The Carolina Slate - Winter 2001

Transcription

The Carolina Slate - Winter 2001
Carolina
The
SLATE
News from the School of Educati on • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Winter 2001
Let the Adventure Begin . . .
By Madeleine R. Grumet, Dean
H
ere is the familiar scene: The
professor comes
into a classroom on
campus. Students
wedged into chairs with
armrests that curve
around to provide a
Photo by
writing surface, twist
Steve Whitsitt.
forward, silent, waiting
for the teacher to start the lecture and the
discussion that will fill two or three hours of
their afternoon. So it has been for decades,
for centuries. Though often punctuated with
tutorials or office hours, it is the gathering of
teachers and their students at assigned times,
away from the activity and distractions of
their homes and work places, that is the primal scene of pedagogy. All of our recent
innovations, collaborative learning, listserves, study groups, peer tutoring are improvisations on that theme.
Maybe it is just the lure of the familiar
that makes us nervous as we contemplate
new ways of teaching and learning. Or
maybe it is the intensity of the passionate
professor’s presence, the experience of the
group that gathers together, the stillness of
the space and its timelessness that we cherish as we tentatively reach out to receive dis-
tance education’s gift of anywhere/anytime
with 51 teachers from Durham and Orange
learning.
County elementary schools who have chosen
In mid-January we welcomed experito study literacy. In Pittsboro, 22 teachers
enced teachers from Durham, Orange and
from the Chatham School District are meetChatham to our new Master’s Degree for
ing with Professor Mary Stone Hanley to
Experienced Teachers. This new program,
study language arts and social studies in their
the cornerstone of our Carolina Teaching
elementary and middle schools.
Network, has been designed to engage teachWhen I went out to greet the Hillendale
ers, gathered into cohorts from the schools
contingent at their first meeting, I found
where they work, in extended part-time
eight teachers who had taught for more than
study, leading to a degree that will emphasize
twenty years, (one had taught for twentya particular area of curriculum that they and
their districts are eager to
study and develop.
These courses are not
delivered on campus, but
in the neighborhoods
closer to teachers’ homes
and work places. There
will be intensive face-toface summer work, and
work that continues during next year facilitated
by Web-based instruction
and small group research
in the schools. At the
Hillendale Center in
Dean Madeleine R. Grumet (center) and Senior Associate Dean William I.
Durham, Professor Jim
Burke (right) welcome Chancellor James Moeser to campus. Photo by
Cunningham is working
Dan Sears.
School of Education Presents Distinguished Alumni Awards
T
he School of Education honored four
outstanding leaders in education by
bestowing distinguished alumni
awards to Governor James B. Hunt, Dr.
Gerry House of Long Island, New York, Dr.
Clyde Edgerton of Durham, NC, and Ms.
Laura Bilbro-Berry of Washington, NC.
Presented during the Alumni Association’s
breakfast on October 12 at the Friday Center
in Chapel Hill with Dr. Nancy Farmer, president of the School’s Alumni Association,
presiding, the awards recognized exemplary
achievement, leadership, and contribution to
the profession of education.
Governor Hunt received the first
Peabody Award from the School of
Education, the most prestigious award given
Governor Jim Hunt (left) greets Ben Matthews, who
chaired the awards ceremony. Photo by Steve Whitsitt.
by the School’s Alumni Association. Named
after George Peabody, the American businessman and philanthropist who donated
the funds for Peabody Hall, which houses the
School of Education, the award honored
Hunt for the significance of his work in the
field of education. In presenting the award,
Madeleine R. Grumet, Dean of the School of
Education, recognized Hunt as first among
the nation’s governors in his dedication to
children and their education. “No one has
been more committed to the cultivation of
teachers and teaching than Governor Hunt,”
Grumet said. Accepting the award, Hunt
urged the audience to continue pushing forward and not accept the status quo. “All of
us must work to insure that every school is
successful and that every child learns,”
Governor Hunt said. “Our job is to help
each of them learn, whatever it takes. As we
work toward helping every child, the best of
what we are as people comes forth.”
Hunt, who earned his law degree from
UNC-Chapel Hill in 1964, chairs the
National Commission on Teaching and
America’s Future, the National Center for
Public Policy and Higher Education, and the
National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards. During Hunt’s 16 years as
Governor of the State of North Carolina,
Hunt led North Carolina’s education reform
efforts by establishing primary reading programs, reducing class size, creating dropout
prevention programs, establishing the N.C.
School of Science and Mathematics, and
establishing the Smart Start program. The
Excellent Schools Act was the cornerstone
of his 1997 legislative agenda. Hunt set a
goal to make North Carolina’s schools First
in America by 2010.
eight!) and eleven teachers who had taught for
less than five years. The Parkwood School had
sent eight of its teachers, E. K. Poe had sent
six; Cameron Park, four and Forest View and
New Hope, three. Teachers came from inner
city, suburban and rural schools, from charter
and magnet schools. They were diverse in age,
in ethnicity, race, and experience, and they
were all relieved that they would not have to
drive to campus after long days at work, worrying all the way about finding parking places.
They were excited to be there with their colleagues and to share this study experience with
them, hoping that together they would make
the sense out of their courses that would help
them transform their classrooms and their
schools.
It was a great experience to see their
enthusiasm. One of the great pleasures of academic work is the opportunity to draw a program, shaping it from endless curriculum meetings, national and state matrices of standards
and requirements, staffing projections and
credit allotments, and to bring it to the people
for whom it has been imagined. Even when all
the course outlines have been voted on, the
brochures printed and the students registered,
all that exists is a score for what may or may
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SCEHveOnOtsL
Join us for seminars, presentations, demonstrations, dialogues, musical performances, conferences, workshops, teleconferences, and more lively happenings around Peabody Hall and across the
campus. For the latest information, visit our Web
site at www.unc.edu/depts/ed/. (Click on “News,
Alumni, & Events” and then on “Calendar.”)
Major 2001 events include:
February 26, 2001
Melissa Roderick
23rd Annual Gordon Lecturer
Examines “Truth or Consequences:
The Impact of High Stakes Testing
on Students, Teachers, and
Schools”
Gerry House describes the “North Star Effect.” Photo
by Steve Whitsitt.
Gerry House, who earned her Ed.D.
degree from the School of Education in
1988, received the Distinguished Leadership
Award, presented by Dr. Neil Pedersen, who
worked with House as an associate superintendent when House was superintendent of
the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools from
1985-92 and the first African American
woman superintendent in North Carolina.
Pedersen succeeded her as superintendent of
Chapel Hill-Carrboro schools, a post he currently holds. “In my 25 years as an educator,
I have not met a school administrator who is
a clearer thinker, better articulator of her
views, or a harder worker than Gerry
House,” Pedersen said. House now is president and chief executive officer of the
Institute for Student Achievement in Long
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Dr. Melissa Roderick, Associate Professor at the
School of Social Service Administration at the
University of Chicago and Co-Director of the
Consortium on Chicago School Research, spoke
on “Truth or Consequences: The Impact of High
Stakes Testing on Students, Teachers and
Schools.” Monday, February 26, at 7:15 p.m. at
the Friday Center in Chapel Hill, preceded by a
6:30 p.m. reception.
Fall, 2001
Alumni Day and Second Annual
Distinguished Alumni Awards
Come home to Carolina for a day of celebration.
Next fall, the School and its Alumni Association
will host Alumni Day and the Second Annual
Alumni Awards ceremony. We hope you will
join us. For more information, visit our Web site
at www.unc.edu/depts/ed. We invite you to
nominate candidates for the awards by May 1.
See nomination form on back cover.
The Carolina Slate • F A C U L T Y
School Welcomes Five New Colleagues
Mary Stone Hanley , the School’s first
assistant professor of aesthetic education,
moved from the West Coast back to familial
ground when she
joined us January 1.
“My African
American, Native
American, and
Irish American
ancestors roamed
the western mountains of North
Carolina before my
grandparents
Hanley. Photo by Dan Sears.
moved North in
the Northern
Migration,” Hanley
said. “I remember visiting North Carolina in
my childhood—my many cousins this and
cousins that. I look forward to returning to
share the many forms that stories take with
the people I now will meet.”
Before pursuing her doctoral studies at
the University of Washington, Hanley
taught first, second, and third grades as well
as school-wide drama in the Seattle Public
Schools. In 1977, she co-founded The
Choreopoets, an African American performing arts group committed to the reconstruction of African American culture and history
through research and performance; subsequently, she served as its director as well as a
performer, researcher, and writer. Hanley
joined the faculty of Antioch University in
Seattle in 1996, where she taught, supervised
student teachers, directed student research,
and coordinated the Undergraduate Teacher
Certification Program. She has won awards
for excellence in teaching, academic
achievement, service, drama, and communications, including the 1998 Gordon C. Lee
Award for Outstanding Dissertation in the
College of Education at the University of
Washington. Her undergraduate degree in
children’s drama and early childhood education and her master’s degree in educational
communications and technology are also
from the University of Washington.
Mary Elizabeth Monahan :
Whoever you are,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
Calls to you like wild geese,
over and over,
Announcing your place in the family of things.
- Mary Oliver
“Being at Carolina, for me, is like
answering that call and finding my place,”
says Mary Beth Monahan, who joined us in
July as an assistant
professor of language arts. An elementary school
teacher in New
Jersey for eight
years, Monahan
was also program
director for a “book
buddy” program to
assist Head Start
Monahan. Photo by Dan Sears.
teachers in
Vermont. She led
delegations of high school students abroad
for the People to People Student
Ambassador Program. Before earning her
doctorate from Rutgers University, Monahan
served as an evaluator of teacher portfolios
for Education Testing Service in Princeton,
New Jersey, and provided professional development workshops for teachers on standards
related to speaking, listening, reading, writing, and visual literacy. Monahan’s research
focuses on critical language studies, discourse
analysis, and teacher research as a form of
professional development. She is especially
interested in studying the social, cultural and
political functions that language serves in
educational settings and in finding ways to
increase students’ access to school-based discourses of power. In her recent work that
addresses the challenge of helping middle
school students write “voiced” academic
essays, Monahan proposes an alternative
2
theory of voice (based on language theories
of Bakhtin, Hymes and Ivanic) and with it, a
reconceptualization of the essay itself as a
tool for thinking and acting upon the world.
Martha DesChamps Petoskey received
her Ph.D. in school psychology from the
University of Georgia in May 2000 and
became an assistant professor of school psychology at Carolina on July 1. During her
doctoral studies,
she taught statistics
to doctoral students, supervised
data collection and
analysis on a project for at-risk children, and consulted
with local elementary and high
schools on evaluation studies. She
Petoskey. Photo by Dan Sears.
completed a predoctoral internship
at River Oak Center for Children in
Sacramento, California, providing psychological services to preschool and school-aged
children with serious emotional disturbances. She has worked in the Georgia public schools, assessing students in preschool
through 12th grade, leading group interventions for children with attentiondeficit/hyperactivity disorder and providing
programs for students and parents on violence prevention, anger management, and
conflict resolution. She holds a B. A. in psychology with honors from Presbyterian
College in Clinton, South Carolina, and a
Master of Education degree in school psychometry from Georgia State University.
“I’m proud and excited to have the opportunity to grow with UNC and, in particular,
with the School of Education as we reiterate
our commitment to quality education at
every level,” Petoskey said. “With regard to
that, my interests are many. However my
current research focuses primarily on
improving school climate (and, indirectly,
student achievement) at the elementary
level by promoting ‘goodness-of-fit’ between
students and teachers. A second research
focus is science-based psychoeducational
assessment–an area in which I also am
actively teaching and supervising.”
Stanley A. Schainker became a clinical
associate professor of educational leadership
at UNC on July 1.
After earning a
baccalaureate
degree from
Princeton
University and a
Master of Arts in
Teaching degree
from Harvard
University,
Schainker served as
a high school social Schainker. Photo by Dan Sears.
studies teacher in
Missouri and then
as a junior high school principal in Florida.
He went on to earn an Ed.D. from Harvard
and then worked as an assistant superintendent in New York, a superintendent of
schools in Pennsylvania, and an associate
superintendent in San Francisco, California.
Subsequently he became executive director
of the California School Leadership
Academy, then director of the Duke
University School Leadership Center, and
later adjunct senior program associate for the
Center for Creative Leadership in
Greensboro. He opened his own consulting
firm, Schainker and Associates, and has consulted widely with schools, universities, and
businesses across the country on topics
including leadership development, employee
empowerment, collaborative decision making, group facilitation, development of training programs and materials, and organizational change. “I’ve always tried to bridge
the gap between the world of the school
practitioner and the academic world,”
Schainker said. “I definitely believe that
educational leaders are more likely to be
effective if they learn the lessons of research
and theory—and then base their decisions
on that learning. Working at the School of
Education will give me the opportunity to
continue to emphasize this crucial interrelationship.”
Margaret P. Weiss joined the School of
Education faculty on July 1 as an assistant
professor of special
education, having
completed her
Ph.D. at the
University of
Virginia in 1999. “I
am excited about
being at Carolina
in special education and middle
grades,” she said.
“Both the students
Weiss. Photo by Dan Sears.
and the faculty are
committed to
working in and strengthening public education for all students.” Before pursuing her
doctoral studies, Weiss was a special education teacher at elementary, middle, and high
schools in North Carolina, Virginia, and
New Hampshire. During her doctoral studies, she taught courses in the Special
Education Master’s program for both in-service and pre-service teachers. She won the
Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant
Award in 1998, the Curry Dissertation
Award, and the Outstanding Doctoral
Student Award in 1999. Weiss has conducted studies of teachers of students with disabilities in juvenile detention facilities and
of special educators in co-taught and special
education classrooms. In her research, she
has addressed the issues of co-teaching, effective instructional practices in general and
special education, and the transition of students with special needs from school to postschool settings. She is continuing to investigate effective instructional practices for students with learning disabilities,
emotional/behavior disorders, and attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder, particularly in
reading and writing at the middle school
level.
Fitzgerald Named Assistant Dean
for Faculty
Dean Madeleine Grumet named
Professor Jill Fitzgerald assistant dean for
faculty personnel
procedures, effective July 1. As
assistant dean,
Fitzgerald will
oversee faculty
appointment,
reappointment,
promotion, and
tenure procedures
in the School, and
insure that all
Fitzgerald. Photo by Dan Sears.
School and
University policies
regarding faculty personnel procedures are
followed. She also will counsel, advise, and
mentor new tenure-track faculty in the
School as they begin the professorship.
In Memoriam - Robert Neill Scott
Neill Scott, who
served on the faculty
of the School of
Education from 1957
to 1983, died on
August 11, 2000. He
was 78. Scott was an
associate professor of
educational psychology and served as a
General College
adviser. Before coming to Carolina,
Scott was on the faculty of Western Carolina
College in Cullowhee, NC, where he was
dean of men from 1952-55 and director of
student personnel from 1955-57.
Colleagues remember Scott as a caring,
compassionate, student-oriented professor.
“He was a wonderful counselor and adviser
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not take place, much like the sheet music for
a symphony or the blueprint for a building.
As all teachers know, all the surprises and
discoveries that keep teaching compelling
happen as the song of the program is taken
up by its performers: its teachers, its students.
What we make of it, is what it is.
So what will we make of this? Faculty
members in the School of Education are taking a course that instructs them how to offer
their courses on the Web through Learning
Space. We are hiring technical staff to assist
in readying and maintaining Web-based
courses. But we know that our mastery of
this new medium is still very elementary, like
little kids practicing scales or multiplication
tables. This new program takes all the elements of teaching that were predictable and
rigid, and makes them fluid. As the program
proceeds we will need to decide when we
need to meet, to see each other’s faces and
hear each other’s voices, and when we can
disperse, freeing the course to live in other
places. No longer will the interactions of the
course take place only under the gaze of the
professor. What will be the role of this professor when teachers are dispersed, meeting
together in their schools? As the courses
move forward, there may not be discrete
beginnings and endings. Questions raised in
to many students,” said Dick Coop, professor
of educational psychology. “He took the
time to make himself available to students,
particularly those who had a personal need.”
