Blanche Evans Dean: Teacher, conservationist, and author

Blanche Evans Dean, an Alabama high school biology teacher, is also a renowned naturalist, conservationist, and nonfiction author. Photo credit: Encyclopedia of Alabama.

Many gifted educators are well-known not only for their contributions to the classroom, but also for outstanding accomplishments outside in fields other than education. This is true about Blanche Evans Dean, an Alabama high school biology teacher who was also a renowned naturalist, conservationist, and nonfiction author.

Blanche was born June 12, 1892. She was raised on her parents’ farm in Clay County, Alabama, on land her mother’s family had bought from the Creek Indians. Even at an early age, the young Blanche developed a keen interest in science, and exhibited a fondness for the plants and animals that inhabited the world around her.

As a teenager, Blanche attended Lineville High School and, after graduating in 1908, began teaching at the two-teacher school at Hatchett Creek Presbyterian Church. After deciding to make teaching her lifelong career, Blanche enrolled at Jacksonville Normal School, now known as Jacksonville State University, where she majored in education. She later transferred to Valparaiso University in Indiana, where she earned her teaching certificate at age 26.

After graduation, Blanche taught for three years at Shades Valley High School in Birmingham. In 1922, she took a break from teaching and entered the University of Alabama, where she earned her Bachelor’s in Chemistry in 1924. Once she completed this degree, she accepted a position as a biology teacher at Woodlawn High School in Birmingham, where she developed her hands-on, experience-based style of teaching. Blanche believed that students were better able to develop an understanding of birds, insects, and plants, and “a sense of being” for all living things by listening and observing first-hand, even getting down on their hands and knees.

In 1939, the innovative teacher married William Dean, but they divorced less than a year later. Blanche decided to keep her husband’s surname.

Blanche remained at Woodlawn High School until she retired in 1957, spending nearly 30 years as a teacher in the public school system. In the later years of her career, she became a passionate naturalist and conservationist. One of her projects in the 1940s was a campaign to have the US Government declare Alabama’s Clear Creek Falls a national park. The area, threatened by dam construction, was rich in mountain laurel, contained a rare species of white azalea, and even supported a stand of Canadian hemlock. The campaign failed, however, and the falls were ultimately incorporated into Lewis Smith Lake.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Blanche helped to found the Alabama Ornithological Society, the Alabama Environmental Council, and the Alabama Conservation Council, then known as the Alabama Conservancy. Additionally, the indefatigable educator was involved in the Birmingham Audubon Society, the Alabama Academy of Science, the National Association of Biology Teachers, the American Fern Society, and Delta Kappa Gamma. In 1951, she established an Outdoor Nature Camp, which she directed every summer for 13 years in order to educate teachers and other adults about Alabama’s natural history. In 1967, after assisting the Alabama Environmental Council in designating Alabama’s first national forest, the Willliam B. Bankhead National Forest,  she was awarded a prize from the National Audubon Society for conservation education. Blanche was the first person from Alabama to receive such an award.

Blanche had always been frustrated with the lack of reference books available about Alabama’s botany and zoology, so after her retirement she wrote several books on the subject. She self-published Let’s Learn the Birds of Alabama in 1957, Trees and Shrubs in the Heart of Dixie in 1961, Let’s Learn the Ferns of Alabama in 1964, and Wildflowers of Alabama and Adjoining States in 1973. Her field guides remain the standard today.

This remarkable educator passed away May 31, 1974, at the age of 88, from complications caused by a major stroke. She was buried in the cemetery at Hatchett Creek Presbyterian Church. But she was not forgotten. In 1975, she was recognized with the Alabama Library Association’s first posthumous Annual Author Award for her non-fiction books. The Alabama Wildflower Society later established the Blanche E. Dean Scholarship Fund and named its Birmingham chapter after her. In 1985, Blanche was inducted into the Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame  in 1985.

To read more about Blanche Evans Dean, click on this link to the Encyclopedia of Alabama.

This March, teachers celebrate Women’s History Month

Throughout the month of March, teachers all over the country will be celebrating Women’s History Month 2021 with their students. Here is Rosie the Riveter, a national symbol for the contributions women make to American history. Photo credit: The Smithsonian.

Throughout 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.Here’s a list of some resources and materials teachers might want to examine for inclusion in their Women’s History Month lessons.

The National Women’s History Museum (NWHM) provides many resources for Women’s History Month, such as articles, online exhibits, virtual field trips, and classroom resources. You can also find information about women history makers and biographies at this site.

Have a look at the teaching resources available at Scholastic.com. On this site teachers can find women’s history month articles, book lists, lesson plans, and online activities for grades K-12.

