New Jersey STEM teacher Helen Corveleyn earns accolades

Elementary STEM teacher Helen Corveleyn of Hopewell, New Jersey, has earned many accolades for her innovative environmental projects involving young students. Photo Credit: Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space

I always enjoy sharing stories about innovative STEM educators who have earned recognition for their innovative work with young people, and today’s featured teacher, Helen Corveleyn, is one of the most inspiring.

Helen is a STEM coordinator at Hopewell Elementary School located in Hopewell, New Jersey. She has also taught seventh grade Life Sciences at Montgomery Middle School in Skillman, New Jersey.

This amazing educator is passionate about promoting elementary STEM education. She inaugurated her school’s Green Team, where she leads her young students to become careful stewards of the planet, providing many opportunities for them to practice environmentally safe habits. For example, she introduced a ban on plastic in the school’s cafeteria, and she introduced a hydroponic garden to grow organic produce for the school lunches. In fact, the garden project earned her school a Best in New Jersey Farm to School Award in 2018. In addition, Helen runs the Nature Harmony Project, an initiative which blends STEM and the arts with social and emotional learning in an outdoor education setting.

Helen’s dedication to environmental awareness expands beyond the elementary school. She helped her community inaugurate a townwide Earth Week to promote environmental justice issues. She serves as a Board Trustee of both the Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space and the Hunterdon Somerset Mercer County STEM Ecosystem. And, as if all that were not enough, she has taught Environmental Leadership to graduate students at The College of New Jersey and Conservation Biology to adult students at Miami University of Ohio.

For her work as an educator, Helen has earned many accolades. She was honored as the I can STEM NJ Role Model by the New Jersey STEM Pathways Network in 2021. She earned a coveted PAEMST (Presidential Award for Education in Mathematics and Science Teaching) in 2020, and that same year she was named New Jersey County Teacher of the Year. In 2019, she garnered a Governor’s Educator of the Year.

Helen’s career as an educator spans 13 years. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Policy from Marist College. She earned her Master’s degree, summa cum laude, in Conservation Biology from Miami University of Ohio. She completed international field work with Project Dragonfly, which included studying island bio-geography and whale sharks in Baja, Mexico. She also studied orangutans and sustainable palm oil in Borneo, Malaysia. Finally, she created a multimedia-based conservation campaign to support the Belize Zoo and Maya Forest Corridor.

You can read more about this amazing educator at centraljersey.com.