Lessons learned on way to top

Caposey’s rapid ascent had some speed bumps

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PJ Caposey, Oregon High School principal, tosses the basketball to Chana student Adam Quick on Friday afternoon. Once a semester, Caposey drops by the alternative school to interact with the students in hopes of getting them back into the high school.
PJ Caposey, Oregon High School principal, tosses the basketball to Chana student Adam Quick on Friday afternoon. Once a semester, Caposey drops by the alternative school to interact with the students in hopes of getting them back into the high school. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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OREGON – Driven – adjective; relentlessly compelled by the need to accomplish a goal; very hard-working and ambitious.

See also: PJ Caposey, principal of Oregon High School.

Caposey is just 32 years old, but already he has accomplished more than some educators twice his age. But his rapid rise from unprepared sociology teacher at a rough, South Side Chicago high school to respected principal at a nationally recognized, small-town high school has not been without its trials.

The young educator is tall and broad-shouldered and flashes an easy, boyish smile. He is aggressive yet genial. He oozes confidence with a healthy splash of humility. 

Caposey did not set out to be an educator; in fact, the Chicago-area native planned to play college baseball. But Caposey, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma at 17, shifted gears. Inspired by the teachers who helped him complete his studies from home and boosted his spirits, he majored in education and graduated from Eastern Illinois University with a degree and a plan to make a difference.

The Golden Apple Scholar taught sociology at Percy Lavon Julian High School, a high-needs school where the “wild 100s” meet the affluent, white neighborhoods on the South Side of Chicago. He connected with his students. He empowered them. But he didn’t really educate them.

“I thought I was a great teacher, but I definitely was not,” he said. “I didn’t understand what good instruction was. I knew [how to build] relationships, but I didn’t know how to be standards-based and outcome-driven and how to move kids forward.”

Caposey did not intend to become a school administrator, either; he figured the classroom, not the principal’s office, was his place. But he got a wake-up call.

“One of my professors said, ‘You need to be an administrator,’” he said. “I was on the fence. I wanted to move up, but I wanted to be in the classroom, too. He said, ‘Well, why do you want to be in the classroom?’ And I said, ‘Because my kids need me.’

“And then he said, ‘You can influence maybe 100 to 150 kids a day in your classroom, or you can impact so many more in a whole building.’ That stuck with me.”

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