Scott and his wife Lib were among the first
faculty/spouse couples at Carolina to receive
the prestigious Danforth Associates award
from the Danforth Foundation. As Danforth
Associates, they reached out to many
Carolina students, fostering supportive relationships beyond the usual faculty/student
role in order to enhance the quality of students’ lives.
Scott is also remembered as an individualist who believed strongly in his ideals and
championed them with great integrity.
“When Neil Scott believed in something, he
worked for it with all that was within him,”
Coop said. “He wouldn’t sell out, no matter
what.”
one course will resurface again, projects and
research sustained from one to another. How
can we in the School of Education work
together so that we create and sustain the
continuity that our students will be experiencing? How can we release the work to
them so that it can be understood and translated into the terms of their teaching lives
and schools, and still stay in the conversation?
We hope that the teachers in this program who are its pioneers will help us and
work with us as these courses evolve. Dr.
Susan Friel, who is coordinating this program, will soon visit each cohort and ask it
to select representatives who will work with
faculty and administration to design the
communications that will make this program
vivid as well as efficient, useful as well as
compelling, important and fulfilling for its
individual participants as well as for its
cohorts and schools.
It is not a question of substituting one
medium or form for another. It challenges us
to choose, and temper, vary and combine, to
work in mixed media, night and day, together and apart, here and there and never lose
touch. If we do it right, the scene may never
be familiar again, for it will change with
every new group and every new topic. Let
the adventure begin.
F A C U L T Y • The Carolina Slate
Lillie, Hunter Retire
David Lillie , professor of early childhood, family and literacy studies, retired in
August after 32 years as a faculty member at
the School of Education. “My decision to
retire and leave the Peabody Hall community was made with mixed emotions,” Lillie
told the faculty. “This has been a wonderful
environment in which to work and I believe
these years have been very productive for
me, both professionally and personally.
However, the time and situation are right
for me to move on to some new adventures.
Although I have officially retired from the
University, I will continue to be active in
the field of education.” In his new role,
Lillie is directing the UNC Coordination
Center for the North Carolina State
Improvement Project located at UNCGeneral Administration, a project aimed
toward improving the performance of students with disabilities. During his tenure at
the School, Lillie chaired the Division of
Special Education, served as chair of the faculty of the School of Education, directed the
nationwide Technical Assistance and
Development System serving early childhood demonstration programs, directed the
Center for Educational Leadership, established and directed the North Carolina
Partnership Training System for Special
Education, and established and directed the
North Carolina Distance Education
Partnership. “David Lillie’s outstanding and
effective advocacy for children with disabilities was reflected in his scholarship and
teaching as well as his accomplishments in
community outreach,” said Senior Associate
Dean Bill Burke.
Richard C. Hunter accepted a position
at the University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign as of August 31 as professor and
head of the Department of Educational
Organization and Leadership, ending a 15year career at the School of Education at
Carolina. Hunter joined the faculty of
Carolina’s School Leadership Program in
1985, after international teaching experience in Japan and public schools administrative experience in California, Washington,
Virginia, and Ohio in positions of principal,
assistant and associate superintendent, and
superintendent. During his career at the
School of Education, Hunter served as chair
of the Educational Leadership Program,
implemented the Master’s in School
Administration Program, and directed the
University’s Inter-institutional Doctoral
Program in School Administration, offering
courses to students in the Charlotte area.
During leaves of absence from his faculty
role, he served as superintendent of public
instruction for the Baltimore (City)
Maryland Public Schools in 1988 and as
associate director for education with the
Department of Defense Education Activity
from 1998-2000.
(continued from page 1)
Island, New York, a partnership that prepares at-risk students for college or careers.
Previously she was superintendent of the
Memphis, Tennessee, public schools where
she initiated a wide range of successful
school reforms. She was named the 1999
National School Superintendent of the Year
by the American Association of School
Administrators.
House credited the School of Education
graduate faculty with exposing her to the
powerful world of research and teaching her
to connect theory and practice. “I learned to
remain focused on the North Star effect,”
House said, “teaching and leading all children so that they can become all they want
to be.”
Clyde Edgerton, author of seven novels,
received the Alumni Achievement Award,
recognizing the critical acclaim of his writing
and his achievement in literature. The award
was presented by Dr. Sterling Hennis, a
retired English education professor and his
former mentor. Edgerton earned all three of
his degrees from the School of Education
(A.B.Ed. 1966, M.A.T. 1973, and Ph.D.
1977). “The people who were at the School
and were enthusiastic when I was a student,
literally changed my life,” he said in accepting the award. A former high school English
teacher and faculty member at Campbell
University, Edgerton is noted as an innovative, creative teacher and writer. He has previously received the North Carolina Award
for Literature, a Guggenheim Fellowship,
Sterling Hennis (left) presents the Alumni
Achievement Award to Clyde Edgerton. Photo by
Steve Whitsitt.
Faculty Kick Off Year
with Retreat
S
chool of Education faculty gathered at
Aqueduct Conference Center on
August 25 for a day-long retreat to
begin developing a collaborative research
process. Mr. Terry K. Peterson, Chief
Counselor to Secretary Riley of the U. S.
Department of Education, addressed the
group on the complex issues facing education. Faculty identified several priorities for
collaborative research, including equity
issues, information delivery, and redesign of
teacher education.
Faculty discuss ideas for collaborative research. Photo by Dan Sears.
Music in the Air
Laura Bilbro-Berry leads the charge into the future.
Photo by Steve Whitsitt.
and a Lyndhurst Fellowship in recognition of
his work. A compelling story teller, Edgerton
is in demand as a speaker and reader of his
own fiction. His novels are Raney, Walking
Across Egypt, The Floatplane Notebooks, Killer
Diller, In Memory of Junior, Redeye and
Where Trouble Sleeps.
Laura Bilbro-Berry is the 2000-2001
Teacher of the Year for the State of North
Carolina. A second grade teacher at C.
Tayloe Elementary School in Beaufort
County, NC, for eight years, she earned her
A.B.Ed. degree from the School of Education
in 1992. In presenting the Outstanding
Young Alumni Award to her, Dr. Stephen
Halkiotis, her former principal at Orange
High School, called her a model of excellence, a student who was dedicated, unpretentious, highly motivated, kind, and gentle.
“She was a dream student,” Halkiotis said.
In accepting the award, Bilbro-Berry
credited the School of Education and her
professors for instilling in her the idea that
the world is about risk-taking. “We can’t be
afraid to take chances,” Bilbro-Berry said. “It
never ceases to amaze me how a small
change in practice or a small idea can blossom into something so wonderful. We must
continue to do whatever it takes for the children of North Carolina.” In her school,
Bilbro-Berry has developed a Writing
Improvement Team, a Reading Renaissance
Program, and Family Math Night. In her
community, she has established a Parent
Book Exchange program for students and
their families, and has directed a program for
at-risk second graders. Bilbro-Berry is currently traveling the State, serving as an
ambassador for education as the NC Teacher
of the Year.
UNC students,
faculty, and public
school teachers
from around the
state gathered in
Peabody Hall on
January 26-27 to
“hear the music”
and celebrate the
impressive results
of the North
Carolina
Curriculum, Music
and Community
(CMC) Project,
which integrates
traditional North
Traditional banjo player A. C. Overton (right) delights a Peabody Hall audience as
Wayne Martin, folklife director of the NC Arts Council, looks on. Photo by Jock Lauterer.
Carolina music
into the 4th-grade
curriculum. Friday
shape this project, both through its financial
evening performances by banjo player, A. C.
support and through the participation of
Overton, and gospel singers, The Badgett
folklife director, Wayne Martin, folklife speSisters, set the stage for presentations on
cialist, Beverly Patterson and Arts in
Saturday by elementary classroom and music
Education director, Linda Bamford. The proteachers from Ashe, Caldwell, Orange and
ject also has received support from the NC
Surry counties. The teachers described and
Humanities Council and the National
demonstrated the many ways that they have
Endowment for the Arts.
integrated this music into the curriculum
with their students.
Co-directed by UNC-CH faculty members Dwight Rogers of the
School of Education and Glenn
Hinson of the UNC Curriculum in
Folklore, the CMC project, now in
its second year, uses music as a central feature of the entire course of
study, not just as a typical “arts
enhancement” unit. The goal is to
make learning in all subject areas
more exciting, fun, and meaningful
for students. “Glenn and I are
pleased with the way the CMC
project has reinvigorated children’s
desire to learn and rekindled
teachers’ and parents’ interest in
the traditions of their local communities,” Rogers said. The North
The Badgett Sisters perform a cappella gospel songs and describe
Carolina Arts Council has helped
their recent work with children in elementary school classrooms in
North Carolina. Photo by Jock Lauterer.
3
The Carolina Slate • N E W S B R I E F S
Initiatives Funded in Science, Healthy Schools,
Limited English Proficient Students, Literacy
National Science Foundation
Funds NanoManipulator
Project
“For one week, my biology class had scientists visiting us. . . . They wanted to see if we
knew what viruses are and how they work. Some
students had an idea, but I just knew that they
made me feel yucky when I get sick . . . I realized that I had really been fooled by a false
stereotype of what a scientist had to look like.
There were all different kinds of people here, of
different ages as well as different races. But they
all share the same goals—to learn as much as
they can about viruses . . . They all work as a
team and their work is very beneficial.
The scientists gave us an idea of what a virus
looks like and what it does. . . . We did a lot of
‘hands-on’ activities . . . I enjoyed my experience
learning about viruses. It opened my mind to a
possible new path to a career as a scientist and
gave me a definite new outlook on viruses . . . I
think every student should have the chance to
participate in an activity like this. . . .”
-Freshman, Orange High School
Many more students in middle schools,
high schools, and university classrooms will
have an opportunity to experience learning
with nanotechnology over the next three
years, thanks to a $767,275 grant from the
National Science Foundation to Gail Jones,
associate professor of science education at
the School of Education. As with the student quoted above, who participated in the
pilot phase of this work, others now will be
able to investigate tiny viruses with a tool
called the nanoManipulator (nM). The students not only see the viruses but also
receive feedback as if they are actually
touching the viruses. By using a nM joystick,
students can feel the shape, hardness, elasticity, and friction of the virus.
Nanotechnology is emerging as one of
the fastest growing areas of science. A
decade ago, nano applications were regarded
as science fiction. Today scientists can study
atoms, move atoms, and create tiny robots
using nanotechnology. Jones and her colleagues will study how students of various
ages learn with this cutting-edge technology.
Collaborators on this project are Richard
Superfine of the UNC-CH Department of
Physics, Russell Taylor of the UNC-CH
Department of Computer Science, and Tom
Andre of Iowa State University.
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration Funding
Launches Science Labs
The School of Education will establish
two new science education laboratories to
train elementary, middle grades, and secondary science teachers, with a $500,000
grant from the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA). The new
funding will support renovation of an existing classroom in Peabody Hall and establishment of an instructional laboratory at the
new R.D. and Euzelle Smith Middle School
scheduled to open in Chapel Hill by 2002.
The laboratories will allow science and
mathematics to be taught in a hands-on
manner in an open atmosphere with safety as
a vital component. “This funding will enable
our teachers to receive the training they
need to energize young North Carolinians’
desire to study science and mathematics,”
said U. S. Representative David Price, who is
a member of the Subcommittee that drafted
the FY 2001 VA-HUD Independent
Agencies Appropriations Bill, which includ-
4
Michael Byrd (foreground), a student at Orange High School, works the controls of the nanoManipulator under the
direction of postdoctoral student Mike Falvo (center) and Richard Superfine (right), associate professor of physics,
during a 1999 exploratory study. The system created by Carolina scientists uses virtual reality technology to provide
a 3-D image and the sensation of “feeling” to the sample being studied.
ed this funding. “I am very pleased to have
played a role in gaining this support for public education in North Carolina.”
Teachers across North Carolina will benefit from the NASA-funded laboratories by
taking science methodology courses in person or through distance education courses
made available in their classrooms via the
Internet. “This support will go a long way
toward helping us address North Carolina’s
current shortage of qualified science teachers,” Dean Grumet said. “Science teachers
need a state-of-the-art science laboratory in
which to learn how and why to teach aspects
of the state’s science curriculum.”
Assistant professor William Veal emphasized the breadth of North Carolina educators who will be served by these instructional
laboratories, including alternative licensure
School of Education students, students seeking initial certification, and teachers who
wish to continue their education through
graduate level courses. “NASA materials and
support will be particularly helpful to new
teachers in developing lesson plans and curricula that integrate technology with handson activities and labs that focus on diverse
learners,” commented Veal.
The Smith Middle School, where the
new instructional laboratory will be located,
is a collaboration between the Chapel HillCarrboro City Schools and the School of
Education. The middle school will house
not only the new science instructional laboratory but also other sophisticated facilities
to train teachers and provide in-service
training and after-hours continuing education opportunities.
N.C. General Assembly
Supports School-Based Health
Centers
“As I’ve worked to improve schools,
I’ve been struck by the fact that a lack of
adequate health and mental health services
in schools prevents them from doing a lot of
positive things,” says Donald Stedman, professor and former dean of the School of
Education. “We need to deliver those services to the schools, where the kids are, earlier and better.” Stedman is working to
establish school-based health centers in all
North Carolina schools. To guide this work,
he has established the Leadership Council
for Healthy Schools, which he now chairs.
A school-based health center brings
together a family nurse practitioner or physician’s assistant, a special education expert, a
clinical social worker, a mental health specialist and an administrator. These specialists
are located in one office inside a school and
remain in that school full-time, not rotating
from school to school. “It’s not enough to
have a nurse at a school one day a week,”
Stedman said. “If the goal is to keep kids in
school to raise attendance and improve academics, you have to have health professionals
there all day long.” When Stedman began
this work a year ago, only 29 of North
Carolina’s 100 counties had at least one
school-based health center. There are more
than 2,000 schools across North Carolina.
At the turn of the century, the major
public health concern was hookworm.
Today’s world presents a wider range of
health concerns, such as asthma, sexually
transmitted diseases, alcohol and substance
abuse, and thousands of children taking
Ritalin and other drugs. “The professionals
in a school-based health center can ensure
that medications are administered properly
and treat minor illnesses so that students
don’t have to be sent home,” Stedman
said. “They can also have a big impact on
preventing lifelong problems.”
One hundred nonprofit groups have
joined Stedman in a coalition called,
“Covenant with North Carolina’s Children.”
The coalition has worked with the NC
General Assembly toward the goal of providing health services for children in North
Carolina’s schools. This past summer, the
Department of Mental Health, Department
of Substance Abuse Services, Department of
Public Health, and Department of Public
Instruction offered grants to start 24 new
school-based health centers across the state.
Counties starting a new center were required
to make a financial or in-kind investment.
The state agencies also distributed 20 planning grants to help counties without a
school-based health center to begin planning
for one.
U.S. Department of Education
Funding Extends Dual
Immersion Work
Learning to read is a challenge for every
child but especially for those who are learning in a language other than their native
tongue. In response to the needs of limited
English proficient (LEP) children, Audrey
Heining-Boynton, professor of foreign language education and Spanish, is working to
establish a comprehensive Spanish dual
immersion program in two elementary
schools in Wake County and Duplin
County. With funding exceeding $570,000
from the Office for Bilingual Education and
Minority Language Affairs (OBEMLA) of
the U. S. Department of Education,
Heining-Boynton is directing a 3-year effort
to provide comprehensive bilingual education programs to the LEP children in the two
schools. “Our goal is to teach these children
to read independently and well by the end of
the third grade and to master challenging
mathematics by the end of eighth grade,”
Heining-Boynton said.
