Dennis Littky was commended as a Giraffe Hero in 1987. In the two decades since then, he’s accomplished so much it’s staggering to contemplate. Littky combines theory (he has two PhDs after all) with hands-on action and his results are solid and lasting. We’re proud to have spotted him so early in his career. Check his current work out at www.bigpicture.org.
Here’s the story we did on him way back when.
Dennis Littky was once the much-praised principal of a model school on Long Island, but he burned out so badly he decided to just learn to live in the woods. He left Long Island for an unplumbed mountain cabin in Winchester, New Hampshire.
The town of Winchester had a high unemployment rate; many, many residents were on welfare. Its high school, Thayer, reflected the town’s troubles with a sky-high dropout rate. Thayer High was as down as the town—everything was broken, dirty or covered with graffiti. Students drank and smoked pot in the halls. It was a mess, but that wasn’t Littky’s problem; he was minding his own business, living the simple life out in the woods.
But it didn’t take long for Littky to get restless. He started a newspaper. He became a state legislator. Then he got on the school board. When Thayer’s principal resigned, Littky was ready to return to running a school.
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