When Teachers Speak of Teaching, What Do They Say? a Portrait of Teaching from the Voices of the Storycorps National Teachers Initiative

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

When Teachers Speak of Teaching, What Do They Say? a Portrait of Teaching from the Voices of the Storycorps National Teachers Initiative When Teachers Speak of Teaching, What Do They Say? a Portrait of Teaching From the Voices of the StoryCorps National Teachers Initiative The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Liefshitz, Irene Anastasia. 2015. When Teachers Speak of Teaching, What Do They Say? a Portrait of Teaching From the Voices of the StoryCorps National Teachers Initiative. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard Graduate School of Education. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:16461032 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA When Teachers Speak of Teaching, What Do They Say? A Portrait of Teaching from the Voices of the StoryCorps National Teachers Initiative Irene Anastasia Liefshitz Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot Joseph Blatt Michael D. Jackson Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Education of Harvard University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Education May 2015 © 2015 Irene Anastasia Liefshitz All Rights Reserved i DEDICATION To teachers, ancestors and living, in and out of the classroom, who help us learn, who use their power, who give their love, whose purpose is to not let schooling get in the way of education. Aché. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I acknowledge first and foremost the teachers who participated in the StoryCorps National Teachers Initiative: their voices are everything. I am thankful to StoryCorps for the genuine interest and generous access that made this research possible. This work was guided by my committee: Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot, Joseph Blatt, and Michael D. Jackson. Their critical, discerning support was instrumental to my listening, reading, thinking, and writing. They are true teachers. They helped me learn in the classroom and in this dissertation. For this, they have my sincere gratitude and appreciation. I am grateful to Darren Chase, Rosanna Salcedo, Dena Simmons, Carla Shalaby, and Thomas Nikundiwe for reading portions of my portrait. Their thinking made this work stronger and more true. Finally, I acknowledge the teachers in my own life, especially at St. Simon Stock School in the Bronx and PS/IS 187 in Washington Heights. They showed me what teaching is. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS I Introduction: When Teachers Speak of Teaching 1 II Literature Review: Researching Teacher Talk 10 III Theoretical Framework: Conceptualizing Teacher Voice 19 IV Research Design: Interpreting Voice 31 V Research Context: Background to the Conversations 47 VI Portrait: What Do They Say 60 Introduction: Finding Meaning Love Learning Power Purpose Conclusion: “Yes, But…” VII Implications: Listening to Teachers 255 VIII Appendices 266 IX Bibliography 320 X Vita 335 iv ABSTRACT There is a significant lack of educational research in which teachers’ talk about teaching is not mediated by researchers. In the public sphere, teachers’ voices rarely reach us unfiltered by the media, union and school district representatives, education reformers, and policymakers. What if we could listen to teachers talk about teaching unconstrained by any topic or agenda, in a conversation initiated by them? The StoryCorps National Teachers Initiative (SCNTI) provides an unparalleled opportunity to answer this question. In 2011- 2012, hundreds of teachers talked about teaching with someone significant to them. Listening to these conversations enables understanding of teaching from the perspective of those doing the work, in their own voice. This study addresses the meanings and conceptualizations of teaching articulated by teachers. Three basic assumptions guide this research. First, because teaching is an uncertain craft (McDonald, 1992), I suggest poetics of teaching (Hansen, 2004) as a listening lens. Second, because the experiences of teaching are expressed in conversation, I suggest a prosaic approach to language (Morson & Emerson, 1990) which considers form and function. Third, I conceptualize teacher voice as a source of knowledge about teaching and the phenomenon by which we can comprehend its humanity, uncertainty, and unfinalizability (Bakhtin, 1981). Building on this conceptual framework, I propose a unique empirical approach to studying teacher voice: a synthesis of hermeneutics, metaphor analysis, and portraiture. The answer to the question When teachers speak of teaching, what do they say? is in the form of a portrait, a portrait of teaching composed of teachers’ voices. I find that teachers talk about four essential human phenomena: love, learning, power, and purpose. Within these constructs, I provide a critical interpretation of teacher talk about teaching that illuminates the complex and varied nature of teaching work. v This study privileges teacher voice—literally and epistemologically—and presents research as an act of listening. It transmits and amplifies teacher voice to constitute a refreshed and reexamined cultural record (Lamothe & Horowitz, 2006) of teaching. And as critical interpretation of human experience, this research invites participation: a response to teacher voice. 