Over the three years of the project,
Heining-Boynton and her colleagues will
train 75 elementary teachers, assistants, and
administrators in the two schools in how to
teach reading to LEP students. They will also
provide training to six licensed K-12 Spanish
teachers in the two districts on how to teach
reading and mathematics at the elementary
level.
The project will also serve LEP high
school students in the two participating districts. Heining-Boynton is creating an innovative academic support program for LEP
high school students, consisting of in-school
and after-school mentoring activities. The
goal will be to encourage and prepare the
students to pursue college and other opportunities after their high school graduation.
Previously, Heining-Boynton has initiat-
ed a 5-year, $2.4 million project to train
teachers to serve LEP students more effectively. The project began in nine counties
and, through distance learning, has spread
statewide. Currently in its second year, this
project is also funded by OBEMLA.
Corporation for National
Service Funds SCALE Network
College students on campuses across the
country work to help fellow citizens learn to
read. Their efforts will soon be bolstered by a
new project by the School of Education’s
Student Coalition for Action in Literacy
Education (SCALE). With a $250,000 grant
from Learn and Serve Higher Education, a
branch of the Corporation for National
Service, SCALE is establishing a national
network of 20 colleges and universities
involved in literacy work. In the 3-year project, SCALE will assist the network schools
in developing service-learning seminars
related to their community literacy work.
The seminar will provide training to
prospective literacy tutors. It will include a
project such as an oral history, photography
exhibit, or curriculum materials. A special
effort will be made to encourage faculty and
community participation. SCALE will support the work of all network schools and will
disseminate sample syllabi nationally.
Since SCALE was founded in 1989 by
two Carolina undergraduates, it has grown to
become the national center for student literacy work in the United States. “This new
project will enable us to multiply the effectiveness of our work with campuses across
the country,” said Kathy Sikes, executive
director of SCALE. “With this national network in place, campus-based literacy groups
can learn from each other and benefit from
ongoing collaborative relationships.”
N E W S B R I E F S • The Carolina Slate
Smallwood Foundation Sponsors Forum on Women in Educational Leadership
All administrators in education face
demands daily, including policy issues,
instructional challenges, personnel
matters,
and community
relations.
Within this
context, do
women
take a
Catherine Marshall. Photo by Ollie
different
Brock.
approach
than men?
Are there female and male models of administration? These questions were the focus of
a forum hosted September 9 by the School of
Education, supported by the Frances C. and
William P. Smallwood Foundation of Forth
Worth, Texas, and directed by Catherine
Marshall, School of Education professor of
educational leadership.
“Today’s world presents both opportunities and ironies for women,” said Madeleine
R. Grumet, Dean of the School of Education,
addressing the audience of 65 women and
men educators from school
districts across the state. She emphasized the
“deep convictions that women hold about
our ability to contribute to a child’s life and
society” and urged the group to consider the
challenges inherent in this work and
“whether, together, we can do it even better.”
A panel of women educators led a dialogue on issues facing women in education.
Women must be willing to take the risk of
stepping into leadership positions, the panel
concurred, noting that women leaders have
yet to establish the same networks that their
male counterparts enjoy. “Such networks
facilitate connection and provide a context
for sharing similar ideas and experiences,”
said Ann Hart, superintendent of Catawba
County Schools. “They lead to bonding that
can make a difference in job satisfaction and
in gaining opportunities to advance to leadership positions.” Panelists were Hart,
Teresa Davis of Chatham County, Anne
Deegan of Wake County, Susan Helmer of
Chatham County, Kathryn Meyers of
Durham County, and Susan Wynn of
Durham County.
In small group discussion sessions, participants considered how women’s participation
in the public world frames current schooling
challenges such as accountability, the
teacher shortage, the achievement gap
between minority and non-minority students, and community and parent relations.
They explored whether gender constrains
them or affects their priorities.
Reflecting on the history
of women school leaders,
Marshall noted 1910 as a turning point when Ella Flagg
Young became superintendent
of schools in Chicago, the first
time a woman gained such a
high position in school leadership in the United States. In
that era, however, the superintendency was traditionally
seen as “populated by highly
regarded men walking down
the streets of their communities,” Marshall said, quoting
Ellwood Cubberly. The participation of women in school
leadership today gives us many opportunities
to question and re-frame assumptions about
leadership, Marshall added.
The second Forum on Women in
Educational Leadership will be held on
Saturday, April 28, 2001, 10:00 a.m.-1:00
p.m. in Peabody Hall, to explore the extent
to which performance standards for school
leaders provide the language that speaks to
the work of women in education. For more
information, visit our Web site or call
Wendy Borman at 919-962-5381.
The Smallwood Foundation, which supported the forum, also provides fellowships for
selected firstyear students
in the doctoral program in
educational
leadership at
the School of
Education.
Davis and
Wynn were
1999-2000
Smallwood
Fellows.
Ann Hart. Photo by Ollie Brock.
Three new
Smallwood
Fellows, Anita Alpenfels, Nichole SaulsberryScarboro, and Theresa Wahome, are now on
campus and progressing in their coursework.
Participants share ideas at Forum on Women in Education. Photo by Ollie
Brock.
Jonathan Kozol Slams Equal Standards Without Equal Opportunity
Jonathan Kozol, author, educator, and
activist, spoke on the Carolina campus on
September 20 in the Weil Lecture on
American Citizenship, presented by UNC’s
Institute for the Arts and Humanities and
co-sponsored by the School of Education. In
an afternoon panel discussion, Howard
Machtinger, panel chair and director of the
School of Education’s Teaching Fellows
Program, described Kozol as an individual
whose strength lies in his ability and willingness to listen to children themselves, believing that “children are their own best advocates.” Panel members Courtnee Poole, a
Carolina Teaching Fellow, and Daniella
Cook, a teacher at East Chapel Hill High
School, questioned Kozol about his vast
experiences in a racially segregated and poor
neighborhood in New York City’s South
Bronx. Kozol deplored the profound inequality of educational opportunity in our country, noting that Bronx students receive barely half the support of their affluent
Westchester neighbors. Kozol wondered why
students in need don’t receive greater support and why politicians have no problem
“allocating resources” for the Pentagon or
other programs but complain about “throwing money” at public education. He cogently
criticized the current standards movement by
noting that “equal standards without equal
opportunity is punitive hypocrisy.”
In an evening lecture, Kozol described
his experiences with young Black and
Hispanic/Latino children as presented in his
1995 book Amazing Grace: The Lives of
Children and the Conscience of a Nation and in
his most recent work, Ordinary Resurrections.
Emphasizing the hopefulness of the children
in spite of their circumstances of growing up
in one of the most impoverished communities in America, Kozol challenged the audi-
Scott Ainslie Sings the Blues
Teachers Who Know Their Stuff
Barbara Stengel, professor of educational
foundations at Millersville University in
Pennsylvania and executive secretary of the
Philosophy of Education Society, spoke to
School of Education students and faculty on
October 17, emphasizing the importance of
teachers’ subject-matter knowledge and her
hope for a strong, dynamic relationship
between the liberal arts and teacher education. Stengel posed three nagging questions
to the audience of 30 faculty and students:
What does it mean when one refers to
“teachers who know their stuff?” Where is
the intersection between academic disciplines and school subjects? How do teachers
come to “know their stuff?”
After a lively dialogue with the audience
exploring these questions, Stengel suggested
that “knowing one’s stuff” means that a
teacher is “pedagogically response-able—
able to respond with regard to ideas, learners, and texts.” The idea of “response-ability” includes a teacher’s thoughtful reaction
to what is going on with the students in the
classroom. Recognition is the significant first
step in addressing and interpreting the needs
and desires of students, according to Stengel.
Teachers can then consider the many alternative responses to diverse student needs.
“Subject-matter knowledge is an infinite
field,” Stengel said. “‘Knowing one’s stuff’ is
an everyday process for teachers.” She
emphasized the need for teacher education
to be considered an all-campus responsibility
and an important issue for all academic
disciplines.
ence to lead the nation beyond its indifference to the fate of all children. Urgently, he
pressed the audience, “Patience is the luxury
of those who are not in pain.”
Scott Ainslie. Photo by Steve Whitsitt.
In connection with the Durham Blues
Festival, the School of Education hosted
Scott Ainslie, noted musician, performer,
and educator, on September 5. The School
of Education’s aesthetic education agenda
works to connect classroom teachers and
curricula to the lively arts events taking
place in our communities. The Ainslie workshop was organized to strengthen this connection.
Ainslie captivated the Peabody Hall
audience of undergraduate and graduate
students as well as faculty
from the School of Education
and across the UNC campus
by playing and singing the
Blues. He also talked with
the audience about the
social-historical context of
the music he played as well as
the derivation of some of the
lyrics from Africa. Ainslie
emphasized the importance
of the connection between
traditional African music and
modern music, and the
African influence on music
such as the Blues. “Scott was
amazing! He has an unusual
combination of artistic mastery and teacher-content
knowledge,” said Christopher
Osmond, a School of
Education student who
attended the performance. “He accompanied
his songs with deep historical background
that interwove these artifacts with their
milieu. All in all, a great performance!”
The School of Education will sponsor
other arts events this spring as part of the
Jazz Festival, which will take place on the
UNC campus. Visit the UNC Web page,
www.unc.edu, for specific information about
the Jazz Festival events.
5
The Carolina Slate • S T U D E N T S A N D A L U M N I
Hanging out at Peabody Hall
From Your Alumni
Association President
Dear Alumni,
Regardless of what you
are doing now, the
School of Education
has had a special place in your life. You began
or continued your professional training in these
old Peabody Halls. At some point in your life,
you decided to be an educator and this institution and this place gave you that opportunity.
Others who now follow you need your support
and involvement. The general public acknowledges the “code red” teacher shortage in North
Carolina and our need to recruit and retain
teachers and administrators, but what are you
doing individually to help your “home” university address this critical state need? What are
you doing to help others who want to choose
teaching as their life profession?
Gifts to the University can be money
(please be sure to designate the School of
Education Foundation), and certainly that is
important, but we also need your interest in
and advocacy for the activities of the School.
Are you coming to any special lectures or seminars (Smallwood Program on Women in
Leadership, Ira J. Gordon Lecture)? Have you
attended an alumni event (for example, the
Town Meeting or the Awards Breakfast on
University Day)? Would you help us plan an
annual alumni event? Would you host Dean
Grumet at an Outreach Meeting in your geographical area? Would you help us recruit quality students? Could we connect you to some
undergraduates or graduates in your area of
study? Would you be interested in being a
guest lecturer in a class?
We need not only your financial support
but also your personal gifts of time and commitment. Please consider getting re-involved with
the University and this School. There is so
much to be done. Contact me through the
School’s Alumni Office, 919/962-5381 or [email protected]. We hope to see you or
hear from you in the near future.
Nancy J. Farmer
(A.B.Ed. ‘69, M.Ed. ‘70, Ed.D. ‘82)
Alumni Council President
New Council
Members Needed
The Alumni Council invites alumni to submit
their names or the names of others to be considered for membership on the Council or its committees. The Council is presently composed of 20
School of Education alumni, two faculty members
and the Dean of the School of Education. The
Council serves as a conduit for the exchange of
information and ideas between the School of
Education and the alumni. The Council meets
three to four times a year on Fridays, 9:00 a.m. –
2:00 p.m., at the Friday Center in Chapel Hill.
During their 3-year term, members attend Council
meetings and serve on committees and task groups
as needed. We can provide substitute reimbursement for teachers. Please send a letter and resume
to Alumni Relations, School of Education,
Campus Box 3500, Peabody Hall, Chapel Hill,
NC 27599-3500, or call 919/962-5381 for further
information.
Alumni Reconnect Around the State
More than 100 alumni of the School of
Education, spanning the graduating classes of
the last half century, gathered recently in
Winston-Salem and Charlotte to enjoy a
dialogue with Dean Grumet and to reconnect with one another. Winston-Salem area
alumni, hosted by Senator Linda Garrou
(’67), met with Dean Grumet at the Graylyn
International Conference Center on
December 4. Charlotte area alums joined
the Dean at the Mint Museum on January
10, hosted by local alumnae Barbara Cash
(’64), Stewart Gordon (’65), Judy Pliner
(’70, ’72, ’82), and Catherine Stephenson
(’61). Alumni Council President Nancy
Farmer (’69, ’70, ’82) welcomed participants
at both gatherings and provided an update
on the Alumni Association’s upcoming programs. "It’s exciting to have our alumni
together to discuss the critical issues facing
educators in North Carolina," said Wendy
Borman, Director of Development. "We
have an impressive group of alumni who
have made a dynamic commitment to the
field of education and to the children of this
state. It’s noteworthy when they take the
time to reconnect with Carolina friends and
discuss current priorities of the School of
Education." If you are interested in having
the Dean meet alumni in your area, please
contact us at 919/962-5381 or by email at
[email protected].
Visit us at. . .
Winston-Salem area alumni converse at December gathering hosted by Senator Garrou (back left) and Dean Grumet.
6
www.unc.edu/depts/ed/
G I V I N G • The Carolina Slate
From the Director of Development
Every day when I walk into Peabody Hall, I am reminded of the
importance of philanthropy. A frequently cited definition of the term
is “voluntary action for the common good.” Clearly, George Peabody
(1795-1869) had in mind the common good when he established the
Peabody Education Fund for the purpose of advancing education in
the South. What an impact he made by providing the building that
has been the refuge for so many students to study the science and art
of teaching, and whose contributions in public education reverberate
throughout the country. Peabody could only dream of the difference
his investment would make in the lives of thousands of children.
Many of our donors have told me that for them, the giving and sharing of time and resources with the School of Education is one way they can make an impact “for
the common good.” For many, philanthropy is fundamental to the quality of how we live our
lives. We know at the School of Education that our donors have made a direct impact on the
quality of our students’ lives. Gifts to the School influence the educational experiences that we
can provide for our students, providing the critical margin that allows us to move beyond the
potential of state allocations.
It is delightful spending time with our alumni of the School of Education. As I express gratitude to our donors, I often find that the donors express appreciation back to me for the way
education influenced and changed their lives. Frequently they share stories about how a professor revealed a new perspective that enabled them to see the world in a fresh light or how their
experiences at the School of Education laid the foundation for their work today.
It is impossible to measure either the quantity or quality of how our lives have been changed
through our experiences at Carolina. However, we can try, by taking stock of the significant
value of our own education and expressing our appreciation by giving something back to assure
that future generations will enjoy the same benefits we had. I am convinced that giving is good
for the soul and the sense of self. It is also primary to the quality of life. Some studies suggest
that giving—as a volunteer or of our financial resources—can lower stress, strengthen our
immune system, and make our heart stronger! Whether these physiological benefits are true or
not, I am convinced that giving and investing ourselves in an enterprise worthy of our support
is deeply meaningful and satisfying.
The donors honored in the Contributors’ Honor Roll have expressed through their financial
investment that they believe in the mission of the School of Education. In the process, they
have experienced the joy of philanthropy and of saying thank you. It is my privilege to say
thanks for making a difference and advancing the “common good” at the School of Education!
Wendy Gratz Borman
Director of Development
Contributors’ Honor Roll
Celebrating the financial investment made by alumni and friends of the School of Education (July 1, 1999 - June 30, 2000)
Peabody Society
(gifts at $2000 and
above)
In tribute to George Peabody,
American business leader and
philanthropist, individuals who
provide annual gifts at this level
are recognized for their transforming investment in the
School of Education. Peabody
Society members have their
names engraved on a plaque in
Peabody Hall, receive special
invitations to the School of
Education’s Dean’s Circle
events, and are recognized
through the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chancellors’ Club.
Alumni
Gregory A. Battistello
Marjorie Bryan Buckley
Patrick William Carlton
William Sherard Chapman, Jr.
