Archive for the 'Educational News' Category

Hard Work Pays Off for Townsend Elementary School

Congratulations to Townsend Elementary School for being named a 2010 Nominee for the National Blue Ribbon Award. Townsend is one of six schools nominated in Tennessee by the state department of education. The school was named because of its dramatic improvement within specific parameters. Read more about it here:  TN Names 2010 Nominees for National Blue Ribbon Award Townsend Elementary School is a part of the Blount County school system.

“These schools serve as a model for other schools across our state and the nation,” Education Commissioner Timothy Webb said in the press release. “Their performance is to be commended.”

Educational News BonnyEditor 04 Jan 2010 No Comments

Post Secondary Education pays off with higher earnings and more job availability

The Tennessee Department of Education has instituted tougher new state standards to make sure our students are better prepared to face the world as young adults after high school. Our changing status from regional community to global society and the economic impact that has on our lives makes it imperative to provide the best educational opportunities for our children. For more information, check out the state’s recent newsletter “Back to School” that describes job and earning potential for students based on their education levels.  Back To School Newsletter

Educational News BonnyEditor 28 Sep 2009 2 Comments

HHS wins big thanks to U.S. Cellular

A $100,000 windfall will give Heritage High School an opportunity to take care of some unmet needs, Principal Patty Mandigo said recently.

The school learned of the money last month after U.S. Cellular announced that Heritage was one of the national Top-10 vote getters in the company’s Calling All Communities promotion. Check out Blount Today’s story.

Mandigo and the school’s leadership team have been reviewing needs to decide how to spend the money. The school’s theater has several including new lighting and sound systems and a new stage curtain. Upgrading the theater would benefit all of the students, she said.

The school also needs to increase its technology capabilities for students and teachers.

Mandigo said the leadership team will decide how to best stretch the money for the benefit of the entire school. She thanked U.S. Cellular for this wonderful gift.

Educational News admin 20 Mar 2009 No Comments

Congratulations Dr. Penny Ferguson

Recently, Dr. Penny Ferguson, a long-time educator at Maryville High School, traveled to Kansas to be inducted into the 2008 National Teachers Hall of Fame. She was one of three teachers from Tennessee to ever be afforded this national spotlight. We want to once again congratulate Dr. Ferguson on this career milestone and share a video with you about her approach to education. The video of Dr. Ferguson was created by one of her former students, Carson Hunt.

Educational News & Spotlight Features admin 17 Jul 2008 No Comments

MHS’s Ferguson travels to Kansas to receive award

Not every teacher gets to travel down the Yellow Brick Road in Kansas.  Maryville High’s English Department Chair, Dr. Penny Ferguson, is one of the fortunate few.  Emporia, Kansas-better known as Teacher Town USA-was host to the 2008 National Teachers Hall of Fame induction ceremonies held on June 18-21.

One of five teachers selected this year-the 17th year of this program to elevate the status of teachers in America-Penny Ferguson became the 3rd teacher from Tennessee to join the ranks of the 80 teachers in the Hall of Fame.  Her days in Kansas were full as she toured Flint Hills, Cottonwood Falls, the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, the William Allen White State Historic Site, the historic towns of Council Grove and Strong City, and the historic One-Room Schoolhouse on Emporia State Campus. The inductees were also the honorees one evening  at the Emporia Municipal Band’s Concert in Fremont Park.

Dr. Ferguson became a national spokesperson for education as she joined the other four honorees in speaking to the Future Teachers Academy; as a participant in a televised roundtable discussion moderated by NEA past president Keith Geiger; and as a participant on “Talk of Emporia,” a live radio talk show.  She was able to discuss issues facing education today, including No Child Left Behind and teacher burnout.

On the last evening, a reception was held in the National Teachers Hall of Fame Museum, followed by a formal induction ceremony.  In this ceremony, each honoree was featured in a video depicting his/her career in teaching, each honoree gave a speech about education,  and each honoree received the Belltower Award and a signet ring.

In addition to her national recognition, Ferguson received the following gifts and mementos:

  • A plaque bearing her picture, name, and brief description for display at Maryville High
    School and in the Hall of Fame;
  • A signet ring and lapel pin presented by Herff Jones, Inc.;
  • A $1,000 scholarship for a student of her choice who is planning to pursue a degree in
    education presented by Sodexho School Services;
  • $1,000 in materials for her classroom presented by Pearson Education;
  • A permanent display in The National Teachers Hall of Fame;
  • A cast bronze Belltower Award created by noted sculptor John Forsyth;
  • A Marlow woodcut of a country school scene.

