I always enjoy sharing stories about exemplary educators who have earned recognition for their work in the classroom. One of these is Leila Kubesch, a teacher from Norwood, Ohio, who has been inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame (NTHF). She is one of five educators who has been inducted for the year 2022.
Leila teaches Spanish and English as a second language at Norwood Middle School in Norwood, a suburb of Cincinnati. As part of her instructional program, Leila organizes community service projects. For one project, her students created a talk show for a local television station where community members discussed topics of interest to young people. For that project, Leila and her students garnered the Ohio Education Association Media Award for Public Service. They also received a grant to expand their studio.
For another project, Laila secured a grant for a performing arts project. She guided her students in the creation of a display made of cut-out hands laminated on burlap sacks that stretched more than 100 feet. The project was so well-received that a special exhibit featuring the display opened at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Downtown Cincinnati.
In addition to her work in the classroom, Leila embraces an impassioned ideology of equity and social justice that extends beyond the walls of her school. She has served as an advocate for emancipated foster youth in Ohio, and has delivered speeches to large audiences including TedXCincinnati, where she won the Audience Choice Award for her talk. She worked diligently to help pass House Bill 50, legislation that enables foster youth in Ohio to have a home until age 21.
Not only has Leila been inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame, but she has also earned many other accolades. In 2020, she was named Ohio state’s Teacher of the Year and the National Toyota Family Teacher of the Year. In 2021, she garnered an NEA Horace Mann Award for Teaching Excellence and an NEA Foundation Award for Teaching Excellence. In 2000, she earned a Fulbright Hays Fellowship.
Well done, Leila!