Frank Rockwell Comfort
Robert Wendell Eaves, Jr.
Harvey Leroy Kennedy
Harold Lillard Kennedy III
Linnea Weblemoe Smith
Gordon Smith III
Charles Stephens Templeton*
Friends
Dean E. Smith Foundation, Inc.
Duke Energy Foundation
Frances C. & William P.
Smallwood Foundation
Glaxo Wellcome, Inc.
Havatampa, Inc.
Beverly Eaves Perdue
Philip Morris U.S.A.
Estate of William A. Sigmon
Dean E. Smith
U. S. Department of Education
Dean’s Circle
(gifts from $500-$1,999)
The Dean’s Circle recognizes
donors who provide a generous
investment in furthering the
School of Education’s Teacher
Education Program, research
and connection to public education. Dean’s Circle members
have their names engraved on a
plaque in Peabody Hall, and
receive special invitations to
the School of Education’s
Dean’s Circle events.
Alumni
Billie Collins Alphin
Oliver Wendell Alphin
Douglas DeGolyer Arnold
Amy Allmendinger Brisley
Jon Philip Brisley
Barbara Robinson Buckland
Ronald Jackie Carroll
Hynda Brody Dalton
Marsha Mallett Gaster
Joseph L. Giles
Jeffrey Alan Hoffman
Lezley Blair Hoffman
Barbara Lovill Hooks
W. Borden Hooks, Jr.
Kimberly Weston Johnson
Joan Ferrell Kennedy
Michael Denard Kennedy
Halbert Hill McKinnon, Jr.
James Julian Myers
Sarah Elizabeth Parker
Mark Louis Schaeffer
Frank Gerhard Schafstedde
Elizabeth Goforth Simons
Gaye Godwin Spears
Brian Stabler
Vicki Sue Stafford
Alice Creech Tilghman
Marvin Martin Ward
Clarence Nelson York
Friends
Barnes & Noble Inc.
Ernest H. Dark
June D. Ward
Benefactors
(gifts of $250-$499)
Gifts at this level support the
preparation of teachers, further
the School’s research agenda
and make a positive impact on
public education in North
Carolina.
Alumni
Pamela Woodall Bass
Charles Lewis Beatty
Ray Denton Benfield
Betty Myers Brooks
Wilburn George Burgin, Jr.
Beth Warren Carter
John Fleming Carter III
Betsy Un-Hi Chang
Charles Morgan Clarke
Judith Stanley Creech
Edwin Eugene Dunlap, Jr.
Elaine Byrd Farge
Nancy Jane Farmer
Sandra Keller Furr
Stephanie Clark Hall
Mary Beth Miller Harper
James Lonnie Harper
Charles Foster Hartman
Deborah Andrews Heil
Charles Harry Huss
Sandra Wood Hyder
John Thomas Kelleher
Joanne Olvera Lighter
James Davis Mellon, Jr.
L. Dent Miller
Emily Tanner Moore
Bonnie Williams Morrah
Jacquelyn Stroupe Pace
Virginia Marie Pittman
Beth Appleby Sabo
Linda Tully Sarubbi
Roxie Ruhlman Smith
Cecil McLane Smith
Mary Ann Sowers
Julia Crater Stevens
Zollie J. Stevenson, Jr.
Clay Bernardin Thorp
Mary Elizabeth Van Every
Roy Allen Williams
Wanda Jones Williams
Lottie Lee Williamson
Robert Ellis Zaytoun
Friends
Bank of America
Russell J. Rowlett III
Donald John Stedman
Sponsors
(gifts from $100-$249)
The School of Education is
proud of the support that we
receive from our friends and
alumni who choose to make a
difference in the opportunities
afforded to our students.
Alumni
Daniel P. Abercrombie
Sally McMillan Adams
Mary Austin Adkins
Ruth McLaughlin Aitken
Michael Jay Allen
Barbara Lentz Allman
John Joseph Aluise
Rosalie Martha Andrews
James Bentley Armstrong
Sarah Elizabeth Armstrong
Marybell Avery
Nancy Davis Avery
Grace Graham Bacon
Donald Etheridge Bailey
William Howard Baldwin
Charles Raynor Barber
Roberta Mick Barrett
Irene Evelyn Barrier
Doris Hasty Barron
Robert Lynn Bartley
Betty Gurkin Beacham
C. Keith Beamon
Barbara Thomas Beason
John Hughes Bender, Jr.
Charles Glenn Bennett, Jr.
Lee Hollingsworth Berger
Richard Lamont Bestwick
Barbara Costa Bosse
Dana Lanier Bostic
Christopher Allen Bowman
Sheila Sanderson Breitweiser
Mary Frances Brigham
E. David Broadhurst III
Anne Campbell Brooks
Roy Victor Bruninghaus
Ann Tolar Bryan
Barbara Rice Bunch
Jean Ratliff Burch
Susan Elaine Burgess
Johnnie Edward Burke
Frances Pegues Burroughs
Harry Olin Buzhardt, Jr.
Dale Franklin Campbell
William Bernard Campbell
Stuart Ives Carrier
Cynthia Caffey Carson
Elizabeth Hooks Carter
Cynthia Goldberg Cassone
Laurie Jones Chapman
Shirley Truitt Church
Gail Blonda Clay
Lewis Henry Clay
Edwin Kenneth Cline
Shirley Williams Clodfelter
Anne F. K. Coenen
Mary Herman Cole
Robert Feaster Coleman III
M Elizabeth Compton
Shirley Lewis Conley
Stiles Young Conrad
Max Gilliland Cotten
Hilda Gaddy Courter
Richard Scott Craddock
John Walthall Creagh III
Mary Jane McCall Crews
Vernon Clay Culpepper, Sr.
L. Glenn Cuthrell
Roswald Bernard Daly
Marcia Schwartz Davis
Marie Forbes Davis
Susan White Davis
Van O’Dell Dempsey III
Kay Lambert Dennis
Jane Alligood deVos
Michie Harriss Dew
Michael Taylor Dibbert
Patricia Mills Dibbert
Linda Andrews Dickinson
Julia Smith Dimmitt
Orlando Cepeda Dobbin
Thomas Edward Dohrmann
James Harper Donnell, Jr.
Gerald William Donnelly
Barbara Carr Dougher
Estilla Wilson Duncan
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Patricia Dalton Dunn
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Friends
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Campus Y
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Thornton Foundation
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(gifts up to $99)
Support at this level is made by
our alumni and friends who provide a cornerstone of support.
Every gift makes a difference in
the opportunities we can afford
our students and faculty in furthering the mission of the
School of Education.
Alumni
Carol Mater Abbott
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7
The Carolina Slate • G I V I N G
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8
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Thomas Blair Clark, Jr.
George William Clark, Jr.
John Lawson Clarke
Joanie Clark Clarke
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Effie Tillman Clayton
Frederick Thomas Claytor
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Thomas Charlie Clemmons
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Joi Skaggs Cochran
V. Mickey Cochran
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Gilbert Milton Cofer, Jr.
James Woods Coghill
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Janet Woodlief Cole
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Hal Franklin Collier
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Jerry Parks Cooper
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Anne Phillips Copenhaver
Robin Jones Coppock
Adele Hawley Corbett
H. Dickson Corbett III
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Mary Louise Johnston Corn
Jan Miller Cornebise
Alfred Emile Cornebise
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John Hardin Corpening
Harry Pressley Corriher II
Bruce Packard Corson
Joseph Anthony Cospito
Lisa Johnson Coster
David John Coster
Joe Elmer Coulter
Carol Caudell Council
Daria Paul Courtney
Benjamin Haywood Courtney
Mary Wilkinson Covington
Gloria Farnell Cowan
Sallie Baxter Cowell
Elizabeth Whitfield Cowell
John Norvell Cox
Claudia Ann Milham Cox
George Buddy Cox
Dawn Naylor Craddock
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Allan F. Craig
Kimberley Sue Crane
Penny Myers Craner
Fred B. Cranford
Brenda Kaye Craven
Samuel Mock Craver
Mary Penry Craver
Carol Runge Crawford
Kenneth Andrew Crawford
Matthew Darwin Crawford
Mary Snow Euwer Crawley
Francis Winslow Crawley
Jessica Buchanan Creech
Ivan Dabney Crissman, Jr.
J. Melville Crocker
Patricia Brandt Crockett
Stephanie Wall Cromwell
Ernest George Crone
Andrew Walter Crook
Phyllis Bobbitt Croom
Dean Harlow Crosswhite
Sherry Gardner Crowder
Elisa Lundy Crowe
William Groce Crowell
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Anthony Cedric Cunningham
Carol McCormick Currie
Kathleen Matthews Currin
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Leeda Stockton Currin
George Spencer Currin
Lalla Gribble Dabbs
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Camille Putnam Dale
Jo Ann Thomas Dalehite
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J. Earl Danieley
Rose Reeves Dwiggins Daniels
George Ernest Daniels
Virginia Hauser Daniels
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Kevin Michael Daugherty
James Charles Daugherty
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Reid Sexton Davis
Merle Smith Davis
Susan Navey Davis
Christine DeLuca Davis
Elaine Franklin Davis
William Raeford Davis
G. Ray Davis
Barbara Deese Davis
Bette Davis Davis
Barbara Kay Davis
James Donald Davis
Beth Ingram Davis
Laura Elizabeth Davis
Carolyn Niles Davis
Mark Allen Davis
Cheryl Wagner Davis
Susan Pavy Davis
Janet Eileen Dawson
Robert William Day
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Elizabeth Grayson Deal
Judith Anne Dean
John Powell Deason III
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Mary Anne Thompson Delphry
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Andy C. Denny
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Elizabeth Fowler Diggs
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Michael Fleming Disston
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Kay Noffz Drake
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Carol Faye Duncan
Kenneth Malcolm Dunkley
Kay Stirewalt Dunkley
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Timothy Mark Dunn
Susan Morris Dunn
Patricia Carolyn Dunn
Julie Dean Dwyer
Estelle Suddreth Dyer
Martin Allen Eaddy
Mary Lane Mordecai Early
Barbara Ross Earnhardt
Melissa A. Eatman
Albert William Ebelein
Holger Bernd Ebert
Elizabeth Triplett Ebert
Lois Ruth Ebey
Edna Sydnor Edmondson
Heather Dawn Edwards
Mary Powell Edwards
Talmadge Hight Edwards, Jr.
David Phillip Edwards, Jr.
Nancy Carter Edwards-Fowler
Linda McGee Eelman
Wendy Pipkin Efird
Zannie Poplin Efird
Carolyn Welch Elam
Susan Kee Eller
Sally Godehn Ellis
Beth Vestal Ellis
Kay Vance Elmore
Rana Mustafa Eloubeidi
Constance Ridout Embry
Lisa Parham Epperson
Jane Howie Eskridge
Ellen Evans Essex
Kaye Shaffer Essick
Jessica Thompson Eustice
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Jeanne Clark Evans
Joyce Young Evans
Thomas Wilbur Evaul, Jr.
Carol Lindborg Everett
Peter Ben Everett
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Sue Ruffin Fairless
Diana Williams Faison
Jane Tesh Fako
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Terri Ellis Fannin
Rickie David Fannin
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C. Douglas Farmer
John Deaver Farmer
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Francine Upchurch Farthing
James S. Farthing, Jr.
A. Donald Farthing, Jr.
Barbara McClendon Faust
Ann Peyton Fearrington
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Nancy Belote Felton
John Richard Femia
Carla Fenson
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Vance Thomas Forbes, Jr.
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Denise Roberts Ford
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Jane Mayo Forton
Rebekah Gilbert Foster
Amanda Lineberger Foster
Johanna Marie Foster
Lisa Wagoner Foushee
Yvonne Bullock Fowler
Henrietta Roberts Fox
James Dewitt Frady, Jr.
Helen Shapiro Frank
Betty Frye Franquemont
Jed Lachlan Franquemont
Terri Barnes Frazier
William Joseph Frazier
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Mary Carson Freas
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John Curtis Fries, Sr.
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Mary Tune Fryer
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Deidre Connelly Galvin
Gary Everette Gammill
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Marian Kadlec Garrett
Harriet Traynham Garrett
Kay Harrison Garrison
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Margaret Burton Gatewood
Joyce Arminda Gatta
Eleanor Dawn Gaug
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Anne Dantzler Geer
Elizabeth Floyd Gerlock
Donna Elaine Gertz
John Vernon Geyer
Elizabeth Gerrald Gibson
Susan Erickson Gibson
Sally Caldwell Gibson
Jennifer Testa Gibson
Linda Jean Giguere
Gayle Venters Gilbert
Bonn Arthur Gilbert, Jr.
Miranda Vanessa Gilchrist
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Laura Morrison Giles
Martha Brooks Giles
Jean Yeargin Gill
Janice Tuttle Gillen
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Betty Lowder Gilliam
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Phyllis Costner Gillikin
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Alan Leyton Ginsburg
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Jeanette Michaux Gionfriddo
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Angeline Glander
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Thomas Edgar Glass, Jr.
Rosemarie Glatz-Bailey
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Anne Gribble Glover
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Harriet Williams Golden
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Melissa Belanger Good
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Elizabeth Ann Goode
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Bari Lieb Gorelick
Jeffrey Alan Gorelick
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Louis Jeffrey Gotlib
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Alexander Gow III
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Rosalie Beaudrot Graham
Dale Illick Gramley
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Jacquelyn Bumpous Grant
Lisa S. Grate
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Betty Saunders Graybeal
Richard Heath Greathouse
Jo Ann Newsome Green
John William Greene
Carolyn Lois Greene
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John Zebulon Greene III
Walter Hilliard Greene, Jr.
Bette Kramasz Greer
George Patrick Greger-Holt
Nansi Meg Greger-Holt
George Albert Gregory
Anne Cowan Gregory
Margaret Edmundson Gregory
Mary Dashiell Gregory
Fletcher Harrison Gregory III
Fred Heyward Gregory, Jr.
Nancy Bell Gresham
John William Grice*
Patricia Foy Griffin
Martha Evans Griffin
Beverly Floyd Griffin
Randolph James Griffin
Elizabeth Buie Griffin
Harry Duncan Griffin, Jr.
Jessica Dale Griffith
Nancy Iden Griffith
Trena Topham Griffith-Hawkins
Frank James Grill
Vanessa Benfield Grill
Ronald Anthony Grzybowski
Jack Burkette Guard
Sarah Richey Guenther
Paige McArthur Guest
G. Wilson Gunn, Jr.
Michael Gerard Gunzenhauser
Margaret Elizabeth Gurley
Robert Clifton Guthrie
Carol McBane Guthrie
Marjorie Eisenkramer Gutnik
Jonathan Michael Guy
Jean Hackney Haas
Lona Maddrey Hackenberg
Lyn Carter Hadden
Linda Rogers Haines
Harriett Nunn Haith
Frances Woody Halcrow
Gayanne Tanner Hall
Dianne Sacrinty Hall
Denise Dove Hall
Deborah Halperin-Phillips
G I V I N G • The Carolina Slate
Marie Sparrow Hambright
JoAnna Davis Hamilton
P. Ronald Hamilton
Naomi Jane Hammeke
Judith Jo Hamrick
Barbara Smith Hanania
Joel Samuel Hanania
Lucy Ann Whedbee Hancock
Grace Elizabeth Hancock
Lucy Ann Harber
Rufus Dwight Hare
Jane Heishman Hare
Rebecca Rollins Hare
Donna Mae Knipple Hargens
Carol Taylor Harless
Jean Spencer Harold
Ann Daniel Harper
Leslie McCorkle Harpster
George Franklin Harpster, Jr.
