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Live

The Latest: Iran threatens UAE ports as war enters its third week

Get ready to vote for Amphi school board

  • Jul 9, 2016
  • Jul 9, 2016 Updated Oct 10, 2016

Five candidates are vying for three seats on the Amphitheater School District board.

Who should I vote for? Amphi Governing Board

If you live in the Amphitheater Unified School District, these are the people you will see on your general election ballot. They are seeking one of three volunteer positions.


Scott Baker

Scott Baker, 54

Employer and position: Catalina Foothills School District, Physical Education Teacher

Education: Bachelor's degree in Elementary Education (University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse); Master's in Teacher Education and PhD in Teacher Education (University of Arizona)

Political experience: None

Top priority: Teacher retention

HIS TAKE ON ...

Testing: I feel that we have too much of an emphasis on testing and that the time that teachers need to spend in their classes actually testing students should be reduced, even if the state of Arizona requires testing as some type of an accountability measure.

Improving teacher retention: One thing I would do to improve teacher retention is to make sure that the maximum amount of money possible is going into teacher salaries. Other things that I would do to increase teacher retention is to work to create a culture of respect for teachers in the district.

Improving academic achievement:  The most important ways to affect academic achievement are through having quality teachers and having a quality curriculum. I’m very knowledgeable about curriculum and I think that I would have a very experienced eye towards curriculum that is being brought to the school board.


Vicki Cox Golder

Vicki Cox Golder, 65

Employment and position: Self-employed, Real Estate Broker

Education: Dropped out of University of Arizona

Political experience: 27 years on the Golder Ranch Fire District board, nine years on the Amphitheater school board starting in 1987

Top priority: My top priority would be working with the Legislature and the governor to identify a permanent funding source for education.

HER TAKE ON ...

Testing: I know that teachers complain about testing but there has to be some testing in schools, because you have to know how you’re doing compared to other state districts. How would you know how you’re doing unless you’re testing? They perhaps over do it because teachers are spending an enormous amounts of time preparing for and administering tests.

Improving teacher retention: You need to have a good climate in the schools and of course you have to pay them a decent salary. It’s also appalling that first-year teachers make as much as they did 20 years ago. We have to make sure that teachers are paid decent salaries.

Improving academic achievement: Some of the things we’re already doing, such as Odyssey of the Mind and academic decathlons, help improve academic achievement. They are good for children and they are fun. We have to try to make education fun and enjoyable.


Julie Cozad

Julie Cozad, 66

Employment and position: Retired from teaching in the Marana Unified School District

Education: Bachelor's degree in Elementary Education (University of Arizona); Master's in Education Administration (Northern Arizona University)

Political experience: Incumbent on the Amphitheater school board

Top priority: I'll make sure that we retain staff and meet the needs of our students.

HER TAKE ON ...

Testing: I don’t mind accountability. In fact, I think it’s crucial for everybody. One of my frustrations with AzMERIT is that it recently changed and the teachers don’t know if what they are teaching is what would be asked on the test. I’m OK with testing if it’s a reliable and valid test.

Improving teacher retention: For the teachers that we’ve got, we’ve got to hang on to them. I want to make sure they are heard and valued and we’re doing anything that we can do to support them. It comes down to hourly wage. I also like the idea of going in and listening to make sure people feel that I’m approachable and they can talk to me.

Improving academic achievement: I recently met with the director of Pima County libraries and found out that all the things that libraries do. Amphi does so much for kids but the library system does too. I think branching out with the community and seeing what’s available is going to be crucial because of limited budget.


Deanna Day

Deanna Day, 70

Employer and position: Retired teacher of the Amphitheater School District

Education: Bachelor's degree in Education (University of Arizona); Master's of Education in Reading (University of Arizona)

Political experience: Incumbent on the Amphitheater school board

Top priority: My top priority is high quality education for all students of the Amphitheater district.

HER TAKE ON ...

Testing: There is way too much testing for students. And when you’re not testing, you’re preparing for testing. I’d have more curriculum that mirrors problem solving, science technology, engineering and math.

Improving teacher retention: Salaries are a huge issue at the moment. We need to get better salaries for teachers. But it’s not only salary. It’s also job satisfaction with teachers.

Improving academic achievement: We do a lot of things in academic achievement. Teachers are professionally trained. There are high levels of professional development that focus on how to get the most out of students. We know that parents choose schools based on academic achievement.


Mick Stewart

Mick Stewart, 54

Employer and position: Advanced Placement government teacher at Sunnyside High School

Education: Bachelor's degree in Education (Brigham Young University); Master's in Education Administration (Northern Arizona University)

Political experience: None

Top priority: I want to support teachers and I want to involve the community in making Amphi the number one destination of education.

HIS TAKE ON ...

