Washington teacher Jamie Smith bids for seat in State House of Reps

Jamie Smith

Washington teacher Jamie Smith runs for a seat in her state’s House of Representatives.

Today’s political climate has spurred many talented and hardworking educators to run for public office. One such educator is Washington teacher Jamie Smith, who is bidding for a seat in her state’s House of Representatives. After winning the Democratic primary last August, Jamie will face off against Republican Kelly Chambers to represent the state’s District 25A.

Jamie earned her Bachelor’s degree in Education from Pacific Lutheran University in 2004. She majored in both history and secondary education, and she minored in communications. In 2007 she earned a Master’s degree in Leadership Development Program from the same university. In addition, Jamie is a National Board Certified Teacher.

Jamie has spent her twelve-year career as an educator  teaching history, civics, and government at Puyallup and Rogers High Schools. She has also served as a cross country and track coach there. In addition, she has been employed as a Regional Curriculum Trainer for the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation, a national non-profit which helps to develop courage, commitment, citizenship, integrity, and patriotism in students.

If elected, Jamie says her priorities will be education, the economy, homelessness, rising housing costs, lack of transportation, the opioid crisis, and the environment. “Our state faces many tough choices,” asserts Jamie. “As a teacher, I know our schools desperately need support to provide the best education to our children, wages have stagnated and we need more living wage jobs, small businesses need support to compete in the 21st century economy, (and) we must take action to protect our environment from the ravages of climate change,” she continues. “We need leaders who care about our needs. I am the advocate who will make sure every child in our state gets a high quality education. I will fight for workers and help Washington grow,” she concludes.

Tim Walz: Former teacher, now candidate for Minnesota Governor

Tim Walz

Tim Walz: Former high school social studies teacher, veteran, current US Congressman, and candidate for Minnesota Governor.

Today an astounding number of talented educators are accomplishing great things in politics. One of these is Tim Walz, a former teacher and current US Congressman who is running for the office of governor of Minnesota. In last summer’s primary, Tim garnered the Democratic nomination for his state’s top office.

Tim points with pride to the fact that he was raised in a small town in rural Nebraska. “Small-town life and working on family farms each summer taught me fundamental lessons about the importance of family and the value of hard work,” Tim declares. “I had wonderful public school teachers, great neighbors, and loving parents,” he recalls.

As a teenager, Tim graduated from Nebraska’s Butte High School. At the age of 17, he enlisted in the Army National Guard, and by 1989, he was honored as Nebraska’s Citizen-Soldier of the Year. As a young man, Tim traveled the country working at a number of odd jobs, including building grain silos, factory work, and mortgage loan processing. During this time, he accepted a temporary teaching position at the Native American Reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota. His stint there convinced Tim to choose education as his life profession.

Tim enrolled in Chadron State College in Chadron, Nebraska, where he earned his Bachelor’s degree in Social Sciences in 1989. The next year, Harvard University offered him a teaching position with one of the first government-approved groups of American teachers to work in the People’s Republic of China. He worked there from 1989-1990.

When he returned from China, Tim settled in his home town in Nebraska, and resumed teaching and coaching. He also inaugurated a small business, the Educational Travel Adventures, Inc., which offered opportunities for American high school students to take trips to China. It didn’t take long for Tim’s community to recognize how exceptional the young teacher was. In 1993, he was named the Outstanding Young Nebraskan by the Nebraska Junior Chamber of Commerce for his service in education, small-business, and the military.

Tim and his wife Gwen, a Minnesota native, moved to Mankato, Minnesota, in 1996, where Tim became a teacher and football coach at Mankato West High School. There he helped coach the football team to win the school’s first state championship.

For his work in the classroom, Tim has earned many accolades. He was named a Minnesota Ethics in Education Award winner in 2002, and in 2003 he garnered honors as both the Mankato Teacher of the Year and a Minnesota Teacher of Excellence. After this, Tim completed his Master’s degree in Educational Leadership (2001) and enrolled in a doctoral program at St. Mary’s University in Winona.

In 2004, the social studies educator decided to become personally involved in politics. He ran for a seat in the US House of Representatives in 2006 and won, defeating six-term incumbent Gil Gutknecht. Tim was re-elected to five more terms. As a Congressman, Tim is a member of the House Agriculture Committee and currently serves as the ranking member of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee. Tim also serves as co-chair of the National Guard & Reserve Components Caucus, the House Congressional Veterans Jobs Caucus, and the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus. In addition, he co-founded the Congressional Propane Caucus.