James Willard Harr
Peggy Gregson Harrelson
Tracey Greene Harrill
Dennis Eugene Harrington
Kelly Turner Harrington
Patricia Moffitt Harris
Gary Reeves Harris
Lynn Coker Harris
Tipton McColl Harris
Daniel Lawrence Harris
Marianna Dickey Harris
Susan Ann Harris
Minnie Ellen Harris
Connie Brunt Harris
Sarah Keith Harris
Paula Harrington Harrison
Gladys Lusk Hart
Robert Rawls Hart
Marguerite McKinney Hart
Hazel May Hartsoe
William John Harvey
Florence Dunn Harvey
Lessley Merklein Harwell
Diana Harwood-Peterson
Joseph Kyd Haseman
Janelle Hood Haseman
Ronald Thayer Haskins
Jeffreys Lee Haslam
Dianne Campbell Hatfield
Sandra Chrisco Hatley
Gurney Ernest Hatley, Jr.
Shelley Voorhis Hausler
Daphne Deshaies Haverkamp
Patricia Dulaney Hawkins
Sarah Clapp Haworth
Leora Hayes
Nancy Grimes Haywood
Kristina Dyan Haywood
Ruth Davis Heafner
Patricia Anne Lindqu Heald
Mary Jordan Sutton Heald
Michele Elaine Heath
Michael Edward Heath
Patsy Jacqueline Heath
Wanda Burns Hedrick
Stanley Harris Hedrick
Linda Lennert Heffernan
Donna McKinney Heiser
John Charles Hellard
Susan Holt Helmer
Bobby Earl Helms
Linda Weddington Helms
Kimberly Anne Helms
Willie Stitt Helton
Kimberly Michelle Hemmer
Ann Tillery Hemphill
Jimmy Davys Hemphill
Elizabeth Sharp Henderson
Margaret Churn Henderson
Mary Anne Henderson
Sara Ritchie Hendricks
Betsy Lyon Hendrix
Carole Linn Henning
Susan Adelaide Henretta
Sara Oliver Henry
Katharine McFarland Henson
Janice Frady Henson
Sharon Witter Herlovich
Elizabeth Johnson Herring
Grace Eakes Herrington
Ruth Elizabeth Heruska
Ruth Vaughn Hester
Nathan Mees Hester
Angela Denise Hewitt
Junior LaFayette Hiatt
Margaret Starling Hickey
James Herman Hickman
Michael Wesley Hickman
Amy Suzanne Hicks
Virginia Walser Hicks
Catherine Claire Hicks
Virginia Hill
Christie Ellen Hill
Thomas Wells Hill, Jr.
Naomi Cox Hillon
Nancy Grubb Hines
David Sutton Hirschler II
Michael Anthony Hitchcock
Karen Avery Hixson
Beverly Pack Hobson
Angela Runyon Hodecker
David Edward Hodge
Lisa Morgan Hodge
Jennifer McCommons Hodges
Martha Read Hoekstra
Sandra Marie Holder
Richard Allen Holder
Frances Perry Holder
Crystal De’Anne Holland
Jane Withers Holland
Gretchen Bode Holland
Sherrill Reid Holland III
Jennifer Files Hollander
Patricia Martin Holleman
Billy Joe Holliday
Pamela Green Hollodick
Sylvia Currin Holloman
Julie Fraley Hollowell
Elizabeth Woodward Holman
Thurman K. Holmes
Martha Beal Holmes
Margaret Hoke Holmes
Elna Mangum Holmes
Mary Cudd Holoman
Kenneth Donald Holshouser
Emily Moravec Holt
Jane Ann Crump Holt
Jennifer Seaman Holt
Stephen Thomas Holt
Nancy Saint-Amand Holt
Nancy Jayne Holton
Gregory Lynn Honeycutt
Annice Florelda Hood
M. Glenn Hood
David Alexander Hooper
Agnes Roberson Hooper
John H. Hooper
Dabney Hopkins
Robert Franklin Hopson
Debora Mashburn Hopson
Joseph Beach Hord, Jr.
Julie Bowen Horne
John Hannan Horne, Sr.
Catherine Ryder Horner
Judy Collins Horton
John McManus Hough, Jr.
Margaret Perkins House
Karen Leigh House
Stephen Houston
Susan MacIntosh Houts
Kelly Walsh Hovis
Richard Lee Hovis
Gayle Ragland Howard
Mary Anne Martin Howell
Mary Lynn Buie Howie
Mary Linker Hoyle
Kendra Cormack Hudson
Lisa Ambrose Hudson
Nancy Ann Hudson
James Edward Huegerich
Katherine Dickert Huffstetler
Ellen Glidewell Hughes
Janice Pender Hughes
Polly Pentecost Hughes
Barbara Jean Hughes
Brian Neil Hughes
Todd Douglas Hultman
P. Scott Hummel
Deidre Chalaire Humphrey
Willie White Humphrey
Charles Jerome Humphrey
Lisa Milby Humphries
Dennis Avery Humphries
Robert Miller Hundley, Jr.
Gilbert Harrison Hunt
Robert Scott Hunt
Christine Coppley Hunt
S. Brinson Hunter III
Mary Monteith Hupman
Marguerite Kurtz Hussey
Margaret Coltrane
Hutchison
Ann Hewlett Hutteman
Kathy Hytten
Steven Sal Ianniello
Kathy Weavil Idol
Almeta Willard Idol
Weldon Avery Idol
Gail Koontz Ijames
Lynnette Wyatt Indermaur
Pamela Reed Ingraham
Susan Pollard Irons
Ben Gibson Irons II
Ellen Mentzer Ironside
James Morrison Irvin
Gale Miller Isaacs
Donald Clyde Iseley
Sybil Ray Ishman
Ann Ross Isley
Mary Isley Isley
Linda Wall Isley
Phyllis Harris Jack-Moore
Burton Winfield Jackson
Donna Sue Jackson
Shelia Priscilla Jackson
Donald Lee Jackson
Nancy Green Jackson
Charles Henry James
A. Everette James, Jr.
W. Thomas Jamison
Teresa Ercoline Jarrell
Deborah Lee Jeffress
Anita Reeves Jenkins
Denny Jenkins, Jr.
Thomas Edward Jennings
Susan Price Jerchower
Eli Howard Jerchower
Wallace Lee Jernigan
M. Nelson Jessup
Margaret Anderson Jewell
Nancy Fleshman Jiranek
Pamela Earle Jobin
June Hendricks Johnson
Lawre Liles Johnson
Mary Ann Johnson
Christine Almond Johnson
Lesa Hobart Johnson
Luci Turner Johnson
Carol Johnson
Kay Branstetter Johnson
Donald Conrad Johnson
Constance Marie Johnson
Oliver C. Johnson, Jr.
Annette Newsome Johnston
Ronald Alfred Johnston
William G. Johnston, Jr.
Susan Talley Joines
Jean Glasson Joklik
Cynthia Mullen Jolly
Samuel Brown Jolly, Jr.
C. Jeffrey Jones
Laura Haskin Jones
Robert O’Brien Jones
Anne Davis Jones
Linda Kay Mills Jones
Nanette Frazier Jones
Elaine Chadwick Jones
Brenda Jewell Jones
Cynthia Osborne Jones
David Campbell Jones
Dixie James Jones
Julia Ann Jones
Pelham Thomas Jones
Loyal Edward Jones
Charles Gay Joyner
Karyn Mereness Joyner
Young-Sook Jung
Tamara Lee Kaiser
Barbara Geiger Kanoy
David Marshall Kaplan
Paula Solomon Karesh
Sarah Jeffries Kaufholz
Mary Jane Yelton Kaufman
Charlene Callis Keeton
Martha Lynn Keever
Susan Palmer Keith
Algernon Joyner Keith
Elizabeth Joyner Keith
Maureen Melvin Keller
Susan Weber Keller
Catherine McLurd Kelly
Matthew Thomas Kelly
Christine Deener Kent
Jack Scott Kenyon, Jr.
Mary Efird Kepley
Annette Reichert Kern
Richard Matthew Kern
Susan Margaret Ketch
Elizabeth Ward Kidd
John I. Kiger, Jr.
Jennie Hicks Kimbro
J. Brandon Kincaid
Lynn LeFever Kincaid
Debra Futrell King
Sandra Young King
Virginia Vann King
Marthena Marrin King
Sarah Elizabeth King
William Oliver King
Doris Brown Holt Kingsmore
Freda Zeh Kirkman
Anne Forbes Kirkman
Fredericka Munday Kirkman
Donald Alan Kirkman
Susan Shepard Kiser
Maria Hunter Kiser
J. David Kiser
Kristen Zuba Kitchen
Jeffrey Wayne Kitchen
Virginia Uzzle Kitzmiller
Christina Sloan Klar
Nadine Marie Klein
Olivia Taylor Kleinmaier
Elinor Woods Kline
Tracy Franklin Kluttz
Octavia Bowers Knight
James Henry Knight
Lois Storm Knol
Sally Harper Knop
Barbara Ward Knowles
George Clifton Knox
Kathleen Grogan Kocaba
Barbara Stephanie Kolski
Brenda Elaine Kooman
Kathy Swicegood Koonts
Jerry Webster Koontz
Kathleen Herzberg Koontz
Evelyn Parker Kornegay
Henry Korzennik
Paula S. Krist
Tamera Mills Kronenwetter
Beverly Rostin Krouse
John Stanley Kuchmay
Barbara Faust Kuligowski
Lawrence Ronald Kurland
Laurie Travis Kushner
Deborah Booth Kyle
Fred Sanders Kyzer
Elbert Montague Lake
L. Susan Lamb
Carol Baynard Lamb
Kaye Pass Lambert
Joseph Curtis Lambert, Jr.
Jane Nicholds Lampo
Alton Scott Lancaster, Jr.
John Kenneth Lancaster, Sr.
Susan Northrup Landergan
Calvin Lee Lane
Elizabeth Clarke Lane
Mary Hill Hatley Lane
Patricia Sawyer Laney
Victor Vann Langston
Sharon Amick Lanning
Prudence Ann Laramore
Carolyn Barton Lassiter
Elsie West Laube
Susan Parker Lauer
Ruth Osmers Lauter
Jonathan Gregory Lauterer
Cynthia Logwood Lawhon
Mary Wood Bobbitt Lawson
George Walls Lawson, Jr.
Frank Benjamin Layman, Jr.
Louis Hugh Layne, Jr.
Sarah Elizabeth Leak
Paul Morton Leder
Rebecca Cummings Lee
Joseph Byrd Lee, Jr.
Mary Kathryn Leete
Ann Thomas Legg
R. Dennis Leighton
Michele Fleming Leland
Michael William Lemmons
Peter Andrew Lennon
Tina Leigh Lentz
Wilford Allen Leonard
Joanna Wilson Leonard
Suzanne Marie Leonard
Carol Lynn Lester
Billie Marks LeTendre
Sharon Nurit Levanoni
D. Mark Levin
Dianne Sholinsky Levine
Phoebe Moore Levine
Leonard David Levitch
Daniel Eric Levy
Alice Smith Lewis
Hattie Kimzey Lewis
Mary Banks Lewis
Charles Carson Lewis
Donna Hastings Lewis
Katherine Marie Lewis
Charles Blake Lewis
Jane Templeman Lewis
George Carl Lewis, Jr.
Kathryn Hilliard Lies
Douglas Smithdeal Lighthart
Rowena Orr Lilly
Marcia Borton Linas
Marilyn Flynn Link
Garnett William Link, Jr.
Lindsey Jane Linker
Jeff Linker
Arthur Owen Linskey
Laura Chermely Linton
Catherine Cockerham Lippard
Linda Fisher Litaker
Dianne Little
Daphne McKee Little
L. George Litton, Jr.
Annette L. Litzenberger
Allen David Lloyd
Rachel Anne Locey
Albert Pultz Lochra, Jr.
Glenda Bullock Locke
Deborah Arndt Lockee
Sara Hill Loftin
Ann Van Hoy Loftis
Kimberly VanHoose Logan
Jennifer Olive Loiseau
Carolyn Evans Long
Mary Jordan Long
Preston Marshall Long
Joe O’Neal Long
Megan Somers Long
Patricia Garber Long
Nancy Carnes Long
Diana Jones Long
Walter Nathaniel Long, Jr.
Lynn Sherill Looper
Corinthia Pickett Lopes
Anna Strader Lord
Marjorie Hay Lott
Sara Reznicek Loughlin
Mary Jon Sacrinty Love
Beth Black Love
Martha Huckabee Lowder
Geraldine Ethridge Lowery
Ted Norman Lowery, Jr.
Angela Thompson Lowhorn
Rexanna Pennell Lowman
Kelly A. Lowther
Kenton Russell Loyd
Michelle H. Luckenbach
Mark Wayne Luckenbach
Eileen Zuckerman Lukaszewski
Susan Jewell Luper
William Donald Luper, Jr.
James Edward Lyerly
Kathy Barker Lynch
John Richard Lynch, Jr.
Elizabeth Whitley Lynn
Fain Combs Maag
Dorothy Kay Mabe
Catherine Howell MacAllister
Carter Brooks MacBain
Beverly Leach MacKay
Peter Kenneth MacKenzie
Mary Beth MacKenzie
A. Burton Mackey, Jr.
Sherrie Ann MacKinney
Charlotte MacLauchlin
Margaret Hester MacMillan
Priscilla MacVeagh
Jacques Berr Macy
Margaret Mary Maczuga
Tyre Glenn Madison, Jr.
John Luther Madison, Sr.
Lisa Katherine Madry
Sue Denny Madsen
Lynn Thompson Magee
Paul Richards Mahoney
Barbara Faye Mallard
Eugenia Quillian Mallonee
Patrick G. Mangan
Isabel Hoyt Mangan
Matthew Wade Manlove
Mary-Margaret Maynar Manlove
Barry Dean Mann
Ashlie Downum Mann
M. Jule Mansfield
Judith Lowry Mansfield
Mary Virginia Manson
Nancy Knott Manthey
Mary Gunter Marchman
Barrett Roberson Mardre
Russell Aubrey Marion II
Alan Harvey Markow
Linda Strickland Marsal
Virginia Shalibo Marsh
Shelby Purser Marston
Jean Yarbrough Martin
Hugh Bryant Martin
Karen Johnson Martin
David Augustus Martin
Samuel Charles Martin
Mildred Scroggs Martin
Judy Hubbard Marx
Dan E. Massey
Peggy Smith Mathieu
Brian Keith Matney
Kathryn Campbell Matney
Benjamin James Matthews
Ray Matthews*
Harold Way Matthews, Jr.
Thomas Neill Maultsby
Paul McGougan Maultsby, Jr.
Brenda Hill Maxwell
Ellen Frisbie May
Judith Radabaugh Mayfield
Stuart Tyrus Maynard, Sr.
Daisy Lucille McAlister
Eugenia Forbes McArver
Elsa House McBride
Elaine Fodel McBryde
Robert Lee McCain
Elizabeth Hooker McCallister
Elizabeth Edmonds McCallister
Susan M. McCandless-Knight
Joseph Ferrell McCann
Constance Marie McCann
Marianne Santos McChesney
Ann Maceli McCloskey
Jean Louise McCloskey
James Joseph McCloskey
Susan Young McClure
R. Tony McCollum
Freda Siler McCombs
Julia Morgan McCombs
Joan Byrum McCormick
William H. McCormick III
Kathryn Cox McCullen
Gail Groome McCullough
Jean Thomas McDaniel
Margaret Haynie McDevitt
Edwin McDevitt
V. Paul McDonald
Ford Crisp McDonald
Mary Marcella McDonald
Carolyn Greene McDonald
Linda Helderman McDonald
Samuel Grainger McDowell
Diane Fisher McDowell
Cherie Edwards McGee
Peggy Wynne McGhee
Susan Weber McGinness
Dawn Wood McGinness
Faye Maness McGinnis
George Carroll McGinty
Bonnie Bell McGowan
Gail Lindley McGowen
Bruce Russell McGraw
Jean Whitaker McGraw
Sharon Bingham McGuire
Jennifer McNeal McHarg
William Patrick McHenry
Donna Blackburn McHenry
Sherry Johnston McIlwain
Janet Haskett McInroy
Denise Richardson McIntosh
Kenneth M. McIntyre
Christy Marie McIntyre
Robert Wayne McKay
Anyce Kallam McKee
Kimberly Howard McKeel
Wilbur Ruth Young McKinley
James Donald McKinney
Glenda Goodman McKinnon
Kathy Frieze McKnight
Carol Day McKown
Joel Bryant McLawhorn
Margaret Brown McLean
Dolores Marie McLean
Richard Dean McLean, Sr.
