About Terry Lee Marzell

Terry Lee Marzell holds a bachelor's degree in English from Cal State Fullerton and a master's degree in Interdisciplinary Studies from Cal State San Bernardino. She also holds a certificate for Interior Design Level 1 from Mt. San Antonio College. She has been an educator in the Corona Norco Unified School District for more than 30 years.

Jessie Thatcher Bost: Pioneer schoolteacher from Oklahoma

Pioneer schoolteacher Jessie Thatcher Bost was the first woman to earn a college degree from Oklahoma A&M University. Photo Credit: Linda A Grave

There are many fine teachers who are know for their firsts. One of the these is Jessie Thatcher Bost, a pioneer schoolteacher in Oklahoma who was the first woman to earn a college degree from Oklahoma A&M University.

Jessie Thatcher Bost was born on December 16, 1875, in Guthrie Center Iowa. In 1891, her parents relocated the family to Stillwater in Oklahoma Territory. As a young woman, Jessie attended Oklahoma A&M University, now known as Oklahoma State University. There she studied agriculture, horticulture, physics, and chemistry. Students were also required to participate in military drills, and Jessie was no exception. When Jessie graduated on June 9, 1897, she was the first woman to earn a degree from that university.

While attending college, Jessie accepted a position as an assistant librarian in the school’s library. She remained in this post from 1895 to 1896. During these years, Jessie and some of her women cohorts established the Sigma Literary Society, because the only existing club, the Webster Literary Society, admitted only men. Later, Jessie was also voted the first President of the university’s Alumni Association in 1902, and she organized and served as the first President of the college’s Half Century Club in 1954.

After she earned her degree, Jessie taught school in Stillwater, at a salary of $40 per month. Except for the time spent raising her children, she continued to teach until her retirement in 1946.

On July 16, 1902, Jessie married Henry Bost, a fellow student. The union produced four children, three of whom attended Oklahoma A&M College. When the Bosts moved to Alva, Oklahoma, Jessie organized a Parent-Teacher Association and served as Chair of the Northwest District PTA.

Jessie Bost’s contribution to the teaching profession in Oklahoma has not gone unnoticed. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Women’s Hall of Fame in 1997. In 1925, a women’s dormitory was built on the A&M campus and named in her honor.

This Chalkboard Champion died in Cleveland, Oklahoma, on February 14, 1963. She is interred at Fairlawn Cemetery in Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma.

Michigan teacher Bridget Zahradnik garners 2022 PAEMST Award

Elementary school science teacher Bridget Zahradnik of Novi, Michigan, has garnered a prestigious 2022 PAEMST Award. Photo Credit: PAEMST

It is always my pleasure to share stories about exceptional educators who have earned recognition for their work in the classroom. One of these is Bridget Zahradnik, an elementary school science teacher from Michigan who has garnered a 2022 Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching (PAEMST).

Bridget has been a professional educator for 24 years. Currently she teaches fifth grade math and science at Novi Meadows Elementary in Novi, Michigan. Previously, she taught first and third grades for 19 years at Parkview Elementary School. Prior to that, she taught Spanish for a year at Village Oaks and Orchard Hills Elementary Schools in Detroit, and first grade at both J.S. Slocum Elementary School in Pineville, Louisiana, and McKinley Elementary School in Corona, California.

The honored educator has worked diligently to improve science instruction in her school district, declares Steve Mathews, Superintendent of Novi Community Schools. “Bridget Zahradnik has been instrumental in updating our science curriculum and a strong advocate for engaging science instruction,” he says. “She has helped move our district science curriculum forward and improved science instruction, especially at the elementary level,” he continues. Matthews notes that Bridget was instrumental in transforming the traditional science fair to an “invention convention.” This event requires students to develop creative solutions to a problem each on has selected. In some cases, the students’ solutions have resulted in patents, including one for a healthy lollipop and another for a LEGO sorter. In addition, Bridget launched a fundraising drive to pay for outdoor learning spaces in Novi. Because of her efforts, her district received a $400,000 grant to fund the project.

In addition to her work in the classroom, Bridget serves as her District’s Science Content Area leader, designs and delivers professional development, and works as an educational consultant. She has also published numerous articles about science instruction, makerspaces, project-based learning, and subject matter integration.

Bridget earned her Bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education in 1996 and her Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction in 2002, both from Michigan State University.

