|
Teacher of the Year
award goes to Rogers Park Middle School's Melody Montgomery.
DANBURY
- "Be prompt. Be prepared. Be productive. Be polite."
The reminder competes with a warning not
to whine and a suggestion to practice peace that hang in the front of
Melody Montgomery's classroom at Rogers Park Middle School in Danbury.
The small, third-floor room, chock full
of books and posters about the past, came alive as the blond, smiling
Montgomery told her students of the need to research historical sources
they'll use in class and understand the perspective in which they were
created.
In the first 2 days of school this year,
her eighth-grade American history students already knew a little of why
Montgomery was named Danbury's Teacher of the Year for the 2003-04
school year.
"I heard from my brother that she
was a good teacher and so far she's really good," said Elizabeth
Doran, 13. "She doesn't let us fall asleep and she's been telling
us to be the best we can because she was named the top teacher."
Robert Mitchell said the award means
he'll expect more from Montgomery as a teacher.
"She seems like a really good
teacher so far. She already started giving us stuff about current events
and telling us why we should learn history," Robert said. "It's
because it's important to know the past, that you have to respect the
past and learn from the mistakes of the past."
Montgomery's award was announced last
week at a district-wide orientation. She'll compete for the state honor
next.
"It's a career high. It's a big
district. It's an honor and a privilege," Montgomery said during a
class break Friday.
Montgomery, 56, taught in New Jersey and
Pennsylvania before coming to Danbury in 1984 to teach social studies.
Since 1990, she has taught American history and since 1994, served as the
school's yearbook advisor.
She said her role is to help students put
events in history into context.
"You have to think thematically, to
connect the pictures and look for the common themes," she said. "I
spend a lot of time on current events and I connect them to what has
happened before."
Through the years, she's found
eighth-graders increasingly mature, which she credited to their exposure
to television, video and computers. At the same time, she's found they
need direction in handling social situations more than ever before.
She teaches all levels of students.
"I have some kids some years who are
super-motivated and they can fly. Other years, I have students I have to
pull along, though I tell them I'm not going to lower the bar," she
said. "I love to teach. I discipline because I have to. It's part
of the job."
Not only has Montgomery won state and
national recognition for herself, she's found opportunities for her
students to compete outside the classroom as well.
In 2001, Montgomery was honored
nationally as Connecticut's first George Washington Scholar. She also
has been selected five times for an inter-district state grant for her
work on the Amistad Project, about the infamous slave ship. She helped
write the Amistad curriculum that is now used in several states.
One of her students won the Connecticut
TeenRespect Scholar Award, which included a week in Washington, D.C. A
student of hers was published in the National Student Editorial Cartoon
Books, another finished third in Connecticut’s History Day and another
won a National Poetry Contest.
"Melody is always trying to be a
better teacher, a more innovative teacher. She's an extraordinarily
creative person," said Clare Barnett, the coordinator of social studies
for the district. "She is one of the finest examples of what the
teacher of the year is."
Barnett said Montgomery will be
presenting her work during a conference of the National Council of Social
Studies this year, which illustrates the respect she has earned.
"With her peers she is recognized as
an extraordinary practitioner. and she's an outstanding person too,"
Barnett said.
Looking back on her honors, Montgomery
beamed when she thought of her week as a George Washington Scholar, during
which she lived at Washington's Virginia homestead.
"Living at Mount Vernon for a week
was a history teacher's dream come true," she said. "We went into
the attic and into the basement and one day I got up and sat on the porch
of Mount Vernon at 6 a.m. and watched the sun rise."
After more than three decades in the
classroom, she still finds joy from her students, present and past. One
day, she recalled that she and her husband met a former student who came
up to her at a coffee shop.
"She said, 'I'm going to be a
teacher,' Montgomery said, and then she added, 'I'm going to be a history
teacher.' You feel like you might have made a difference." |