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External Partners Alumni Search Submit Return to home Search Search About About Olin Home Why Olin Equity, Diversity & Inclusion Leadership & Strategy News & Media Events Contact Us Programs Programs Home Explore Our Programs BS in Business Administration MBAs Specialized Master's Doctoral Executive Education Dual Degrees Faculty & Research Faculty & Research Home Faculty Directory Research Research Centers Olin Brookings Commission Olin Award Student Resources Student Resources Home Career Services Center for Experiential Learning Entrepreneurship Academic Calendars Student Organizations For Current Students For Military Veterans Admissions Admissions Home Scholarships & Aid Attend Program Events Visit Olin Ask a Student Student Profiles Request Information Refer a Candidate External Partners Alumni When the Kids Come First: Ty McNichols Season 3, Episode 3 October 11, 2022 29 minute listen Listen on Apple PodcastsListen on Spotify About News and Media On Principle Podcast Season 3 When the Kids Come First: Ty McNichols When the Kids Come First: Ty McNichols I thought I could make a difference. I thought I could impact the community. And my record had shown that I could. Summary You walk in expecting to do big things. When the wheels come off the plan, however, how do you regroup, reprioritize, keep a team aligned—and still try to accomplish something? Episode Description In March 2013, the Normandy School District’s board hired Ty McNichols as its superintendent. By January 2015, McNichols was gone, resigned from the post after gaining what had been a career ambition—to lead a school district. In the course of those 22 months, McNichol ran into a buzzsaw of state and local politics, financial crisis, plummeting morale, personal attacks and lightly veiled racism as he navigated the sudden loss of accreditation for the district. Oh, and by the way, McNichols and his team had to educate 4,000 students from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade. The drama began to unfold within weeks of McNichols taking on the role offered by the elected school board for the north St. Louis County district. The chronically underperforming district needed a leader with ideas about improving student performance. The board thought McNichols might have the right ideas. By June, however, the state of Missouri had stripped Normandy of its accreditation, setting in motion a series of issues and unintended consequences. That included accommodating hundreds of students given authority to flee the district for a neighboring, fully accredited district. Those moves came on Normandy’s dime—indeed, a lot of dimes Normandy didn’t have. And it put the mostly Black and brown students of Normandy in the crosshairs of a somewhat hostile reception from the mostly white district identified to accept them. “What are the things I value? What was I willing to do and what not? Education is a political action for social justice,” McNichols said. “That's what drove me.” Our story is about how a leader confronts wildly competing priorities when the stakes are high—arguably no higher than the education of children. Can you strive for great? Must you settle for acceptable? Is this about making the best of a bad situation? Related Links Tyrone McNichols named Normandy superintendent, St. Louis American, March 14, 2013 McNichols resigns as Normandy superintendent, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 22, 2015 Saint Rice on LinkedIn Washington University’s Institute for School Partnership Credits This podcast is a production of Washington University in St. Louis’s Olin Business School. Contributors include: Katie Wools, Cathy Myrick, Judy Milanovits and Lesley Liesman, creative assistance Jill Young Miller, fact checking and creative assistance Hayden Molinarolo, original music and sound design Mike Martin Media, editing Sophia Passantino, social media Lexie O'Brien and Erik Buschardt, website support Paula Crews, creative vision and strategic support Special thanks to Ray Irving and his team at WashU Olin’s Center for Digital Education, including our audio engineer, Austin Alred. Additional information Please subscribe on your favorite podcasting app to be notified when each new episode of On Principle is available.   Download the podcast transcript PDF Share podcast Apply Now Visit Us Request Info One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899 [email protected] 314-935-7301 News & Media Events Faculty Directory WashU Center for Career Engagement Washington University home Olin Links Sitemap Privacy Policies Title IX Accessibility ©2024 Washington University in St. Louis

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