Dr. Jessie Voigts: Publisher of website for traveling teachers

Dr. Jessie Voigts

Dr. Jessie Voigts: Publisher of website for traveling teachers.

Summer vacation often means travel, both domestic and international, for dedicated classroom teachers. If that describes you, then here is an educator whose travel website you might be interested in checking out. Her name is Dr. Jessie Voigts.

Jessie is the publisher of Wandering Educators, a travel library for individuals who are curious about the world. She also publishes Journey to Scotland, a travel site for her favorite country in the world. She founded the Family Travel Bloggers Association, and directs the Youth Travel Blogging Mentorship Program. The program is on-going, free, multi-term online class and mentoring program for students ages 12-18. The program is for teenagers with a natural curiosity about the world and a passion for expressing themselves through words, photos, videos, and conversations. In addition, Jessie has published six books about travel and intercultural learning, with others in the works.

Jessie attended the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, where she earned her doctorate in 2008 in International Education with a dual emphasis on intercultural adjustment for travel abroad and acquired disabilities. She devotes her considerable energy to seeks ways to increase intercultural understanding, especially with young people. She has traveled around the world, and she has lived and worked in Japan and England. She is passionate about international education, study abroad, smart travel, intercultural awareness, and travel with disabilities.

“I truly believe that international education can change the world,” Jessie once said.  “From studying abroad, hosting exchange students, working abroad, doing international internships, taking international classes, learning languages, taking a gap year, asking questions and learning about people’s lives, and traveling, there is a plethora of ways to learn about people, places, cultures, and ways of being in the world.”

Traveling teacher Lillie Marshall, a Massachusetts Literacy Champion

Lillie Marshall

Traveling teacher Lillie Marshall, a Massachusetts Literacy Champion

One of the biggest advantages a career in teaching has to offer is ample time to travel during the summers. Because traveling is such a terrific learning experience, teaching and traveling go hand in hand. One educator who can testify to this is Lillie Marshall, a high school English and Humanities teacher from Boston.

Lillie graduated from Brookline High School in 1999. Brookline is a public high school located in Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. Following her high school graduation, she enrolled in Brown University, a private Ivy League school in Providence, Rhode Island. There she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Comparative Literature in 2003.

As soon as she earned her degree, Lillie landed a position as a teacher of English and Humanities at Boston Latin Academy. She enjoyed her work as an educator, but was soon feeling the effects of burn-out. “After five years as a high school English teacher, I was exhausted and frustrated. To continue in education, I knew I needed to step back and get perspective on what learning really is,” Lillie recalls.

To regain her passion for the profession, Lillie spent the next year traveling around the world. She taught in Ghana, did some writing in Thailand, and explored architecture in Spain. In 2009, she started writing a travel blog to chronicle her global experiences. “At the end of the year’s journey, I was energized and excited to teach in Boston again, and have been teaching happily here ever since… with travels every vacation possible, of course!,” she reveals.

For her work in advancing teaching and traveling, Lillie has been named a Massachusetts Literacy Champion. The Massachusetts Literacy Champion Awards Program recognizes outstanding literacy educators, their practices, and their programs.

To check out Lillie’s travel blog, simply click on this link: Teaching Traveling. To learn more about Lillie, check out the short YouTube video about her below.

 

Emily Griffith: Founder of Denver’s Opportunity School

Emily Griffith

Emily Griffith, teacher and founder of Denver’s Opportunity School, often wore hats created by students in the school’s millinery classes.

There aren’t many educators who are so revered their portrait hangs in a state capitol building, but one who does is teacher Emily Griffith of Colorado.

Emily was born on February 10, 1868, near Cincinnatti, Hamilton County, Ohio. Even at a young age, Emily knew she wanted to be a teacher. However, because her father often changed professions and frequently moved the family from state to state, and because she was expected to go to work at a young age to help support the family, Emily didn’t have much opportunity to earn a formal education.

Nevertheless, in spite of her youth, lack of formal education, and inexperience, Emily managed to convince the school board at Broken Bow, Oklahoma, she was capable enough to teach. The teenager began her teaching career in the sod schoolhouse she had briefly attended herself. How long she taught there is not known for certain, but it is estimated to be between eight and eleven years.

