Cavazos led her alma mater for 13 years, the first woman and minority to do so. She’s most proud of guiding it out of “program improvement” -- a designation for Title I schools that don’t meet certain academic performance measures – twice and never letting test scores slide. (Some years saw no growth.)
Then there was the success in tennis and with We the People, which tests knowledge of the U.S. Constitution. She put a lot of her own time and effort into the latter, attending practices, rehearsals and competitions, getting faculty to work with students on enunciation, and even upgrading their wardrobe.
Cavazos negotiated with a store owner in Bakersfield to sell matching black suits for the boys for about $100 each . The girls dressed in black skirt suits and matching blouses. The students also worked on poise, handshakes and looking people in the eye.
“All those things add up and make an impression,” Cavazos said. And that, she said, can tip a close competition in one’s favor.
Arvin went on to win the regional We the People competition for the first time, beating perennial winners Centennial and Liberty high schools. Every year since 2005, Arvin has nabbed first place in congressional district competition and either first or second in regional competition.
“As the principal she set the standard and indeed the bar very high; being an invaluable part of what made our team successful,” said We the People coach Robert Ruckman, an Arvin High alum Cavazos hired when his predecessor, Larry Hallum, retired.
“She could always be counted on to provide advice or access to school resources to help the team – and most importantly she gave her own personal time. … She showed the community and the students that the program mattered.”
Cavazos initiated other novel programs at Arvin High, said former Assistant Principal Jason Hodgson, who is now director of professional development at the Panama-Buena Vista Union School District.
She raised course rigor by doubling the number of AP classes offered, introduced block scheduling to increase instruction time, and initiated parent trainings on such things as the education system, graduation requirements and college admissions processes so they could better help their kids.
She also created a Student of the Month program in which 20 to 25 students a month who weren’t top in their class or star athletes, but nonetheless accomplished meaningful things, were recognized, Hodgson said. Teachers would say a few words about each student in front of their peers and parents.
“It might not come off the page as all that unique, but what was happening in that environment and in that community was incredibly special,” Hodgson said of Cavazos’ work at Arvin High. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”
HEADING WEST
Cavazos didn’t think she could move up in the Kern High School District and so moved on to the Kern County Superintendent of Schools office as chief instructional officer in 2011. Two years after that she ascended to where she is now: superintendent of the 1,050-student Taft Union High School District.