Home Sign in

Assistant Girls' Dean

Holbrook SDA Indian School in Holbrook, AZ
Pacific Union Conference
Description

Holbrook Indian School (HIS) is seeking an assistant girls' dean effective immediately.  This is a 12-month hourly position and is similar to taskforce volunteer positions at other schools. Duties include helping the head dean with dorm functions, supervising students on commons and the cafeteria, helping in a classroom as an aide for an hour and a half from Monday through Friday, and helping during the summer program.  The structure in each dorm includes a Head Dean, Associate Dean, and Assistant Dean.

HIS is an accredited 1-12th grade boarding school operated directly by the Pacific Union Conference.  As such, faculty and staff members receive remuneration and benefits according to the policies employed by all schools in the Pacific Union.  As in many other SDA boarding schools, employees live in on-campus housing. The assistant dean lives in an apartment in the dorm.  The average student population at HIS is 72 students, split evenly between 1-8th and 9-12thgrades, with an additional 7-15 students at our one-teacher school in Chinle, Arizona. 

Required Experience

Must be 21 years old or older to meet our insurance requirements for transporting students.  Preference will be given to candidates with interest in the education, counseling, or social work fields.

Posted by: Pedro L. Ojeda

Resumé Deadline: Friday, June 28, 2024

School Logo

Holbrook SDA Indian School

Holbrook Indian School provides a safe place for Native American students to learn and grow in the Creator while preserving and celebrating their Native culture.

There once was a style of boarding school aimed to destroy all aspects of Native culture, especially outward signs of tribal life. During the late 1800s, Native children were forced to cut their hair and were forbidden to speak in their Native languages. Holbrook Indian School opened its doors in 1946 and has since provided a safe place for students to learn and grow in the Creator while also preserving and celebrating their Native culture.