2005 Excellent Educator Awards
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
- Kristy Upton
Five Winners Announced
Five Putnam City Schools teachers were
named "Excellent Educators" at the annual banquet of the Putnam City
Schools Foundation on April 12.
Carolyn
Behrens, drama teacher at Hefner Middle School, Donna Bergmann, Title 1
teacher at Central Intermediate School, Beverly Martin, music teacher
at Overholser Elementary School, Denise Tidwell, 5th grade teacher at
Kirkland Elementary School and Randy Utt, 4th grade teacher at James L.
Dennis Elementary School, received the awards.
Each of the five
recipients was awarded $1,000, while their schools received $500 to be
used to enhance learning opportunities in the recipient?s classroom.
Funded
by the Independent Insurance Agents Association of Oklahoma, the
Excellent Educator awards are presented to teachers who go above and
beyond the call of duty to educate students in the classroom.
Below is what attendees at the banquet heard about each of the Excellent Educators:
Carolyn Behrens
Speech and Drama Teacher
Hefner Middle School
The
Drama Club at Hefner Middle School numbers more than 150 members, and
there has to be a reason why. Anyone at Hefner will quickly tell you
that the obvious reason the club is so popular is Carolyn Behrens, the
speech and drama teacher. She has 15 years experience, all of it a
Hefner, and she understands that a teacher is a leader, and when a
teacher leads with a positive attitude and an optimistic style rooted
in kindness, good things happen.
Her success is exemplified by a
state record of averaging more than 45 students participating in the
Optimist Oratorical Contests. In these contests, eleven of Mrs.
Behrens? students have taken the top award of a $1,500 college
scholarship.
Mrs. Behrens is also equally proud of sending on
average more than 120 students each spring to the Putnam City West
Novice Drama Contest. The results have been astounding there also, with
Hefner bringing home 12 first-place sweepstakes awards.
She is said
to combine excessive amounts of energy and a love for her field in such
large amounts, that her students cannot help but get caught up and
carried along by her contagious excitement.
In the classroom, Mrs.
Behrens is kind and patient, but this is certainly not a blow-off
class. She has always expected a lot from her students.
The drama
room is a great place to be. Here you will find books, scripts, props
costumes, files and much more, including a collection of more than 180
hats. The students are invited to use anything and everything as they
prepare for events.
Mrs. Behrens is the electives team leader at
Hefner, and she is described by her peers as being "disgustingly
organized," "dedicated" and "delightful." She plays well with others,
and works easily with her fellow teachers to produce high-quality
assemblies and performances.
Mrs. Behrens gets her biggest rewards
from taking children at a time when their developmental levels are all
over the map and guiding those who are shy and introverted to be
self-confident, while polishing the talents of others who are more
secure in themselves.
She is an excellent educator because she
freely gives of herself to her school, her fellow teachers, but most of
all to her students. In return, she has earned their love and
admiration.
Thank you Carolyn Behrens for going far above and beyond what is required or expected.
Donna Bergmann
Title I Reading and Math Teacher
Central Intermediate
Donna
Bergmann is a huge point of pride for Central Intermediate. She is an
extraordinary person who serves as an outstanding role model for not
only her students, but also for the entire faculty.
As a Title I teacher, Mrs. Bergmann coordinates a daily tutoring program for more than 60 students.
She
was the main force behind establishing two wonderful collections of
materials to assist students with their reading and math. After setting
them up, she now maintains the "book room" which contains more than
1,000 books in leveled sets, and she oversees a large, centralized
inventory of math materials that are used for hands-on learning
activities. The benefits to the kids have been impressive, and it
wouldn?t have happened without Mrs. Bergmann.
With 22 years of
teaching experience, and 17 of that in Putnam City, Donna knows that
the best teaching philosophy begins with acceptance. She searches for a
child?s strengths, and then builds on them as she challenges him to
meet high expectations as they move forward together.
Working with small groups, gives Donna the opportunity to meet specific learning needs for her students.
The
school has seen a quiet transformation as Mrs. Bergmann has established
a "home to school" connection that puts leveled books and other
materials into the hands of parents to use with their children.
Always
looking for a way to make things better, Mrs. Bergmann conducts a math
club for students; makes time on a regular basis to mentor students who
need additional guidance; has received training and serves as the back
up computer lab manager; serves as the key organizer for standardized
testing; and plays a major role in organizing the 5th-grade?s time at
Camp Classen.
A fellow teacher writing in support of Mrs. Bergmann?s
application for this award states: "Her friendly smile is reflective of
the positive attitude she brings into our building each day, and we are
fortunate to have her here as a teacher and mentor, but it is the
students in her classroom who are truly the fortunate ones."
Thank you Donna Bergmann for making great things happen at Central Intermediate.
Beverly Martin
Music Teacher
Overholser Elementary
There
is only one Beverly Martin in the district, and Overholser Elementary
is lucky to have her. Dr. Martin has 26 years teaching experience in
the field of music education, and 25 of those have been in Putnam City.
Honored as an OPOE State Educator Merit Award winner in 2003, Dr. Martin?s talents, make for a zestful classroom.
Recently,
she saw the need for adding and improving the quality of instruments in
our elementary schools, and she encouraged the passage of a bond issue
to provide funding for their purchase. Software, risers, and
instruments for Pre-K and kindergarten rooms across the district have
also come about through Dr. Martin?s leadership.
She has developed
an extensive array of learning centers that cover the PASS objectives
while making learning fun. It?s common to find her students making real
music with homemade instruments that once were just PVC pipe, rubber
gloves and cardboard tubes. It?s great fun, and real learning is taking
place.
