社区黑料

Explore

Five Things to Know About Missy Testerman, the 2024 National Teacher of the Year

Longtime elementary school teacher earned ESL certification to advocate for immigrant students in her rural Tennessee school.

Misty Testerman, the new National Teacher of the Year, works with two students in her classroom. A former first- and second-grade teacher, she shifted to teaching ESL. (Tennessee Department of Education)

Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 社区黑料 Newsletter

Missy Testerman has enjoyed a teaching career that is decades longer than most, spending more than 30 years in first- and second-grade classrooms.

But when she saw that her K-8 school district in rural Appalachia was quietly becoming a refuge for families from Mexico, Central America and Asia, she shifted gears and became an English as a second language teacher, pushing to smooth her students鈥 鈥 and their families鈥 鈥 transition to life in the U.S.

Her students鈥 English acquisition is key because many become their family鈥檚 translators, not just in school but elsewhere. 鈥淪o their exposure to the language and their learning the language actually opens up doors and possibilities for their families,鈥 she said in an interview.

Testerman on Wednesday was named the by the Council of Chief State School Officers.

As Teacher of the Year, she鈥檒l spend a year traveling the U.S. as an ambassador to the teaching profession, telling The74 that she鈥檒l urge other teachers to become advocates for their students 鈥 and for their fellow educators.

Testerman was selected from a field of three other finalists for the award: Alaska鈥檚 Catherine Walker, a high school science and career and technical education teacher; Georgia鈥檚 Christy Todd, a middle school music technology teacher; and New Jersey鈥檚 Joe Nappi, a high school history teacher who writes a blog on teaching about the Holocaust.鈥  

All of the finalists, as well as the other state-level teachers of the year, on Wednesday learned from First Lady Jill Biden that when they visit the White House later this year, as is customary, they’ll also be the guests of honor at a , the first time that diplomatic nicety will be reserved for a group of educators, the Associated Press reported. Typically state dinners are used to woo foreign heads of state. 

Testerman, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in elementary education and a Master of Arts in reading education from East Tennessee State University, teaches in , a K-8 school in a small farming town of about 4,500, located 250 miles east of Nashville. And she serves as the Rogersville district’s ESL specialist and ESL program director. She also coordinates the system鈥檚 summer programs and is a mentor teacher and member of the teacher leadership team.

She鈥檚 not the first ESL teacher to capture the top-teacher honor 鈥 in 2004, it went to Rhode Island鈥檚 , who designed the ESL program for the North Kingstown, R.I., school district. And in 2018, the recipient was , a Washington state ELA teacher who worked at a 鈥渘ewcomer school鈥 for new immigrants. Other recipients have also worked with English language learners, even if the designation wasn鈥檛 in their formal title.

Here are five things to know about Testerman:

1. She has taught her entire career in a single school in rural east Tennessee.

The 53-year-old Testerman is a lifelong teacher, having put in 33 years in the classroom, all of it Rogersville. 

鈥淚t’s a beautiful place,鈥 she said in an interview. 鈥淚t looks like it’s a Hallmark postcard.鈥

She admits that her long career is 鈥渒ind of unusual 鈥 teachers, as you know, tend to leave the field as soon as they’re able to do so. But I still find a lot of joy in teaching, and I feel like I’m as energized to keep teaching as I was years ago.鈥

2. Before working in ESL, she had a long career as a classroom teacher. 

Testerman spent most of her career, about 30 years, working as a first- and second-grade teacher before enrolling in Tennessee鈥檚 program and adding an English as a second language (ESL) endorsement to her resume. She has said she wanted to ensure that immigrant students and families in Rogersville had an advocate. 

鈥淚 try to make sure that my children and their families are assimilated here, that they鈥檙e participating in sports and everything, because if they assimilate, people will accept them more easily,鈥 Testerman told when she was named a finalist.

3. While Rogersville is isolated and rural, her students are from all over the world.

Testerman has a full-time case load of 21 students, a mix of Spanish, Arabic and Chinese speakers, as well as a few who speak Gujarati, a language from the western Indian state of Gujarat. It accounts for a of Indian immigrants to the U.S. 

鈥淚t’s a pretty interesting breakup of situations and languages,鈥 she said. 

Her students are divided between first-generation Americans born here to immigrant parents, and newcomers 鈥 many of whom have arrived in the U.S. 鈥渨ithin the past year or so,鈥 she said.

Missy Testerman works with a small group of ESL students in her Rogersville, Tenn., classroom. 鈥淚 still find a lot of joy in teaching, and I feel like I’m as energized to keep teaching as I was years ago,鈥 she said. (Tennessee Department of Education)

Testerman said her students occasionally face 鈥渟ome unpleasant situations鈥 around discrimination in the mostly white community of Rogersville, 鈥渂ut that’s basically the rarity. My school has embraced them, has embraced their families. I think that I have the luxury of being in the role to kind of be the ambassador, to make that happen.鈥

She said most people in the area also embrace the newcomer families once they get to know them 鈥渂ecause they see that they’re just like every other family. They love their students. They want them to do well and achieve so that they can create a good future for themselves.鈥

In her application for the award, Testerman wrote, 鈥淪imple gestures such as sitting with my students鈥 families at high school graduation or a school play goes a long way in helping them find acceptance in our rural area, since I have belonged to this community for decades and others trust my lead.鈥

Former student Nadeen Aglan told AP that Testerman goes out of her way to develop close ties with the families of her students. 鈥淗er kindness shows. Her compassion is really deep.鈥

4. She wants teachers to realize their own power 鈥 and fight for change.

Testerman said she is looking forward to advocating for teachers over the next year.

鈥淭here are 3.5 million dedicated teachers all over this country who invest time, energy and love into helping our students create the best possible future for themselves,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I want to empower teachers by getting them to understand that they are their best advocates and their students’ best advocates. Teachers are the experts.鈥

Testerman said many times teachers must abide by policies that are 鈥渘ot made by people who spend a lot of time in classrooms. 鈥淚t’s time for teachers to let their voices be heard.鈥

She wants teachers to advocate for students not just in their school building but, if needed, in their state legislature 鈥渨hen there is either an implemented policy or a suggested policy that you know is just not what’s best for kids.鈥  

5. She plans to return to the classroom after her year away.

National Teacher of the Year winners often leverage the honor to pursue big dreams outside of the classroom, including and . , the 2016 honoree, is now a member of Congress representing Connecticut. 

Testerman on Wednesday said her plan after her year away from the classroom is to return. 鈥淚 still find so much joy in teaching,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 can’t honestly imagine my life without being a teacher.鈥 That may change, she said, but at the moment she plans to return to the classroom.

Watching a child acquire another language is 鈥渁n amazing, magical transformation,鈥 Testerman . 鈥淭here鈥檚 a level of excitement in a learner when they realize they are able to understand the language they are hearing around them.鈥 

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 社区黑料鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 社区黑料's republishing terms.





On 社区黑料 Today