âThere is only one kind of shock worse than the totally unexpected: the expected for which one has refused to prepare.â
â The Charioteer
Principals who showed up for Metro Nashville Public Schoolsâ regularly scheduled leadership meeting this week probably expected the usual: a few updates, some motivational talk, and maybe a stale breakfast pastry.
What they got instead was a full-blown performanceâa weird, uncomfortable flex by embattled Superintendent Dr. Adrienne Battle and her executive team. And it couldnât have come at a stranger time.
These meetings are typically dry affairs, focused on data, district goals, and morale-boosting. But this one? This one veered hard into âloyalty rallyâ territory, complete with donuts, weapon detectors, chants, a mascot, and a parade of mayors.
The $6.5 Million Question
Letâs rewind. Dr. Battle is under fire following the districtâs $6.5 million settlement in a retaliation lawsuit brought by five former MNPS officials. Battle and her camp continue to insist she did nothing wrongâdespite a summary judgment issued 18 months ago that strongly suggests otherwise.
The court found that MNPS leadership repeatedly questioned the âloyaltyâ of at least one employee after her cousin sued the district. Two and a half months after that suit settled, that employee was removed from her position. The courtâs words: “A two-month delay is enough for a jury to make the inference.”
So while the legal debate is now closed (thanks to the settlement), the leadership lessons are very much open. And hereâs the thing: it doesnât look like anyone learned a damn thing.
Jesse Register, a former MNPS Director, had a simple rule: If something looks unethical, it is. Judging by that standard, last weekâs meeting was a flaming red flag.
đȘ Donuts and Detection Devices
When principals arrived, they were greeted with donuts and a fully operational EVOLVE weapons detection system.
For those unfamiliar, EVOLVE is the high-tech scanner used in high schools since last yearâs Antioch shooting. It hasnât been rolled out to middle schools yetâthough just last week, a gun was found in a backpack at a North Nashville high school. The district says it’s writing a grant to expand EVOLVE before a September 30 deadline.
Maybe Iâm being petty, but itâs hard not to wonder: couldnât that $6.5 million have helped pay for safety upgrades instead of legal fallout?
Also of note: the scanners were operated by Battleâs dozen-or-so âChiefs,â many of whom earn north of $200,000 per year. Apparently, their only job that morning was to stand by the machines and wave people through.
Twelve executives. Two-hundred-grand salaries. Running security.
đ€ Four Mayors Walk Into a MeetingâŠ
Inside, the real show began. Not one, not two, but four Nashville mayorsâFreddie OâConnell (current), and former mayors Bill Purcell, Megan Barry, and John Cooperâshowed up to deliver glowing praise of Dr. Battle.
Each took their turn reminding everyone how amazing she is. According to them, MNPS could not function without her leadership.
Teachers? We love you, but sit down. The good doctor gets the standing ovation.
Of course, no politician misses an opportunity to remind educators about those recent salary bumps. But hereâs a reality check: paying professionals closer to what theyâre worth isnât a giftâitâs a basic requirement.
Doing the right thing doesnât make you a hero. It just means youâre finally doing your job.
And about Megan Barryâlook, I admire her resilience through personal tragedy. Sheâs been kind to me personally. But is she really the best person to defend a public official accused of misusing taxpayer funds? Thatâs a tough sell.
You can love someone and still question their choices. Those two things arenât mutually exclusive.
đ§± A Broken Wall Between Politics and Schools
Letâs talk about the elephant in the room: the presence of these mayors violates a foundational principle of Metro governance.
Back in 1963, Nashville and Davidson County merged under a single charterâan innovative move at the time. But there was one deliberate exception: public schools.
Mayor Beverly Briley, the architect of that consolidation, insisted MNPS remain semi-autonomous. He argued that schools needed an elected board, not political oversight from City Hall. The Metro Charter reflects that: mayors fund schools, but they donât run them.
This âdivision of authorityâ is there for a reason: to guard against political interference.
So when Dr. Battle invites four mayors to sing her praisesânot to advocate for more resources, not to support students or teachers, but to prop up her personal imageâit sends the wrong message. Itâs a blurring of lines weâre not supposed to blur.
đ Loyalty Cards and Group Chants
Then came the most awkward part of the morning: MNPS leadership distributed pre-written praise cards for principals to sign and send to Dr. Battle. There were gift baskets. Chants of âWe support you, Dr. Battle!â broke out across the room.