Sharon Marie McLeod
Gregory Kyle McLeod
Shelley Spears McMillan
William Bruce McMillian, Jr.
Lorraine McLamb McNally
Danny Donald McNally
Ruth Wagner McNeely
Sandra Haire McNeely
Dorothy Brewer McNeill
Kathryn Marie McQuade
Mary Gribble McSwain
John Dillard McSween
Dianne Rider Meacham
Linda Trice Meadors
Sarah Lowe Meadows
Laurie Dedman Mealor
William Battle Mebane
Elaine Bridger Mebane
Alexander Murphy Mebane, Jr.
Phyllis Eberhart Meckley
Joanne Stevenson Medlin
Sheila Faye Mehrer
Timothy James Mehringer
Meta Moore Melchior
Suzanne Varano Mellow
James Stuart Melvin, Jr.
J. Ronald Mendenhall
Patricia Nordseth Mengel
Carl Wainwright Mengel*
Moira O’Callaghan Mennona
Edward Raymond Mennona, Jr.
Sarah Futrell Meoni
Robert Scott Merolla
Kaye Elaine Merrell
Elizabeth Lincoln Merricks
Barbara Burkehart Merritt
Lee Jay Messinger
William Elton Metcalfe
Jessie Goss Miars
Kenneth Alan Michal
David John Middleton
Cynthia Tesh Miles
Roxie Neal Miller
Jane Spencer Miller
Sharon Bowden Miller
Melinda Long Miller
Teresa Coleman Miller
Betsy Jacobs Miller
Katherine Causby Miller
Henry Lee Miller
May Eason Mills
James Theodore Millsaps
Charlotte B. Milstead
Maxie Randall Mintz
Chester Eugene Misenheimer
Margaret Isley Mitchell
Susan Harriett Mitchell
Devonne Camille Mitchener
Cathy Ann Mittelstadt
Patricia Parrott Moehle
Robert B. Moffett
Anne Shaw Montgomery
Cheryl Hunter Moody
Rhonda Reid Moody
W. Clifton Moone III
Dennis Joseph Moore
Judith Jameson Moore
Lisa Huskins Moore
Guthrie Lemmond Moore
Alison Aycock Moore
Ann Elizabeth Morano
Samuel Barrineau Morris
Michelle Diane Morris
Denise Maske Morris
Charles Danny Morris
Patricia Ann Morris
Ruby Barnes Morrisett
Sula Floros Morrow
Nancy Allmendinger Morse
Blondie Eve Morse
Holly A. Mortensen
Elizabeth McClernon Morton
Marcia McFarland Morton
Bruce Floyd Morton
Kathryn Germanow Morton
Paula Taylor Moser
Pamela Brady Moser
Patricia Brown Moss
Barbara Katz Moss
William Eagles Moss
Virginia Gilliam Moss
Ruth Jeanne Allen Moss
Arthur Laverne Moss, Jr.
Martha Lee Moye
Patricia Seray Moyer
Thomas Edward Muchlinski
Randall Edison Mullis
Robin Gray Mullis
Beverly Knes Mulvihill
Leigh Booth Munley
Timothy George Murphy
Elizabeth G. Murray
Ann Howell Myatt
Harold Gordon Myers
Ronald Irvin Nanney
Carola Higby Naquin
David Woods Dean Naquin
Karen Jane Neal
Pamela Bailey Nealy
Henry Woodward Needham
Hilda Ridge Neill
Susanne Marie Skinto Nelson
Wendell Arvid Nelson
Lynne Hundley Nelson
Janet Hartley Nelson
Fred Wilson Nelson, Jr.
John William Nemeth
Rebecca Bowden Nemeth
Wanda Fields Neudorfer
Susan Schlaseman Neufeld
Charles Robert Neufeld
Sharyn Elizabeth Neuwirth
Suzanne Allene Newsom
Margaret Lynne Newsome
Ann Gates Newsome
Michael Ray Newsome
Troy Wilson Newsome, Jr.
Dung Dong Nguyen
Susan Snipes Nichols
William Edward Niven
Angelia Denise Nivens
Mary Ellen Hammann Noble
Lawrence Russell Nolan
Sharman Pledger Norman
Mary Ann Ittner Norris
John Norman Norton, Sr.
Elmer Harris Norwood, Jr.
Jennifer Barringer O’Brien
Rebecca Jackson O’Connell
Carol Kincaid Odell
Donna Bowers Odum
Sue Sassamam Oehler
John Summers Oehler, Jr.
Brian John O’Grady
Kristine Maura O’Keefe
Donald Carson Oldham
Octavia Jeanne Olive
Barbara Allen Oliver
Nan St John Oliver
Rebecca A. Olive-Taylor
Nancy Barber Olson
Blanche Parrott Olson
Robert Stanley Olson, Jr.
Mark DeWitt O’Neal
Deborah Ann O’Neil
Peter James O’Neill
C. Saunders O’Quinn
Grady Cameron Ormsby
Myra Elizabeth Orr
Cynthia MacDow Osborne
H. Keneth Overcash
James Louis Overman
Barbara Igoe Owen
Wayne Leonard Owen
Bobby Gene Owens
John Marion Owens
Cheryl Lynne Oxford
Dana Miller Packman
Renee Tolley Page
Kathleen Deeney Paget
William Fisher Palmer
Sharon Palsha
Johnny Robert Parker
Linda Simmons Parker
Mary Shaw Parker
William Morten Parker
Louise Mullins Parris
Emily Catherine Parrott
William Moody Parry, Jr.
Charles Jennings Parsons
Frances Potter Parsons
Rebecca Peeler Parsons
Steven Randall Parsons
Ann Miller Partin
Hugh Elliott Partin, Jr.
Frederick Hubert Paschal
Carolyn Escott Paschal
Jessine Hart Pate
Robert Alvin Patten III
Melanie Adams Patterson
Jimmie Rucker Patton
Katherine Hannan Paul
Katharine Everhart Paull
Florence White Pauls
Timothy Richard Pauluzzi
Kathryn Stroud Pavese
Suzanne Garner Payne
Clare Burt Payne
Isabella Jewell Payonk
Cecile Martin Pearsall
Alice Bradley Pearson
Carol Ashley Pearson
Mary Whitesides Pearson
Douglas Lamar Pearson
John Louis Pecora
Victoria Greenwood Pecunia
Donna Bishop Peffley
Susan Cagle Pegg
Jacquelyn Ozment Pence
Jean Bordeaux Pender
Nancy Louise Pender
John Atlas Pendergrass
Stephanie Kay Penland
Raymond Benjamin Pennington
J. Andrew Peoples
Sammy Norris Perdue
Carlos Enrique Perera
Cline Michael Perkins
Julia Ware Perkins
Linda Crawley Perry
Susan Griffin Perry
Margaret Baker Perry
Mary Ann Rohrhurst Peter
Thomas Wood Peterkin, Jr.
Susan Brenner Peters
Elinor Ranta Peterson
Peggy Ann Hudson Peterson
Nancy Erichson Peterson
Dean Johnsey Peterson
Elaine Bond Peterson
Terry Keith Peterson
Henry Oscar Peterson III
Deborah Cobb Petty
John Richard Pfaff
Elizabeth Nixon Pfeltz
Beverly Simpson Pharr
Marilyn Andrews Pharr
Henry Neal Pharr III
Linda Farnsworth Phillipps
Erika Steffen Phillips
Linda Doerr Piccola
Kristin Marie Pickett
Winston Glascock Pierce
Susan Foley Pierce
Emily Scruggs Pike
Susan Frances Pippin
Glenda Baird Pittman
Edward Lee Piver
Margaret Pitser Pleasants
Gordon Wendell Plumblee
Dian Heffner Poe
Melinda Stancill Poe
William Dismukes Poe, Jr.
Susan Roberta Poole
Clyde Eulan Pope
Betty Hemphill Pope
Patricia Burns Porter
Hannah Nicholson Poteat
Angela Lindsay Potter
Rebecca Gaeth Powell
Jacqueline Garrison Powell
Harriette Dwelle Powell
Anne Hofler Powell
Frank Marion Powell
Nan Stutzman Powell
Carolyn Wilkerson Powell
Larry Gordon Powell, Jr.
William Thomas Powell, Sr.
Esther Mahiquez Prades
Sarah Moss Pratt
Mary Aunita Prebula
Harriet Gooch Preimats
Jodi Lieberstein Preminger
Rebecca Gail Premock
9
The Carolina Slate • G I V I N G
Myles O’Hara Presler
Sonya Prestridge
Elizabeth Miller Price
Ellen Yogman Price
Rachel Thompson Price
Jack McKee Price, Jr.
David Hyde Prince, Sr.
Christian Jennings Proctor
Brank Proffitt
Juanita Farmer Proffitt
Mary Fuller Propes
Dascheil Darrell Propes
Judy Tuttle Pruitt
Dorothy Gooch Pruitt
Jerry Lee Pruitt
Mayrelizbeth Pruitt Pryor
Andrea Ballew Puckett
Ronald Hughes Purdy
Phyllis Wall Purdy
Teresa Hare Putnam
Ralph Thomas Putnam
Robert Lesley Quackenbush
Nancy Lattimore Queen
Kathryn Watson Quigg
Helen Hamilton Ralston
Adele Kendall Randall
Elaine Morris Randles
Susan Dannenberg Randoing
Donna Wall Rankin
Alice Ann Ratliff
W. Lloyd Ratliff
Gretchen Yost Rauch
Kenneth Clyde Ray
Hilary Cooper Raymond
Ann McNeely Reagan
Charles Leon Recktenwald
Bobbie Newman Redding
Sandra Darling Reed
Mary McIver Reese
Julia Brittain Reeves
Jan Murray Reid
Mary Frances Quillen Reid
C. Ervin Reid
Miriam Davis Reid
Riley Earle Reiner
Tammi-Sue Sellati Remsburg
Robert Lewis Remsburg III
Marian Wightman Renfro
Sheela Sehorn Repoley
Madeline Armstrong Reynolds
Peter Lee Reynolds
Janet Ingle Reynolds
Judith Patton Rhinehart
Carter Lee Rhinehart, Jr.
Susan Fitz Rhodes
Herbert Calvin Rhodes
Leslie Huneycutt Rhodes
Damon Lee Rhodes
Randy Scott Rhyne
Christopher Edward Rice
James Eugene Rice
Roberta Cameron Rice
Joann Felske Richards
James Fred Richards, Jr.
Judy Sue Richardson
R. Nelson Richardson
Pamela Brewer Richardson
Justine Rivenbark Richardson
Erika Marx Richey
Amy Meredith Rickard
Helen Catherine Riddle
Nancy Georgiade Riefkohl
Robin Lee Riggins
Anne Hodgin Riggs
Linda Eddy Rings
Kevin James Ritter
Jessica Wood Rivers
James Rimmer Roberts
Thomas Gene Roberts
Davis Roberts
Frances Siler Roberts
Joanna Houston Roberts
Mary Beckom Roberts
Lynda Tysor Roberts
Thomas Adams Roberts, Jr.
Mary Moreland Robertson
William Lewis Robertson
Gary Paul Robinson
Wendy Allen Robinson
Vincent Fred Rockel, Jr.
Joyce Greene Rodman
Patricia B. Rodriguez
Rebecca Carrie Rogers
Phyllis Wall Rohn
Karen Folger Roll
Mary Jean Rollins
Ann Graham Rollins
Priscilla Bennett Rolls
Janice Morgan Romanet
Sandra A. Roman-Oertwig
Robin Theresa Rooney
Charles Hubert Rose
Kathryn Curlee Rose
Jean Pratt Rose
Janet Silverman Roseman
M. Keith Rosemond
Susan Leslie Rosenthal
C. Reid Ross
Johnny Ervin Ross
Linda Leonard Roth
Donald Henry Roth
Lori Hanninen Rothenberg
Roger Reagan Rountree
Hannah Wilkins Rouse
Leigh Pass Rowe
Ann Phenicie Roybal
Melissa Jo Rua
John Calvin Rudisill, Jr.
Cynthia Thompson Rudolph
Charles Telford Rudy
Edward Rudzik, Jr.
Meredith Michelle Rumfelt
Bonnie Hoyle Rumsey
Dexter Cleveland Rumsey III
Susan Shapiro Rush
Harllee Alston Russ, Jr.
Doris Herring Russell
Ivy Lawrence Russell
Carol Beckerdite Russell
Donald Albert Russell
Stephen Henry Rutherford
Rita Sandman Ryan
Stephen William Ryan III
Evelyn Weidman Ryder
Mohammad Yasin Saaed
Kay Ramsey Saenger
George Walter Saenger
Sarah Halecki Saia
Jerry Steele Sain
Everette Thomas Saintsing
Reiko Tento Sakata
Thomas David Sales, Jr.
Barbara Gatchell Salmon
Mary Taylor Salsbury
Mary Rogers Sanderford
Phil Snead Sanders
Ginger Wright Sanders
Julia Scott Sanders
R. David Sanderson
Virginia Coffield Sands
Alexander Paul Sands III
Jeannette LuAnn Sanford
Elizabeth Stewart Santelli
Gary Barnes Sappenfield
Jean Marie Harvey Sartain
Lenore Satterfield
Susan Murphy Saunders
Larry James Sawyer
Sallie Mann Scales
Bridget See Scanlan
Patricia Huske Schaefer
Michele Miller Schaich
Thomas Winden Scheft
Laurie Heffner Scheft
Harriet Sandra Schiffley
Joan Carol Schlegelmilch
Bonnie Laing Schneider
Mandy Suzanne Schnupp
Teresa Culberson Schrader
A. Terry Schraner
Pamela Johnston Schreiber
Elizabeth Finamore Schriefer
Carol Kirby Schroeder
Peter Gerald Schroeder
R. Alan Schueler
Mary Lou Ruyak Schuler
Elisabeth Fernandez Schwanz
Barbara Vail Schwartz
Holly Jayne Schwarz-Dykes
Mary Calhoun Scott
Brian Patrick Scott
Ann Patterson Scott
Mary Justice Scott
Charles Prioleau Scott
Marlene Gilley Scott
Miriam Ann Scott
Jack Hillman Scott, Jr.
Woodrow Herman Scriven
Georgiana Miller Searles
Kay Messink Sears
Glenna Safrit Sears
Jane Rowlett Seawell
Mary Angela Seippel
Nancy Skinner Self
Teresa Jansen Senter
Margaret Yntema Sereno
Dianne Busby Sergeant
Jennifer Lyn Serio
Dianne Thomas Setzer
Rebecca Grant Sexton
Myron Wade Sexton
Helen Ruth Seymour
Arnold Don Sgan
Doris Foulds Sgan
Margaret S. Shackelford
Susan Sargent Shaffer
Don Graves Shane
Janis Smith Shane
Elizabeth Myhre Shannon
Sheila Aronson Shapiro
Ira G. Shapiro
Jane Graham Sharp
Paula Cozart Shaw
Evelyn Foard Shaw
Beryl Bunn Shaw
Sandra Reid Shaw
Richard Alan Shaw
Alan Page Shaw, Jr.