Some of the resources available at www.history.com include background information on the annual observance, and photo galleries of important women figures in history, divided into such categories as women in politics, sports, the arts, and science, There is also a dandy timeline of milestones in women’s history, a list of famous firsts in women’s history, information about women’s suffrage, and more.

Take a look at the website www.womenshistory.gov, which is currently offering online exhibitions about women’s suffrage, Rosa Parks, Native American women artists, and more. The website is supported by the Library of Congress, the National Archives and Records Administration, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Gallery of Art, the National Park Service, the Smithsonian Institution, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Still need more? Here’s a list of additional resources compiled by Edutopia, an offshoot of the George Lucas Educational Foundation. Includes links to websites that offer lesson plans, printables, digital exhibits, primary sources, and STEM materials.

Enjoy!

Tracy Kraft-Tharp: Colorado school teacher and politician

Many fine educators have achieved success in areas outside of the classroom. One of these is Tracy Kraft-Tharp, a former middle school teacher who was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives. Photo credit: coloradopolitics.com.

Many fine educators have achieved success in areas outside of the classroom. One of these is Tracy Kraft-Tharp, a former middle school teacher who was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives.

Tracy earned her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology, Sociology, and Education from Moorhead State University in Moorhead, Minnesota. She earned a Master’s degree in Social Work from the University of Denver. In 2000, she earned Juris Doctorate from the University in Denver.

Tracy inaugurated her career as an educator when she accepted a position as a middle school teacher. From there, she became a social worker at the Tenneyson Center for Children, where she worked with at-risk children. Next, she served as the Director of Adolescent Services at Gemini House. She also worked as the Director of Battered Women Services at the Women in Crisis women’s shelter. Later, Tracy taught college courses as a professor at Metropolitan State University located in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She is also a former professor at Regis University in Denver.

In 2012, Tracy was elected to represent the 29th District on the Democratic ticket. She served in that body from Jan., 2013 to Jan., 2021. There she worked tirelessly for job growth. She passed legislation to support the Re-Hire Colorado program, which provides job coaching and training to unemployed and underemployed Colorado residents. She also sponsored legislation creating a suicide prevention task force to reduce the rate of suicide in Colorado. In addition, the former middle school teacher was appointed to serve on the Jefferson County School District Strategic Planning and Advisory Council.

In addition to her professional affiliations, Tracy is a member of many organizations, including the Juvenile Justice Delinquency Prevention Council; the Jefferson County Parent Teacher Association; the League of Women Voters; and the Human Services Council.

Since 2000, Tracy has run her own consulting firm, working with small businesses and nonprofits to increase strategic planning, facilitation, policy development, ED mentoring, and facilitation.

To read more about this Chalkboard Champion, click on this link to the website for Tracy Kraft-Tharp.

Khalif and Victoria Rasshan found African American Museum of Beginnings

After they retired, educators Khalif and Victoria Rasshan founded The African American Museum of Beginnings (TAAMB) in Pomona, California. Photo credit: TAAMB.

Retired educators often become involved in projects that improve and enrich their community. This is certainly true of Khalif and Victoria Rasshan, a married couple who are both retired teachers from the Pomona Unified School District (PUSD) in Pomona, California. The pair established, curate, and run an African American museum in their home town of Pomona.

The African American Museum of Beginnings (TAAMB) is a community museum that inspires and educates all who are interested in the history, culture, and arts of Africans and African Americans. The museum offers exhibits, programs, and community engagement. The collection includes information dating back from 6,000 BC to the present. In addition, ancient artifacts and little-known African contributions are on full display. The Rasshans founded the museum in 2011 after they retired following more than three decades in the teaching profession. The couple credits Gloria Morrison and Alma Morrison Rahmaan for the inspiration for the museum. In the early 1990’s, the Morrison sisters called for relevant cultural education for their children.

Khalif was born in Los Angeles and raised in Compton, California. He graduated from Garey High School in Pomona in 1969. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from the University of La Verne in La Verne, California, in 1973. He earned his Master’s degree in Education from Azusa Pacific University in Azusa in 1977. He was employed as a high school English and Social Studies teacher in the Pomona Unified School District (PUSD) from 1976 to 2010, a total of 34 years. Victoria graduated from Centennial High School in Compton, California, and, like her husband, studied at La Verne University. She is a retired elementary teacher from PUSD. In 1969, Victoria was honored as her District’s Teacher of the Year.

To learn more about the TAAMB and to visit the museum website, click on this link to www.taamb.org.