Wyoming Teacher Brittney Montgomery named her state’s 2022 Teacher of the Year

Brittney Montgomery, an elementary school teacher from Green River, Wyoming, has been named her state’s 2022 Teacher of the Year. Photo Credit: CCSSO.org

I always enjoy sharing stories about educators who have earned accolades for their work in the classroom. One of these is Brittney Montgomery, an elementary school teacher from Green River, Wyoming. She’s been named her state’s 2022 Teacher of the Year.

Brittney teaches first grade at Harrison Elementary School in Sweetwater County School District No. 2 in Green River. In addition to her work in the classroom, the honored educator serves on her school’s Leadership Committee. She also volunteers as the secretary for the Green River Education Association. She mentors new teachers and spends time helping college students as they pursue their degrees.

The Wyoming Teacher of the Year faces a significant responsibility to represent the teaching profession throughout the state. Over the course of the coming year, Brittney will act as a liaison between the teaching community, the Wyoming Legislature, the Wyoming Department of Education, school districts, and communities. In addition, the Teacher of the Year serves an education ambassador to businesses, parents, service organizations, and media, and as an education leader in teacher forums.

Brittney earned the Teacher of the Year honors for her deep commitment to students. “She’s all about kids, and she’s all about doing what’s best for kids,” asserts Harrison Elementary Principal Stephen Lake. “It’s exciting. It’s exciting for teachers to be recognized for the hard, hard job that they have,” he continued.

Here’s an example of Brittney’s commitment to her students. When schools were closed at the beginning of the pandemic, she launched an online program to read stories aloud to help children stay connected. Her work was reported by a local news source, and “Storytime with Mrs. Montgomery” was shared with thousands of children across the country.

Brittney’s career as an educator has spanned 12 years. As a fourth-generation teacher in her family, Brittney demonstrated a passion for teaching from a young age. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education from the University of Wyoming. She earned her Master’s degree in Education from Grand Canyon University.

To read more about Brittney Montgomery, read this article published about her in the Green River Star.

 

Music teacher Zitkala Sa: Honored by the National Women’s History Project

Zitkala Sa

Music teacher Zitkala Sa was honored by the National Women’s History Project. Photo credit: Mary Cronk Farrell

Today is the fourth day of Women’s History Month, so I’d like to introduce you to one of the most amazing Chalkboard Champions and political activists in American history. She is Native American Zitkala Sa, whose Indian name translated means Red Bird.

This remarkable educator was born on Feb. 22, 1876, on the Yankton Sioux Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Her father, an American of European descent, abandoned his family, leaving his young daughter to be raised alone by her Native American mother. Despite her father’s absence, Zitkala Sa described her childhood on the reservation as a time of freedom and joy spent in the loving care of her tribe.

In 1884, when she was just eight years old, missionaries visited the reservation and removed several of the Native American children, including Zitkala Sa, to Wabash, Indiana. There she was enrolled in White’s Manual Labor Institute, a school founded by Quaker Josiah White for the purpose of educating “poor children, white, colored, and Indian.” She attended the school for three years until 1887, later describing her life there in detail in her autobiography The School Days of an Indian Girl. In the book she described her despair over having been separated from her family, and having her heritage stripped from her as she was forced to give up her native language, clothing, and religious practices. She was also forced to cut her long hair, a symbolic act of shame among Native Americans. Her deep emotional pain, however, was somewhat brightened by the joy and exhilaration she felt in learning to read, write, and play the violin. During these years, Zitkala Sa became an accomplished musician.

After completing her secondary education in 1895, the young graduate enrolled at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, on a scholarship. The move was an unusual one, because at that time higher education for women was not common. In 1899, Zitkala Sa accepted a position as a music teacher at Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. There she became an important role model for Native American children who, like herself, had been separated from their families and relocated far from their home reservations to attend an Indian boarding school. In 1900, the young teacher escorted some of her students to the Paris Exposition in France, where she played her violin in public performances given by the school band. After she returned to the Carlisle School, Zitkala Sa became embroiled in a conflict with the Carlisle’s founder, Colonel Richard Henry Pratt, when she expressed resentment over the rigid program of assimilation into the dominant /white culture that Pratt advocated. She also objected to the fact that the school’s curriculum did not encourage Native American children to aspire to anything beyond lives spent as manual laborers.