Beth North Shea
Ninette Kyle Shearer
N. L. Shearouse
Nancy Dorn Sheehan-Becker
Lynda Sanders Shell
Judith Emily Shelton
J. Glenn Shelton
Nancy Adeline Watson Shelton
Jean Phillips Shepard
Franklin Glen Shepherd
Giles Freemont Shepherd III
Robert Walter C. Sherlin
Catherine Smith Sherrill
Thomas Edward Shewey
Sophie Shielman Shiffman
Kimberly Coble Shinn
Laura Williams Shinn
Agnes Bush Shives
Catherine Barger Shoemaker
LaTonya Jo Sholar
Jennifer White Shore
Adam Dale Short
Gail Phyllis Shulimson
James McBride Shumway
Beth Cameron Shwedo
Martha Mullaney Sibley
Deborah Corbin Sievert
James Potts Sifford, Jr.
Jimmy Ray Sigmon
Linda Pell Sigmon
Milton Johnson Sills
Edna Ann Silver
Melissa Coleman Simmons
Amy Smith Simmons
Lawrence Howard Simon
Janice Vieser Simons
Anne Miller Simons
Delores Parks Simpson
Sue Ann Sims
James Vernon Sims, Jr.
Phyllis Forrest Sinclair
Woodruff Franklin Sink
Betty Zeh Sink
Julie Plunkett Sizemore
S. Andrew Skakle
Debbie Coltrain Skakle
Bron D. Skinner
David Joseph Slaydon
Ellyn M. Slepian
Julie Anne Sliva
Marion Meddaugh Slocum
Kimberly Marie Sloper
Betty James Maness Slowinski
Allen Thurman Small
Lindley Moffett Small
Mary Davis McLendon Smart
Mary Potter Smethie
Edna Knighten Smit
S. Kent Smith
Sandra Tyson Smith
William Terry Smith
Polly Pierce Smith
Laurence M. Smith
Theresa Peele Smith
Elizabeth Cheney Smith
Barbara Murray Smith
Retha Godwin Smith
Carole Carter Smith
Glynda Warren Smith
Leslie Pittman Smith
Jane McDuffie Smith
Bettie Sue Smith
Traci Birken Smith
Lloyd Clifton Smith, Jr.
Clarence Edwards Smith, Jr.
Warren Woodlief Smith, Sr.
Richard Jackson Smith, Sr.
Elizabeth Happer Smythe
Sara Parietti Snow
Elizabeth Glenn Snow
Grady King Snyder
Mary Edwards Snyder
Timothy Robert Snyder
William Robert Snyder, Jr.
Jennifer Kilborn Sofjan
Christine Ekvall Sohl
Margherita Patterson Somers
Hans Kelly Somey
Judith Sommers
Jacqueline Toms Sorensen
Alfred Grayson Soulier
Sheila Douglas South
Alesia Risnes Sova
John Arthur Sova
Roger Allen Spach
Sharon Rowe Spangler
Richard Conrad Spangler III
Juanita Long Spanogle
Pet G. Spears
Larry O’Neal Spears
Rhonda Williamson Spell
Robert Eudean Spencer
Ben Harrison Spencer
Jodie Joines Spencer
Sharon Lynn Spencer
Karen Radford Spivey
Tony Lynn Spivey
Rebecca Hargis Spring
Elizabeth Johnson Springle
Patricia Johnson Sprinkel
Patricia McQueen Spruill
Joan Musselwhite Spyhalski
Wallace Braxton Stanback
Pamela Stone Stancil
Jack Milton Standefer
William Thornton Stanfield
Charles Bell Stanley
Lynda Brewer Stanley
Mollie Robey Stanley
Angela Eagle Stanley
Jan Poole Stanley
Callie Ratley Stanley
Elizabeth Whitfield Stansbury
Harry Austin Starnes
Diane Godwin Starrett
Wendy Lunsford Staskiewicz
Carolyn Steele
Marjorie Poe Steffe
Sue Fulton Stein
Joan Louise Steinberg
Amanda Tilley Stensland
Robert Henry Stenzel
Dorothy Gray Stephens
Michael David Stephens
Helen Gay Stephenson
Glinda Garris Stephenson
Robert Steven Stern
Donna Lipshitz Stern
Martha Cobb Stevens
Donna Wade Stevens
Marguerite Godwin Stevens
Susan Kenerly Stevenson
Donna Pettit Stevenson
Kathleen Kelleher Steward
Pauline Johnson Stewart
Betty-Lee Ponder Stickler
Jane Reames Stikeleather
Ann Buchly Stiles
Estelle McElwee Stinchcomb
Joyce Peterson Stines
Linda Berghorn Stinson
Linda Bowling Stipe
Ingrid Clay Stogner
Elizabeth Karsnak Stokes
Lizbeth Jane Stone
Kristen Bliven Stone
Linda Lasley Straughn
Charles Blaisdell Straughn
Lucile Meredith Streater
Jennifer Stephens Stringer
James K. Stringfield, Jr.
Carol Smith Strittmatter
Martha Narensky Strobel
Ronald Alan Strom
Charlene Hawkins Strong
Ashleyn Peterson Stroud
Stuart Lee Stroud
David Sheldon Stroud
Twyla Schmucker Stroup
Eugene Cruser Stryker
Dianne L. Sturdivant
Claudia Iverson Sturges
Theresa Mary Sull
Sue Sanders Sullivan
Eugene Charles Sullivan
Sandra Buntin Sullivan
Arthur Calvin Summers
Malinda Harrington Summey
Mark Sumner, Jr.
Alyce Sumrell
Susan McPhail Surles
Beverly Greene Surles
Gilbert Lanier Surles, Jr.
Mary Elizabeth Hibb Sutton
Beatriz Riera Swajkoski
David Allen Swann
Nancy Higginbotham Swann
Nicole Joyner Swanson
Carolyn Lewis Sweet
Krista Swensson
Betty Whaley Sykes
Alice Lee Peterson Sykes
John Richard Sykes
Louise Hale Taff
Joseph Edwin Tate, Jr.
Nancy Flood Tatum
Linda Kaczka Taylor
Rodney Bruce Taylor
Vivian Feemster Taylor
Emory Windfield Taylor
Debra Barnes Taylor
Miriam Modlin Taylor
Donald Eugene Taylor
Lanelle Selby Taylor
Sara Jane Taylor
Virginia Ryals Taylor
Patricia Porter Taylor
Janis Cline Taylor
Joseph Ovander Taylor, Jr.
Jesse Ireland Taylor, Jr.
Carol Jean Teal
L. Roy Teel
Jackson Howard Temple
Sandra Jean Temple
Karen Lynn Temple
Debra Fox Tenenbaum
Natalie Tunstall Tennant
Fay Fisher Terry
William Vereen Terry
Ellen Ford Terry
Wallace Ray Tew
Jo Ann Johnson Thackston
Penni Griffin Tharp
Lourene Pike Thaxton
Elizabeth Childers Thomas
James Carl Thomas
Ralph Murray Thomas
Adrienne Williams Thomas
Brenda Campany Thomas
Thomas Coolidge Thompson
Mark Robert Thompson
George Kenneth Thompson
Harriet Ming Thompson
Alexis Jackson Thompson
Lori Wisneski Thompson
Helen Donnell Thompson
Paul William Thompson, Jr.
Shirley Saieed Thorburn
Robert William Thorburn V
Judy Guillet Thorne
Robert Earl Thorne
Laura Woodbury Thornhill
Marion Osborne Thornton
James Alden Thorson
Marsha Hankins Thrasher
Donna Frye Throneburg
Lawrence M. Throneburg III
Kenneth Gray Tilley
Patricia Mallison Tilley
John Howard Tillotson
Mary Jane Tinker
Virginia Nelson Tinnell
Emily Dawn Tinsley
Sue Joyner Tisdale
Alfred Edmund Tisdale III
Robert Scott Todd
Byron Leslie Tolbert
Andrea Dawn Tolson
Kathryn Sousa Toma
Anne DeVane Tonissen
Rosemary Eagles Toumey
Elaine Barber Trant
Charles Amon Trant, Jr.
Patricia Moore Trapani
Frances Leigh Traylor
Linda Hockaday Treadway
Carol Patricia Tresolini
Thomas Egbert Truitt
Mary Victor Trumbo
Elizabeth Hood Truscott
Elizabeth Reece Tucker
Lenoir Williams Tucker
Francis Shirley Turnage
Barbara Houston Turner
Angie-Marie Miles Turner
Jane Forbes Turner
Judy Howell Turner
Marsha Caldwell Turner
Christy Cockrell Twiddy
George Ella Tyson, Jr.
Carol Thacher Umphress
Garry King Umstead
Gayle Stillwell Underdown
June Walker Underwood
Rhonda Johnson Underwood
Frances Stafford Unruh
W. Gray Upchurch
Patricia Shaw Upchurch
Jacqueline Wilkins Upp
Timothy John Urban
Toni Oster Urban
Diana Harry Utermohle
Kristin Conrad Uyttenhove
James Valsame
Sandra Lynn Van Hooydonk
William Ford Van Hoy, Jr.
Robert Lee Van Hoy, Sr.
Judith Rousseaux Van Namen
Victor Stuart Vance
Nancy Rose Vance
Paula Jean Vanderlinden
Donna Core Vann
Michael Dale Vann
Susan Sorensen Vaughn
Eloise Maddry Vaughn
Cheryl Pickett Veasey
Carol Williams Venese
Lynne Vernon-Feagans
Karen Sears Vertreese
Nancy Foltz Vest
Mary Jacob Vestermark
Barbara Joy Vetter
R. Steven Vetter
Debra Knuebel Vetter
Nancy Walston Vick
Cynthia Crumpler Vincent
Ronald Wayne Violette
Susan Davis Virgin
Claudia Viveros
Charles Triston Vizzini, Jr.
Elizabeth Freeze Voiers
David Edward Von Canon
Tracy Lynne Voreis
Elizabeth Waddell
James Radford Wade
Julia Blythe Wade
Martha Dickens Wade
Lewis Jackson Wagstaff
Angelia Barkley Waitt
Gregory Michael Waitt
Mary Nolan Wakeford
Amy Leonard Walker
Lori Elizabeth Walker
Paula Hedgecock Walker
Margaret Franck Walker
Lewis Landren Walker
Latisha Kim Walker
Kathleen Malloy Walker
Wilbur Lincoln Walker, Jr.
Margaret Garrett Wall
Madelyn Paschall Wall
Laura Martin Wallace
Mary Pope Wallace
Mary Katharine Wallace
Virginia Price Waller
Sandra Joye Walser
Mark David Walters
Jane Dennis Walters
Lora Michelle Walters
Ralph MacArthur Walton
Sue Harvey Wampler
Elizabeth Morris Waples
Raisse Lynn Ward
Geraldine Butler Ward
Lewis Latane Ware
Elizabeth Tilley Ware
Marian Southerland Warehime
Edwin Lynn Warehime
Laura Forgeron Warren
Helen Frostick Warren
Rebecca Roberson Warren
Barbara Wade Warren
Stacie Stewart Warren
Lucy Rouse Warren
Eli Anderson Warren
Nancy Griffin Warren
John Crain Warren
William Lovelace Warren
D. Randolph Warrick, Jr.
Elizabeth Warriner
Patti Newsom Washington
Ann Marie Shaw Wasson
James Jay Wasson
Steven Paul Waterman
Loy Malone Waters
Steven Boyd Watkins
Carolyn Heuay Watlington
Ann Kissling Watson
Anne Page Watson
Emily Moorhead Watts
Celeste Black Watts
Mary Alexander Way
Brian Keith Weatherby
Amy Burgess Weaver
John William Weaver
Thomas Collier Webb
Helen Walker Webb
Carol Dement Weeks
Rylan Campbell Weisner
Tonya Kaiser Weitzel
Prentice Fridy Weldon
Wilson Osbourne Weldon, Jr.
John Ira Weldon, Jr.
Donna Stout Wells
Kenneth Wayne Wells
Sue Summerson Wells
Catherine Hebert Wells
Dixie Huske Wells
Darius Lathan Wells
Kitty Del Welsh
Holly Pearl Welstein
Harvey Louis Wensel
Margaret Jennings Wergley
Martha Kirkland West
William Osborne West, Jr.
Susan Duncan Westall
Woodrow Hillis Westall
Lillian Ann Lovin Wester
Barry Donald Wester
Michelle Lynn Cook Whalen
Janet McKeel Whalen
Louise Bauer Whealton
Leslie Wheaton
Kenneth Bradford Wheeler
Peter Richard Wheeler
Rebecca Clopper Wheeler
Linda Lee Whetstone
Sharon Fox White
Norma Gaskill White
Margaret Jane White
William Allen White
Diana Hallman White
Beverly Wright White
Barbara Smith White
Joyce Daughtry White
Sylvia Phillips White
Marietta Chamblee White
Lynda Ward Whitehead
Stephen Kenneth Whitfield, Sr.
George Terrill Whitlatch
Nancy Henderson Whitlatch
Zana Culbreth Whitmire
Peter Anthony Whittaker, Jr.
Andrew Heath Whittle, Jr.
Martha Fortune Wickers
Julia Stokes Wiedemann
John William Wienants
William Bryant Wilder
Alma Ann Wilder
Robert Brooks Wilhite
Laura Anne Wilkerson
Amelia Wilkie
Catherine Bradley Wilkinson
Patricia Stanley Wilkinson
Elisabeth Smith Wilkinson
Emily Harris Wilkinson
Elizabeth Cheatham Wilkinson
William K. Wilkinson II
Robert Watson Wilkinson IV
Charles W. Wilkinson, Jr.
Ann Bruton Willard
Teresa Holland Williams
Sara Alice Swigart Williams
Richard Tyrone Williams
Charles Ray Williams
Mozelle Ilene Williams
Mary Liipfert Williams
Ann Loftin Williams
Brian John Williams
William Claude Williams III
Kristy Peele Williamson
Victoria Saretto Williamson
Robert Jerome Williamson
John Graham Williard
Patricia Grant Williard
Lynn Elizabeth Williford
Cheryl Owens Williford
L. Jesse Williford, Jr.
Christine Laura Willis
Jennifer Brady Wilson
Richard Carlton Wilson
Sharon Wagner Wilson
Heather Wimmer
Sheila Wilson Winborne
Rona Kiser Winchester
James Charles Windham, Jr.
Herbert Larry Winecoff
Susan Shumaker Wingate
Mabel Livingston Winslow
Roy Garrett Winslow
Teresa Jewell Winstead
Lyda Wicker Winstead
Elizabeth Swanner Winstead
Susan Grant Winstead
Kimberly Bonds Winston
Tara Halladay Winter
Amy Booe Witherow
Virginia Wainwright Wolf
Laura Evans Wolf
Michael Norris Wollett
Elizabeth Setliff Wollett
Amy Elizabeth Wollin
Pamela Lesley Wolters
Elizabeth Chappell Womack
Margaret McLean Womble
Burdine Womble
David Shiel Wood
Elizabeth Biedenbach Wood
Kathy Sherrill Woodby
Cheryl McNeill Wooddell
Catherine Cummings Wooddy
Deborah Anderson Wooden
Larry Wilson Woodrow
Martha Wilkinson Woods
Andy Green Woods
Marlene Overman Wooten
James Franklin Wooten
Gerry Robertson Working
Brian Lee Worley
Susan Thomas Worley
Michelle Grigsby Worthington
Jacquelyn Steed Wray
Nancy Sikes Wren
Thomas Graham Wright
Eleanor Boyd Wright
Walter Keith Wyatt
Cynthia Taylor Wyatt
Carol-Ann Tadlock Wyman
Pat Wynns
Ronald Eugene Wyrick
David Barrington Yale
Mary Griffith Yale
Janet Jones Yale
Martha B. Yarborough
Peggy Elliott Yates
Charles Clegg Yates*
Sherri Smith Yelton
Larry Eugene Yelton
Patricia Cronin Yesulaitis
Elizabeth Jeanette Yopp
Alice Hanson Yopp
Jean Williams Young
G. Anthony Yount, Jr.
Jennifer Newton Yow
William Allen Ziegler
Carmena Barnes Zimmerman
Lisa Moore Zissette
Terri Phillips Zobel
Tonya Jones Zucker
Friends
Dwight W. Allen
Anuket Arabian Farm
Roger Lee Beahm
Wendy Louise Beahm
Nancy P. Branch
Beth Ann Broadway
Linda Carl
Sherry B. Coble
Cooper, Davis & Cooper
John O. Dabney
Daniel Design Associates
Kisa M. Davison
Arlene Fingeret
Graco Vending Company, Inc.