For those of you who understand such things, I know you will
be interested to learn that she teaches duple and triple meter as the
kids skate about the room on paper plates while saying, "scoot, scoot,"
or "scoot, scoot, scoot."
Here?s an example how she integrates music
into the regular curriculum: Let the students? classroom spelling words
serve as the beginning point for them to write and perform simple
compositions using rhythms of quarter, two-eighths, four-sixteenths,
and triplet.
Innovation combined with fun is Dr. Martin?s
foundation for teaching music in a child-centered way. She genuinely
loves what she does and her kids, and it comes shining through.
Her
efforts beyond her teaching field to make Overholser a better school
extends to leading the paper drive, maintaining the school garden, and
overseeing collecting box tops to obtain free equipment for the school.
She has the respect and admiration of her students, their parents, and her peers.
She
has an enormous regard for the three "Ls": life, learning and laughter,
and she works hard every day to give the lessons of each to her
students. Beverly Martin, Excellent Educator.
Denise Tidwell
Fifth-grade Teacher
D. D. Kirkland Elementary
Denise
Tidwell teaches fifth-grade social studies and language arts at D. D.
Kirkland Elementary. She has 28 years of teaching and administration
experience with the most recent five being in Putnam City.
Mrs. Tidwell is noted for her wonderful sense of humor and high energy level. Students in her classes laugh and smile a lot.
Her
creative lesson plans are well known, and she enjoys involving the
community and parents in helping her provide up-to-date information to
catch and keep her students? full attention.
For example, this
Disney Teacher of the Year nominee and Olympic torch escort runner
implemented the comprehensive "Liberty Kids" program into her
classroom. The program calls for students to gather information about
the Revolutionary War from a wide variety of sources and then make use
of the computer lab to write articles as if they were a reporter for
the Pennsylvania Gazette and had witnessed the historical events they
researched. This process of combining research skills, social studies,
reading and writing produces a remarkable product while enhancing
student proficiency and interest.
Rewriting history as though it
occurred in modern times, and asking students to write stories by
successively adding paragraphs are two among many successful teaching
strategies Mrs. Tidwell employs to engage all of her students.
Believing
students to be perceptive and curious, but who all to often cite
television as a authoritative source, has led Mrs. Tidwell to teach in
a way that fosters sustained student interest. She gives direction,
counsel and substance and then allows the students to think
independently as they acquire and apply knowledge to gain understanding.
And,
sometimes life-long classroom memories get created. For example, in
Mrs. Tidwell?s words: "When studying Egyptian history, we mummified
chickens donated by a grocery store. So that students could understand
how the process worked, each child had a chicken, placed it in a
plastic bag and buried it in fresh salt twice a week for a month. It
was an interesting project, the kids loved it, and the supplies were
donated, but it took more than 2,000 pounds of salt to complete the
process."
Believing her job does not end at the classroom door, Mrs.
Tidwell serves on many school improvement committees, participates in
PTA, takes primary responsibility for many school-wide programs and
assemblies, helps in the administration office as needed, assists in
ordering resource materials, and is in charge of EDIT training.
All of this, and unfortunately what you?ll probably remember most about Mrs. Tidwell is all those mummified chickens.
Thank you, Denise Tidwell for being an innovative and excellent educator.
Randy Utt
4th-grade Teacher
James L. Dennis Elementary
Randy
Utt has been a classroom teacher for 20 years, with six of those years
in Putnam City and the rest in service outside Oklahoma.
Her classroom environment is described as positive and encouraging high expectations.
A
recent technology grant has helped Mrs. Utt teach differently as she
incorporates technology to help her reach her goals and objectives.
Paper and pencil have given way in many cases to digital cameras, Kid
Pix, PowerPoint, video editing, wireless laptops, and the Internet. The
students are learning the same material, but they are gaining
technology skills as they do so.
Mrs. Utt maintains a popular web
site for her classroom. There are numerous links that correspond with
units of study, and the site gives information about what is happening
in her classroom as well as at the school. Parents have frequently said
how much they enjoy having this information available online.
Mrs.
Utt sees her classroom as being a community of learners, and she
particularly enjoys sharing with them the exciting materials she has
gained during the last five years as a participant in National Science
Foundation courses.
The Daily Oklahoman has come to her classroom
for the past four years to make a special report on the "Oklahoma
Living History Museum" the class does as a part of their study of
Oklahoma.
Mrs. Utt?s students also use digital cameras to create
PowerPoint pages that are printed as a geometry book showing captured
shapes, angles and lines found in the school. This is just one of a
variety of student produced PowerPoint shows made during the year.
Depending
on which day you come to Mrs. Utt?s class, you might see her students
making a 1 ? foot tall paper doll of a famous black American with
research information on the back, or participating in a hands on study
of the life cycle of the monarch butterfly, or creating biography
cubes, or assembling an autobiographical "squash book" that will be
given by the students to their parents as a Christmas gift.
Mrs.
Utt?s expectations for her students are high, and they must take
creative risks to meet them, but the classroom atmosphere is calm and
inviting. This is a safe place to take risks, and the trust and rapport
Mrs. Utt has with her students allows her to meet their academic,
emotional and social needs.
A parent wrote in support of Mrs. Utt?s
nomination: "As parents, we appreciate the fact that Mrs. Utt gets to
know her students, earns their respect, and tailors the classroom
experience to their individual learning styles."
Thank you, Randy Utt, excellent educator, for setting high expectations for your students, and then making sure they meet them.