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November 14, 2024
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Roger Catania is influencing New York state education

1984 graduate retired as superintendent of Lake Placid schools

Roger Catania '84 is a member of the New York State Board of Regents. Roger Catania '84 is a member of the New York State Board of Regents.
Roger Catania '84 is a member of the New York State Board of Regents. Image Credit: Contributed.

After four decades in education 鈥 with roles from teacher to school counselor to superintendent 鈥 Roger Catania 鈥84 is still passionate about his field and wants to make an impact. He鈥檚 doing so as a member of the New York State Board of Regents. The appointment came a year after retiring as superintendent of Lake Placid鈥檚 schools.

鈥淚 was fulfilled as a superintendent and honored to have the job, but it was time to pass it off to the next person,鈥 Catania says. 鈥淚 wanted a different role in education. I saw [the Regent position for the North Country] was open, and it didn鈥檛 strike me as something I was initially interested in. But I got a phone call asking if I wanted to be considered, so I put my name in.鈥

Following a public interview, Catania was selected to represent an area stretching from the Canadian border southward to Schenectady. During his time as superintendent, Lake Placid 鈥 a district where he was a school counselor 鈥 moved off the state鈥檚 list of schools needing improvement, achieved financial stability, instituted universal Pre-K and repaired relationships between teachers and the administration. This proved beneficial when the district fully reopened its schools in fall 2020, six months after the beginning of the pandemic.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have the adversarial relationship between teachers and administrations, and unions and boards that we used to have,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e had a team concept. Although there wasn鈥檛 100% agreement on what to do about the pandemic, we had widespread willingness to move forward and keep the schools open.鈥

Reducing the opportunity gap was a high priority for the Lake Placid district under Catania鈥檚 leadership. As a Regent, he is focused on reducing educational inequalities and feels schools are unfairly blamed when student achievement misses the mark.

鈥淚鈥檇 like to see recognition that broader social concerns are at the root of educational inequality,鈥 Catania says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to eliminate poverty through schooling alone, unless we address economic inequality. We won鈥檛 end racism just by teaching it in the schools as long as racist attitudes outside of schools remain unchanged. We end poverty and racism by changing society, and schools can support those changes.鈥

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