After that, as a political activist, Zitkala Sa devoted her energy and talent towards the improvement of the lives of her fellow Native Americans. The former teacher founded the National Council of American Indians in 1926 and served as its President until her death in 1938. She traveled around the country delivering speeches on controversial issues such as Native American enfranchisement, their full citizenship, Indian military service in World War I, corruption in the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the apportionment of tribal lands. In 1997 she was selected as a Women’s History Month Honoree by the National Women’s History Project.

Zitkala Sa: A national treasure and a genuine Chalkboard Champion.

You can read more about Zitkala Sa and the Carlisle Indian School in my book, Chalkboard Champions, available from amazon.

First Lady Dr. Jill Biden continues to teach despite big responsibilities

First Lady Dr. Jill Biden, a former high school English teacher and current community college professor, continues to teach despite her numerous responsibilities as America’s First Lady. Photo Credit: the hill.com

You may be familiar with Dr. Jill Biden, the nation’s current First Lady. But did you know that she is a former high school English teacher? In addition to her experience at the secondary level, Jill has been a professor of English at Community College since 2009. She has declared her intention to continue teaching during her entire tenure as First Lady.

Jill was born on June 3, 1951, in Hammonton, New Jersey. She was raised in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania. After she graduated from Upper Moreland High School in Montgomery County, Pennsylvnia, in 1969, Jill earned her Bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Delaware (1975). She earned two Master’s degrees, one in English from West Chester University in Pennsylvania and one in Education from Villanova University in Pennsylvania. She completed the requirements for her PhD in Education from the University of Delaware.

After earning her degrees, Jill accepted a position teaching English and reading in high school. She taught for three years at Claymont High School in Delaware, and then at Brandywine High School in Wilmington, Delaware (1991-1993). For five years she taught adolescents with emotional disabilities at Rockford Center Psychiatric Hospital.

From 1993 to 2008, Jill taught English and writing at Delaware Technical & Community College. Since 2009, she has worked as a professor of English at Northern Virginia Community College.

When her husband was elected to serve as the Vice President under the Obama Administration, Jill continued to teach full time, even though she had many responsibilities as the wife of the Vice President. She is believed to be the only Second Lady in history to hold down a full-time job while serving as Second Lady. Despite her workload in the classroom, Jill still found time for public service. During her husband’s Vice Presidential term, which spanned the years from 2009 to 2017, the hardworking educator co-founded the Book Buddies program and the Biden Foundation. She also spearheaded a nonprofit organization to support women’s health and another to support military families.

And her work as a public servant and educator continue. Dr. Jill Biden: A true Chalkboard Champion.

What are teachers in Ukraine doing right now?

Teachers are, without a doubt, some of the bravest individuals that exist on the planet. The proof? Teachers have volunteered to stay in Ukraine and resume teaching their classes in bunkers, basements, and underground subway stations. In times of upheaval, kids need the kind of calm, reassurance, and stability their Chalkboard Champions are providing.

Celebrating Women’s History Month!

During the month of March, teachers all over the country will be celebrating Women’s History Month with their students. The annual observance features women’s contributions to history, culture, and society, and has been celebrated in the United States since 1987.

Women’s History Month had its origins as International Women’s Day, a day that commemorated the Feb. 28 meeting of social reformers and suffragists in Manhattan, New York, in 1909. On March 8, 1911, the first International Women’s Day was celebrated in Europe—particularly in Austria, Switzerland, Germany, and Denmark. However, the holiday wasn’t widely celebrated in the United States until 1975, when the event was first sponsored by the United Nations.

In March 1980, President Jimmy Carter declared that March 8 was the official start of National Women’s History Week. That same year, Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah and Representative Barbara Mikulski of Maryland co-sponsored the first Joint Congressional Resolution declaring the week of March 8, 1981, National Women’s History Week. By 1987, Congress declared the entire month of March Women’s History Month. Since then, every president has declared the month of March Women’s History Month.

It’s important to celebrate this annual event to remind ourselves, and also teach our students, about the many accomplishments made by women throughout history. From science to literature to politics to the arts, the month-long celebration offers a chance to reflect on the trailblazing women who have led the way for change, not only in our country, but also around the world.

So, Chalkboard Champions, teach on!