through coaching, empowerment and experiences for growth. Organizational excellence is achieved through strategic, results-driven, shared decision-making. Lead by example, recognize excellence and serve boldly.
How have you integrated communication into your district’s strategic plan? We have locally developed goals. Edgewood ISD's Goal 1 is that Edgewood ISD will improve its two-way communication and parent engagement as indicated by improving its net promoter score from a negative net promoter score to a positive net promoter score by June 2028 (Baseline net promoter measure May 2022).
What communication initiative are you most proud of that have you implemented in your district? The purpose of Edgewood ISD’s “Women with Vision” is to provide a platform for our district’s most involved, collaborative and committed female, scholar family members to engage in critical discussions on district initiatives, programs and opportunities. EISD recognizes that the work of educating our scholars should not be done in a vacuum and that we must rely on our families to not only create, and discourse, over our district goals, but to also continue the work we begin in the classrooms, in their own homes when their scholars leave our campuses each day. When we work as a team to rally around our scholars, we will see successes in all that we do. ·Members should serve as the representative voice for their peers and share out recommendations for programming, changes they wish to see, concerns they hear, etc. with the organization during the meetings.
B.A. - Mississippi State University; MPA - University of Georgia
I believe school PR/communications is what I was born to do! One of the biggest decisions a parent can make is where to send their child to school, and it’s an honor to share with our parents the engaging work that their children are doing under the guidance of world-class teachers and leaders. On any given day, in any given school, there are many stories to be told and I take that charge seriously. As school communicators played a key role in COVID-19 communications, storytelling was more important than ever – not only did I share information with parents about our protocols, but I also made over 80 visits to schools last year and told a variety of stories about how students were thriving with both in-person and distance learning options. I also worked with principals to determine best mitigation practices and helped make those pervasive, because positive action must be the foundation of what we are ultimately communicating. School public relations is incredibly complex and I love that each day brings a new challenge.
My greatest school PR success was completing 11 nationally-innovative school communication audits using a process of research, planning, implementation, and evaluation. I am now in phase two of this project and am attending school council meetings to garner feedback from parents about school-level communication and how I can better support the work of their schools. One of the most significant findings is that as students take more ownership of their learning, they also take more ownership in parent communication. Therefore, next steps are to better prepare parents for this transition and to also determine best practices from exemplar teachers and coaches at the secondary level so we can strike the right balance with parents feeling informed and fostering student independence.
My greatest school PR challenge is overcoming rigidity. Like many PR professionals, I am detail-oriented and a self-described perfectionist. It’s a blessing and a curse to see when something is one pixel off, but the greatest challenge I have faced in my 13 years in this field is to learn to be more flexible. I might have an aversion to Comic Sans or Curlz, but it’s not the end of the world if those are a font favorite elsewhere. What’s more important is the bigger picture – staff and parents feeling well-informed and students growing and learning in positive school cultures. Instead of telling someone their website isn’t formatted properly, I now make a 2-3 minute screencast if I think there’s a quick tutorial I can offer to provide ongoing professional learning. By being much more flexible, I have deepened relationships and become better at supporting the most important job that occurs in our school system: teaching.
My favorite part of my job is the relationships. I often say that there is no substitute for showing up, and that’s why I make so many school visits each year. From getting to hold a gorgeous monarch butterfly to watching a vibrant student musical to seeing 3-D printing in action from engineering students, I have witnessed countless unique opportunities, and these experiences are just a small piece of what our students get to take part in each and every day. If I didn’t take the time to form relationships, I wouldn’t know that what students value is knowing that the photos I take may show up in their yearbooks. I wouldn’t know the myriad of annual activities that teachers do across our schools because I wouldn’t have witnessed them firsthand. I wouldn’t know about the families of our principals or what they believe makes their school unique. All of that is invaluable because at the end of the day and at the end of this career, relationships are what will remain – both professionally and personally.
The communication tool I use the most is Canva! I would be a brand ambassador if they asked! I am not very mathematically-minded and it can be challenging for someone with an eye for good design – but not an eye for rulers and gridlines – to be a graphic designer. However, Canva has made it possible and I am able to create aesthetically-pleasing graphics with short turn-around times. I have trained communication ambassadors at our schools how to use it as well. Right after Canva, the tool I most use is iMovie. I am completely self-taught in videography and using iMovie and Canva together has made me someone who can add “videographer” to their list of expertise.