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Superintendent Looks to Shake Up Roles to Boost Fresno Student Performance

Nancy Price, Multimedia Journalist

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Fresno Unified Superintendent Bob Nelson wants to put even more focus on improving students’ academic performance by restructuring one of the district’s top jobs and reorganizing the functions of others.

A proposal on Wednesday’s School Board agenda would redefine the duties of the deputy superintendent and chief financial officer positions. Both were formerly held by Ruth Quinto, who resigned in September.

“If I’m ever going to get Fresno Unified to a place where people really value it deeply as an educational institution, we have to keep making more than just gradual progress on the academic side.” — FUSD Superintendent Bob Nelson

Under the proposal, the deputy superintendent would be an academic second-in-command to Nelson and would focus in particular on the student populations — English language learners, special education, historically disadvantaged, foster and homeless — that have struggled the most in academic achievement.

The restructure will mean “having another person that’s focused constantly on making sure our kids are successful academically,” he told GV Wire℠ this week. “If I’m ever going to get Fresno Unified to a place where people really value it deeply as an educational institution, we have to keep making more than just gradual progress on the academic side.”

Taking a Cue from Clovis Unified

Nelson said he believes he has the support of the School Board, which has been encouraging him for several years to have a deputy superintendent focused on academics who can help co-lead the district.

It has worked successfully in Clovis Unified, he said.

“There’s a model that Clovis has used where Don Ulrich and now Norm (Anderson) have served as a deputy to Superintendent (Eimear) O’Farrell, and that has functioned well for them,” he said. “And I think it’s not a bad methodology to follow. So we’re going to try it and see if it makes it easier.”

More Changes on Tap

Nelson said he is eyeing other changes, including making sure that the jobs assigned to administrators make sense today. In some cases, job tasks followed employees to their new roles, such as a risk management employee who is in charge of approving contracts. The workflow followed the employee from his old job in purchasing, Nelson said.

And in response to trustees’ requests for the district to focus on “return on investment” — getting the biggest bang for the bucks spent on education programs — Nelson said he wants to hire outside contractors to review programs, such as the “designated schools” program that adds instruction time and targets disadvantaged students.

Future Schools Foundation in the Works?

“There’s a foundation for Clovis schools, a foundation for Central schools, a foundation for Sanger schools. And we don’t have that.” — FUSD Superintendent Bob Nelson

Nelson said he wants to increase the opportunities for the community to engage with and support the district, which unlike other neighboring districts does not have a separate foundation for fundraising and other support activities.

“At some point I need to have an office of external partnerships, kind of like what Larry Salinas does at Fresno State, if I can put the grants office with that person and make it self-sustaining and then have a place where people can congregate,” he said. “There’s a foundation for Clovis schools, a foundation for Central schools, a foundation for Sanger schools. And we don’t have that. There’s not a place for people who want to support the district to congregate.

“I do think people are pretty proud internally now to represent Fresno Unified, but until that’s in the voice of the community, I will have accomplished very little. So I have to try and figure out, how can we better serve the constituents and represent them in their interests. How do I go about doing that? So that would be what I’d probably pursue next.”

The School Board’s public meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday and can be viewed at http://go.fresnounified.org/ustream/, Comcast Xfinity Channel 94 and AT&T U-Verse Channel 99.

Nancy Price is a multimedia journalist for GV Wire. A longtime reporter and editor who has worked for newspapers in California, Florida, Alaska, Illinois and Kansas, Nancy joined GV Wire in July 2019. She previously worked as an assistant metro editor for 13 years at The Fresno Bee. Nancy earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her hobbies include singing with the Fresno Master Chorale and volunteering with Fresno Filmworks. You can reach Nancy at 559-492-4087 or Send an Email

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    Billy

    November 18, 2020 at 1:41 pm

    FUSD board is all about political correctness and fulfilling a specific progressive ideology of ” restorative justice ” students are not taught fundamentals but rather how to destroy history, disrespect family and government structures, what hand outs to get besides free meals.
    Until those board members are replaced the test scores at FUSD will continue to dwindle. They emphasize politics not education, they emphasize race and divisions not patriotic unity. The lone white male on the board has been under an illegal censorship by the majority female non-white members who don’t practice accountability and responsibilty. Their way is to blame the low test scores on economic disparity, racism and police presence on campus. It couldn’t possibly be about poor parenting, lack of business training and development it always has to be the fault of the ” other guy”
    Good Luck Nelson you can’t change test scores with that current board who are about ” victimhood” not empowering students to greatness.

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