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Paula A. Mitchell Wins Arch Coal
Teacher Achievement Award
March
15, 2005 - Paula A. Mitchell believes
there may be no more important time to
be a teacher and teach well than today.
“Being a teacher is a rewarding career
that enriches my own passion for
learning, as I take a role of
responsibility in the lives of young
people,” she says. “I would not trade it
for the world.”
Her passion shows. Today Mitchell was
among only 12 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.
“Paula Mitchell 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.”
Mitchell teaches fourth-, fifth-, and
sixth-grade students at Brandywine
Elementary, Brandywine, W.Va. “My
teaching philosophy is to keep things
simple, be caring and fair, and give
students a foundation for a rapidly
changing world,” she says. “Children
should be thinking, and this needs to be
encouraged. After all, children are our
future, and how we treat and educate
them will affect our future. I consider
the best learning environment to be one
in which children are actively
involved.”
Mitchell earned her bachelor’s degree in
elementary education at James Madison
University, Harrisburg, Va. Her
involvement with the West Virginia
Writing Assessment program led Mitchell
to begin presenting writing workshops
across the state. She has served on the
Writing Assessment Redesign, Teacher
Mentoring, Student Teacher Training, Job
Shadowing, Crisis Team, Career Day and
other committees. Mitchell actively
supports her community through various
initiatives and includes her students in
such activities as well.
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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