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May 15, 2012
Contact: Linda Farmer, APR | Director of
Communications
Association of Washington School Principals
O: 360.357.7951 | C: 253.232.2891
lindaf@awsp.org
Enumclaw Principal To Join Middle School Principals' Board
Steve Rabb To Assume Statewide Leadership Role
OLYMPIA – Steve
Rabb, principal of Enumclaw Middle School (Enumclaw SD), will be the
next vice president of the Association of Washington Middle Level
Principals (AWMLP). Rabb will serve as vice president of AWMLP for the
2012-13 school year, president-elect in 2013-14 and president in
2014-15.
AWMLP is a 26-member board that meets quarterly and represents
nearly 700 middle and junior high school principals and assistant
principals from around the state. It is one of three grade-level boards
that inform the work of its parent organization, the Association of
Washington School Principals (AWSP).
Rabb was elected by his peers for his active involvement in the
principalship with such accomplishments as Enumclaw Middle School being
named a “School of Distinction” by OSPI in 2011.
“Steve brings many years of highly effective experience as a
middle level principal,” said Don Rash, AWSP’s Director of
Middle Level Programs. “He has been a principal leader in his
district, now he is stepping forward to lead at the statewide
level.”
Rabb has been principal at Enumclaw Middle for 14 years. He was the
assistant principal at the school for six years prior to that. Before
that he taught junior high for six years. He holds a bachelor’s
degree in education, with a history major and language arts minor from
Seattle Pacific University, and a master’s degree in educational
administration from Western Washington University.
“I’ve invested my life into middle level education,
developing leadership in myself and others” said Rabb. “I am
looking forward to giving back to the middle level community and helping
our organization grow on a statewide basis.”
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About the Association of Washington School
Principals
The Association of Washington School Principals is a professional
association serving principals, assistant principals and principals in
training. Formed in 1972, the association now includes more than 3,400
members from public and private elementary, middle and high schools
statewide. It is governed by a board of practicing principals drawn from
three grade-specific boards representing the elementary, middle and high
school levels. For more information, visit www.awsp.org.
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