1 I INTRODUCTION: WHEN TEACHERS SPEAK OF TEACHING Teachers have always had to confront the fact that others in society are often eager to characterize or define their work for them. There always exist multiple ways of accounting for the work that are fashioned by those who do not do the work themselves. This political and often public condition generates tensions, ambiguities and confusion. It triggers debates that all too often devolve into either cheerleading for the profession or throwing mud in its face. However, the practice of teaching has resources and integrity enough to withstand such praise and blame. Consequently, while the politicized talk proceeds, so can the conversation among educators about the purposes and meanings in teaching. (Hansen, 2004) Teaching is studied, measured, rated, simultaneously vilified and exalted. The prevailing spirit is that of reduction, expressed in the quest to delineate the exact characteristics of effective teaching and in the totalizing representation of teachers as the single most important means for attaining student achievement. Heroes and saviors, unprofessional and resistant to change, the solution and the problem—teachers and their work are the topic of much talk. Amid this talk is an equally pervasive ethos of silence—a scarcity of public discourse by teachers talking about the work of teaching. Their talk rarely reaches the public unfiltered by critics or advocates in the media, union leaders, education reformers and policy makers. Public and policy conversations about teaching are indeed driven by “those who do not do the work themselves.” Outside the policy and public realms, in educational research, teachers’ talk about their work is almost exclusively elicited and collected by researchers who ask teachers about their experiences, beliefs, thoughts, and meanings. Though teachers are ostensibly the integral subject—the source of knowledge and experience of teaching—their talk is material for the research inquiry. No matter how unstructured the interview or focus group, how unobtrusive the observation, how inclusive and self-reflective the researcher, or how active the teachers in co-designing the research—teachers’ talk of teaching is mediated by the researcher’s presence, teachers are almost always positioned as respondents and objects of observation, teachers’ words are data to answer the researcher’s pursuit. 2 This relative lack of agency in talk, as well as the silence, is also experienced in the microcosm of teachers’ personal lives. I remember the experience of “talking about teaching” with acquaintances and friends, or at social gatherings, or when meeting people for the first time. I deliberately use quotation marks because it wasn’t really talking about teaching, not in the way that talking is the give-and-take of listening, speaking, and recounting of experience. It was responding to their statements, questions and observations: So what do you do? Wow, I could never do that. God bless you. So what do you think about testing? What would you do to fix schools? I can totally see you as a teacher. Don’t the kids drive you crazy? You must be so patient. What is your take on charter schools? The union? So do you want to be a principal some day? I remember feeling a kind of falsity, a sense of being spoken to or spoken about, but not really talked with, a deep-seated conviction that how I responded and what I said didn’t really matter, as if the set of topics and issues about teaching was already there and the conversation was an inconsequential variation on the theme. Even with close friends or family, conversations about teaching are filled with too many assumptions and misunderstandings, and I feel I have to explain so much and at the same time feel very little desire to do so. I end up feeling like a representative of the profession, reduced to giving sound bites. I remember becoming quiet, staying polite; inside me grew the feeling of being misunderstood and unheard. At other times, I started fighting the words and ideas which I did not want applied to my work. When teachers “confront the fact that others in society are often eager to characterize or define their work for them,” we respond or we stay quiet. But those are not the only options.
