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To make everything
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The best thing you
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Jackie Robinson
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Glenn Beck

When Harold “Chuck”
Hatfield started
teaching elementary
school in Putnam
County in 1973, he had
no idea he would
someday run the
school system. He had
no idea that he would
fill such diverse roles
as teacher, assistant
principal, principal,
Director of Curriculum and Instruction for Elementary Education,
Assistant Superintendent for Personnel, and Deputy Superintendent,
before becoming the Superintendent of Schools.
Hatfield had no idea thirty-five years ago that his career would
carry him to the state’s highest honor for school system chiefs; but
this year, Putnam County Superintendent of Schools Chuck Hatfield
was named West Virginia State Superintendent of the Year by the West
Virginia Association of School Administrators.
Hatfield’s journey from substitute teacher to school chief has been
filled with challenges, rewards, and accomplishments. As a teacher,
he earned the respect of his students, their parents, and his
colleagues. As a school administrator, he distinguished himself as
an instructional leader, and in 1980, was given the challenge of
opening a new elementary school, Eastbrook Elementary. As a central
office administrator, he was instrumental in recruiting and hiring
one of the most qualified and celebrated education workforces in the
state and determining the direction of the system’s strategic plans.
As Superintendent of Schools, he has overseen the highest achieving
academic program in the state of West Virginia and the largest
facilities improvement program since the 1980s.
Hatfield’s statewide reputation has been earned in part by his
tireless efforts as Chairman of the Legislative Committee of the
West Virginia Association of School Administrators and as Chairman
of the Board of RESA III, which includes Boone, Clay, Kanawha and
Putnam Counties. In both positions, he advocates for public
education and affects public policy and practice.
Hatfield was genuinely pleased and humbled by his selection as
Superintendent of the Year, and in typical fashion, he credits
others for his accomplishments: “I’m blessed with a good community,
good teachers, a good staff, and good Board,” he states. “It’s
because of them that I am able to do the work that I do.”
He takes great pride, however, in discussing what he believes to be
his administration’s greatest achievement, opening lines of
communication between the school system and the community. “By
making ourselves open and available to the public and bringing
everyone to the table, so to speak, we have been able to truly
respond to the needs of our citizens,” he says. “I think that has
been our greatest accomplishment.”
This year, as Hatfield begins his second term as Putnam’s school
chief, he continues to focus on closing the achievement gap,
increasing rigor in the classroom, integrating technology into the
curriculum, accelerating the learning of all students, forging
partnerships with parents, and making Putnam County Schools a leader
in 21st Century education. Additionally, he continues to
push for quality facilities for all areas of the county, and is
actively working to replace outdated buildings and infrastructure in
area schools.
As Superintendent of the Year, Hatfield will represent West Virginia
at the National Association of School Administrators in San
Francisco, California, in February.

