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When Linda Napier and Jim Yates were first selected as the newest
Teacher of the Year in the Fairfield City School District, at a
meeting of administrators during the summer, we had to stop and
think about what to call them.
Teachers of the Year? Co-Teacher of the Year? Co-Teachers of the
Year? It is the first time a teaching team, of which there are many
in our district, has been selected for this honor. But as we
prepared the announcements and other material associated with the
award, we just naturally found ourselves calling them – collectively
– the Teacher of the Year. It may break grammar rules or logic
conventions, but it works. Though both Linda and Jim are obviously
outstanding individual teachers, after 17 years of team teaching
they work together so well in the classroom and in such a seamless
fashion that they don’t even think it about anymore, even though
it’s immediately obvious to an observer.
When I announced them as the newest Teacher of the Year, at our
annual Opening Day meeting last week, Jim and Linda spoke to our
nearly 700 teachers gathered there. One of the first things they
said was that the team is actually more than just the two of them. A
group of educational assistants and one-on-one aides help them
immensely, they said. They include Vicky Wilson, Dawn Smith, Carol
Fuller, Melissa Noll, and also Ruth Hagan, who spent thousands of
hours supporting them but is working at our Freshman School this
year.
To watch that group of professional educators at work in the
classroom is a life-affirming experience. Their students face what
are challenging mental disabilities, and many have physical
disabilities as well. The challenges facing these children can be
staggering. Despite all of that, Jim and Linda teach, and
their students learn, often far surpassing expectations.
The children love their class and love learning…it may be the
happiest classroom in our school district.
For the teachers, it is also highly physical work. They lift,
swing and spin the children. They use high-fives, backslaps,
handshakes, songs, chants, and many other techniques to encourage,
reward, and inspire. It may look informal, but each gesture, touch
and sound is chosen with knowledge of a child’s specific
communication and learning style. And they push the
children, never accepting work that is less than they are capable of
doing. That, of course, is part of good teaching in any
classroom.
Part of what makes this award so special every year is that the
nominations come from those people who know their work best…other
teachers in the building and administrators who work with them.
Former winners of the Teacher of the Year who are still part of our
district include Diana Knoth, Lynne Dyer, Colleen Silverberg, Lee
Ann Hieber, Alexis Vafides, Cynthia Walker, Kim Nuxhall, Kathy
(Peters) Gillespie, Diane Callahan, Joyce Arnold and Teresa
Elash.
Jim and Linda have joined a list of educators who are among the
most highly respected in our district. They are truly deserving of
the honor.
Cathy Milligan Superintendent Fairfield City School
District
Published in the Fairfield Echo, Sept. 6, 2007
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