Council of Chief State School Offices – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 21 Apr 2023 11:20:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Council of Chief State School Offices – 社区黑料 32 32 She Didn鈥檛 Think She鈥檇 Last a Year; Now She鈥檚 the Nation鈥檚 Top Teacher /article/she-didnt-think-shed-last-a-year-now-shes-the-nations-top-teacher/ Wed, 19 Apr 2023 20:38:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=707668 Oklahoma math teacher Rebecka Peterson thought her first year of teaching would be her last. As a former college instructor, she was disillusioned by teaching high school students who were 鈥渕ore or less forced to be there.鈥

But on Wednesday, the Swedish immigrant was named National Teacher of the Year 鈥 a recognition of the tight bonds she鈥檚 formed over 11 years with students and her efforts to bring teachers鈥 inspiring stories to the forefront.

鈥淚 hope that my story 鈥 it being so very difficult and wondering if this was the right thing 鈥 resonates with other teachers,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 just want my message to be lifting up the profession.鈥

Peterson, who teaches algebra, AP Calculus and other math courses at Union High School in Tulsa, was one of five state-level winners chosen as finalists by the Council of Chief State School Officers, which sponsors the program. As the national winner, Peterson will devote the next year to highlighting other teachers鈥 stories. That shouldn鈥檛 be a stretch for Petersen, who last year began , which she describes as an educator version of the popular website . Over the past year, she鈥檚 visited teachers in 40 of 77 Oklahoma counties and posted their stories on social media.聽

鈥淚 want to create a space for teacher voices and elevate their joys and their struggles,鈥 she said.

Her message is a counterpoint to what some Oklahoma teachers have heard from their state leaders in recent years. In 2021, Gov. Kevin Stitt signed limiting class discussions of race and gender.  And Superintendent Ryan Walters has pushed to have over violations.

But on Wednesday, Walters had nothing but praise for Peterson.

鈥淪he has inspired our children in the classroom and lifted up other teachers鈥 potential across our state,鈥 he said in a statement. 鈥淥klahoma is lucky to have her, and we are happy to share her talents with teachers and students across the country.鈥

Peterson declined to address whether her efforts to celebrate teachers grew out of recent controversies.

Rebecka Peterson鈥檚 former students, Morgan Davis (left) and Alyssa Fisher (right), now teach math in the same department at Union High School. (Courtesy of Rebecka Peterson)

The daughter of medical missionaries, with a Swedish mother and Iranian father, Peterson lived in four countries before settling in the U.S. About six years ago, she began sharing her experience as a sometimes lonely immigrant as a springboard to connect with her students. Some of them write her letters sharing their stories, but most accept her invitation to meet one-on-one. 

Daniel Flores, a senior who had Peterson for AP Calculus in 11th grade, said that beginning-of-the-year meeting set a positive tone for the rest of his junior year. 

鈥淎s a passionate learner, there is nothing greater than connecting with an equally passionate educator,鈥 he said.

After her rocky start  teaching high school math, Peterson became one of five administrators of the blog, where teachers post reflections from their day. The blog, she said, is the reason she stuck with teaching.

鈥淚鈥檝e trained my brain,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a mindframe where I see good that happens in the classroom that others might not see.鈥

Memorable moments for her have included watching two students who usually don鈥檛 get along help each other in class, or a student who usually says he鈥檚 鈥渘ot a math person鈥 say something positive about what he鈥檚 learned.

post was about a gift she received from a student who she said 鈥渃hecked every single box of trauma.鈥 When his mother died, he had to move in with his alcoholic father. But he graduated second in his class and is a talented viola player who worked at a local music store to pay for his instrument.

He told Peterson he wanted to show her his appreciation, but couldn鈥檛 afford to buy her anything. Instead, he offered to play her favorite song 鈥 鈥 on his viola. The moving ballad includes the lyrics, 鈥淏ecause I knew you, I have been changed for good.鈥

That line, she said, is central to her teaching philosophy.

鈥淚 hope that the way I love my students is so deep and true,鈥 she said, 鈥渢hat it changes the way that they love and view themselves.鈥

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In and Out of Class, These Top Teachers 鈥楾hrive Off Connections鈥 With Students /article/in-and-out-of-class-these-top-teachers-thrive-off-connections-with-students/ Mon, 10 Apr 2023 19:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=707228 Like many adults cooped up during the pandemic, science teacher Carolyn Kielma broke the tedium by learning something new. After a lightning-quick online ordination from the Seattle-based Universal Life Church Monastery, she became a licensed wedding officiant.