In 1895, Emily moved with her parents to Denver, Colorado. There she accepted a position as a long-term substitute sixth grade teacher at Central School. The following year she secured a full-time position. The students that attended Central School came from impoverished immigrants from many countries, and Emily could see that her kids’ parents needed help to learn math and how to read and write in English. Emily reasoned that it was just as important to offer educational opportunities to adults as it was to offer them to children.

In 1904, Emily was appointed the Assistant State Superintendent of the Colorado Education Department, a position she held for four years. When her term expired, the veteran teacher served a two-year stint as an eighth grade teacher at the Twenty-Fourth Street School in the Five Points neighborhood of Denver. In 1910, she garnered the position of Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction, where she served another four-year term. After the end of this appointment, Emily once again taught at the Twenty-Fourth Street School, and before long, she became the school’s principal.

In 1916, Emily inaugurated a radical progressive experiment, a nontraditional school open from early morning until midnight, available to “All Who Wish to Learn,” including adults and working youngsters. The school offered courses the students deemed useful, such as English as a second language, American citizenship, mathematics, millinery, auto repair, cooking, carpentry, sewing, needlework, typewriting, and telegraphy. Instruction was individualized, and students could attend free of charge. When Emily became aware that some of her younger students had no time or money to eat, she organized free soup to be served. After 17 years, Emily retired from her work at the Opportunity School in 1933, but her years of service were not over. For the next 12 years, she served on the State Board of Vocational Education.

After Emily completed her public service, she and her sister, Florence, retired to a rustic cabin located in Pinecliffe, Boulder County, Colorado. Sadly, on June 18, 1947, the two sisters were found murdered in their home. Authorities have never been able to prove with certainty who the murderer was.

Emily Griffith

The portrait of Emily Griffith in the Denver State Capitol building.

For her tireless work in public schools, Emily garnered many honors, both during her lifetime and after. In 1911, she was recognized with a diploma and two Bachelor’s of Pedagogy degrees from the Colorado State Normal School and Teachers College in Greeley, Colorado, an institution now known as University of Northern Colorado. In 1976, a stained glass portrait of Emily was dedicated in the Colorado State Capitol. In 1985, Emily was inducted into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame, and in 2000 she was recognized with the Mayor Wellington Webb Millennium Award for Denver’s Most Useful Citizen.

Emily Griffith: truly a Chalkboard Champion.

Teacher Anthony Annunziat recognized at Memorial for Fallen Educators

Memorial to Fallen Educators

Anthony Annunziat is recognized at the Memorial to Fallen Educators located at the National Teachers Hall of Fame in Emporia, Kansas.

In recent years there have been numerous dedicated teachers who have lost their lives at work, but in actual fact school shootings have been occurring for decades. One of these was the murder of Anthony Azzunziat, a business education teacher in New Haven, Connecticut, who has shot at school in 1978 in an attempted robbery.

Anthony was a 20-year veteran of the classroom at Wilbur Cross High School, a four-year high school located in the East Rock neighborhood of New Haven, Connecticut. The school is named after Connecticut Governor Wilbur L. Cross. As an educator passionate about his work, Anthony fervently believed hands-on practice and real-world experiences were a important extension to his classroom curriculum. To this end, the innovative teacher was working with his students to run the Wilbur Cross student store on the morning of December 14, 1978. Suddenly, a street gang of armed teenagers entered the store and demanded the cash box. When the intrepid teacher refused to hand it over, he was shot point-blank in the abdomen. The educator passed away on the operating table later that day. He was just 56 years old.

Anthony’s widow decided to continue her husband’s legacy when, after her husband’s death, she decided to go back to school to become a teacher. Another change that followed the shooting was the decision by the New Haven Education Department to hire security guards to patrol the high schools and some middle schools to provide more security for staff and students.

Anthony’s name and story are part of the Memorial for Fallen Educators sponsored by the National Teachers Hall of Fame located in Emporia, Kansas.To read more about Anthony Annunziata, click on his biography at the Memorial at NTHF Memorial. To learn more about the National Teachers Hall of Fame, click on NTHF.