While Dr. Ferguson enjoyed her time with family and friends in Kansas, she realizes that there is no place like home.  She clicked her heels three times and returned to Maryville, where she will begin an exciting new year of teaching in the fall.

Other Inductees include, left to right, Suzanne Ransleben, Dr. David Lazerson, Dr. Penny Ferguson, Kathleen Engle, and Ronald Blanchard.

Educational News admin 17 Jul 2008 No Comments

Teaching students in the 21st Century

We all can remember being in school and the tools that our teachers used. All research was done in the library, and information was written up on the chalkboard. Depending on how old you are, the changes can be staggering. Chalkboards have given way to white boards that were erasable to SMART boards that interfaced with a computer and the Internet. A book report is no longer just a written report but formatted as a newsletter or another type of project generated with a software program.

The next level of a 21st Century classroom is being introduced into the Maryville school system through the aid of the Maryville City Schools Foundation: the Promethean ActivClassroom. Promethean is white-board technology that allows teachers and students to interact with it and each other. The foundation is raising money in order to provide these systems to all core classes in each of the schools.

Recently, teachers currently using the system explained how they have been able to incorporate Promethean in their lesson plans and the capabilities of the system. They also shared insight into how it is changing and improving the way students are learning.

Carol Anne Scarlett, an eighth grade science teacher at Maryville Middle School, said Promethean helps draw students into lessons by allowing them to interact and provides information to the teacher about what they understand. The system operates like a PowerPoint, but the user has the ability to move objects around and make them appear or disappear.

Ginni Jabbour, who teaches algebra and introduction to algebra II at Maryville High School, said the system’s interactive qualities appeal to today’s students.

“The kids are much more engaged now than they used to be,” Jabbour said. “You could always send kids to the board and write but for some reason, when you involve a technical tool where they’re doing technology, all of a sudden, they’re much more interested. That’s the way they do everything now. To keep them interested you have to communicate the way they are used to.”

Both Scarlett and Jabbour said one of the great features of the system is Promethean Planet, an online source of materials and lesson plans that they can use in the classroom. Teachers use what are called “flip charts” that contain the lesson plans, but they can customize their lessons by picking and choosing which pages of the flip chart they want to teach as well as adding their own information. Jabbour said the Web site allows teachers to search by state standards, topic and grade level, and has lessons that are taught around the world. The site also has a forum for teachers to share information and ideas.

The system includes an activboard, an activslate, an activpen, an activote, and an activwand. The activboard serves as a screen that students and teachers can use with an activpen or activwand to move and display objects.

Jabbour said using the system helps her go through material faster because she doesn’t have to take time to draw shapes or graphs. She can used the available pages or create her own ahead of time.

The activotes are hand-held devices that students use to respond to multiple choice questions. Scarlett said these allow teachers to assess immediately whether or not students are grasping the material. In addition, if it is a quiz, the students’ answers can be exported to an Excel spreadsheet, which results in an automatic posting of the grades.

The system also has another feature that both teachers like.

“The Promethean system that I have in my classroom actually also consists of a wireless slate which allows me to keep control of the board but be anywhere in the classroom,” Scarlett said. “That way I’m not just stuck in the front of the room.”

Jabbour agreed. “Classroom management is much better when you aren’t tied to the front of the room.”

Jabbour also found another use for the system that she hadn’t anticipated. She learned to use a recording feature to “pre-teach” her lesson plan. On a day when she knew she would have to be absent from school, she prepared her lesson a head of time and recorded it. The substitute teacher called up the program in which Jabbour had added appropriate pauses to allow the students to work through problems.

“It was like I was there, but I just physically wasn’t present, and so I didn’t miss a day of instruction because I wasn’t at the school,” she said. When she returned to class the next day, the students were prepared to move on.

Sharon Anglim, director of Communications and Special Projects for Maryville City Schools, said the Promethean system was developed by educators specifically for educational purposes. The system allows teachers to meet the learning needs and styles of each individual child, she added.

