“I think it’s given me credibility with people that I work with,” Young said. “I’m able to be at a bargaining table with a group of teachers and they’re talking about how hard they work, and I know. I’ve been there, done that. Have I used my own money to buy supplies for school? You bet. Have I worked every weekend? You bet. Having been a principal, that’s given me credibility with the principals that I work with now. I get where (they’re) coming from, and I understand what (their) issues are.”
During her time in the Washougal district, Young has led staff recruitment efforts, negotiated contracts with staff associations, supported principals in ensuring that highly effective teachers are in every classroom and shepherded the recruitment and hiring process for administrators, including Washougal School District Superintendent Mary Templeton.
“Marian Young is one of the most effective school leaders I have ever worked with,” Templeton stated in a news release. “Marian has been an integral part of our success as a district by providing guidance, strength and wisdom for our team. We can always count on her to treat people well and keep us laughing with her amazing sense of humor. Marian’s wealth of experience as a classroom teacher, building leader and central office administrator have allowed her to play a key role in helping us see Washougal rising to be one of the top performing districts in the state. We will miss her tremendously and wish her well on her next journey.”
Young grew up in Henley, Oregon, an incorporated community four miles southeast of Klamath Falls. She knew she wanted to be a teacher when she was 6 years old, holding “class sessions” for her stuffed animals in her bedroom with a small blackboard.
“My mother talked to me a lot about her teachers and her high regard for them,” Young said. “At that time there were not a lot of professional role models for girls. I saw these women that I very much admired, and that’s what I wanted to be.”