"Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practise to deceive!" --Sir Walter Scott, Marmion
Click here to read an interesting series of emails that were obtained from Minooka CCSD 201 through a simple Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. These emails pertain, of course, to the recent board meetings on October 15th and October 22nd and the controversy surrounding the proposed parent survey (see previous posts here, here and here; click here to see the proposed survey). What jumps out at me from the emails, which are emails to and from Superintendent Al Gegenheimer, is the sheer duplicity of the messages (showing one face to the board and another to the administration and his confidants).
For example, in an email to one of the school board attorneys, Barb Erickson, in which he attaches the first draft of the survey, Mr. Gegenheimer writes "If it was funny, it would be laughable." However, the very next day (Friday, October 17) when forwarding the board of education a revised draft of the survey, Mr. Gegenheimer has nothing more to say than "Attached you will find the survey. Please let me know if you have any suggestions for revision." Barely a minute later, Mr. Gegenheimer forwards the same email to a Richard Dombrowski (who, to my knowledge, has no connection to Minooka CCSD 201) with this to say: "Here it is. It would be laughable if it was funny."
A little later that same day, there was an email exchange with Mrs. Kathleen Cheshareck (Principal of Walnut Trails Elementary School) that went like this:
"Hi Al, Did Kristan [referring to board member Kristan Crouch] develop the survey or is it a published one? thanks, Kathy" (Kathleen Cheshareck)
"Kristin [sic] did. It is pitiful. It would be laughable if it was funny." (Al Gegenheimer)
"Validity and reliability???" (Kathleen Cheshareck)
"None at all! It's a joke (that isn't funny)." (Al Gegenheimer)
Two days later (Sunday, October 19), Mr. Al Skwarczynski (board member) sent an email to Mr. Gegenheimer which stated "I would like to see the last three open ended questions separated. Since there is room on the page, each question needs to have space directly under it for a response." In response to Mr. Skwarczynski's email, Mr. Gegenheimer merely stated "Thanks Al!" The next day (Monday, October 20), I emailed Mr. Gegenheimer regarding the agenda for the meeting on October 22 stating "It seems that two items are missing from the meeting agenda: (1) the adoption of the strategic plan; and (2) approval of the parent survey." The response from Mr. Gegenheimer was: "I will get it revised and posted. Thanks!" Again, at no point when he was emailing either of the two board members regarding the survey did Mr. Gegenheimer state or even imply that he had concerns about the survey or that he thought the survey was laughable, a joke, pitiful, or that it had absolutely no validity or reliability.
On the morning of October 22 (the day of the regular board meeting), Mr. Gegenheimer sent the proposed parent survey by email to Don McKinney (a former Minooka CCSD 201 board member who resigned from the school board earlier this year and is the current superintendent at Nettle Creek) with this to say: "Sorry that I didn't get this to you sooner. Please look it over and let me know your thoughts. Please call me today, if possible. Thanks!" Mr. McKinney's response stated: "I would agree that this survey is filled with bias. On top of that, everything the board needs to know can already be found in the 5 Essentials Survey data. This think [sic] is ridiculous."
At the very least, this is a rather interesting series of emails. As I have stated in my previous blog posts, I believe that Mr. Gegenheimer was insubordinate and unprofessional in the manner in which he conducted himself regarding this entire incident. For me, these emails just further that impression. You can, of course, draw your own conclusions.