Out of an abundance of curiosity, I decided to Google "Megamentary." What the brain trust of Al Gore's Internet was able to tell me was that a "megamentary" is a large scale documentary, in scope, subject matter or running time. If you were interested in Francis Ford Coppola's creative process during the making of his passion project, Megalopolis, you could watch Megadoc, to get a flavor for just how big things could get if you spent one hundred twenty million dollars of your own money to make a film that no one else wanted to see.
Which is all well and good, except I was looking for some sort of clue about the new organizational plan for the Oakland Unified School District. Earlier this summer I attended a meeting with cohorts from all the other elementary schools across The Town to get a peek at what the coming school year had in store for us. In a word? Megamentary.
This was the solution that the powers that be came up with after budgets were once again slashed and a whole passel of folks were let go. This is not uncommon in the education biz, but for a change this purge did not come at the expense of those in the classroom. After bending to the demands of the teachers' union this past spring, OUSD found themselves in a bind. They were honor bound to give teachers a raise, but the slack had to be taken up somewhere.
Like that thick layer of middle management that had been a question mark for several years. Fifty-three elementary schools were divvied up into three groups, each overseen by a "Network Superintendent." Instead of fifty-some schools to watch over, each of these administrators had eighteen-ish. Each one of those schools had a principal, and often a vice principal or two. And over all of this layer sat a superintendent for the whole district.
So, the word from on high was essentially to cut out the middle, and leave it to just one person to watch over all those disparate institutions, and that word became Megamentary.
Now it makes sense, right?
Except as of this writing, the district's web site still maintains a page for all those intermediaries. In a month and a half, we're all going to roll back into school with the same enthusiastic need for guidance that we have in previous years. On her way out, I asked our former Network Superintendent if Megamentary was an Autobot or a Decepticon. In a refreshingly candid answer, she suggested that it was more of a Voltron kind of thing, with smaller robots joining together to make one big robot. The day after that I learned that she had taken a job at another district as Superintendent, leaving me to wonder how we will all know how to join our various pieces together when the time comes.
Megamentary. Sure sounds cool. I wonder how it will work.