In last summer’s primary, this impressive former teacher won the Democratic nomination for governor of the state of Minnesota. His name will appear on the ballot in this November’s mid-term elections. To learn more, you can visit his website at www.walzflanagan.org.

Honoring teacher and New Jersey US Congressman Donald Payne, Sr.

Donald Payne

High school teacher and former US Representative Donald Payne, Sr.

In American history, there are many examples of successful educators who later became noteworthy politicians. One of these is Donald Payne, a former teacher who was elected as the first African American to represent New Jersey in the US House of Representatives.

Donald Milford Payne, Sr., was born in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, on July 16, 1934. Following his graduation from Newark’s Barringer High School in 1952, Donald enrolled on a scholarship in Seton Hall University in South Orange, new Jersey. There he earned his Bachelor’s degree in Social Studies in 1957. Later he pursued post-graduate studies at Springfield College in Massachusetts.

After his college graduation, Donald taught English and Social Studies in Newark Public Schools. He also coached football. While still a teacher, Donald became the first African American president of the National Council of YMCA. From 1973 t 1981, he served as the chairman of the World YMCA Refugee and Rehabilitation Committee.

After leaving the classroom, Donald worked for a time as an executive for the Prudential Insurance Company. He also served three terms as a Municipal City Councilman, but he had always wanted to become a Congressman. In 1988 he finally achieved that goal when he was elected on the Democratic ticket to represent New Jersey’s Tenth District. “I want to be a congressman to serve as a model for the young people I talk to on the Newark street corners,” Donald said during his campaign. “I want them to see there are no barriers to achievement. I want to give them a reason to try.”

While in Congress, the former teacher served on the Committee on Education and the Workforce, including the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. In addition, he was a part of the Committee on Government Operations and on the Committee on Foreign Affairs, including the Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health and the Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere. From 1995 to 1997, he was the Chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. He was elected to Congress a total of eleven times, and some of his wins were by the widest margins in New Jersey history.

In his later years, Donald suffered from diabetes and he experienced several small strokes, but it was colon cancer that finally claimed his life on March 6, 2012. He was 77 years old. Donald Payne: a true chalkboard champion.

Matinga Ragatz: Globally educated and global educator

Matinga Ragatz

Matinga Ragatz: Globally educated and global educator

It’s always a pleasure to share stories about exceptional educators. One of these is Matinga Ragatz, a former high school social studies teacher who is globally educated, who has become a global educator.

Even as a youngster, Matinga traveled the world. Born in Spain, she was an elementary student in such places as Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Morocco, and Spain. She earned her high school diploma from Black Forest High School in Kandern, West Germany.

As an adult, Matinga earned her Bachelor’s degree at Messiah College in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in 1988. She completed the requirements for her teaching credential at Spring Arbor University in Spring Arbor, Michigan, in 1989. She earned her Master’s degree in Teaching at Marygrove College, in Detroit, Michigan, in 2015.

After earning her undergraduate degree, Matinga accepted her first teaching position at Lansing Christian Schools in Lansing, Michigan. She taught social studies and world language there until 1993. That’s when she moved to a position at Grand Ledge High School in Grand Ledge, Michigan, where she taught until 2011. Matinga spent the next year in Arusha, Tanzania, working as a Curriculum Development Specialist in Flood Garden School. When she returned to the United States, she worked for three years in professional development at the Eaton Regional Education Service Agency. Currently, this chalkboard champion works as an Instructional Innovation Specialist and Learning Coach at Communications by Design. She has led instructional activities in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Lain America, and she has been an innovator in developing online learning spaces. In all, Matinga has spent 22 years as a professional educator.

For her outstanding work in classrooms around the world, Matinga has earned many honors. In 2008, she garnered a Microsoft Partners in Learning Innovative Teacher Award, and in 2010, she was named the Michigan Association of Computer Users in Learning Outstanding Educator Award. In 2011, she was honored as Michigan’s State Teacher of the Year, and in 2017, she was inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame. She has been honored at the White House by both President Obama and President Trump.

To learn more about this remarkable teacher, her teaching philosophy, and her work, view this three-minute YouTube video below: