Savannah schools search for new principals, seek community input
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) – Savannah-Chatham County public school leaders are taking a unique approach to search for their next principals in two schools that score on the lower end of the state's criteria for success.
Hubert Middle and Beach High School both need new principals. For the next school year, the district is hoping to lead those schools to success by gathering feedback at community meetings about how the hiring process should work.
'In the past, Beach was stellar. This community was stellar, but it is on the rise up, and we want to make sure this principal is vested in the community as well as the school,' Co-President of the Cann/Jackson Park Neighborhood Association Altheria Maynard said at a meeting Wednesday night.
The Georgia Department of Education's 2024 College and Career Ready Performance Index measures individual schools' success by four categories: content mastery, progress, closing gaps and readiness.
Graduation rate is also considered for high schools.
Beach ranks in the bottom five of all Chatham County high schools in every category other than progress and is below the state average in the same categories, according to the index.
Hubert, according to the index, is in the bottom five and below the state average in all categories except graduation rate, which does not apply to middle schools.
In a series of meetings held Tuesday and Wednesday night, district officials met with parents and community stakeholders about what they want to see in their children's next principal.
'Hiring a leader and a principal of a school is more about a person who brings all the competencies to the table, and we're not doing anything special because of a performance of a school,' Chief of Schools for Savannah Chatham County Public Schools Raymond Barnes said.
To determine what competencies the new principals should have, district officials had members of the community vote.
'It was a good showing, but I would've liked to see a whole lot more people here involved in the process because the more we educate ourselves about where that bar is, then we can help the school community meet that bar,' Deborah Clarke, Ph.D., a Beach High alumnus and retired SCCPSS educator, said.
Going forward, district officials will incorporate the community feedback into interview questions for principal candidates. Then SCCPSS Superintendent Denise Watts, Ph.D. will recommend candidates for the Savannah-Chatham Board of Education's approval.
According to district officials, the goal is to have the new principals at both Hubert and Beach named by July 1.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Amtrak's salvage center is helping communities in West Baltimore
Keeping useful items out of landfills and giving back to the community. That's the goal of a first-of-its-kind program with the Frederick Douglass Tunnel construction project. When Amtrak razed rowhouses last year to make way for the new tunnel, the railroad went the extra mile, salvaging usable items from the 100-year-old homes. 'We were only technically obligated to provide the historic materials,' says Alexis Hightower, Amtrak capital construction manager. 'As they had a chance to go in and inspect each property, they brought it to our attention, hey there are some other valuable items, some still fairly new.' See more:


Fox News
30 minutes ago
- Fox News
Ex-NFL kicker calls out Simone Biles over personal attack on Riley Gaines
Jay Feely, a former NFL kicker who is running for Congress in Arizona, made his stance on men in women's sports known as he weighed in on the Simone Biles-Riley Gaines feud on Saturday. Feely wrote on X in response to Biles' personal attack on Gaines, "men don't belong in women's sports!" "@Simone_Biles argument is the antithesis of title 9 and equal opportunity it's provided for women. It puts girls in dangerous, compromising situations so a man pretending to be a woman can feel better about themselves," Feely wrote. Feely added his support for Gaines in the post. "Simone doesn't win any medal if she competes against men," he wrote. "Serena Williams doesn't win any tournaments if she competes against men. They are the best ever to do it. Why should we compromise with our high school and college girls and take away their opportunities." Biles went after Gaines as the OutKick podcast host reacted to a transgender pitcher competing in the Minnesota state softball championship. "@Riley_Gaines_ You're truly sick, all of this campaigning because you lost a race. Straight up sore loser," Biles wrote on X. "You should be uplifting the trans community and perhaps finding a way to make sports inclusive OR creating a new avenue where trans feel safe in sports. Maybe a transgender category IN ALL sports!! "But instead… You bully them… One things for sure is no one in sports is safe with you around!!!!!" Gaines responded to Biles' attack. "This is so disappointing. My take is the least controversial take on the planet," Gaines wrote in response to Biles' post. "Simone Biles being a male-apologist at the expense of young girls' dreams? Didn't have that on my bingo card. "Maybe she could compete in pommel horse and rings in 2028." Feely revealed he was stepping into the Arizona congressional race in April in an interview with Fox News Digital. He entered the Republican primary for Arizona's 5th Congressional District to replace Rep. Andy Biggs, who's running to be the Grand Canyon State's next governor. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Wall Street Journal
33 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Deportation Wars Begin
Rounding up and deporting millions of illegal migrants was never going to go down without protest. But President Trump is determined to do it, and no one can say he didn't tell voters during the campaign. But there are risks for both sides of this dispute, and especially for the country if it turns violent and triggers a military response from the White House. The weekend's clashes in Los Angeles are a sign of what could be ahead. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been staging raids around the city hunting for migrants, including at businesses where they are thought to work. Workers, union leaders and pro-migrant activists hit the streets in protest. The clashes turned nasty in some places, some officers were hurt, and ICE and local police made arrests, including of a prominent union leader for interfering with federal officers. President Trump then invoked a little-used law to override what is typically state control and sent in 2,000 troops from the California National Guard. Cue the outrage from Democrats and cries of law-breaking on both sides.