Joylynn Pruitt, superintendent of the University City School District, will retire at the end of next school year.
Pruitt, who has spent eight years as head of the U. City schools, said by the end of her ninth year it will be time for someone else to take the district to the “next level.”
“I am a firm believer that people are sent to different places for different reasons,” Pruitt said.
Pruitt spent 16 of her 38 years as an educator in the U. City schools. Lisa Brenner, president of the board of education, said in a statement that Pruitt’s tenure “will be marked by her implementation of Destination U. City Schools,” an effort to improve academic achievement, staff quality, parent and community engagement, fiscal solvency and transparency.
During her tenure, Pruitt said the district of about 3,000 students changed attendance standards, improved its curriculum, built a new library, expanded its early childhood program and brought back a music program.
“That was my mission. That was what I believe I was here to do,” she said.
But while the district is fully accredited, its annual performance for both 2012-13 and 2013-14 fell below state education standards for accreditation, failing to score 70 percent of the 140 points available on annual performance reviews. (State officials have noted they won’t count this year’s scores if no improvement is shown due to newly implemented English language arts and math assessments.)
Pruitt said her schools face challenges that many others do not have, such as poverty, transience and homelessness among students. Yet the district was able to achieve its first “outright” accreditation under the last incarnation of the Missouri School Improvement Plan.
She admits the district is still trying to meet the latest MSIP standards, and is optimistic the district will meet those standards this year. Even if it doesn’t, Pruitt said her schools have shown continuous improvement, which she calls the “greatest accomplishment.”
“Our ACT scores are going up every year. Our scores in science, particularly in the high school are really growing. The number of students in AP classes is growing,” she said. “We had 205 kids who walked into U. City High School last year as seniors. They all walked across the stage this May. That for me is amazing.”
Still, Pruitt said part of the reason she decided to stay until the end of next school year is that she wants to be there when that data is made public.
“I know that it’s points that count as it relates to whether you’re fully accredited, but in education, it should be about educating kids and giving them a foundation that’s going to help them become lifelong competitive individuals,” she said. “And sometimes that’s not reflected in a test score.”
Pruitt noted that U. City is one of 114 districts across the country that has some form of robotics education at the elementary, middle and high school levels. It’s also one of only three districts in Missouri that is part of the Kennedy Center Partners in Education program.
Achieving more results, however, may happen under her successor’s tenure. Pruitt said her replacement should stay the course on programs that have traditionally worked.
“I want the person who follows me to stay focused on what matters most to kids, and one of the things this community has said to us is they want us to focus on the uniqueness that kids have, and to celebrate the accomplishments that they make, regardless of how small they are,” Pruitt said. “So the kid who is working really hard to get that ‘C’, celebrate that ‘C.'”
After retiring, Pruitt plans to travel, work at the university level, consult – and promote the U. City district.
“I will tell our story of the work that we’ve done,” she said, “where we were and where we are now.”
Edited for length and reprinted with permission from news.stlpublicradio.org.