Recommended publications
  • Diocese of Arlington Tuition Assistance Program
    2016-2017 Parent/Student Handbook ST. MARK Catholic School A 2015 Blue Ribbon School of Excellence 9972 Vale Road, Vienna, VA 22181-4005 703-281-9103, FAX 703-766-3430 Fr. Pat Holroyd, Pastor Mrs. Darcie Girmus, Principal Growing in Faith, Knowledge, and Service www.stmark.org/school This school is accredited by the Virginia Catholic Education Association whose accreditation process has been approved by the Virginia Council for Private Education as authorized by the Virginia State Board of Education. Table of Contents I. PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION/MISSION STATEMENT ............................................1 Diocesan Philosophy of Catholic Education ........................................................................1 Diocesan Mission Statement ................................................................................................1 School Mission Statement/Philosophy ................................................................................1 Student/Parent Handbook ....................................................................................................1 Parental Role ........................................................................................................................2 Non-Discrimination Clause .................................................................................................3 Non-Catholic Students .........................................................................................................3 II. ACADEMICS ......................................................................................................................6
    [Show full text]
  • From the Editor
    From the Editor Dear E-mentor readers, We are thrilled to observe that our efforts to publish E-mentor journal in English has met such a great interest. That is the fourth edition of the jour- nal prepared and published within the scope of a grant funded by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education. We do hope to be able to continue the project of issuing the international version of E-mentor in the following years as it has proved to be a success. In the current edition, one may distinguish two main directions of consid- eration. The first one refers to the role of information and communication technologies both in education and in business. The latter reflects the chal- lenges that the logistics industry faces nowadays due to the ‘disruptive’ role of IT. Sensors, robots, automation, cloud computing, data analysis, 3D print- ing, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence, digital twins or blockchain technology are the examples of disruption mentioned by the author of the paper. Concerning the university, IT appears in the context of adaptive learning and its advantages analyzed by the team of the authors from the University of Central Florida and the Colorado Technical University, with Professor Charles Dziuban as a leader. IT is also present in the papers concerning foreign language learning by the use of videoconferences, instant messaging apps, and international collaboration tools. The concept of professional development through the online course is another example of using IT for academic purposes. Last but not least, is the proposal of an app aimed at eliminating the accessibility barriers, in this case – in Art education.
    [Show full text]
  • Interdisciplinary Team Prom- Ises to Bring Into One's Life, Along with Stimulation Or Even Inspiration, a Sizable Set of Not Fully Predictable Vexations
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 316 506 SP 031 905 AUTHOR Jacobs, Heidi Hayes, Ed. TITLE Interdisciplinary Curriculum: Design and Implementation. INSTITUTION Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, Alexandria, Va. REPORT NO ISBN-0-87120-165-8 PUB DATE 89 NOTE 99p. AVAILABLE FROM Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 1250 N. Pitt Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 ($13.95). PUB TYPE Reports - Descriptive (141) EDRS PRICE MFO1 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS *Curriculum Development; Elementary Secondary Education; *Fused Curriculum; *Integrated Curriculum; *Interdisciplinary Approach; Program Effectiveness; Unified Studies Curriculum ABSTRACT This document describes a variety of curriculum integration options ranging from concurrent teaching of related subjects to fusion of curriculum focus to residential study focusing on daily living; from 2-week units to year-long courses. Suggestions are offered for choosing proper criteria for successful curriculum integration, dealing with the attitudes of key individuals and groups; and establishing validity. A step-by-step approach to integration is presented, proceeding from selection of an organizing center to a scope and sequence of guiding questions to a matrix of activities for developing integrated units of study. A distinction is made between curriculum-content and metacurriculum--those learning skills helpful in acquiring the curriculum content being taught and in developing the capacity to think and learn independently. The book illuminates the value of higher-order thinking and learning skills and provides a vehicle for their integration into curriculum. (JD) ************************************::********************************** Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made frum the original document. *********************************************************************** Intenlisciplin Curriculum: DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION U.B. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Office# of Educational Research ,nd Improvement "PERMISSION TOREPRODUCE THIS EDUCATIONAL.
    [Show full text]
  • I'm Not a 'Tough- Love' Judge, I Don't Believe In
    LATINO LEADERS “I’M NOT A ‘TOUGH- LOVE’ JUDGE, I DON’T BELIEVE IN TEARING DOWN TALENT.” Ricky’s renaissance The superstar finds a new life inLa Banda, along with Alejandro Sanz and Laura Pausini Story by: Judi Jordan | Photos by: Courtesy of Univision RICKY MARTIN IS “LIVING A NEW LIFE” VIA LA BANDA. 60 • July / August 2015 ICKY MARTIN’S massive 32-year musical career has been an auspicious series of ‘waves’; building success upon The judges of La Banda from left to right: Alejandro Sanz, Laura Pausini and Ricky Martin. success, with well-timed breaks to parent, travel, write an autobiography, and do humanitarian work with his Ricky Martin Foundation. After launching the Latin pop crossover ‘wave’ in ’99, and setting sales records with his monster single CD Livin’ La Vida Loca [8 million copies sold], and album Ricky Martin [22 million copies sold], he went on to release Rseven more albums, including 2015’s #1 Latin Billboard and Latin American Music Award-winning album, A quien quiera escuchar. Ricky’s successful Broadway run of “Evita” was followed by a stint on “Glee” as the Spanish teacher, and a quiet time as he settled down to raise his twin boys, Valentino and Matteo. He was livin’ la vida tranquilo, it seemed. Things began to take a new turn as he took on high-profile TV gigs coaching singers for The Voice Australia, and The Voice Mexico. A call from American Idol’s tough judge Simon Cowell brought on the next big wave with an idea for a talent show that would discover the next great boy band a la Latino.
