An apple for the teacher?
Banners in the sky? How will you celebrate Teacher Appreciation Week?
Learn about the gestures that touch educators' hearts. This week, Education
World reports what teachers say makes them feel honored and valued. Included:
Activities for administrators, parents, and students to show teachers
just how much they mean during Teacher Appreciation Week.
For the past 15 years, communities across the country have set aside
the first full week of May, including the second Tuesday, National Teacher
Day, to shower their teachers with well-deserved thanks. Are you looking
for the very best ways to show your teachers just how important they are?
Education World asked teachers around the country about their favorite
Teacher Appreciation Week celebrations.
'TO EAT IS HUMAN; TO DIGEST, DIVINE' -- Mark Twain
"At my school, the parents from the Parent-Teacher Club give us a wonderful
luncheon," Janice Goff, from Dry Branch (Georgia) Elementary School, told
Education World. "This is one of only two times during the year that our
whole faculty gets to sit down to a meal together. Parent volunteers keep
our classes for one and a half hours while we enjoy ourselves and visit
with one another. We are treated royally during Teacher Appreciation Week,
and it does make us feel that we get some recognition for our hard work."
Many teachers look forward to just such a peaceful, leisurely meal among
friends during Teacher Appreciation Week. Add decorations, tablecloths,
and real dishes, and you can turn a teachers room into an oasis of elegance.
"Our parents outdid themselves," said Sarah Maxwell, from St. James
Episcopal School in Del Rio, Texas. "We were served breakfast every day.
Our lounge was decorated with spring flowers and paper butterflies. Different
classes had made each day's tablecloth during rainy days when they stayed
inside for P.E. We are very grateful as teachers to have such support,"
Maxwell told Education World. "I feel very lucky!"
AN APPLE A DAY
A small token to commemorate each day of the week can make a very big
impression. Just ask Dee DeCarlo from Kingwood Elementary School in West
Virginia.
"Our PTA and student council have given the teachers a gift each day,"
DeCarlo told Education World. She received a soup bowl with a packaged
soup mix, a candy-filled plastic apple, a tea bag with a saying attached,
a homemade brownie, and a bag of popcorn. "Both groups took the time to
put little poems in each gift! The gifts were both kind and much appreciated,"
DeCarlo added.
Another great take on this daily dose of fun is the Celebrate
Your Child's Teachers page on the Learning Network. Among the suggestions:
Parents might help students come up with a list of five nice things to
do for their teachers during Teacher Appreciation Week -- nice things
such as putting away supplies, making a card, or helping clean out a classroom
closet. Kids love to help their teachers and will jump at the chance to
give their own kind of thanks.
"One of my students nominated me for Disney's American Teacher Award,"
Ellen Berg told Education World. Berg, who teaches at Turner M.E.G.A Magnet
Middle School in St. Louis, Missouri, said, "I actually cried. I have
never received such a beautiful compliment in all of my life."
Disney has a new award program for teachers. The Disney
Hand Teacher Awards honors creativity in teaching.
WORDS FROM THE HEART
"In a letter, a first grader told me that she hoped I would never forget
her because she would never forget me," Jacqueline Margraf, who teaches
at Wading River (New York) Elementary School, told Education World. "Her
mom framed the letter, and it sits on my desk at school!"
Teachers agree that good teaching is its own reward, but Teacher Appreciation
Week is a great time to let teachers know how they have touched kids'
lives. Although every teacher appreciates the hoopla and gifts, "It's
the visits and letters from former students that mean the most to me,"
Deborah Bambino from Central East Middle School Annex in Philadelphia
told Education World.
"I received a beautiful letter from the mother of a student who succeeded
at my school after very difficult years elsewhere," Jackie Hastings of
Middletown (Connecticut) High School told Education World. "I got to watch
the light go on for him! Making a difference -- that's enough thanks for
me. That's why I wanted to be a teacher in the first place."
FROM THE IDEA FILE
Do you need more ways to thank the teachers in your life? Teachers and
parents around the country told Education World about these favorites:
A former student visited.
A current or former student sent a card.
The parent of a student sent a letter.
PTA volunteers made curtains and painted the faculty room.
PTA volunteers made poster boards with each teacher's name at the
top. They attached a marker to each poster board. Students signed the
posters with messages to each teacher.
A class made a thank-you book.
Parents volunteered in the classroom.
A year of photos were compiled into a video to be shown at a special
teachers' luncheon.
A class made a scrapbook.
A banner was flown on the school and on another building in town.
A billboard displayed thanks.
A message of thanks to teachers was posted on a local bank's sign.
Homemade gifts from students or their parents were given.
Flowers were brought in.
A festive cake was shared.
Books were purchased for the school library; bookplates inside those
books included the teachers' names.
Gifts or gift certificates from school business partners and other
local businesses were given.
A home-cooked "take-out" meal was provided for each teacher's family.
Classes created projects such as fruit baskets or buckets full of
school supplies.
Small daily treats, such as candy bars, fruit, key chains, pens or
pencils, mugs, T-shirts, tote bags, personalized memo pads, stationery,
and especially messages were placed in teachers' mailboxes.
School principals and administrations show recognition of or participation
in Teacher Appreciation Week.
ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCE
Need more ideas? Check out this additional Internet resource for Teacher
Appreciation Week: About
National Teacher Day. This National Education Association site provides
a history of Teacher Day, the National Teacher Day Proclamation, sample
press releases, and additional activity suggestions for parents and administrators.
Many thanks to the following teachers and parents who contributed to
the Education World idea file:
Gail Braddock, Briarcrest Christian School, Memphis,
Tennessee
Leslie Connor, Madison School District PTA, Madison,
Connecticut