October 17, 2009
Gene A. Budig: Meet some talented teachers from across country
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Teaching is very hard work, but many people are very good at it.

Seth Mitchell likes kids and wants to help them find their way in an ever-changing and complex society. He is a teacher of English at Lisbon High School in Maine, population 9,077.

He believes in the use of technology in his classroom, and as a tech liaison with the National Writing Project he focuses on integrating technology into the teaching of writing.

What he is trying to do is find meaningful ways to include technology in instruction and assessment and enhance student achievement. He sees it as the wave of the future.

Mitchell believes he would benefit appreciably by having more interchange with other teachers and that such an exchange would heighten teaching approaches and skills. The teacher from Maine believes he speaks for many of his colleagues.

He was one of several teachers chosen from across the country to be profiled in a new report by the College Board and Phi Delta Kappa International, Teachers Are the Center of Education: Profiles of Eight Teachers.

Sheryl Fontaine finds teaching chemistry "a lot harder than I thought it would be." But she also finds it "more rewarding than I expected it to be." She is a teacher at Reed High School, in Sparks, Nev.

She answers questions from her students with questions of her own, rarely providing a direct answer but supplying valuable clues. She offers new teachers one bit of advice: "If you don't have fun in this job, then you shouldn't be here because it's hard."

A unique perspective was offered by Bill Jeter, a visual arts teacher from Golden Valley, Minnesota. "Art brings humanity to things ... it's the closest we get to magic." He also points out what he believes people really value in education. "Look at where wealthy people send their children," he said. "They don't cut out arts and they don't cut out sports and they don't cut out languages." Jeter has been in the classroom for 17 years.

Judy Ellsesser-Painter, an English Language Arts teacher from South Webster High School in South Webster, Ohio, insists that "everyone teaches; everybody learns." She further asserts that "kids can tell when teachers are putting heart and soul into what they're doing."

The daughter of an English teacher, Ellsesser-Painter did not set out to be in the classroom, but "to have people this involved in learning and education, this is the way you need to live your life: always involved in discovery."

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Posted By: Dr. Mary Sumers (12:51am 11-06-2009)
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Dr. Budig's inclusion of art teachers in this article demonstrates his sensitivity and wisdom in the field of education. I believe that art holds a universal language that not only breaks barriers between cultures, but also helps in the development of the whole person while aiding other learning.

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