    [Show full text]
  • Shout Outs October Vol 2
    Around Our Schools Shout Outs October, 2012 Volume II North Carolina School Nurse of the Year, Deborah Sasser Southern Middle Lead Nurse Lucy Kernodle shared this about Deborah Sasser from Southern Middle earning the North Carolina School Nurse of the Year award. “Twenty-two of our ABSS School Nurses attended the 29th State School Nurse Conference at the Friday Center in Chapel Hill on September 27-29, 2012. Deborah Sasser was officially awarded 2012 NC School Nurse of the Year at the School Nurse Association of NC (SNANC) Annual Meeting at the conclusion of the first day at the Friday Center.” At right is a photo of Lucy and Deborah after the presentation of her award. Congratulations, Deborah! Around Our Schools Shout Outs October, 2012 Volume II Superintendent’s Shout Out A. O. Elementary Erika Kennedy, first grade teacher at A. O. Elementary shared this great community activity: “We asked Dr. Cox to come talk to our first graders because we have been learning about the different roles people have in the community. Every week we are having a different community helper come in and talk to the students about what their role in the community is, how their job helps our community, what kind of technology and tools they use in their job every day, and what can our first graders start doing now to prepare themselves for that job when they get older. We then have the students practice their questioning and speaking skills by asking questions about the job.” Around Our Schools Shout Outs October, 2012 Volume II Graham Middle Ron Villines, Principal Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Open TV Dissertation Final.Pdf
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Education (RE)WRITING THE SCRIPT OF SECOND LANGUAGE TEACHING/LEARNING: EXPLORING TEACHER CANDIDATES’ CONCEPTUAL UNDERSTANDING OF DRAMA- BASED INSTRUCTION A Dissertation in Curriculum and Instruction by Timothy Matthew Vetere Ó 2018 Timothy Matthew Vetere Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2018 The dissertation of Timothy M. Vetere was reviewed and approved* by the following: Matthew E. Poehner Associate Professor of Education (World Languages) and Applied Linguistics Dissertation Advisor Chair of Committee Mari Haneda Associate Professor of Education (World Languages) and Applied Linguistics Jamie Myers Emeritus Professor of Education (Language and Literacy Education) Deryn P. Verity Teaching Professor in Applied Linguistics and Director of ESL/EAP Programs William S. Carlsen Professor of Education (Science Education) Graduate Program Head, Curriculum and Instruction *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT This dissertation reports on a qualitative longitudinal study that explores the original conceptualization of drama-based instruction (DBI) in the L2 classroom among ten K-12 teacher- candidates in a language teacher preparation program. It gives particular attention to two case study participants as they continued to (re)conceptualize drama-based instruction in L2 teaching/learning during diverse field experiences within the United States and Sweden. The following research questions were
    [Show full text]
  • Fantasizing Disability: Representation of Loss and Limitation in Popular Television and Film
    Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 8-19-2014 12:00 AM Fantasizing Disability: Representation of loss and limitation in Popular Television and Film Jeffrey M. Preston The University of Western Ontario Supervisor Dr. Sharon Sliwinski The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in Media Studies A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Jeffrey M. Preston 2014 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, Film and Media Studies Commons, and the Television Commons Recommended Citation Preston, Jeffrey M., "Fantasizing Disability: Representation of loss and limitation in Popular Television and Film" (2014). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 2386. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/2386 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FANTASIZING DISABILITY: REPRESENTATION OF LOSS AND LIMITATION IN POPULAR TELEVISION AND FILM (Monograph) by Jeffrey Preston Graduate Program in Media Studies A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctorate in Media Studies The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Jeffrey Preston 2014 Abstract Most media texts currently being developed with disabled characters are crafted by individuals who are nondisabled and, as such, are based on what the nondisabled think it would be like to be disabled—a perception that is informed by the fantasy of disability.