Testing: As a public school teacher, I have seen the stress that over-testing can do to students. I think we over-test. But I see the value of assessing so that you can figure out what students need. I am concerned that the current format doesn’t do that well enough. I’m a proponent of giving more authority and more decision making to local schools and local teachers.

Improving teacher retention: Arizona is limited because the pay for teachers is low in comparison to surrounding states. What we can do is make teachers feel better about the job they are doing. What I want Amphi to do is to allow teachers to have more voice in decision making and a bigger part. When teachers are empowered, they are more effective in their jobs and they are happier.

Improving academic achievement: We need to find programs that promote high rigor and also provide enrichment for the students to make the connection to higher-level thinking. That is allowing teachers to find and implement programs that use inquiry model of teaching; allowing students to seek, learn and discover. With high expectations and great support, students will thrive.

5 seek 3 seats on Amphitheater School District board

Five candidates are vying for three seats on the Amphitheater School District board.

They are: Scott Baker, a PE teacher; Vicki Cox Golder, a former board member and real estate broker; Julie Cozad, retired teacher and incumbent on the board; Deanna Day, current board president and retired teacher; and Mick Stewart, a former Amphi teacher and current Sunnyside High School social studies teacher.

The Star asked the candidates on their views on some key education issues. The answers have been edited for length and clarity.

Testing

Baker: I feel that we have too much of an emphasis on testing and that the time that teachers need to spend in their classes actually testing students should be reduced, even if the state of Arizona requires testing as some type of an accountability measure.

Cox Golder: I know that teachers complain about testing but there has to be some testing in schools, because you have to know how you’re doing compared to other state districts. How would you know how you’re doing unless you’re testing? They perhaps over do it because teachers are spending an enormous amounts of time preparing for and administering tests.

Cozad: I don’t mind accountability. In fact, I think it’s crucial for everybody. One of my frustrations with AzMERIT is that it recently changed and the teachers don’t know if what they are teaching is what would be asked on the test. I’m OK with testing if it’s a reliable and valid test.

Day: There is way too much testing for students. And when you’re not testing, you’re preparing for testing. I’d have more curriculum that mirrors problem solving, science technology, engineering and math.

Stewart: As a public school teacher, I have seen the stress that over-testing can do to students. I think we over-test. But I see the value of assessing so that you can figure out what students need. I am concerned that the current format doesn’t do that well enough. I’m a proponent of giving more authority and more decision making to local schools and local teachers.

Teacher retention

Baker: One thing I would do to improve teacher retention is to make sure that the maximum amount of money possible is going into teacher salaries. Other things that I would do to increase teacher retention is to work to create a culture of respect for teachers in the district.

Cox Golder: You need to have a good climate in the schools and of course you have to pay them a decent salary. It’s also appalling that first-year teachers make as much as they did 20 years ago. We have to make sure that teachers are paid decent salaries.

Cozad: For the teachers that we’ve got, we’ve got to hang on to them. I want to make sure they are heard and valued and we’re doing anything that we can do to support them. It comes down to hourly wage. I also like the idea of going in and listening to make sure people feel that I’m approachable and they can talk to me.

Day: Salaries are a huge issue at the moment. We need to get better salaries for teachers. But it’s not only salary. It’s also job satisfaction with teachers.

Stewart: Arizona is limited because the pay for teachers is low in comparison to surrounding states. What we can do is make teachers feel better about the job they are doing. What I want Amphi to do is to allow teachers to have more voice in decision making and a bigger part. When teachers are empowered, they are more effective in their jobs and they are happier.

Academic achievement

Baker: The most important ways to affect academic achievement are through having quality teachers and having a quality curriculum. I’m very knowledgeable about curriculum and I think that I would have a very experienced eye towards curriculum that is being brought to the school board.

Cox Golder: Some of the things we’re already doing, such as Odyssey of the Mind and academic decathlons, help improve academic achievement. They are good for children and they are fun. We have to try to make education fun and enjoyable.

Cozad: I recently met with the director of Pima County libraries and found out that all the things that libraries do. Amphi does so much for kids but the library system does too. I think branching out with the community and seeing what’s available is going to be crucial because of limited budget.

Day: We do a lot of things in academic achievement. Teachers are professionally trained. There are high levels of professional development that focus on how to get the most out of students. We know that parents choose schools based on academic achievement.

Stewart: We need to find programs that promote high rigor and also provide enrichment for the students to make the connection to higher-level thinking. That is allowing teachers to find and implement programs that use inquiry model of teaching; allowing students to seek, learn and discover. With high expectations and great support, students will thrive.

Amphitheater School District map

Amphitheater School District map

Want to make a difference in Tucson education? Don't sleep on school board elections

More than three dozen people have thrown their names in the hat for a chance to serve on school boards across Tucson.

While the title of governing board member may not seem all that glamorous, those elected have huge influence over the educational experience of children across the city.

