Katie Franklin
Age 33 | Stuart-Hobson Middle School
Assistant Principal for Interventions
When Katie Franklin began tutoring elementary students in Memphis, Tenn., as an undergraduate in the late 1990s, she was after community-service hours for graduation. But it would shape the direction of her life.
Seeing the stark differences of opportunity among her students was a wake-up call for Ms. Franklin, who was raised in an upper-middle-class white suburb of Chattanooga. As a student at Rhodes College, she immersed herself in history and political theory. Working with disadvantaged children transformed those ideas into a drive to work for social justice. Education would be her route.
鈥淚 was drawn to these kids who didn鈥檛 have the opportunities, but still had that thirst for learning,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 saw how they were discarded instead of being worked with. I began to question how much their school was providing for them.鈥
She embarked on a path that took her, nearly a decade later, to an assistant principalship at Stuart-Hobson Middle School in the District of Columbia, where her supervisory areas include English/language arts and academic interventions.
But first, she took over the tutoring program at that Memphis elementary school when the position became vacant. Doubling its tutoring ranks and seeing what the services could do for children, she set out to obtain teaching experience and a credential.
Rhodes had no education major, so she got her degree in political science and joined the ranks of Teach For America. She taught 3rd grade in New Orleans for two years while working toward her credential through the New Teacher Project, an alternative-route program.
Her early teaching experiences were harrowing. The Houston school that served as her six-week TFA crash course didn鈥檛 prepare her for the level of need she found in New Orleans鈥 Lower Ninth Ward. But her second year, she says, she started making connections with her students and seeing them progress.
A summer teaching opportunity with Higher Achievement, a nonprofit that runs year-round academic-enrichment programs for middle school students, led Ms. Franklin to Washington in 2004. She admits she was scared at first to teach young adolescents, thinking they鈥檇 be 鈥渋mpossible to work with.鈥 Instead, she was enchanted by their eagerness to become interesting, responsible adults.
鈥淭hey blew my mind,鈥 she says.
That response, combined with a culture at Higher Achievement that she describes as a perfect fit鈥攈igh expectations paired with strong learning supports for children鈥攍ed her to begin to see herself in a school leadership role.
In the next four years, she directed one of Higher Achievement鈥檚 neighborhood centers, and then rose to supervise all its academic programming, reaching 500 students in the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia. In that role, she trained, observed, and supported teachers, with a special eye toward the role culture plays in student learning.
Ms. Franklin spent the 2008-09 school year at Harvard University earning a master鈥檚 degree in school leadership. With its emphasis on leading an urban school through instructional improvement, the program offered the right kind of preparation for the career she knew by then that she wanted: as an administrator or teacher-leader for District of Columbia students.
Keenly aware that charter schools were siphoning student and teacher talent away from the regular schools, Ms. Franklin positioned herself as a staunch advocate for the noncharter sector.
Michelle A. Rhee had become the chancellor of schools, and for all the controversy she created, Ms. Franklin saw the shifting sands as an opportunity to serve and further clarify what role in education would best fit her.
She was drawn to a new district initiative called Full Service Schools, which provides enhanced behavioral, social, and academic supports for 11 of its 13 middle schools. She knew Brandon Eatman, the veteran principal of the Capitol Hill Cluster schools鈥攚hich include Stuart-Hobson鈥攆rom her days at Higher Achievement. Interviewing with him led to the job in 2009 that she still holds: assistant principal of academic interventions, a position created by the Full Service Schools initiative.
Once again, it was trial by fire, she says, as she and another new assistant principal replaced the longtime assistant principal. Veteran teachers resented the new administrators鈥 ideas. Within two years, Mr. Eatman changed schools, and a new principal, Dawn Clemens, left her charter school job to replace him. Additional staff departures followed as the school adapted to new leadership.
The upheaval of the past four years has been Ms. Franklin鈥檚 tutor; she is learning how to manage through change, and to enlist her staff in the work. Since Ms. Clemens oversees three schools, Ms. Franklin and the other assistant principal, Tonya Harris, carry a big share of their principal鈥檚 work, juggling meetings, teacher observations and feedback, data analysis, and crisis management.
Through the day-to-day work, Ms. Franklin鈥檚 belief in the power of schools鈥攁nd her school鈥攖o change children鈥檚 lives is unshaken.
鈥淚f schools can operate in a way that values the potential of every student,鈥 she says, 鈥渨e can break the cycle of poverty.鈥