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Chapmanville’s Katherine Manley Earns
Arch Coal Teacher Achievement Award
March
15, 2005 - After hearing the story of
Katherine Manley’s early years, some
might want to count their blessings.
It’s a wonder she survived at all, let
alone excel at one of the world’s most
important professions.
“When I was 6, my peg-legged father sold
our two-room shack in Kanawha County for
30 cans of evaporated milk and moved the
family to Logan County, where we
continued to struggle with poverty long
after I graduated,” Manley relates. “I
stood on street corners, begging with my
father, until I was 14. When we weren’t
street begging, we carried shopping bags
door-to-door, asking for food and
clothes.”
Manley spent summers gathering scrap
iron, scavenging through dumps and
picking berries to help feed the family.
“When my mother could stand it no
longer, she ran away, leaving me to care
for my crippled father and younger
brother and sister,” she says. “During
those challenging years, a few teachers
took time to encourage me, praise my
classroom accomplishments and give me
basic needs. Because of those teachers,
I realized my dream. Now I want to pay
it forward.”
Most would agree that debt’s long been
paid. In fact, you might say Manley just
received a well-deserved refund. Today
she was among only 10 teachers
throughout the state to earn a 2005 Arch
Coal Teacher Achievement Award. Steven
F. Leer, Arch Coal president and chief
executive officer, made the announcement
during a presentation ceremony at the
state capitol. He was accompanied by
West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin;
Secretary of Education and Arts Kay
Goodwin; State Schools Superintendent
David Stewart; and West Virginia
Education Association President Tom
Lange.
“Katherine Manley is very deserving of
this honor,” says Leer. “There are so
many excellent teachers in the state.
She is obviously among the ‘best of the
best.’ Arch Coal believes classroom
teachers, who nurture the love of
lifelong education in our children,
deserve the respect and admiration of
all West Virginia citizens.”
“Mrs. Manley is the kind of teacher that
everyone hopes they’ll get at least once
in their lifetime,” notes Faye Bruun, a
ninth-grade student at Chapmanville
Middle School, where Manley teaches
language arts to eighth-graders. “I knew
her before I met her, because students
she’d had in the past commented about
her and the way she taught. I soon came
to realize what they meant.”
Manley believes the most important thing
she does for students is simply to “be
there.” “No matter what their home
environment or instructional level, I
take them as far as they can go,” she
says. “I strive to reach all my children
by designing and implementing
instructional strategies that reach them
socially, emotionally and
intellectually. I take time to talk to
them about their interests – movies,
books, music, TV shows. They know I
truly care about their whole being, not
just the academics.”
Manley earned a bachelor’s degree at
Marshall University, Huntington, and a
master’s degree at Charleston’s West
Virginia Graduate College. She continues
her education through a variety of
educational workshops and institutes.
She serves on numerous committees aimed
at enhancing education throughout her
district, region and state. Manley has
twice received the Arch Golden Apple
Award. She was a finalist for the 1999
West Virginia Teacher of the Year and
the 1999 Wal Mart Teacher of the Year.
Manley further serves her community
through a range of civic-, church- and
education-related activities.
In addition to recognition, award
recipients receive a $2,500 unrestricted
cash prize, a distinctive trophy and a
classroom plaque. The West Virginia
Foundation for the Improvement of
Education makes a $1,000 award to each
recipient’s school for use with at-risk
students.
Arch Coal is supported by the West
Virginia Department of Education, the
West Virginia Education Association and
Speedway in program promotion. Arch
Coal’s Teacher Achievement Awards is the
longest running, privately sponsored
teacher recognition program in the
state. Nominations of the teachers are
made by the public and selection is made
by a blue-ribbon panel of the teachers’
peers – previous recipients of the
award.
Arch Coal is the nation’s second largest
coal producer. Nearly 2,000 people are
employed at Arch’s operations in West
Virginia. The company is listed on the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: ACI) and
maintains its corporate headquarters in
St. Louis, Mo.
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