Megan Farrell will retire after nearly 30 years at the Oak Bluffs School.
Jeanna Shepard

Oak Bluffs School Principal to Retire This Summer

Megan Farrell told parents this week that she will retire at the end of the school year, joining three other Island principals who are planning to step down before next fall.

A fourth elementary school principal is planning to step down at the end of this school year, sending the district in search of a replacement ahead of next fall. 

Oak Bluffs School principal Megan Farrell notified parents Thursday that she will be stepping down at the end of August as she takes on increasing elder care responsibilities and explores part-time education roles. 

Her departure means superintendent Richard Smith will be on the hunt for three principals. Earlier this week, Edgartown principal Shelley Einbinder announced she would retire in July. Her assistant principal MaryAnn Bartlett is also stepping down at the end of the year.

Those principals are following Chilmark School principal Susan Stevens, who announced late last year that she planned to retire after nearly 50 years in education. The district recently hired Concord teacher Kate Squires to take her place. 

For Ms. Farrell, the decision to retire came with mixed emotions, but she believed the school was on the right path.  

“I am confident that I am leaving the Oak Bluffs School staff and students on a continuous improvement trajectory with an emphasis on social/emotional learning in a safe, secure, and welcoming school facility,” she wrote in her letter. 

She went on to thank the school's educational leadership, expressed gratitude for board members and praised the school’s staff. 

“I am forever indebted to the outstanding Oak Bluffs School staff, at all levels,” she wrote. “They are an extraordinary group of committed educators that continuously give 110 per cent of themselves so students can succeed, and families can grow.” 

Ms. Farrell was hired as the permanent principal in 2016, after serving as the interim when Jack Rizzo suddenly resigned after less than a year on the job. At the time, she had been at the school for 19 years, working as a teacher and a reading specialist before becoming an administrator.

In an interview with the Gazette Monday, Mr. Smith said he was happy for Ms. Farrell and he praised what she’s done for the school. 

“I think she’s done a good job,” he said. “She’s grown the school, the academic program is stronger. I will miss her.”

With only a few months of school left, Mr. Smith expected there would be an abbreviated search for Ms. Farrell’s replacement. 

When Ms. Stevens announced late last year she would step down from Chilmark, the district conducted a broad search, putting ads in education publications and on other job posting sites. 

In that search, the district got 12 candidates back, and held several interviews. The finalists visited Chilmark and Island officials even went to the finalists’ schools to see how they work. 

“Those are things that may not happen in an abbreviated search,” Mr. Smith said. 

The Oak Bluffs process will still likely be more expansive than the hiring in Edgartown, where Mr. Smith said he would likely exercise his power to appoint both a principal and an assistant principal. 

The different approaches are partially due to Mr. Smith’s direct involvement in the Edgartown School after nearly 200 parents attended a school committee meeting earlier this year to underline concerns about education at the school. He said he’s talked to many parents and staff, giving him a strong handle on the type of leadership needed moving forward.

“I am really confident about the succession plan that’s going to be there,” he said. “I feel like there’s been a lot of data gathering that’s already been done.”

The principal departures aren’t all surprising to Mr. Smith. Ms. Einbinder-Fleischmann worked in education for 41 years and wants to spend more time with her brother who has been fighting brain cancer for the past 10 months. Ms. Bartlett last year had discussed potentially moving back to Nantucket or pursuing other education opportunities. Ms. Farrell had also been in education for decades and Mr. Smith knew she would likely retire in the next year or two. 

He hopes the openings will provide a chance for the district to reexamine itself and continue to get better. 

“Whenever there is an opening you aspire to find opportunities to improve and I think we’ll do that in all three of our schools,” he said.

Editor's note: this article has been updated with comments from superintendent Richard Smith.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/05/2024 - 18:33

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Brian Packish

We will miss the leadership of both Megan and Kris. Two driven individuals with the kids of OB and beyond at heart. Thank you both and good luck on your next chapter

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/05/2024 - 19:15

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Lisa Reagan Oak Bluffs

Classroom Teacher, Reading Specialist and Principal, Operations Manager, Grant Writer and Town Liaison; so many hats over 27 years. Megan did it all. Wishing Dr. Farrell the best in retirement. Bravo! Proud to be from OB!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/05/2024 - 20:10

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OB Resident Oak Bluffs

As a parent in the OB school system I'm truly alarmed about the overall systemic failure of our school system. It started with the failure of the the schools to properly address covid and their incredible failure to educate our kids during that time but really covid was just an awakening as to how utterly incompetent our school system is. It's dysfunctional at every level from the top on down. Parents and taxpayers need to step up and rectify this issue.

Albert Gosnold

How should have Oak Bluffs dealt with Covid? How should have kids been educated during Covid?
Beyond Covid what other incompetency's continue exist in our schools?
Parents and taxpayers do not make school decisions, the voters do.
Do we have utterly incompetent voters?
Are you incompetent?
You are quick to accuse.

Laura Edgartown and Indiana

If you think trying to educate with the challenges and limits of covid was uniquely difficult for the island, you clearly had no clue what was going on country wide. Your tossing a blanket of incompetence over the island schools would have to stretch coast to coast as every school system had to recreate the wheel to attempt to educate under those conditions. On the whole, the island schools do a great job.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/06/2024 - 10:09

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Margaret Regan Oak Bluffs

Megan Farrell will be honored and remembered in Oak Bluffs for her leadership and advocacy for literacy. As the former principal of MVRHS, I saw the dedication Megan for kids’ transition from 8th to 9th grade She followed the progress of her students from middle to high school. She will be missed!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/06/2024 - 10:25

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Bob Edgartown

It cannot be more than a coincidence that these top administrators are suddenly leaving the VINEYARD school system. It certainly is not about money as the Island has been very generous to the school systems as a whole. I am sure there are some individual reasons, but curious what the common thread is. Anyone have a guess?

Peter Palches Oak Bluffs

I agree with Marty that Regionalizing would be a good idea, but for a different reason. We wlould have fewer school boards, not fewer principals. Hopefully, with an Island-wide School Region, there would be an HR department to identify and train future leaders from among the wonderful educators already settled here on MV.

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