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Interested in becoming a Permaculture Educator? Find out more: www.permaculture.org.uk/education Credit: Lorraine Ishak
Local teachers and educators learn new lesson plans and classroom experiments during the 2023 Teacher Night—for elementary and middle school teachers—hosted by the Science Education Department at Jefferson Lab on Apr. 19, 2023. (Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)
Often described as a "science fair for teachers,” this event allows educators to see new methods for teaching physical science concepts, win door prizes for their classrooms and earn one recertification point.
More than 700 applicants attended the DMPS Educator Fair at the Iowa Events Center on Saturday, January 11. The district plans to fill approximately 200 positions for next school year. Thank you to everyone who attended, and for the great work that went into another successful career fair!
Governor Phil Murphy and Congressmen Gottheimer announce steps for educators and children to access lead-free water in Bergenfield on October 7, 2019. Edwin J. Torres/ Governor’s Office.
Nathan S.S. Beman at Mt. Zion
(Nov. 26, 1785 - Aug. 6, 1871)
Nathan Sidney Beman, Presbyterian minister, educator, editor, college president, after graduating from Middlebury College, Vermont, taught and preached in New England until 1812, when he came with his wife to Georgia to regain his health. “A man of intelligence and almost boundless energy,” Nathan Beman found unusual opportunities in Georgia where wealthy planters were banding together to establish centers of religious instruction and education for their children.
In late 1812, Beman became teacher and pastor at Mt. Zion, an academy town founded by Hancock County planters in 1811. Some of the State’s leading families supported Mt. Zion Academy which became one of the most celebrated schools in Georgia. The outstanding men Beman attracted to teach contributed much to the state in educational and religious leadership.
Offered the presidency of the University of Georgia, Beman accepted reluctantly and temporarily, resigning because of his wife’s illness and death in 1819. He continued to direct the Academy, to preach, and to edit The Missionary, a weekly gospel newspaper. In 1821 he married Mrs. Caroline Bird Yancey,
mother of secessionist William Lowndes Yancey. In 1823, Nathan Beman and his wife moved to Troy, N.Y., where he continued his ministerial and academic career.
Description: Educator and founder of the Palmer Memorial Institute in Sedalia, North Carolina, Charlotte Eugenia Hawkins Brown was active in the National Council of Negro Women, the N.C. Teachers Association, etc., and was the first black woman to serve on the national board of the YWCA. She lectured and wrote about black women, education, and race relations.
Repository: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America.
Collection: Charlotte Hawkins Brown Papers
Call Number: A-146
Catalog Record: id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/000605309/catalog
Questions? Ask a Schlesinger Librarian
1974 Holden LH Torana, built as a project c1995 by TAFE students. Supercharged V6 running on LPG. National Motor Museum Birdwood
Austin educator Patrick Patterson asks a question as civil rights leader Andrew Young addresses University of Texas at Austin students and community leaders at the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at UT on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. Young's educational seminar is part of The Summit on Race in America being held at the LBJ Presidential Library. Young, a key lieutenant to Martin Luther King, Jr. in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, has served as mayor of Atlanta, U.S. congressman from Georgia, and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.
The Summit on Race in America runs from April 8-April 10 at the LBJ Library.
04.09.2019
LBJ Library photo by Laura Skelding
Day 2 of the YSEALI Empowering Educators in Southeast Asia workshop. This workshop is held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and has brought in up to 100 participants from all the ASEAN countries & Timor-Leste!
Lt. Governor Anthony Brown participates in the National Milken Educator Award at Gaithersburg Middle School to Madeline Hanington by James W. Brown at Montgomery County
Lathers was an 1893 alumnus of the Michigan State Normal School, and joined the faculty in 1899 teaching courses in Speech until his retirement in 1940.
Educator of children with disabilities, Enkjargal Baljarkuu, poses for a photograph in between lessons at School 212 on Monday, March 20, 2023, in Murun, Mongolia.
All4Education, supported by Education Out Loud – GPE’s fund to support civil society – is ensuring more children with disabilities have access to quality education through advocacy efforts and gathering missing data for changemakers to acknowledge the challenge. According to data from 2021 more than 80% of children with disabilities are now attending school. This is an impressive achievement considering that in 2010 only 44% of children attended school.
Mongolia, March 2023
Credit: GPE/Antitheziz Atelier
Learn more: www.globalpartnership.org/where-we-work/mongolia
Alicia Meuangmany/ATU MARCOMM
Copyright of all photos belongs to Arkansas Tech University Marketing & Communication.
Youth Health Services pre-kindergarten teacher Heather Biola, Elkins Middle School social studies teacher Richard Leitner, Third Ward Elementary kindergarten teacher Carol Losh, Elkins High School and D&E choir director and D&E Community Education coordinator Elizabeth Marshall-MacVean, Midland Elementary School first grade teacher Beth Cooper, and Coordinator of Professional Development Schools Sue Talbott
Photo by Mark Lanham. Copyright 2013 Davis & Elkins College.