    [Show full text]
  • The Influence of Teacher Media Images on Professional Teacher Identities 1 Abstract
    The Influence of Teacher Media Images on Professional Teacher Identities Davina Kirby UCL, Institute of Education PhD 1 Declaration I, Davina Kirby confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. Word count (exclusive of appendices and references) 91,567 2 Acknowledgements I would like to thank Professor Gary McCulloch and Doctor Jon Swain who were extremely supportive PhD supervisors over the past six years and, of course, Mr Chips. 3 ABSTRACT This study is a life history exploration into teachers’ responses to representations of teachers in media (television, film and reality documentaries), and the influence media have on the construction of professional teacher identities including teachers’ relationships with their students as part of their daily practice. Few studies have been carried out from the perspective of British teachers using narrative research methods. This research uniquely addresses teachers’ reactions to the reality documentaries that have recently emerged based on teachers and schools, many of which have been located in the UK. The research was conducted in my own school, a girls’ comprehensive secondary school in London, with a mixed sixth form from 2012 to 2014. 17 teachers were interviewed in depth, twice each, concluding with 7 of them for focus group interviews. The research showed that teachers reflect on their professional identity using teacher images in media as a stimulus in their narratives. The research demonstrated evidence of teachers developing their narratives from the start to the end, and some sticking to scripted, although rich, narratives throughout the research.
    [Show full text]
  • Mcdougall, Christopher
    2 To John and Jean McDougall , my parents , who gave me everything and keep on giving 3 CHAPTER 1 To live with ghosts requires solitude. —ANNE M ICHAELS , Fugitive Pieces FOR DAYS, I’d been searching Mexico’s Sierra Madre for the phantom known as Caballo Blanco—the White Horse. I’d finally arrived at the end of the trail, in the last place I expected to find him—not deep in the wilderness he was said to haunt, but in the dim lobby of an old hotel on the edge of a dusty desert town.! “Sí, El Caballo está ,” the desk clerk said, nodding. Yes, the Horse is here. “For real?” After hearing that I’d just missed him so many times, in so many bizarre locations, I’d begun to suspect that Caballo Blanco was nothing more than a fairy tale, a local Loch Ness mons-truo dreamed up to spook the kids and fool gullible gringos. “He’s always back by five,” the clerk added. “It’s like a ritual.” I didn’t know whether to hug her in relief or high-five her in triumph. I checked my watch. That meant I’d actually lay eyes on the ghost in less than … hang on. “But it’s already after six.” The clerk shrugged. “Maybe he’s gone away.” I sagged into an ancient sofa. I was filthy, famished, and defeated. I was exhausted, and so were my leads. Some said Caballo Blanco was a fugitive; others heard he was a boxer who’d run off to punish himself after beating a man to death in the ring.
    [Show full text]
  • SPECIAL Hall of Fame Event with 2017 Alum Tristan Wirfs
    www.MVAlumni.org VOLUME 176 ISSUE 1 SPRING/SUMMER 2021 MOUNT VERNON COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT ALUMNI NEWS PLEASE SUPPORT THE ALUMNI ASSOC. WITH YOUR DONATION... SEE BACK PAGE SPECIAL Hall of Fame Event with 2017 alum Tristan Wirfs July 10 - Main Stage at Heritage Days - 6 pm -- Join us as the The John Pospisil ‘66 family makes Alumni Association honors Tristan Wirfs from the Class of 2017 Heritage Days a time to get together. with a ‘Mustang Outstanding Achievement Hall of Fame’ award. Above are Jared ‘94 and Scott ‘95. Tristan is a big deal to both our alumni and the Mount Vernon INSIDE... community, and throughout Tristan’s success from Mount Vernon 2 Reunions Update schools, through the University of Iowa to the NFL, he has never 4 President’s Message forgotten about Mount Vernon. And, Mount Vernon fans are 5 Heritage Days 2021 Events Tristan’s biggest fans! Tristan is the son of Sarah Wirfs ’93, sister of PHOTO CREDIT AP 6 Brannaman Family Feature Kaylia Wirfs ‘20. See page 4. 