* * * * * * * * * * * * *
The ‘last original’ bids goodbye to Colonia H.S.
Sandra Schmidtke leaves with 40 years of fond
memories
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| JEFF GRANIT
staff Colonia High School Vice Principal Sandra Schmidtke cracks up
senior Julie Coats (r), as she prepares to write in her yearbook
last week | |
BY COLLEEN LUTOLF
Staff Writer
The Woodbridge Sentinel
Front Page - Tuesday ~ June 21, 2005
Every year since Colonia High School was built in 1967,
Sandra Schmidtke has left the school’s halls on the last day of school, only to
return in September.
This year, when the school empties of students on the last day
of school, Schmidtke will leave with them.
Only this time, she won’t return.
 |
| JEFF GRANIT
staff Retiring Vice Principal Sandra Schmidtke demonstrates how the
sign above secretary Karma Provenzano’s desk is supposed to work in
Colonia High School’s main office last Thursday.
| |
The
only remaining original staff member of Colonia High School, Schmidtke, the
school’s vice principal, is retiring after 40 years in the Woodbridge Township
school district.
“I am the last original,” she said in her near-empty office
Thursday.
“I guess she’s ready,” foods teacher Linda Terry said. “She
knows it’s time. We all have to abide by her decision. None of us can imagine
what it’s going to be like in September. We’re all wondering if she’s going to
show up on the first day.”
Schmidtke’s office walls, for decades crammed with pictures of
former and current students, and shelves packed with books and mementos from a
lifetime’s worth of teaching, were practically bare.
Even the animal crackers and pretzels she keeps on her desk for
hungry teenagers were gone.
Schmidtke described her experiences as a physical education
teacher in a high school originally created as a vocational high school; how
kids have changed, how they’ve stayed the same; the tumultuousness of having her
final year at Colonia slammed with scandals; and if Sandra Schmidtke really does
drip the school’s colors when she bleeds.
“I am the oldest thing in this building,” the 62-year-old vice
principal said. “The school opened in 1967 with 1,800 students. It’s hard to
believe we have 1,400 now and we’re busting at the seams. But we didn’t have
class limits back then. There were roughly 35 kids to a class.”
Colonia was originally a three-grade vocational high school with
sophomore through senior classes attending, Schmidtke said.
“We had auto shop, metal shop, electronics, a nursing program,”
she said.
Schmidtke transferred from Avenel Middle School to become one of
Colonia High School’s first gym and health teachers.
Donald Geddis was the school’s first principal and got to pick
his staff, Schmidtke said.
“We thought we were hot to trot,” she said. “He told us what he
wanted done and he wanted the best to do it. People didn’t mind, they usually
want to be given direction.”
The school was originally built for air conditioning, but those
plans were scrapped, Schmidtke said.
“That’s why all the windows are so small like this,” she said
pointing to the vertical window that looks out on the high school’s courtyard.
“They don’t let in a lot of light.”
Yet the small windows keep in plenty of heat, mostly on the
second floor.
“If the main part of the building is in the high 80s, the second
floor is at least 10 to 15 degrees hotter,” she said. “It’s not conducive for
anybody.”
Ryan Miller, a 1992 Colonia High School graduate, is now an
English teacher there.
“I was never in trouble,” he said. “But I don’t know what the
building’s going to be like without her. Whoever’s got to fill her shoes has big
shoes to fill.”
“More like has big pants to fill,” Schmidtke quipped. “You have
to keep a sense of humor in this job. These are very lonely jobs. Most of the
time, the things you’re dealing with, you can’t tell any of the teachers, you
can’t start talking. It’s almost all confidential.”
The past few weeks, Schmidtke has been training her replacement,
Tricia Fitzgerald.
“It’ll be difficult not having her around to go to,” Fitzgerald
said.
Fitzgerald came to Colonia High School in 1998 as an English
teacher and became that department’s head in 2004.
“I’ve been here for 38 years,” Schmidtke said. “I don’t want to
break ties. Getting Tricia to take over, I’ve had to sit back and let the other
person take the lead.”
Something Schmidtke has tried to impart to Fitzgerald is the
importance of maintaining a balance.
“Anyone can make an easy decision,” she said. “It’s the tough
decisions where you need to find the balance between two extremes. In some
cases, there is nothing you can do; the situation is already out of your
hands.”
This year has been full of situations that required tough
decisions and a few that have been out of Schmidtke’s hands.
A locker room harassment incident involving five members of the
boys’ soccer team resulted in the boys’ arrests and transfers to other district
high schools; a 15-year-old girl, a student at Colonia High School, apparently
committed suicide in November; and Edward Billings, a Colonia High School
teacher was charged with criminal sexual contact with one of his students in
December.
“We’re not different from any other school,” she said. “We have
problems, but the good things the kids do are not the sensationalized type of
news. It’s the negative things that grab headlines.”
Schmidtke said the Colonia High School population was unfairly
portrayed in news reports regarding the scandals, and most kids were upset about
it.
“There are things that are going to happen that are going to
make news that aren’t reflective of the school itself,” she said.
The few students interviewed by reporters were not
representative of Colonia High School students, she said. Some of them had been
suspended and were wandering around school grounds during the day, which made
them easy for reporters to snag, Schmidtke said.
“Those were kids with no vested interest in the school,” she
said. “The school was represented in such a negative way. This isn’t really us,
and we don’t want people to think it is. Those kids were making comments about
the school and how bad it is. It’s just not true.”
What Schmidtke has noticed over the years, as teacher and
disciplinarian, is that the teachers grow older. The way children are parented
has changed — but the kids themselves, not so much, she said.
“Kids want to be treated fairly,” she said. “Kids haven’t
changed. I’ve gotten another year older so you become another year further from
their age.”
Parenting is no longer looked at as an art, Schmidtke
said.
“We assume kids are going to take care of themselves,” she said.
“The way kids have changed is that they’re brighter, smarter — they’re exposed
to more things. We’re a changing society, but what hasn’t changed is the concept
of education. Everyone is a critic of education because everyone has gone
through the school system. The interpretation is ‘I pay your salary. What I want
is what I should get.’
“Well, I live in this town, so I’m paying my salary, too,” she
said. “That’s not the issue. The issue is discipline is not the answer —
re-educating is usually what is necessary a lot of times.”
Schmidtke said she loves her job.
“The point of being a teacher is there is always a teachable
moment when you’re working with kids,” she said. “I think they see me as a
disciplinarian, but I don’t think I’m unreasonable. I think they know I’ll
listen.”
And Schmidtke’s been listening for 40 years.
During her tenure at Colonia, Schmidtke has coached cheering,
color guard, drill team, twirlers, floor hockey, track, tennis and archery. She
has also been an adviser for the yearbook committee and school plays.
“There are those who say I bleed blue and gold, but the last
time I scratched myself I saw red,” she said. “I just recently thought, ‘OK,
it’s time for a change.’ I’ve done things I tried to do. I want to do something
else.”
Schmidtke has set up a scholarship in her own name to help the
kids even after she’s gone, she said.
“I wanted to start it while I’m still here,” she said, “so
people know who Sandy Schmidtke is and I would see who the first recipient
is.”
What Schmidtke will miss most about leaving Colonia High School
is what brought her there in the first place.
“The kids,” she said.