The Remarkable Kimberly Bearden, Educator in Atlanta, Georgia

Kimberly Bearden

The remarkable Kimberly Bearden, educator in Atlanta, Georgia

I love to share stories about remarkable teachers. Today I will share a story about the amazing Kimberly Bearden, a middle school teacher from Atlanta, Georgia.

Following her graduation from Joseph Wheeler High School, Kimberly enrolled in the University of Georgia. There she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Education in 1987.

Following her college graduation, Kimberly accepted a position as a sixth grade Language Arts teacher at Floyd Middle School in Mableton, Georgia, where she worked until 1994. For the next ten years, she taught sixth and seventh grade at Dodgen Middle School in Marietta, Georgia. From 2004 to 2007 she taught middle school Language Arts and Social Studies at Mt. Bethel Christian Academy in Marietta.

Kimberly loves to make learning an adventure. She teaches her curriculum in innovative and inspirational ways. She has transformed her classroom into a beach, Mt. Olympus, a poetry coffeehouse, and a mountain retreat. Her students have experienced thunderstorms, an Italian restaurant, a hospital emergency room, a colonial village, and life on a fictitious planet, all without ever leaving the classroom. She has created Survivor tribal challenges and the All-Star Punctuation Bowl to teach grammar. Kimberly often teaches concepts through songs, kinesthetic games, and unique teaching strategies that motivate even the most restless learners.

For the past 11 years, Kimberly has practiced at the Ron Clark Academy in Atlanta, which she co-founded. She serves as the school’s Executive Director, teacher trainer, and a teacher of fifth and sixth grade Language Arts. The Ron Clark Academy is an innovative middle school and educator training facility in Atlanta. To learn more about the Ron Clark Academy, visit their website at Ron Clark Academy.

In total, Kim’s career as an educator has spanned more than three decades. “I was one of those people who always wanted to be a teacher,” Kimberly confesses. “I was one of those people who always loved school… I really wanted to be in a school with children every day,” she says.

For her stellar work in the classroom, Kimberly has earned many awards over the years. These include the Milken Educator Award in 1999 and the Disney Teacher Award in 2000. She was named a Georgia Teacher of the Year Finalist in 2000. In 2012, Kimberly garnered the Making a Difference Award, in 2015, she won the InfluencHER Award, and in 2016, she earned the University of Georgia Outstanding Alumni Award. That same year, she was inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame in Emporia, Kansas.