More and more, technology is becoming embedded in curriculum as textbooks, Web sites and software are developed to provide a seamless transition between the different learning arenas. Anglim said scholastic companies aren’t just selling textbooks anymore.

“As we see new textbooks come out, we see that technology is an integral part of that,” she said.

Photos: First-grade teacher Jessica King, Foothills Elementary School, uses the Promethean activboard to lead a discussion about authors of books her students have been reading.

Students in King’s class “play” a spelling game involving that week’s spelling words on the activboard. Students had to stay inside during a recess because the ground was too wet and eagerly asked to play this game. They lined up to take turns.

Educational News admin 04 Jun 2008 No Comments

BC Fifth Annual Reading Conference Inspires Attendees

Blount County schools’ Fifth Annual Reading Conference provided educators with some food for thought over their summer holidays. Educational leader Todd Whitaker set the tone for the day, sharing with  teachers and administrators the traits that he feels make a great teacher. He’s written several books on the subject. All students should be treated with respect and dignity all the time. Whitaker, a professor of educational leadership at Indiana State University, said the three behaviors that should never be used in school are arguments, yelling and scarcasm. The keynote speaker sprinkled his comments with humor as he pulled examples from his time as a classroom teacher. “We need to cultivate society. We’re not trying to reflect society.”

His philosophy of education (and of life) is “Raise the Praise” and “Minimize the Criticize.” People should be treated as if they are good, giving an example of questioning a student who is out of class. Instead of acting as if the student is doing something wrong, ask if he or she needs help. Great teachers are the ones who act intentionally in everything they do, developing well-thought out plans while making it look random. Great teachers can help students develop a love of reading, which starts with a book.

The day-long conference was chock-full of workshops including Novel Studies, Triology of Reading Strategies, Social Studies for Social People, Using Children’s Literature to Support Life Skills and many others that touched various issues of reading. The presentations I was able to attend all dealt with better engaging our students. I particularly enjoyed Steve Chastain’s Technology Tools for an Educator. Chastain, a University of Tennessee professor who teaches about technology, showed educators Web sites and tools that they can use in their classrooms and gave examples of how those can be utilized in different subject areas.

I’ve attended these reading conferences in the past in a different capacity and found that they provide useful information to our teachers. As a lifelong learner myself, I enjoy conferences that serve to inspire you, to underscore what you are doing right and to give you fresh ideas. I think that is what this conference, which was the inspiration of Director of Schools Alvin Hord, does for participants. Hord created it not long after being name director because he felt a stronger emphasis needed to be placed on reading skills for all grades and all subjects.

This year, as in past years, it was held at Heritage High School and had close to 400 participants. It will give our teachers something to shift around in their subconscious over the summer months and return to the new school year charged up with ideas.

Educational News admin 04 Jun 2008 No Comments

Porter teacher one of five to win state humanities award

By Matthew Stewart
of The Daily Times Staff –

The field of education continues to evolve as teachers become further aware of the ever-expanding world of resources available to them.

Great teachers are able to discern their students’ needs and tailor these new resources to the needs of a specific class. Great educators also possess a certain flexibility whereby they are constantly refining their lessons.

Susan Wagner, a Porter Elementary School fourth grade teacher, is one such teacher. She was one of five Tennessee teachers awarded the 2008 Award of Recognition for Outstanding Teaching of the Humanities.

Wagner is humble about the award. “There are lots of other teachers who do just as many cool things (for their students), but don’t get recognized. I just applied for the award,” she said.

“(Blount County) has a great school system with great kids. A lot of good things are going on here,” said Wagner. “There are a lot of unsung heroes (in education) — a lot of teachers are quiet.”

Second career

Wagner is a second-career teacher, she said. “I’ve worked in other jobs before and this is one job where we give a lot (of ourselves). (As teachers,) we get so attached to (students) that we’re one little family. When (students) are having an exciting day or a sad day we all feel it.”

She has taught third grade, fourth grade and a multi-age fourth grade and fifth class in her eight years of teaching. Wagner likes teaching fourth grade the best, she said. “It’s a hard year for reading and introduces more difficult subjects for science and history. They are moving from a primary education to an upper elementary education.”

Every school year is a new experience with its own unique set of challenges. “Every year I do something different,” said Wagner. “I gauge (my students’) abilities and interests. I gear my instruction toward their needs.”

Wagner likes researching and writing her own lessons, she said. “It’s one of the great things about teaching,” said Wagner.

