It is always exciting when a member of our profession garners recognition for their outstanding work in the classroom. One of these colleagues is Kylie Altier, an elementary school teacher from Louisiana. She has been named her state’s 2024 Teacher of the Year.
Kylie teaches first grade at McKinley Elementary School in Baton Rouge. To enrich her students’ educational experiences, Kylie has applied for and won more than $33,000 in grants. Using these funds, she built a classroom garden, complete with a mobile kitchen. She incorporated virtual reality headsets into her curriculum to boost experiential learning, and she designed an outdoor classroom for her school. “In first grade, the four walls of our classroom are not always the most developmentally appropriate space for children,” asserts Kylie. “I have dyslexia, so I find it important to find ways to make the learning experience personalized to kids’ needs,” she continues. To this end, the honored educator brings experts into her classroom, which has given her students opportunities to interview a New York Times bestselling author, perfect 10-scoring collegiate gymnasts, curators from the Museum of Natural Science, and more.
Kylie has been a leader at every campus she has been a part of, starting an extracurricular garden club, co-founding an after-school reading program where high schoolers mentored emerging readers, spearheading campus-wide reading intervention, and leading professional development.
Louisiana’s Teacher of the Year is not the only honor Kylie has earned for her professional efforts. In 2019, while teaching in Texas, she was named her region’s Teacher of the Year and Mentor Teacher of the Year.
Kylie earned a Bachelor’s degree in Early Childhood Education from Florida State University in 2013. She earned her Master’s degree in Elementary Education from Stephen F. Austin University in 2019.