10 Mustangs - What Are They Doing Now? Jim Wallace ‘64 Daniel Laiswer ‘10 Amy Friedl Stoner ‘01 THERE’S NO Amelia Kibbie ‘02 PLACE LIKE 13 Alumni News 16 2020 Foundation Annual Gift Report MountT 21 2021 School District Retirees 23 Our School District 2020-2021 24 2021 Support & Donation Form After a one year breakVernon due to COVID-19, the Annual Heritage Days Festival, Mount 2021 ALUMNI Vernon’s biggest summer festival, will take Other Saturday events place Friday and Saturday, July 9 and 10 include a Car Show, parade at 11 a.m., EVENTS with a theme of ‘There’s No Place Like Mount a bags tournament, carnival games, food watch for updates to come via Vernon.’ vendors, a beer tent, live music, special email, Facebook, or on our website at www.mvalumni.org Heritage Days will be hosted by the Mount alumni event to honor Tristan Wirfs at Vernon-Lisbon Community Development Group 6, and a street dance led by headliner 2021 HALL OF FAME (CDG) in partnership with the Mount Vernon Crazy Delicious starting at 8:30 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Awards and Scholarships Guide 2016-2017
    Prepared for students and parents of Kewanee High School Kewanee, Illinois Revised September 2016 Awards and Scholarships Guide 2016-2017 Message to Students and Parents: This booklet lists current scholarships and This booklet was published as general selection criteria established by information relating to the schol- arships currently available in our those individuals and organizations who community for students graduat- ing from Kewanee High School. It established or are involved in granting is constantly under study and these scholarships and awards. possible revision by the Scholar- ship Committee and may be changed without notice. Revised copies of this guide will be pub- lished periodically. Please work with your school counselor and school administration to keep abreast of any changes. The By: Scholarship Data Application can be downloaded from www.kewaneeschoolsfoundation. The Scholarship Committee of org and clicking Scholarship Data Form. the Kewanee Schools Foundation TABLE OF CONTENTS TIPS FOR SUCCESS IN OBTAINING A SCHOLARSHIP 1 DISCLAIMER 2 SCHOLARSHIPS BY CATEGORY – Listed below are scholarships relating to the major emphasis of the particular scholarship Monetary Recognition Application Essay Page AGRICULTURE Agriculture Advisory Council Award 2 Dekalb Agricultural Accomplishment Award 3 James Golby Agri Business Scholarship 3 Neponset High School FFA Award 3-4 Vernon H. Charlet Memorial Award √ 4 AUTOMOTIVE George Cernovich Auto Service Scholarship 4-5 COMMUNITY COLLEGE American Legion Post #31 Scholarship 5 Ethel C. Tillman Scholarship 5 Kewanee Park District Scholarship 5-6 K.H.S. Class of 1934 Memorial Scholarship 6 Robert E. Breedlove Scholarship 6 Wayne and Hazel Zang Memorial Scholarship 6-7 EDUCATION Bernie VanWassenhove-Johnson Scholarship 7 Kathryn L.
    [Show full text]
  • The Pilot [1937]
    THE PILOT FOR 1937 PUBLISHED BY Senior Class LEAKSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL This Page Sponsored by Floyd Hill Furniture Company FOREWORD With the pubHcation of "The Pilot" by the class of 1937, the Leaksville High School presents its first year-book. This takes the place of the special Senior Edition of the Leaksville News heretofore published at the end of the school year. When the class leaders met to discuss plans for this year's edition of the News, they found a unanimous desire for a more permanent way of keeping the pictures and articles concerning high school days. This book represents an attempt to answer that need. "The Pilot" gives a picture and thumb-nail sketch of each member of the graduating class, and also contains a record of class and school activities. This, then, is our offering — a summary of the four years' work of the class of 1937. We have enjoyed collecting the material for this volume, and now take pleasure in presenting it to you. It is our hope that it may bring pleasure to the class as well as to their many friends. Anne Dillard, Editor. -4 2 This PaKC Sponsored by Mrs. A. S. Hopper's Stores DEDICATION TO Miss Helen Jones in loving appreciation for her kindness, thoughtfulness, patience, and advice through these years This Page Sponsored by Ben—Egrgleston Brothers—Frank THE PILOT James E. Holmes Carl H. Weatherly Superintendent of Public Schools Principal of High School Leaksville High School Building -'4{ 4 This Page Sponsored by Chandler Drug Company THE PILOT HISTORY OF LEAKSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL The history of Leaksville High School as a state public institution begins in 1917.
    [Show full text]