Organizing Principal
In the South Bronx, Ramón Gonzalez gives a troubled middle school a kidcentric makeover
- By Paula Span
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Down the hall, in a math class, a graphing lesson seems to be causing confusion. Gonzalez, wading in to help kids plot coordinates, will talk with the teacher later. "He's not holding the kids accountable," the principal says. And to do that, he says, the teacher must give clearer instructions.
Gonzalez's standards for his staff are high, he says, but so is his admiration for them. "Every day they walk into this building," he says, "they're taking a stand against poverty."
2:20 p.m.: Dismissal. At times, life at MS 223 can seem pretty ordinary. A girl complains about a boy pulling her hair; two boys are warned about chatting in class. But then Gonzalez sits down with his assistant principal to discuss a 13-year-old showing cognitive deficits after getting shot in the head. They're trying to get a neurosurgeon to evaluate her. "This kid is lost," he sighs.
Some of Gonzalez's colleagues see him headed for top-tier education administration; others hope he'll enter politics. Not likely, he says. He and his wife, a fourth-grade teacher in another city school, have two sons, including a newborn, and have bought a brownstone on the street where he grew up. He's digging in.
"I love this job because every day we get a chance to change lives," he says. "By the time kids get to high school, a lot of decisions are made. Now, they're still searching."
Paula Span teaches at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.
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Comments (2)
What a great article ! I started my day reading this article with a cup of coffee and it's a better day for it :o) Thanks!
Posted by Michael Faulkner on August 18,2008 | 07:27 AM
Thanks for the great profile. Wonderful vision and effort by Mr. Rodriguez. He is in just the right place.
Posted by Gerald Garcia on January 12,2008 | 09:09 PM