Woodstock Community News

The People Who Keep CCSD Running Get a Moment in the Spotlight

The district's school and office support staff keep classrooms running and students supported behind the scenes every day

Woodstock Community News Staff||1 min read

The People Who Keep CCSD Running Get a Moment in the Spotlight

The Cherokee County School District paused on April 22 to recognize the secretaries, office managers, and support staff who hold its schools together, the people who answer the phone when a child is sick, sort out a scheduling conflict before first period, and make sure a nervous new family feels welcome the moment they walk through the front door.

Photos shared by the district captured staff at work across multiple campuses: colleagues huddled over binders, phones in hand, screens glowing, the quiet machinery of a school day in motion. One staff member wore a Sequoyah High School Basketball hoodie, a small detail that underscores just how far this recognition reaches, from the district's central offices to gyms and front desks across Cherokee County.

CCSD described these employees as providing "critically important support" to its mission of becoming the highest-performing school district in Georgia, a goal the district has been publicly championing through its #CCSDElevateTheExcellence initiative. That language isn't just boilerplate. In one of the largest school districts in Georgia, one that serves tens of thousands of students across dozens of campuses, the administrative staff are the connective tissue between families and the institution. They manage enrollment paperwork, maintain attendance records, coordinate schedules, and back up principals and teachers with the logistical work that rarely makes headlines but never stops mattering.

Administrative Professionals Day has been observed annually since 1952, always on the Wednesday of the last full week of April. What began as a national effort to recognize office workers has, over the decades, become something more specific in school communities, a chance to acknowledge the people whose contributions are essential to every family's daily experience but easy to overlook precisely because they do their jobs so well.

For Cherokee County parents, the reminder is a simple one: the person who picks up the phone, pulls up your child's file, or waves you in from the parking lot isn't a background detail. They're often the first and most frequent human connection a family has with their school, and CCSD is making clear it knows that.

Share

Related