St.
Paul educator wins Teacher of the Year
- Article by: JIM
ADAMS
, Star Tribune
- Updated: May 6, 2013 - 6:45 AM
Megan Olivia Hall, a teacher at Open World Learning
Community in St. P...
Megan Hall’s husband, Leo Bickelhaupt, and their son, Dylan
Bickelhall, joined her after her name was announced. She said she had planned
to be a doctor but was inspired by a science professor.
St. Paul schools claimed three of 10 finalists
competing for 2013 Minnesota Teacher of the Year, including Megan Hall who won
the honor and a $6,000 prize on Sunday.
Hall,
who has taught science for 11 years in St. Paul public schools, was chosen from
135 teachers from around the state in the contest’s 49th year. She and other
finalists learned she was the winner at a banquet at the Minneapolis Marriot Northwest in Brooklyn Park. Her reaction?
“Absolute
shock and wonder and gratitude,” said Hall, who lives in St. Paul. She teaches
at Open World Learning Community, a 300-student school based on the Outward
Bound experiential model.
Hall,
34, is the third teacher in the St. Paul School District to win the award,
which is sponsored by Education Minnesota, the state teachers union. Candidates
include prekindergarten through 12th-grade teachers from public, private and
parochial schools.
Four
Minnesota teachers, the last in 1996, have gone on to become the National
Teacher of the Year.
Standing
before a packed banquet hall, Hall thanked her family and colleagues and gushed
about her students, in grades 7 to 12.
“My
students have shown me that soulful delight and remarkable achievement can go
hand in hand,” Hall said. “My students are funny and kind and curious and
insightful.”
One
of them, eighth-grader Sienna Leone-Getten, 13, said she nominated her teacher,
who “really deserves it.”
Sienna
said it was fun learning science from Hall because she “incorporates a lot of
hands-on stuff … There’s very little textbook stuff and a lot of hands-on
labs.” For example, in a biology class, Sienna said, she made mock cells out of
Jell-O, peaches, blueberries and peppermint candies.
Sienna
attended the awards ceremony with her dad, teacher Tim Leone-Getten, who works
with Hall.
“As
a colleague, she is always pushing me to do my best. She sets such high
standards for her kids. I try to keep up with her,” he said. “She is
inspirational, incredibly joyful and hardworking.”
Hall
said she was a pre-med student at Macalester College, where she had a great
science professor who inspired her to go into education.
She
also was motivated by volunteering to teach music at St. Joseph’s Home for
Children in Minneapolis while she was in college.
She
said that the children were trying to overcome difficult backgrounds to learn
and that she felt that she’d seen how to make the nation a fairer place by
helping such kids conquer the achievement gap.
“We
believe in liberty and justice for all in this country, but we don’t have it
yet,” she said.
“Teaching
is one of the best ways to achieve that dream by opening the doors to higher
education that ends poverty.”
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