School board members have the final say on decisions about the kind of curriculum children are taught, how much money is spent in the classroom, or creating student discipline policies.

“They make some of the most important decisions about the day-to-day functions of every one of our school districts,” said Ricky Hernandez, who oversees elections for the Pima County School Superintendent's Office. “It’s vitally important that voters — be they parents or be they community members — pay attention to these elections and try to do some research about these people so they can make decisions that best fit their interests.”

Voters will have the opportunity to make their picks at the polls in November or when early ballots go out in October.

The following 37 candidates are competing for 28 open seats in Tucson’s nine major school districts:

Amphitheater (3 seats)

  • Deanna Day*
  • Julie Cozad*
  • Scott Baker
  • Mick Stewart
  • Vicki Cox Golder

Catalina Foothills (3 seats)

  • Carole Siegler*
  • Eileen Jackson*
  • Robert Douglas Hadley

Flowing Wells (3 seats)

  • Thomas S. Jacobs*
  • James A. Love*
  • Wendy Effing

Marana (3 seats)

  • Suzanne Hopkins*
  • Maribel Lopez*
  • Daniel Post*

Sahuarita (3 seats)

  • J. Elaine Hall*
  • Kris Ham*
  • Dalia Zimmerman
  • Shari S. Lowell

Sunnyside (3 seats)

  • Buck Crouch*
  • Becky Quintero*
  • Roberto Jaramillo

Tanque Verde (4 seats)

  • Jeffrey M. Neff*
  • Carlos Ruiz*
  • Susan E. Fry*
  • Jeremy Schalk
  • Vieri M. Tenuta

TUSD (3 seats)

  • Kristel Foster*
  • Cam Juarez*
  • Mark Stegeman*
  • Lori Riegel
  • Betts Putnam-Hidalgo
  • Rachael Sedgwick
  • Brett Rustand

Vail (3 seats)

  • Allison Pratt*
  • Anthony Sizer
  • Callie Tippett
  • Mark Tate

*incumbent

There is also an opportunity for write-in candidates to file by Aug. 24.

In the case of Catalina Foothills, Flowing Wells, Marana and Sunnyside, which each have three candidates and three seats, if no write-in candidates come forward and if their signatures check out the Pima County Board of Supervisors could appoint those individuals, eliminating the need for, and cost of, an election.

37 candidates seek to serve on Tucson-area school boards

More than three dozen people have thrown their names in the hat for a chance to serve on Tucson-area school boards.

Those elected to governing boards have huge influence over the educational experience of children across the city. School board members have the final say on decisions that include what curriculum children are taught, how much money is spent in the classroom and student discipline policies.

“They make some of the most important decisions about the day-to-day functions of every one of our school districts,” said Ricky Hernandez, who oversees elections for the Pima County School Superintendent’s Office.

“It’s vitally important that voters — be they parents or be they community members — pay attention to these elections and try to do some research about these people so they can make decisions that best fit their interests.”

Voters will have the opportunity to make their picks at the polls in November, though early ballots go out in October.

The following 37 candidates are competing for 28 open seats in Tucson’s nine major school districts (incumbents are indicated with an asterisk):

Amphitheater (3 seats)
  • Deanna Day*
  • Julie Cozad*
  • Scott Baker
  • Mick Stewart
  • Vicki Cox Golder
Catalina Foothills
(3 seats)
  • Carole Siegler*
  • Eileen Jackson*
  • Robert Douglas Hadley
Flowing Wells
(3 seats)
  • Thomas S. Jacobs*
  • James A. Love*
  • Wendy Effing
Marana (3 seats)
  • Suzanne Hopkins*
  • Maribel Lopez*
  • Daniel Post*
Sahuarita (3 seats)
  • J. Elaine Hall*
  • Kris Ham*
  • Dalia Zimmerman
  • Shari S. Lowell
Sunnyside (3 seats)
  • Buck Crouch*
  • Becky Quintero*
  • Roberto Jaramillo
Tanque Verde (4 seats)
  • Jeffrey M. Neff*
  • Carlos Ruiz*
  • Susan E. Fry*
  • Jeremy Schalk
  • Vieri M. Tenuta
TUSD (3 seats)
  • Kristel Foster*
  • Cam Juarez*
  • Mark Stegeman*
  • Lori Riegel
  • Betts Putnam-Hidalgo
  • Rachael Sedgwick
  • Brett Rustand
Vail (3 seats)
  • Allison Pratt*
  • Anthony Sizer
  • Callie Tippett
  • Mark Tate

There is also an opportunity for write-in candidates to file by Aug. 24.

In the Catalina Foothills, Flowing Wells, Marana and Sunnyside districts, each has three candidates and three seats. If no write-in candidates come forward and if the nomionating signatures check out, the Pima County Board of Supervisors could appoint those candidates, eliminating the need for and cost of an election.

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