“What’s really neat is to see a student you had several years ago, and have them tell you they remember a lesson. It’s nice to know it sticks with them,” she said.

Past students remember

Fifth-grader Derek Roulette remembers his time in Wagner’s class last year. “I like how she taught social studies. She made it fun and easy,” he said. Roulette’s favorite lesson was one where his classmates had to act like British and American spies during the American Revolution. Roulette seemingly remembers every detail of how he and his peers scoured the entire school for enemy troops. Even more impressive was how his narrative of the lesson reflected a deep understanding of not only the tactics but the history of the American Revolution.

“She was just a great teacher and I was glad to have her,” said Roulette.

Students have enjoyed many lessons this year, such as reenacting the battle of Lexington and Concord, creating models of famous Tennesseans using potato chip cans and designing cell models for a “Top Cell Model Competition.”

Wagner will receive a fellowship of $2,000 to use for professional development, and another $1,500 for humanities textbooks at the school. She will use the $2,000 for trips to Boston and New York to learn more about these significant colonial period cities. Wagner’s trip will include visits to museums and historic sites as well as a Mt. Vernon workshop on archaeology.

“I’m glad she’s getting awarded for things she’s doing everyday,” said principal Deborah Craig. “She’s very creative and always provides an enriched curriculum. This award will just add to the enrichment and give her financial backing for her projects.”

Educational News admin 03 Jun 2008 No Comments

Students Need to be Recognized

Gov. Phil BredesenIt’s that time of year again when we reward our kids for all of their hard work. Each school system has its own awards for various activities and academics, and we should be proud of all of our students. Recently, three award ceremonies spotlighted students we would like share with you.

The Daily Times Academic Awards

The first, The Daily Times Academic Awards, is a long-standing tradition created and sponsored by the newspaper. Academic Letters, similar to Athletics Letters, are awarded in the areas of language arts, math, science and social studies. Students from high schools in Alcoa, Maryville, Blount County, and Greenback are honored.

This year, the 23rd year, resulted in 227 students receiving 341 letters. More than one-third of the students lettered in more than one subject. Six students, representing three high schools, earned letters in all four subjects. Those students include Heritage High School sophomore Clark Aaron Herd and Maryville High School senior and valedictorian Pendell Myers. William Blount High School had three students take all four honors: sophomore Kristen Nicole Waggoner, juniors Bradi Noel Millsaps and Travis Lee Wilson, and senior Matthew Allen Campbell. Congratulations to these students as well as all those who earned a letter.

Gov. Phil Bredesen, the keynote speaker for the event, encouraged the students to start thinking about what a “well-spent” life looks like and to start setting expectations for themselves in addition to meeting the expectations of others. He also told the students to use change as a means to grow and get out of a rut.

“Treat change as your friend and not your enemy,” he said.

As a final thought, he suggested that students should consider volunteer work or public service as they create a life for themselves. Breseden said when he is 80, he wants to ask himself this question:

“As you traveled through this life, did you put more back than you took?”

Blount County Turnaround Achievement Awards

I’ve had the privilege of attending the Blount County Turnaround Achievement Awards for the last several years. The event, which is sponsored by local attorneys Joe Costner and Steve Greene, recognizes students from all three school systems for turning their lives around in the areas of academics, attendance and behavior. One student from each middle and high school are chosen and recognized at a breakfast in May. It’s moving experience to hear how these children have overcome difficulties in their lives and set their course back on the right path. Sometimes it’s because an adult has intervened and worked with the student to turnaround his or her life. Other times, it’s because the student himself has recognized that changes need to be made and decides to rethink his lifestyle. The student’s nominator or a school representative tells how the student has made positive changes. Most of the kids are shy about making any comments, but their beaming smiles tell it all. Students are given a plaque to remember their achievement and encouraged to continue moving forward. I think it is admirable that Costner and Greene sponsor such a unique opportunity to recognize these kids.

This year’s recipients include: Josh Conner, Alcoa High School; Chloe Wolfe, Alcoa Middle School; Lacey McMurray, Carpenters Middle School; Robert Winstead, Eagleton Middle School; Amanda West, Heritage High School; Annabelle Sampson, Heritage Middle School; Ashley Robertson, Maryville High School; Brent Vince, Maryville Middle School; Kathryn Shuler, William Blount High School; and Terry Shields, William Blount Middle School.