Iâm not making this up.
Some principals refused to sign the cards. They know those cards will be tracked. If retaliation followsâas it did in the recent lawsuitâhow exactly will MNPS defend itself?
Even worse, two new principals were introducedâreplacements for two plaintiffs forced out as part of the settlement. Their announcements were met with a standing ovation.
Yes, the new leaders deserve support. But letâs not pretend this isnât incredibly awkward. Applauding their arrival, when everyone knows who theyâre replacing, feels like celebrating a cover-up.
As if that wasnât enough, the Tennessee Titans mascot showed up and handed out autographed memorabilia.
âIt was very uncomfortable,â one principal told me. âThe vibe was weird.â
There was some welcome good news shared at the meetingâreal, substantive progress that deserved attention. But any positive impact was completely obscured by the strange, over-the-top need to celebrate the superintendent. Instead of focusing on whatâs working for students and schools, the spotlight was redirected toward image management. A moment that could have been about momentum became just another distraction.
đ© What Is This All For?
All this pomp and performance has a very specific energy: fear.
You donât throw a loyalty rally, invite four mayors, distribute donuts, chants, and swag bags unless youâre scared of something.
But what exactly is Dr. Battle afraid of?
As far as I can tell, no one is holding her accountable for anything.
The school board? They recently rewarded her with a new contract and an $80,000 raiseâall while the ink on that $6.5 million settlement was still wet.
Now weâre hearing about a central office remodel that includes a private executive bathroom.
Total cost: $165,083.
Yes, itâs apparently a âmodestâ renovation. But the optics? Brutal.
According to MNPS Communications Chief Sean Braisted:
âThe project involved modest updates to the Directorâs office⊠adjustments to office and conference areas and the addition of a restroom and storage space.â
Sure. But a $165,000 renovation after a multimillion-dollar lawsuit? At a time when teachers are still buying classroom supplies out of their own pockets?
Somebody has to start protecting the public interest. The question is: who?
đ Meanwhile, in the State CapitolâŠ
In other news, multiple outlets recently reported that Tennessee is spending more per student on private school vouchers than on public school studentsâ$7,295 vs. $7,023, according to state-level numbers under the new TISA funding formula.
On its face, thatâs alarming.
But school choice advocates were quick to push back. Walter Blanks, in a recent op-ed, notes that when you include local and federal funds, the average public school student actually receives $13,000 annually statewide, and $22,000+ in MNPS. Voucher kids? Just the $7,295.
Heâs got a point: weâre comparing apples to oranges. Public school funding comes with complex weights and categories. Vouchers are flat-rate.
Muddying the math only distracts from what really matters: How are we serving kids best? Thatâs the question. Everything else is noise.
đ± Burner Phones and the Cell Ban Hustle
On a lighter note, Channel 4 recently uncovered a growing student trend: burner phones.
To skirt MNPSâs classroom phone bans, students are reportedly bringing decoy phones to turn inâand keeping their real ones hidden.
âEveryone I know just has a second phone they give to teachers,â said Malik Jackson, a 2024 graduate. âMy little brotherâs in high school now. He has two.â
MNPS says it doesnât track burner use, but device violations are down slightly this year: 118 students so far, compared to 143 this time last year.
Make of that what you will.
đ Friday Night Lights (and Mixed Emotions)
Finally, tonight kicks off high school football across MNPS. As the parent of a sophomore, Iâll be in the standsâequal parts excited and nervous.
Iâm rooting for every kid out there, hoping they stay safe, play hard, and walk off the field with pride.
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Buckle up. The rideâs not over.
Categories: Education
Giving the director a raise more than most every teacher makes in an entire year is a huge disrespect to the teachers and staff that make this district work. They pile more and more on our plates, threaten us if we are off script, overload our classes, expect us to take a bullet for the students, and give us such a small raise that insurance costs erase it. If you dare to speak up, you are run out of town or given a demotion. The board members seem to be more like BFFs of the director, instead the ones holding her accountable (even with a simple evaluation). This reminds me of the current US President. We have forgotten to value the working people who are held accountable every day. I blame this on Board members. It’s time to hold them accountable, not elect them to a lifelong Metro clerk job.