鈥淚 just love love,鈥 said Kielma, who teaches at Bristol Eastern High School in Connecticut and is one five finalists for 2023 National Teacher of the Year.

By chance, her first time leading a ceremony was the marriage of a former student. The two stayed in touch on Facebook after Andrew Michaud graduated in 2014. He didn鈥檛 learn Kielma was a minister until he and his fianc茅e Jane began searching for a venue.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have drawn a more perfect hand of cards,鈥 Michaud said. 鈥淚 didn’t feel nervous standing at the altar because I鈥檓 just kind of hanging out with my favorite teacher.鈥

Andrew Michaud鈥檚 wedding to his fianc茅e Jane was the first one his former teacher, Carolyn Kielma, ever officiated. (Carolyn Kielma)

All of this year鈥檚 finalists hold a similar place in the hearts of their students, parents and colleagues. While passionate about their subjects, and deeply skilled, they are perhaps best known for the relationships they鈥檝e forged. 

鈥淚 thrive off connections in my classroom,鈥 said Kielma, who teaches biology and sees a lot of the same students in her biotechnology and forensics elective. 鈥淭he students won鈥檛 work for me if they can’t connect with me.鈥

This month, the Council of Chief State School Officers will name one of these five state teachers of the year the national winner. That educator will serve as an ambassador for the profession, speaking across the country and focusing on an issue that defines them as a teacher.

Kimberly Radostits of Illinois mentors ninth graders to help them get a strong start in high school. Jermar Rountree from the District of Columbia helped build an afterschool program where students can learn fencing and cooking. Rebecka Peterson of Oklahoma helps administer a blog where educators highlight the positive side of teaching, even when it鈥檚 hard to find. And Harlee Harvey has immersed herself in the culture of one of the most remote places on earth 鈥 the Alaskan tundra, accessible only by bush plane. 

Harvey teaches first grade at Tiki摹aq School, which serves a native whaling community in Point Hope, a narrow peninsula that juts out into the Chukchi Sea. After growing up in Fairbanks, where she went to the University of Alaska, she felt drawn to teach in the rural I帽upiaq village.

Most educators there don鈥檛 last long.

The school is 鈥渃onstantly restarting,鈥 Harvey said. 鈥淲e’ve had a new principal just about every year.鈥

Alaska Teacher of the Year Harlee Harvey gets tossed into the air as part of Nalukataq 鈥 a Native Alaskan game that is part of a traditional spring festival the I帽upiat people hold to celebrate a successful whale hunt. (Harlee Harvey)

In the spring, children often hunt with their parents for bowhead and beluga whales. The resulting bounty forms the centerpiece of the village鈥檚 spring festival and can feed families for months. Harvey designs culturally relevant lessons on topics such as ice fishing and how Native Alaskans melt ice and snow to make water in winter.

鈥淭he big push is framing education through their worldview,鈥 Harvey said. 鈥淚f there鈥檚 a story about going to the market and buying watermelon 鈥 they don鈥檛 do that out here.鈥

Harvey consults with Molly Lane, the school鈥檚 librarian, on hunting seasons throughout the year, blending facts about bearded seals, caribou and other animals into her lessons. Her attention to enduring traditions reflects broader efforts in the North Slope Borough School District, which includes Tiki摹aq School, to infuse the students鈥 culture into the curriculum. 

The year Harvey took charge of the yearbook, for example, she included students鈥 I帽upiaq names along with their English ones.

鈥淭hat had never happened before,鈥 said Lane, who has had three children taught by Harvey. 鈥淪o many people appreciated her effort in getting the names spelled correctly.鈥

鈥楢n outsider looking in鈥

Earning students鈥 trust, as Tulsa鈥檚 Peterson learned, is all about vulnerability. Born in Sweden to a Swedish mother and Iranian father, the Union Public Schools math teacher likes to share her experiences living in four countries before arriving in the U.S. 

鈥淎s a child moving that much,鈥 she said, 鈥淚 always felt like an outsider looking in.鈥 About six years ago, she began sharing her story with students and inviting them to meet with her one-on-one to tell theirs. The experience, she said, has 鈥渢ransformed鈥 her classroom and made students more willing to speak up about their needs.

Daniel Flores, a senior who took Peterson鈥檚 Advanced Placement Calculus class in 11th grade, said he initially felt unsure of himself after a rocky experience taking pre-calculus remotely during the pandemic.

