Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Saroyan retiring after time of his life

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Saroyan retiring after time of his life

    Vallejo Times-Herald
    June 7 2009


    Saroyan retiring after time of his life


    By Mary Enbom/Times-Herald city editor
    Posted: 06/07/2009 12:00:52 AM PDT


    Tears rolled down Doris Le's face as she reminisced about the day last
    year when she walked into Vallejo High School principal Phil Saroyan's
    office, worried she'd face "an angry bull."

    Le recently finished her freshman year at Harvard University, and
    stopped by unexpectedly to visit her former principal, who retires in
    a few days after

    36 years as a local educator.

    When Le showed up, Saroyan had a final newsletter to finish, a
    computer data glitch to fix, a reporter waiting to interview him and
    an upcoming volleyball game to play between staff and seniors.

    But he put them all on hold to spend more than an hour with her.

    As a senior, Le led a highly publicized student campaign against
    unsanitary bathrooms. She said she was blasted by some district
    administrators, and even some classmates, after submitting a petition
    signed by 800 students,demanding the school board hire more custodians
    to clean the bathrooms more often. Some critics said she made the
    school look bad, and since Saroyan may have been put in a

    politically difficult position, she worried she'd get backlash from
    him, too.

    "I walked in and he just smiled at me, offered me a seat and asked me,
    'How are YOU?' Not, 'How is the situation?' or 'Why didn't you come to
    me first?' but, 'How are YOU?' " Le said.

    "It's so representative of how he cares about each student as an
    individual. Regardless of being really busy, he always makes a point
    to know how you're doing -- emotionally, academically and personally."


    After more than three decades in education, the 61-year-old says the
    job has added challenges since he started, but kids haven't changed
    much.

    "For the most part, kids are kids. They still need the loving, caring
    attention of adults," he said.

    The world, however, has become more complex, especially since the
    economy tanked, and that's impacting students, he said.

    "More kids come to school hungry. More kids need clothes. Fewer can
    afford to participate in activities because of finances. There's a
    tremendous number of homeless kids now. More and more have to work to
    support their family," Saroyan said.

    Befriending students is Saroyan's signature, and he often gets former
    students -- including New York

    Yankees ace pitcher CC Sabathia -- dropping by years later to visit.

    Saroyan, who grew up in Vallejo, rarely goes anywhere in town "without
    someone yelling out, 'Hi Mr. Saroyan!' " his daughter Nicole Saroyan
    wrote in her father's last newsletter. He calls the newsletter, which
    he began 25 years ago, "the Armenian Times," after his ethnicity, and
    sends it to parents, staff, alumni and friends, locally and
    nationwide.

    A 1965 Vallejo High graduate, Saroyan considered it his dream job when
    he became principal of his alma mater 15 years ago.

    He said he had two goals: to restore a feeling of "family" among the
    faculty, because a Vallejo City Unified School District teachers
    strike had just ended, and to boost student achievement.

    He said he worked hard to create a caring place where staff and
    students could thrive. Test scores, measured by the state's Academic
    Performance Index, rose 100 points in nine years, he said. Last year,
    Vallejo High jumped from a 3 to 9 on a 10-point scale comparing
    schools with similar demographics, he said.

    The job has come with some grief: education's struggle to secure
    enough state funding ("It's deplorable not to have a full-time
    librarian"); students who dropped out ("It's always disappointing");
    and the occasional death of a student or staff member ("These are the
    most difficult"). The job's round-the-clock demands also have been
    hard on family at times, he said.

    But he said it's still his dream job, and "I still love it. I'm still
    very happy. I couldn't ask for a better staff of teachers, counselors
    and support staff."

    He has high praise for Vice Principal Lloyd Cartwright, who will take
    the post on an interim basis next school year. "If some dog were
    coming in here besides Lloyd, I'd consider staying," he said.

    Teacher Jack Gillepsie said he'd be the first to make a "ball and
    chain, or ankle bracelet to chain him to the desk" to make him stay.

    "When I've needed to be called on the carpet, he's always done that in
    a way that's not demeaning or threatening," Gillepsie said. "When I've
    come to him with workable solutions, he's backed me up. If there's an
    issue I needed to fix but couldn't see a solution, he has had two or
    three ideas to help find a solution that worked best."

    Mixed feelings about leaving?

    "No, it's time," Saroyan said. "I've planned this for a long time."

    He said he may do some consulting, helping high school administrators
    analyze data and improve test scores.

    He also plans to do more fishing and mountain climbing -- a sport he
    took up in recent years -- and spend more his time with family,
    especially his grandchildren.

    What will he miss most?

    "Graduation, absolutely!" he said, lifting both hands into the
    air. "That's what we're all about -- getting these kids to Corbus
    Field, getting them started in a new phase in their lives."

    As Saroyan starts the newest phase of his own life, he said he has
    only one regret that "I didn't start mountain climbing sooner."

    http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ne ws/ci_12539119
Working...
X