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Job Details

Middle and High School Dean

  2025-05-09     National Association of Independent Schools     Honolulu,HI  
Description:

SALARY RANGE : $53,680 - $112,672 based on degree and student contact hours

JOB SUMMARY

The Middle and High School Dean cultivates a positive, orderly, and caring learning environment for students in grades 6–12. Through targeted programming, individualized counseling, data-informed interventions, and close collaboration with families and faculty, the Dean advances each student's social-emotional growth and academic success while embedding Deeper Learning competencies—mastery of content, critical thinking, communication, collaboration, self-direction, and academic mindset—into daily practice. The Dean reports to the Assistant Principal for Student Life.

ESSENTIAL DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES include the following. Other duties may be assigned.

Academic Advising

  • Guide students through self-reflection, four-year planning, and course selection aligned with interests, abilities, and post-secondary goals.
  • Coordinate annual course-request and schedule-change cycles; ensure equitable access to all classes.
  • Monitor attendance, grade, and assessment dashboards weekly; convene multidisciplinary support meetings within forty-eight hours of early-warning triggers.
  • Collaborate with College Counseling on NCAA eligibility, scholarship criteria, and college-admissions timelines; host quarterly family workshops.
  • Draft, implement, and review accommodation plans for learners with documented differences; coach faculty on differentiation and Universal Design for Learning.
  • Lead grade-level seminars on different pedagogical approaches to learning.
  • Deliver parent education sessions on curriculum pathways, graduation requirements, and academic success strategies.

Social and Personal Counseling

  • Provide short-term, solution-focused counseling addressing anxiety, grief, peer conflict, identity development, and academic pressure.
  • Maintain a vetted referral network of licensed mental-health professionals for long-term therapy and specialized services.
  • Embed evidence-based SEL lessons that cultivate self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making.
  • Coordinate peer-mediation and restorative groups to strengthen relationships and teach conflict-resolution skills.
  • Oversee transition programs for new and rising students, including orientation events and peer-mentor pairings.
  • Uphold confidentiality standards while complying with mandated-reporting requirements.

Student Behavioral Standards, Restorative Justice, and Discipline

  • Co-chair the Student Support Team; implement tiered Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) across the division.

  • Serve as the primary facilitator of restorative practices:
    • Conduct preparation meetings, restorative conferences, and follow-up sessions with affected students, staff, and families.
    • Guide participants in identifying harm, accepting responsibility, and creating mutually agreed restitution or healing actions.
    • Track completion of restorative agreements and measure their impact on recidivism and school climate.
  • Train faculty, staff, and student leaders in restorative language, proactive community-building circles, and de-escalation strategies.
  • Investigate disciplinary incidents promptly; document findings and assign equitable consequences that prioritize accountability, relationship repair, and re-entry success.
  • Lead re-entry conferences after suspensions, creating individualized success plans with families and mentors.
  • Maintain FERPA-compliant behavior records and communicate outcomes to parents or guardians within one school day.

Guidance Counseling (Middle School)

  • Teach a spiraled advisory curriculum covering digital citizenship, empathy, decision-making, and goal-setting.
  • Arrange age-appropriate speakers and activities supporting character education and SEL themes.
  • Partner with grade-level teams to design advisory experiences that foster community, cohesion, and team-building.

Student Life and Engagement

  • Partner with Athletics and Performing Arts to establish co-curricular eligibility standards and recognition programs that honor holistic achievement.
  • Plan and evaluate school-wide events—Spirit Week, class socials, and service-learning days—to strengthen belonging and pride.
  • Maintain daily visibility across campus by walking common areas, visiting classrooms, and attending student events, performances, and athletic competitions whenever possible.
  • Provide daily student supervision across varied indoor and outdoor locations.

Data and Assessment

  • Maintain comprehensive academic, attendance, behavior, and counseling records in the Student Information System, ensuring data integrity and privacy.
  • Produce monthly dashboards for divisional leadership, highlighting trends and recommending program adjustments.
  • Lead the annual review of policies and programs using evidence-based findings.

Crisis Response and Safety Leadership

  • Serve on the Crisis Response and Threat-Assessment Teams; coordinate safety drills and post-incident debriefs.
  • Provide psychological first aid during emergencies and manage family communication in partnership with the Communications Office.
  • Ensure compliance with Hawai?i Revised Statutes related to school safety, transportation, and emergency preparedness.
  • Maintain current certification in CPR, First Aid, and Youth Mental Health First Aid.

Professional Development and Faculty Collaboration

  • Design and deliver in-service workshops on restorative justice, SEL integration, Universal Design for Learning, and equity-centered pedagogy.
  • Act as an on-call resource for teachers on adolescent development, behavior support, and instructional differentiation; co-teach model lessons as requested.
  • Engage in professional networks (e.g., HAIS Deans and Counselors Consortium) to remain current on research and best practices.

Cultural Competencies

  • Understands the practice area deeply and actively pursues learning that expands expertise within and beyond the current role.
  • Engages in lifelong professional learning and critical reflection to enhance leadership, mentoring, and collaboration; exhibits sustained curiosity about people, events, and places.
  • Builds positive, productive relationships with colleagues, other departments, families, and community stakeholders.
  • Creates safe, caring spaces that are inclusive, respectful, and engaging for all learners and colleagues.
  • Seeks out and embraces leadership opportunities that advance school initiatives and model best practice.

QUALIFICATIONS

  • Must possess exceptional written and communication skills.
  • Proficient in the use of technology in the classroom and in educational administrative software.
  • Proven organizational and management skills.
  • Strong interpersonal skills including staff, faculty and community relations.
  • Must be well versed in research-based instructional practices.
  • Applies the Systems Thinking Model.
  • Ability to simultaneously manage multiple immediate, medium and long term projects, recognizing how to prioritize each on a daily basis.

EDUCATION and/or EXPERIENCE

  • A Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university
  • A Master's degree (with a focus on counseling) is strongly preferred.
  • Two years of experience working with adolescents in schools or related settings and an understanding of developmental issues relating to adolescents is required.
  • Must be highly proficient with Google for education suite and other digital education tools and applications.
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