Kelley Cusmano named Michigan’s 2025 Teacher of the Year

High school English teacher Kelley Cusmano has been named the Michigan State 2025 Teacher of the Year. Photo credit: Bridge Michigan

There are many exemplary teachers work in America’s public schools. One of these is Kelley Cusmano, a high school English teacher from Michigan. She has been named her state’s 2025 Teacher of the Year.

Kelley teaches at Rochester High School in Rochester, Michigan. She teaches Language Arts courses to sophomores and in Elements of Composition to juniors who read below grade level in a diverse student body. She also provides instruction in Student Leadership on her campus. In a career as an educator that has spanned 20 years, she has spent nearly 17 of them at Rochester.

Since 2022, she has also served as the Secondary English Language Arts Curriculum Consultant for Rochester Community Schools. She was selected a of Klawe Fellow for 2020-2021. In addition, in 2018 Kelley served as a member of a committee of educators who organized the Governor’s Education and Talent Summit. And currently, she serves as an at-large representative for the Michigan ASCD organization and serves on the CEO Teacher Cabinet for the Teach Plus organization. Her selection as her state’s Teacher of the Year is not the only recognition Kelley has earned. In March, 2017, she was named Adviser of the Year by the Michigan Association of Student Councils. In 2016, she was selected Emerging Leader by the Association for Curriculum Development.

It is not a surprise that Kelley chose a career in education. “From a young age, I knew that I wanted to work with kids,” she remembers. “I was inspired by spending a lot of time in my mom’s classroom—she taught kindergarten in Concord, Michigan—and my identical twin sister and I would spend hours reading books to kids, playing on the playground with them, etc.,” she continues. “However, as I got older, I actually became interested in writing/journalism as a career, so I entered Michigan State University as a journalism major. I knew I still wanted to work with kids, so I blended both of my loves and decided to become a high school English teacher,” she concludes.

Kelley earned her Bachelor’s degree in English with a Minor in History from Michigan State University in 2005. In 2009, she earned her Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction, also from Michigan State.

 

Elise Boutin named Louisiana’s 2025 State Teacher of the Year

High school English teacher Elise Boutin of Louisiana has been named her state’s 2025 Teacher of the Year. Photo credit: The Acadiana Advocate

It is always my pleasure to share the news that an exceptional educator has received recognition for their work with young people in America’s public classrooms. Today, I am pleased to announce that Elise Boutin, an English teacher from Louisiana, has been named her state’s 2025 Teacher of the Year.

Elise teaches seniors at Rayne High School in Acadia Parish, Louisiana. She also serves as the school’s Interact Club Advisor and the Cross Country coach. In a career that spans 14 years, she has spent the last 10 of them at Rayne. Prior to her service at the high school, she taught at the junior high school level.

As part of her work at Rayne, Elise resurrected the Rayne, Alive! program, a student-produced YouTube channel. The program has become an important part of the school’s culture. While producing this program, Elise’s students have worked with crews from news stations in Lafayette, and they have even met celebrities and enlisted their aid in creating introductions for episodes of the show. 

Elise says the secret of her success in the classroom is to be real. “I’m authentically myself, and then I give permission for them to be themselves, and I feel like that’s kind of the most unique thing about me,” Elise says. “I really do encourage my students to find their voice and be themselves and not fit a mold of any kind.”

In addition to her Teacher of the Year honors, Elise has been named this year’s recipient of the Norma Hunt Super Bowl Champion of Education award, which includes two tickets to this year’s Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans.

Elise earned her Bachelor’s degree from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in 2009. She earned her Master’s degree in Teaching from McNeese State University in 2013. In addition, she is working on a graduate certificate in professional writing at the University of Louisiana in Lafayette.
 

The remarkable teacher and First Lady Jill Biden

 

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. In fact, she continued teaching throughout 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, and later while her husband served as the 46th President of the United States,  Jill continued to teach full time, even though she had many responsibilities as a public figure.

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

Florida teacher Jenny Torres Sanchez writes award-winning Young Adult novels

Former Florida English teacher Jenny Torres Sanchez now writes award-winning Young Adult novels. Photo Credit; Jenny Torres Sanchez

Many excellent classroom teachers have earned fame as talented authors. One of these is Jenny Torres Sanchez. She is the author of young adult novels, several of which have won coveted awards.

Jenny was born in Brooklyn, New York. Her mother immigrated to the United States from Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, and her father immigrated from El Salvador. When she was ten years old, her family moved to Orlando, Florida. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in English Literature from the University of Central Florida.

Once she earned her degree, Jenny taught English Language Arts at the high school level. Later she left the classroom to care for her son, who was diagnosed with developmental delays. During this time, she began to write her first novel, The Downside of Being Charlie, The book was published in 2012. She followed this with Death, Dickinson, and the Demented Life of Frenchie Garcia in 2013; Because of the Sun in 2017; The Fall of Innocence in 2018, and With Lots of Love in 2022.

In her novels, Jenny often writes about challenging topics. She does this, she says, in the hopes that her books will help who young people who are facing challenging situations to “help them know that the human condition is one made up of so many things: love, pain, elation, tragedy. And no matter what your situation, there are others out there who probably understand, or empathize, with what someone is going through.”

Jenny’s work has earned a number of prestigious awards. In 2017, she earned a Florida Book Award for Young Adult Literature. In 2021, she garnered the Best Fiction for Young Adults award from the American Library Association and she was also named a finalist for the Pura Belpre Award. In 2024, she captured Michael L. Printz Award.

To learn more about Jenny Torres Sanchez, click on this link to her website.

 

Michele Dunaway: English teacher and author of popular romance novels

Michele Dunaway, an English and Journalism teacher from St Louis, Missouri, has published more than 29 popular romance novels. Photo credit: Michele Dunaway

Students who were in the classes of Michele Dunaway, an English and Journalism teacher from Missouri, may be surprised to learn that their teacher is a popular author of romance novels. In fact, she has published over 29 romance novels and she has sold over 1.7 million books globally.

Michele was born on July 14, 1965, in St. Louis, Missouri. She says she decided she wanted to be a teacher and an author by the time she was in the third grade at Mary Queen of Peace School in Webster Groves. And she was writing, even at that young age. After she earned her diploma from Kirkwood High School in 1983, Michele launched into her college courses so she could achieve her goals. She earned her Bachelor’s degree at the University of Missouri at St. Louis in 1987. She earned her Master’s degree at Webster University in 1996.

Once she earned her degrees, Michelle accepted a position as a middle school teacher in Fenton, Missouri. She worked there from 1994 to 2000. Next she taught for one year at the high school level in Brentwood, Missouri, and then she relocated to teach English at Pacific High School in Pacific, Missouri.

Michele published her first novel, A Little Office Romance, in 2000. The volume was the first in a long line of romance novels. Many of her books have a setting in her native St. Louis.

In 2012, Michele was named the High School Journalism Teacher of the Year by the Missouri Interscholastic Press Association. She is a member of the Romance Writers of America.

With all this success, would Michele quite teaching? “Writing is a job and a hobby so I’m always working,” she declares. “I also know that I will teach for a long time—it’s a myth that writers can immediately quit their day jobs, not that I want to do that right now anyway,” she continues. “I love to teach and write, so I’m living the best of both worlds,” she concludes.

You can read more about this Chalkboard Champion at her website.