鈥淪he assured me that we would work through it. We did. She answered every question I asked,鈥 said Flores, who will attend Stanford University on a full scholarship this fall. 鈥淚 have always had a strong support system in my family, but Mrs. Peterson stood out in the way she made her classroom a little home for every one of her students.鈥

The past three years have been some of the most challenging many teachers have ever experienced. But in the blog, Peterson always finds an encounter or observation worth celebrating. Entries include the time a student wrote her after her husband鈥檚 grandmother died and when she teared up watching members of the school鈥檚 perform in a musical.

鈥淚t shifted my mind as a teacher to be intentional about adding meaning to those small beautiful moments,鈥 she said.

Alyssa Fisher, left, one of Rebecka Peterson鈥檚 former students, now teaches at Union High School 鈥 also in the math department.

鈥楾he most heartwarming thing鈥

Radostits, a Spanish teacher at Oregon High School, in a rural area east of Chicago, has the same outlook toward students in her Hawks Take Flight mentoring program, which she launched with colleagues in 2008. The program鈥檚 weekly afterschool sessions target students who struggled with absenteeism or missing assignments when they started ninth grade.聽

They discuss what鈥檚 going well and where they get stuck. If the students meet their goals for the week, they earn incentives, like an extra $5 on their meal accounts.

鈥淚 love teaching Spanish, but honestly my content is just a vehicle to connect with students,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese kids become another part of my family.鈥 When COVID closed schools in March 2020, the program took a pause, but the mentors still offered individual support. Those one-on-one Google Meets often turned into group homework sessions.

鈥淚t was the most heartwarming thing for me,鈥 Radostits said. 鈥淚 thought they were going to go rogue on us and they didn’t.鈥

Illinois Teacher of the Year Kimberly Radostits worked with two students on homework in her Spanish class. (Heidi Deininger)

Radostits knows that shows freshmen who are on track academically are more likely to graduate on time. Rather than relying on teacher recommendations to identify students who needed mentoring, she pushed for a more data-driven approach. She turned to Adam Larsen, assistant superintendent in the Oregon Community Unit School District, who helped to develop an to detect which students might need extra help. Sixteen schools outside the district have since adopted it.

鈥淲e ultimately wanted to be laser-specific about finding kids who were at-risk of dropout, not necessarily the ones who were causing the most visible problems in class,鈥 Larsen said.

鈥楾hey miss me鈥

Radostits is on a sabbatical this year, but she鈥檚 still mentoring students. Being a statewide winner can leave teachers feeling torn. Even if they鈥檙e still teaching, they often take time off for speaking engagements and conferences. 

鈥淭hey miss me, and I miss them,鈥 Rountree, a physical education teacher, said about his students at Center City Public Charter School鈥檚 Brightwood Campus. He said it鈥檚 especially hard to keep his pre-K students in a routine when he鈥檚 out. 

Noticing that the pandemic left many students feeling isolated or quick to anger, he takes time in class to let them air frustrations and share what makes them happy. When they come to P.E., they grab a clothespin to indicate their feelings 鈥 red for angry, blue for sad, yellow for OK and green for happy. 

鈥淚saiah loves Coach Rountree,鈥 Toya Newton said of her youngest son. 鈥淗e comes home explaining the different activities.鈥 

The 10-year-old recently brought home some sticks the class used to bang out a rhythm on the floor. Rountree said Isaiah asked to practice drumming at home. Newton鈥檚 oldest son Eric had Rountree for flag football, and she especially appreciated the coach taking his class across the street to Walmart to explore healthy meal portions and learn to read nutrition labels. 

鈥淢y son was overweight,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow he鈥檚 playing flag football in high school and his weight is perfect.鈥

Coaching flag football is just one of physical education teacher Jermar Rountree鈥檚 many roles at Center City Public Charter Schools. (Center City Public Charter Schools Brightwood Campus)

Rountree seeks help from community organizations in D.C. to address other needs 鈥 partnering, for example, with , a nonprofit that provides meal tokens that families can use at participating food trucks or restaurants throughout the city. And he helped launch an afterschool program featuring nontraditional activities like boxing and learning Japanese. 

As if Rountree weren’t busy enough already, he also stepped in this spring to serve as stage manager for the school鈥檚 first musical since the pandemic 鈥 鈥淎nnie Jr.鈥

鈥淚 just want to make sure my kids get it all,鈥 he said.

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