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Corvallis superintendent named new Columbia Falls High School principal

| April 20, 2022 7:10 AM

By CHRIS PETERSON

Hungry Horse News

The Columbia Falls High School has a new principal in Jon Konen.

Konen has been the superintendent at the Corvallis School District since 2020. Prior to that his was principal at Lincoln Elementary in the Great Falls School District for nine years and the athletic director at the Power School District from 2004 to 2007.

He has also taught at the elementary grade level in Great Falls, Lakeside/Somers and started his teaching career in Anchorage Alaska 24 years ago.

During a meet-and-greet last week, Konen said he wanted to be a principal again to get back to having daily contact with students.

He also wanted to get back to the Flathead, where he started his career as a teacher in Lakeside/Somers.

He spoke to some of the more challenging parts of his career, including an incident in Great Falls where there was a quadruple homicide and a person died on school property.

He said the school had to tactfully notify parents and close the school grounds as it was a crime scene.

In turn, the school set up a daycare at another location so parents could still go to work.

The homicide also impacted students at the school directly, so it arranged counseling.

“I was proud of how it was handled and the messaging that went out,” he said.

He said part of his success is “showing up and participating in programs.”

It might be a basketball game one night, a concert the other. Konen has experience as a basketball referee.

He said he impressed with the high school’s succes — it currently has 28 dual credit courses that double as college credits.

He also said he liked the “Bleed Blue” slogan the school has.

“I love having a mantra we can make tangible,” he said. “People want to participate and it becomes contagious.”

On mental health of students, he said he supported social and emotional learning, but said critical race theory isn’t being taught in Montana’s curriculum.

“We’re not doing it. We’re not teaching critical race theory,” he said. “It’s giving social and emotional learning a bad name.”

He said if folks have differences, he invites them in to see the classes and what’s being taught.

“I always bring it back to what’s good for kids,” he said.

As far as working with staff, he said he wants to create a culture people want to be part of.

Corvallis is also a class A school, though smaller than Columbia Falls, with a total student body of about 1,340 students and 473 in the high school.

The school board Tuesday voted unanimously to hire Konen.