A sad but distinguished farewell
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA - She breathed new life into Killybrooke Elementary School,
but now she needs to do the same for her family.
After two years as principal of Killybrooke, Mary Ann Gilbreth is
returning to her hometown of Chicago to be near her family and care for
her sick husband.
A move to a position teaching education to undergraduate and graduate
students at Northpark University will allow her to do that, she said.
After working as a teacher and assistant principal during her 26-year
career in education, Gilbreth came to Killybrooke and the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District about two years ago.
“She’s done so much for our school with our virtue wall and really making
our school what it is,” said Joyce Christiansen, PTA president for the
last two years. “It was a diverse community where she pulled everyone
together.”
While almost feeling like she’s abandoning the school she has grown to
love, Gilbreth says she believes it’s the right move for her.
“I need family support -- it’s been a real struggle for the past three
years,” she said. “I feel like I’m letting them down, but I know they’ll
be just fine because it’s a wonderful staff.”
When she was offered the position at Northpark, she said it was a sign
that it was time to go.
It was the next step she wanted to take in her career and university
positions don’t come around often, she said.
But it is with a heavy heart that she leaves the school and community in
which she has become entrenched.
“I think I realized how wonderful this school is. Killybrooke is a hidden
gem,” she said. “The minute I came here, I knew it was special.”
As she said when Killybrooke was named a California Distinguished School
this year, Gilbreth feels the school’s strongest assets are the special
needs programs that came to campus the same year she did, and the
character education program, which she began this year.
But she said the school’s best quality is, of course, the staff and
students.
“This school is a little United Nations -- we have 15 different languages
at this school,” she said. “And how wonderful, because in the real world
people need to know how to work and play with all different types of
people.”
On her last day, the tearful goodbyes left no doubt as to how the school
community felt about her.
“She was so fabulous. She was just the greatest, most giving person,”
Christiansen said. “She really made my past two years the best I’ve ever
had with PTA. This will leave big empty spots in our hearts. She’s been a
true friend. She’s done so much for our school and our kids.”
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