The middle school years can be volatile for students, and in St. Paul, they can be hard on superintendents, too.
Joe Gothard, now beginning his third year as leader of the state's second-largest district, is aiming to succeed where a predecessor stumbled — and he is pinning his hopes partly on a new middle school not far from the city's East Side.
E-STEM, as it currently is known, opens in September in the former Crosswinds Arts and Science school building in Woodbury. It will begin with sixth-graders only, giving Principal Jocelyn Sims a dream opportunity to build a new program from the ground up.
Stakes are high. Gothard is making a middle school turnaround a priority in a new strategic plan, SPPS Achieves, to be launched this fall. The district has been losing too many students at that age, officials say, and needs a jolt.
"This is the kind of energy and excitement that all families and students need to have," the superintendent said this spring when Sims reported on her teacher and staff hires, and on efforts to recruit students at East Side elementary schools.
Her pitch?
"You get to be pioneers of a brand-new middle school," Sims recalled this week. One, she added, that is "in the heart of a nature haven." There is a bald eagles' nest near the road that winds its way to the school's entrance. Plenty of deer in the area, too.
"You have to drive real slow around here," Sims said.