The PAEMST program, founded in 1983, is administered by the National Science Foundation (NSF) on behalf of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The honor comes with a $10,000 cash prize.

Happy Independence Day, Teachers!

This delightful image was created by Emily Wunderle of Saxtons River, Vermont, to represent Saxtons River Elementary School teacher Jaime Douglass. Photo Credit: The Vermont Journal

Isn’t this Independence Day image delightful? The design was created by Emily Wunderle from Saxtons River, Vermont, in 2021. Emily won many art contests while a student at Bellows Falls Union High School in her home state.

Emily’s Independence Day drawing features a teacher dressed in patriotic clothing poised at the blackboard while holding class online. Emily created the image as a tribute to teachers, especially Saxtons River Elementary School teacher Jaimie Douglass. Jaime was honored last year by the University of Vermont as an Outstanding Teacher.

 

Illinois music teacher Dee Green: She was no Stooge

Illinois teacher Dee Green earned fame in Hollywood when she worked with The Three Stooges in the movie Brideless Groom (1947). Photo Credit: IMDb

Many talented classroom teachers achieve success in fields other than education. One such teacher was Delores Mae Green, who better known as Dee Green.

Dee was a beloved music and choir teacher who was also an acclaimed actress in Hollywood. Her claim to fame is that she worked with the Three Stooges. She is well-known for playing the part of one of Shemp’s potential brides. She was the plain, tall, and fawning Miss Fanny Dinkelmeyer in the comedy short Brideless Groom. She also portrayed the homely and unattractive fiance in I’m a Monkey’s Uncle and the daughter of King Rootintootin’ in Mummy’s Dummies. Unfortunately, Dee’s acting career ended when  a motor vehicle ran over her feet in New York. The accident resulted in the need for orthopedic footwear for the remainder of her life.

Dee was born on November 16, 1916, in Peoria, Illinois. After she concluded her career in show business, she earned her Master’s degree in music. She returned to her home town and taught music and choir classes at Peoria Heights Grade School in Peoria Heights, Illinois, during the 1960’s. Throughout the late 1970’s and early 1980’s she taught Language Arts and Drama at Roosevelt Junior High, which is now known as Rockford Alternative Middle School, in Rockford, Illinois. She produced many annual events, including a production of Babes in Toyland and numerous elaborate Christmas pageants that included every student in the school.

Dee inspired more than one of her students to pursue a career in theater. Some of them eventually earned success on Broadway in New York. She was often described by her students as kind and generous, and a woman of great courage, talent, and vision.

This amazing Chalkboard Champion passed away from cancer on April 24, 1985, in Rockford, Illinois. She was 65 years old.

Vampire Weekend musician once taught junior high school

Alternative rock musician Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend fame formerly taught English to eight graders in New York City. Photo Credit: FamousBirthdays.com

Many individuals who have enjoyed successful careers as entertainers have also experienced success as classroom teachers. One of these is Ezra Koenig, a musician who also taught at a junior high school in New York.

Ezra was born on April 8, 1984, in New York City. As a youth, his family moved to Glen Ridge, New Jersey, where he graduated from Glen Ridge High School. He then returned to New York to enroll at Columbia University.

Right out of college, and looking very young for his 23 years, Ezra taught English courses for eighth graders at Junior High School #258 in Brooklyn, New York. He there as part of the Teach for America program. Although Ezra’s students described him as laid back, Ezra remembers those years as rough. “It was a pretty hectic lifestyle,” he confesses. “I mean, (being a full-time musician) is a hectic lifestyle too, but to teach all day, then go record or try to, you know, play a show, and then wake up and go to work again was pretty difficult.”

In the entertainment industry, Ezra is best known as the lead singer, guitarist, and principal songwriter of the alternative rock band Vampire Weekend. But the former teacher is also the creator and host of the Apple Music fortnightly radio show, Time Crisis with Ezra Koenig. He has also earned acclaim as the creator of the American-Japanese animated television series, Neo Yokio.

For his work in the music industry, Ezra has earned many accolades. He has garnered five Grammy Award nominations for his work with Vampire Weekend. He won the award for Best Alternative Music Album in both 2013 and 2019. He was also nominated for Album of the Year 2016 for his work as a producer on Beyonce’s album Lemonade.

To read more about Ezra’s experiences as a teacher, see this link to an article about him published by MTV News.