Educator Honored for Energetic Passion and Student Interaction
September 21, 2009
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Educator Honored for Energetic Passion and Student Interaction
VALDOSTA - The Boston Tea Party, the Great Depression, Pearl
Harbor and the XYZ Affair -- from A to Z students in Gwen
Desselle’s U.S. history class moved through the alphabet naming
events that spanned 230 plus years. In game show fashion, the 2010
Georgia Teacher of the Year kept the students engaged as they
reviewed for their final test in U.S. history.
Her energetic teaching style and interaction with students is a
clear indication as to why she received the highest award given to
a Georgia public school teacher.
Desselle, a 32-year veteran educator from Moultrie, Ga., earned her
bachelor’s, master’s and educational specialist degrees from
Valdosta State University. Her teaching career began at Valdosta
High School in 1977 and then a few short years later she returned
home to Colquitt County, where she has been ever since.
Desselle and her husband, James, a middle school social studies
teacher, are avid travelers, who have visited every state in the
nation and many European countries. Their quest to see the world
has impacted their son, Jay, who is studying international affairs
at the University of Georgia.
“Our travels help us relate to the students -- we have stories and
pictures about the places we study and tell our students what it
was like in the past and how it has changed today,” Desselle
said.
Colquitt County Superintendent Leonard McCoy credits Desselle’s
success in her ability to bring history alive.
“Not only does she know it, she in a sense lives it through her
travels and the manner in which she presents it,” McCoy said.
“Humor plays a major role in her classes as she makes learning
fun.”
A voracious reader, Desselle conveys to her students the importance
of reading and how the knowledge it brings helps link subjects past
and present.
“I use a lot of anecdotes to share about figures from history,”
Desselle said. “I also bring a sense of humor -- I can laugh at
myself and get kids to laugh, too. I enjoy what I do and kids
realize it.”
She describes her teaching style as flexible and student oriented.
Her classroom lessons are interactive and incorporate a variety of
activities to help maintain the students’ interest and
involvement.
“I am always seeking a new and better way to help students learn,”
Desselle said. “I keep the lessons relevant -- no busy work and
every assignment has a purpose and is linked to the state
standards.”
Always looking for ways to engage the imagination of her students,
Desselle enjoys her job and realizes what she does is important and
works to gain trust and respect from each student.
“I am fair -- kids know I have their interest at heart and they
trust me to do what is best for them.”
As Georgia Teacher of the Year, Desselle will spend the 2009-10
school year traveling around the state as an advocate for the
teaching profession and conducting workshops and programs for
current and future educators. She will compete for the 2010
National Teacher of the Year and serve as an adviser to State
Superintendent of Schools Kathy Cox and the Georgia Department of
Education.
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