Congratulations students for making positive changes in your life and for receiving recognition for your efforts.

Bill Williams, former co-anchor of Action 10 News WBIR, served as the keynote speaker, and he spoke directly to the kids. He gathered them in front of him at the podium, took a $20 bill out of his pocket and said he would give it to one of the students. The charismatic Williams asked the students who wanted the $20 bill and all their hands shot up. Then he wadded it up into a ball and asked again who wanted it. All hands shot up. Williams dropped it on the floor and stomped the bill. Picking it up, he asked them again who wanted it. All hands shot up. Williams explained that the bill is just as valuable even if it was wrinkled and messed up and told the students that they are just as valuable even if they are having difficulties in their lives.

“I want you to remember that the rest of your life,” Williams said as he tossed the bill to one of the students.

What a great way to help kids understand their value and such a simple lesson.

Blount County schools Citizenship Award

Each year in the Blount County school system, three students – one from each school level – are selected for the Director of Schools Citizenship Award. Director of Schools Alvin Hord started this program not long after he was named director. The award, now in its fifth year, is designed to recognize students who display leadership skills, volunteerism and service to fellow students, their school and the community. They are chosen by a committee from nominations submitted by each school. The school board celebrates their achievements at the May school board meeting. Students are given plaques and a plaque with each student’s name hangs in central office.

The awards this year go to: Leah Thomas of Walland Elementary School, Gracie Arthur of Heritage Middle School and Amy Eastridge of William Blount High School.

Leah Thomas

Leah Thomas is an active member of her school community. She served as a buddy for a classmate diagnosed with diabetes, escorting her classmate where she need to go and making sure she did not need medical attention. Serving on safety patrol, Thomas monitored the hallways and greeted students as they arrived at school.

Her leadership service skills were displayed as vice president of the 4-H Club and a member of the “K-Kids,” sponsored by the Kiwanis Club. With K-Kids, she helped raise money for Relay for Life and created posters and flyers for the project.

Thomas also worked with her fellow students by being a kindergarten helper, serving as a “bus buddy” after school to get kindergarten students to their buses and working with them in P.E.

In her spare time, she sings with the Blount County Honors Choir and plays basketball for the Walland team.

Gracie Arthur

Gracie Arthur supports her school in many ways and maintains an excellent academic record. She served as the “water girl” for the football team and never missed a practice last summer. She made sure the players had water, helped clean up after each practice and assisted the booster club with pre-game meals.

In addition, she was president of Student Council and secretary of the National Junior Honor Society. She won first place in the school Science and Social Studies fairs and second place at the Blount County Social Studies Fair. Arthur was selected to participate in the Jaycee’s Youth Legislature, which includes 50 students from middle schools in all three school systems.

Arthur is an active member of Grandview Baptist Church, where she helped put together treat bags for children at a church carnival, delivered Christmas cards to church families and helped organize backpacks of school supplies for children who didn’t have a backpack. Last summer, she helped teachers at Walland Elementary School get ready for the upcoming year by cleaning desks, making name tags for students and making copies.

Arthur also pet-sat for her friends while they were gone on vacation.

Amy Eastridge

Amy Eastridge, a rising senior, is the epitome of service to her school and community. Eastridge served on Student Council, helping to organize such projects as Toys for Tots, Phonebook Recycling and the Medic Blood Drive. She has served as the chairman of the United Way Intra-Youth Council. As a member of the council, she has visited Asbury Acres Nursing Home, providing companionship to residents and helping with holiday festivities. She also worked with CPR classes for the American Red Cross and put kits together for volunteers of the Little River Clean-Up Day as part of her council activities.

Eastridge helped to organize a program called “Trick or Cans,” where people donate canned goods on Halloween night for Second Harvest Food Bank. She made informational flyers to distribute to local neighborhoods and then collected food that night.

She volunteered at April Foolies, a fund-raising event for United Way’s Success by Six program and Blount County New Hope Children’s Advocacy Center, counting proceeds and collecting tickets. To support the United Way Day of Caring, Eastridge cleaned trails at Camp Tanasi, a Girl Scout retreat.

How fortunate the Blount community is to have such three caring and willing students who spend their spare time helping others. Congratulations to all three!

Educational News admin 15 May 2008 No Comments