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Schools

Meet the Newest Neelsville Knight

Neelsville principal acknowledges challenges and points the way forward as school undergoes restructuring.

When the Neelsville Middle School Knights charge through the doors on the first day of school Monday, the newest addition won’t be the sixth graders.

The newest Knight will be Lily “Vicky” Lake-Parcan, who was named principal July 25 following the departure of Dollye McClain. School officials said McClain did not reapply for her position as mandated by No Child Left Behind (NCLB) policies for schools that fail to meet academic targets.

According data released by the Maryland Department of Education, the Germantown school missed academic goals in eight areas.

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“We are going to focus on a really strong instructional program,” Parcan said. “Our focus is really on teaching and learning, supporting teachers with professional development to make sure that they are equipped to do the job that they are required to do and to look at student performance as a measure of [whether] we are doing a good job or not.”

Sixth grade students will report to school Thursday morning for a half day of orientation, but Parcan will to meet all the Knights on Monday.

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Parcan has also been trying to win over parents, many of whom were upset at news of Mclain’s departure and since said they would have rather Mclain stayed.

Parcan held a meet-and-greet session, fielding questions from parents and students about her background and her vision for Neelsville.

Once school resumes, Parcan said she plans to hold weekly coffee sessions open to any parent.

Parcan said she would respect school traditions like staff and student schedules and focus on improving student success. Though she said while there was room for improvement at Neelsville, No Child Left Behind set unrealistic expectations and labeled good schools as “failing” if they missed their yearly targets, in even one subgroup.

“For example, in terms of our English learners, the law as it is written now, you have one year to learn English and to have to take the test,” Parcan said.

Parcan is not new to the Montgomery County School System. She began her career in 1989, as a Head Start teacher at Goshen Elementary School in Gaithersburg and worked her way to Director of Middle School Instruction and Achievement, the position she left to become principal at Neelsville

When Patch chatted with Parcan in the days leading up to the first day of school, her face lit up every time she mentioned teaching. Her family moved to Gaithersburg from Chile, just after she completed seventh grade at an American school. She said she always knew she wanted to be a teacher.

The experience of relocating, Parcan said, has made her more sensitive to transition, which she said draws her to middle school students.

“Even if you are not coming from a different country, middle school is a transition,” Parcan said. “There are changes going on in your life emotionally, physically and so how do you manage that change and still remain a student committed to a strong academic program."

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