Green’s Property Managment
and Sales
Beverly Ann Bryant Holt
Claudia B. Horowitz
Indian Tuff Tank of
Greensboro, Inc.
Jereann King
Page McCullough
Edward L. Moore
Oshaguard
Juanita Childers Thomas
Unichem, Inc
Gerald Unks
Uptown Beauty Nook
Upward Bound Alumni
Association
Karen Wallace-Meigs
Barbara Hanna Wasik
John and D. Kim Wright
Yeargin Insurance Agency, Inc
*Deceased
The School of Education thanks the many alumni and friends who made financial contributions. We have made every effort to produce an accurate list of contributors. If an error or omission has
occurred, please accept our apology and notify the School’s Development Office at 919/843-8596 or [email protected].
10
C L A S S N O T E S • The Carolina Slate
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Keeping up-to-date with alumni . . . Let us know what YOU are doing!
1950s
Rabbi David Kraus
M.Ed. ’55
Created a CD based on the Kraus Shapiro
Sequential Efficiency Analysis (KSSEA), a
1976 work by Rabbi Kraus designed to
address non-learning situations and to
encourage teachers to be more creative.
1960s
Jo Anne Knott Whitt
A.B.E.D. ’65
Graduated summa cum laude from NC
Central University in 1992 with an M.A. in
school counseling. Passed the National
Board for Certified Counselors in June 1996.
Resides in Roxboro, NC.
1970s
Denise Graham Andrews
B.S.S.T. ’73
Science department chairperson, AlamanceBurlington Schools, Graham, NC. Received
a Fulbright Teacher Exchange for 2000-2001
to teach at Priestlands School in Lymington,
England.
Michael L. Boner
B.A. Ed. ’75
National Director of Corporate Accounts,
Roche Diagnostics, Maryland. Baby girl,
Bailey Augusta Boner, born December 31,
1999 to Michael and his wife, Maureen
Maney Boner.
Dale F. Campbell
A.B.Ed. ’71
Received the 2000 National Leadership
Award from the American Association of
Community Colleges, recognizing his longterm and significant contribution to community colleges since the early 1970s. Currently
is Professor and Director of the Institute of
Higher Education, University of Florida.
Virginia Johnson Dickens
Ph.D. Special Education ’77
Professor of Special Education at Fayetteville
State University, NC. Was honored with the
2000-2001 Fayetteville State University
Teacher of the Year Award.
Floyd Henry Edwards
Ed.D. ’72
Retired from East Tennessee State
University in 1992 as Professor Emeritus and
Associate Dean of College of Education.
Served as member of Secondary Commission
(1980-1992) and Elementary Commission
(1994-2000) of Southern Association of
Colleges and Schools (SACS). Continues to
serve Latin American Committee with
school evaluations of American type schools
in Mexico, Brazil, Paraguay, Costa Rica,
Honduras, and most recently, Port Au
Prince, Haiti, in March 2000.
Nancy Carter Edwards-Fowler
M.Ed. ’71
Associate in research (retired), Duke
Medical Center. “Enjoying living with the
deer, rabbits, and turtles in Chatham
County, NC.” In Blowing Rock, NC, parttime beginning in November 2000.
Janie (Clark) Lindle
B.A. ’76
Professor at the University of Kentucky in
the College of Education, Department of
Administration and Supervision. Received
the 2000 Senior Faculty Award for Service
from the UK College of Education.
Appointed “Interim Principal” for a local
public middle school for the 2000-2001 academic year. Continues to serve part-time as
UK professor teaching classes and advising
graduate students, but will return to full professorial responsibilities in the 2001-2002
academic year. Janie asserts, “Some professors choose ‘exotic’ sabbaticals in foreign
lands. What could be more ‘exotic’ for education faculty than a middle school?”
Barbara Hamaker Murray
B.A. ’79
Language arts teacher at Phillips Middle
School in Chapel Hill, NC. Earned National
Board Certification in EarlyAdolescence/
English Language Arts in 1998. Awarded the
Rashkis Chair for Excellence in Teaching
Middle School Language Arts, 2000-2002.
Eunice Doman Myers
B.A. ’71, M.A. ’73, Ph.D. ’77
Spanish Division Coordinator at Wichita
State University; served as Graduate
Coordinator for 16 years. Co-editor of four
volumes of proceedings from the Wichita
State University International Conference
on Foreign Literature (which she organized
for 12 years). Working on a book on the
Spanish contemporary author, Rosa
Montero.
John F. Parkman
A.B. ’71, M.Ed. ’72, C.A.C.S. ’80
Has accepted new position as Director of
Guidance and Counseling at Oxford Hills
Comprehensive High School, a technical
and academic high school of 1250 students
in South Paris, Maine. Is also in his final
year as President of the Maine Counseling
Association, but will continue as its new
treasurer.
Alline (Bagley) Riddick
B.A. English Education ’71
Recently promoted from Assistant
Superintendent to Superintendent of
Schools in Franklin City Schools, Virginia.
Robert Rider
M.A.T. Health & Physical Education ’73,
Ph.D. Curriculum & Instruction ’78
Entering 22nd year as a professor in the
College of Education at Florida State
University. For the past three years has
served as director of the Center for the Study
of Teaching and Learning, in addition to
duties as professor of physical education.
Recently appointed to position of Associate
Dean of Graduate Studies and Research in
the College of Education at FSU. Also,
recently received a $1,300,000 grant to
direct the Youth Fitness and Tobacco
Prevention/Education Project, funded by the
Florida Department of Health.
Jane Smith
A.B.Ed. ’79
Was named Teacher of the Year for
Cumberland County (NC) Schools.
Currently is eighth-grade science teacher at
R. Max Abbott Middle School in
Fayeteville, NC. Last spring, she donated
one of her kidneys to a student through
transplant surgery at UNC Hospitals.
Russell (“Russ”) VerSteeg
A.B. Latin Education ’79
Beginning his 10th year teaching at New
England School of Law. Also teaching at
Boston College Law School. Completed his
second book, Early Mesopotamian Law, to be
published by the Carolina Academic Press
(Durham, NC). Currently working on a
series of books about ancient law, including
one on Egypt.
1980s
Jackie Blount
B.M.Ed. ’83, M.A.T. ’89, Ph.D. ’93
Recently named Associate Dean for
Research and Teacher Education at the
College of Education, Iowa State University,
Ames.
Beverly Farrow Brown
B.A. ’87, M.S.A. ’97
Recently named principal of Union
Elementary School in Shallotte, NC, having
been a NC educator for 12 years.
Ted R. Eddings
B.A. Music Education ’81
Recently promoted to Vice-president of
Human Resources for Blumenthal Mills, Inc.
in Marion, SC. Resides in Myrtle Beach, SC,
with his wife and three children.
G. Stanley Hughes
A.B.E.D. Social Studies Education ’89
Living in Wilmington, NC, with wife Lisa
and children Austin (5 years old) and
Chandler (1 year old). Co-owner of a
Memphis-style rib house called Sticky
Fingers, which has 8 locations around the
Southeast.
David Kaplan
Ph.D. Counseling Psychology ’85
Appointed Chair of the Department of
Counselor Education and Rehabilitation
Programs at Emporia State University in
Emporia, Kansas.
Jennifer C. Smith
A.B. Middle School Social Studies/Language
Arts ’86
Taught language arts for 14 years in
Asheboro City Schools and Chatham
County Schools, NC. In 1997, earned
National Board Certification in
English/Language Arts. As of July 1, 2000,
became ILT Coordinator, a new position for
Asheboro City Schools.
1990s
Carla Jackson Arrowood
A.B. Secondary Math Education ’94
New baby, Alex Landon Arrowood, born on
August 31, 2000.
Celeste Michelle Beck
B.A. Secondary Latin Education ’98
Recently returned from teaching with the
JET Program in Japan after 2 years. Accepted
into the Arts in Education Master’s Program
at Harvard University’s Graduate School of
Education for fall semester of 2000.
Lisa Scott Bodenheimer
B.A. Middle Grades Education ’92
Teacher at LEAP Academy, WinstonSalem/Forsyth County Schools in NC.
National Board Certification—Early
Adolescent Generalist ’99. Celebrated birth
of son, McChristian Scott Bodenheimer,
August 2, 2000.
Betty McDaniel Buchanan
B.A. Elementary Education ’93
Teaches 2nd and 3rd grades in Johnston
County, NC. Married Brian L. Buchanan on
December 11, 1994. New baby, their first
child, Benjamin Matthew Buchanan, born
June 13, 2000 (7lbs. 15 oz.). Taking the
2000-2001 school year off “to be a Mommy.”
Elaine Cusick
M.A. Early Childhood Education & Family
Support ’98
Vice-Principal and Director of the Early
Childhood Program, International School of
Tanganyika, Ltd., in Tanzania, where she
has received “hands-on training” in educa-
tional administration. In addition, has sharpened her Swahili bargaining skills and “has
fallen in love with the animals and landscape, not to mention the people of
Tanzania.”
Jennifer Sherrill Davis
M.A.T. ’93
Teacher/Instructional Support Specialist,
Cleveland Elementary, Johnston County
Schools, NC. New baby, Jonathon Wrighter
Davis, born August 17, 1999.
Tangula Diggs
B.A. ’91
Promoted to position of facilitator for the
academically/intellectually gifted for
Scotland County Schools, NC.
Jill Beeson Fisher
M.Ed. ’94
Promoted to position of field services manager for the Atlantic Coast Region of
Scholastic Book Fairs. Manages a team of 15
field representatives servicing school book
fairs in North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Virginia. Currently resides in Charlotte, NC.
Brent Fuqua
M.A.T. ’91
Director, Hoops of Hope Basketball Ministry
in Colorado Springs, CO, a Christian, nonprofit organization. Coordinates basketball
camps and ball-handling exhibitions around
the world. With wife Dina, a teacher, has a 1
year-old son, Seth.
Kim Langholz
M.Ed. ’91
Completed Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
degree in May 2000, Iowa State University.
Client education is an important part of
Kim’s new career. Continues to teach when
opportunities present themselves.
Christopher Allen Lassiter
B.A. ’97
High school teacher, Wake County Schools,
NC. Married on June 24, 2000, to Valerie
Elaine Ayers, a 1998 School of Education
graduate.
Emily Chevalier Moore
B.A. Elementary Education ’96
Kindergarten teacher at Penny Road
Elementary, Wake County Public Schools,
NC. Married in May 1999 to Brian E.
Moore, a 1996 UNC-CH graduate. Nominee
for the Wake County Teacher of the Year.
Winner of the Penny Road Elementary
Teacher of the Year Award for 1999-2000.
Kristen Stone (formerly Bliven)
A.B. Elementary Education ’98
1st grade teacher, Oakley Elementary
School, Buncombe County Schools, NC.
Married James Matthew Stone on June 17,
2000.
Leslie White
B.A. Spanish Education ’98
Spanish teacher, grades 3-5, at Ward
Elementary School in Winston-Salem, NC.
Earned her M.A. Ed. from Wake Forest
University in 1999.
Deaths
Gina D’Errico
Ph.D. ’97
Deceased, August 13, 2000
Walter John Taylor, Jr.
M.Ed. ’60
Deceased.
Charles Ray Williamson
C.G.R.E.D. ’77
Deceased, May 4, 2000.
11
What’s New? (Please print.)
Honors? New job? New address? New spouse? New baby?
Please keep us informed of what you’re doing, and we will share the information with other alumni through The Carolina Slate.
Name (please include former name used in school) ______________________________________________________Degree(s), year(s) _______________________________________________
Title____________________________________________________________________Employer ______________________________________________________________________________
Work address___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Phone (work) ________________________________________Fax _____________________________________________Email _____________________________________________________
Home address __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Phone (home)________________________________________Fax_____________________________________________Email _____________________________________________________
News _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
I would like to be involved with the School of Education by:
_____ serving on the Alumni Council or committee
_____ hosting an outreach meeting in my area
_____ assisting with recruitment of prospective students
_____ advising undergraduate or graduate students in my field of study
_____ supporting beginning teachers or other education professionals
_____ serving as a guest lecturer in a class at the School of Education
_____ other (please specify, or contact us to discuss possibilities)
Enclosed is my gift of $_______to the UNC-CH School of Education Foundation.
Designated annual giving levels are as follows:
Peabody Society
Dean’s Circle
Benefactors
Sponsors
Cornerstone Contributors
$2,000 or more (includes UNC-CH Chancellors’ Club status)
$500 - $1,999
$250 - $499
$100 - $249
$1 - $99
Every gift in any amount is needed, helpful, and appreciated. THANK YOU!
✁
Return to The Carolina Slate, School of Education, CB 3500, Peabody Hall, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3500.
Nomination Form for Alumni Awards (see article, p.1)
Return this form by May 1, 2001, with a letter no more than two pages in length, describing the candidate’s achievements
along with a biographical description of education, experiences, and activities.
Name of nominee ________________________________________________________________________________________
Mailing address / City, state, zip ____________________________________________________________________________
Phone (work) ____________________________________________ (home) ________________________________________
Email __________________________________________________________________________________________________
This candidate is nominated for (check one): ❐ Distinguished Leadership Award
❐ Outstanding Young Alumni Award
❐ Alumni Achievement Award
❐ Peabody Award
Nominator’s name________________________________________________________________________________________
Mailing address / City, state, zip ____________________________________________________________________________
Phone (work) ____________________________________________ (home) ________________________________________
Email __________________________________________________________________________________________________
Return completed form by May 1, 2001 to:
School of Education Alumni Council, CB 3500, Peabody Hall, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3500. (Fax 919/962-1533)
Carolina
The
SLATE
Office of the Dean
School of Education, CB# 3500
UNC-Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3500
W in t e r 2 0 0 1
Alumni Awards
Distinguished Leadership A war d recognizes exceptional
service furthering the mission of the School of Education.
Alumni Achievement Awar d recognizes exceptional
achievement of an alumnus/a who personifies the
School of Education’s tradition of excellence and brings
distinction to him/herself and the School.
Outstanding Young Alumni A war d recognizes an
alumnus/a who has graduated within the last 10 years
and has shown outstanding leadership and exceptional
commitment to furthering the mission of the School of
Education.
Peabody Awar d recognizes an outstanding individual who
has made a significant impact on the field of education.
✁
Nonprofit Organization
US Postage
PAID
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Chapel Hill, NC 27599-1110
The Carolina Slate is published
twice a year by the Dean’s Office
of the School of Education for a
wide audience of alumni and
friends.
Phone 919 966-7000
Fax
919 962-1533
Email [email protected]
www.unc.edu/depts/ed/
Madeleine R. Grumet
Dean
Linda D. Baucom (M.A. ‘72)
Editor
Lisa E. Schmid
Editorial Staff
Office of Design Services,
University Relations
Design and Publication
18,500 copies of this public document
were printed at a cost of $6,950
or $.38 per copy.
12
Visit us at . . .
www.unc.edu/depts/ed/
“Story Time,” the image incorporated in the masthead, is
reprinted, by permission of the
editor, from Lesley Nolin,
Howard A. Swan, & Peter C.
West (Eds.), Historical images of
education. (1991). DeKalb, IL:
Northern Illinois University,
College of Education, p. 72.