Love Thy School Board

Va. Officials Showered With Thanks, but How Much Is Too Much?

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 13, 2006; Page B01

If 6-year-old Conor Lafferty had his druthers, he would draw helicopters, the Incredible Hulk or any of his multiple versions of a three-eyed, box-headed man. But late last month, the Woodbridge first-grader was assigned to draw a portrait of someone outside his oeuvre: Grant Lattin, a Prince William County School Board member.

"I didn't know what a school board member was," said Conor, who attends Leesylvania Elementary School. "But I thought it was cool."

If he hadn't been drawing a picture of Lattin, Conor said, he would have been studying math or spelling. But this being February, it is the season for school systems to honor their boards with artwork, gift baskets, flowers and plaques. And just in case systems are unsure of how to appreciate their boards, they are given a kit full of promotional tips: a sample certificate, a sample gubernatorial proclamation, sample articles and letters to the editor.

In Virginia, February is School Board Appreciation Month, which should not be confused with National School Board Recognition Month -- in January. That's a lot of appreciation and recognition, say some parents and school officials in the Washington area, many of whom wonder whether the tradition, despite its quaintness, amounts to an unseemly display of public relations.

"I think National School Board Recognition Month ranks up there with National Chocolate Week," said Sally Ann Baynard, an Alexandria School Board member and adjunct international relations professor at Georgetown University. "You're either honored by what you do or you're not."

And yet, school officials across the country are dutifully heaping appreciation upon their board members, who appreciate the appreciation, even if some of them think it can be gratuitous.

In Prince William, students from several schools were asked to draw pictures to be hung in the School Board meeting room. All month, the public can view the board members' portraits, which can only be classified, generously, as a cross between avant-garde and spooky.

Lucy S. Beauchamp, the board chairman, was given a black streak through her blond hair. Don Richardson appears to have a purple goatee with red spots. Betty D. Covington has no hands.

"I am just delighted by the expressions that we've received from teachers, students and parents," said Lattin, a lawyer who has been on the Prince William board for two years. "At the same time, sometimes when too much is made about what we're doing, you have a feeling that it's over the top."

Emboldened by the belief that school board members are an underpaid and tireless class of public servants, many school systems observe these recognition months with an ardent devotion. Advocates say the board members deserve it. Most are paid little to nothing, and, with an endless schedule of receptions and sporting events, they become masters in the art of schlepping, often on nights or weekends.

Typically without advanced degrees in education, school board members are charged with settling a jurisdiction's most contentious issues.

Invariably, no matter whom they pick as superintendent, which programs they add or cut, or which neighborhood they send to the better school, they deal with abundant criticism that often turns nasty.


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