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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE N.R. #152, 2/19/01 Date: February 19, 2001 Contact: Irene Cromer (703) 791-8720 FINALISTS ANNOUNCED FOR TEACHER AWARD Sally M. Graham Martin, a business education teacher at Brentsville District Middle/High School, and Karen Mirkovich, who teaches first grade at Marshall Elementary School, have been selected as finalists for Prince William County’s 2001 Washington Post Agnes Meyer Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award. Martin and Mirkovich were selected from among sixteen nominees by a panel of teachers, parents, school division classified personnel and administrators. The winner of the award, who will also be recognized as the Prince William County Teacher of the Year and the school division’s nominee for the 2002 Virginia Teacher of the Year, will be announced in mid-April by the Washington Post. Sally M. Graham Martin
“Sally Martin creates lessons with purpose and coordinates meaningful co-curricular projects for her students,” her nominators say. In her desktop publishing/multimedia presentations class, Martin requires students to create business cards and brochures for actual businesses. Martin was selected as Virginia’s 2000 Future Business Leaders of America Advisor of the Year. In 1999, she was named the Virginia Business Education Association Great Ideas Winner for the Furbie Project she designed and implemented in her classroom using the Internet. According to her nominators, seeing a young person discover his or her potential is Sally Martin’s greatest reward as a teacher. Taryn Kiesnowski, a former student who is now a business teacher at
Brentsville, says, “Mrs. Martin created a spark that ran inside me like
wildfire….I knew then that I wanted to teach high school business students
all of the things that I had learned from Mrs. Martin.”
Karen Mirkovich
In 1999, Karen Mirkovich became one of the first five Prince William
County teachers to achieve National Board Certification. She has
since accepted an invitation to become a trained National Board assessor,
a position that allows her to mentor current National Board candidates.
A former member of the school division’s Instructional Support Team, Mirkovich
was an active participant in the development and implementation of an elementary
school science program, the science lead teacher program, and the elementary
science coordinator handbook.
At Marshall, she was instrumental in establishing “Prime Time
Reading Night,” which brings several hundred parents and students together
for an evening of reading. She also sponsors an author’s night, where
every child reads aloud from his own book.
Other nominees for the award, their curriculum area or grade, and their schools included: Laura Altholz, physical education, Featherstone and Triangle elementary schools; James Dean Bish, United States and Virginia history and twentieth century history, Woodbridge High School; Robin L. Blaemire, speech and language pathologist, Kerrydale Elementary School; Maureen Ellis, pre-IB world studies 9, IB anthropology 11-12, Stonewall Jackson High School; Althena Harris, fifth grade, Nokesville Elementary School; and Mary Devlin Hayden, seventh grade language arts, Graham Park Middle School. Also, Jean C. Lusardi, chemistry, Woodbridge High School; Donald C.
Maeyer, electronic technology, electronics II, Woodbridge High School;
Betsey Nalevanko, eighth grade language arts and reading/regular education
and inclusion special education, Beville Middle School; Elizabeth Pitts,
Latin, Forest Park High School; Andrea Sparks-Brown, biology, Woodbridge
High School; Julie J. Steelman, first grade, West Gate Elementary School;
Donna Stofko, third grade, Rockledge Elementary School; and Michelle P.
Wentzel, ED self-contained resource, Stonewall Jackson High School.
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