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DeBiase Wins Arch Coal Teacher
Achievement Award
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (March 5, 2006) – Do you know why
spiders don’t stick to their own webs?
Denise M. DeBiase’s kindergarten
students do. “Young children are like
sponges, ‘soaking up’ information
presented,” she notes. “It is quite
gratifying to see their faces light up
when they explore new experiences and
learn new things.”
It would be exciting to see those faces
when DeBiase shares her own new
experience. She became one of only 12
teachers statewide to receive a 2007
Arch Coal Teacher Achievement Award.
Steven F. Leer, Arch Coal chairman and
chief executive officer, made the
announcement during a presentation
ceremony at the state capitol. He was
accompanied by West Virginia Governor
Joe Manchin; First Lady Gayle Manchin;
Arch Coal President and Chief Operating
Officer John Eaves; and West Virginia
Education Association President Charles
Delauder.
“Wouldn’t learning be fun in Ms.
DeBiase’s class?” asks Leer. “Imagine
working in small teams at the elementary
level, learning more about her ‘fact of
the day,’ and then taking one of her
special ‘lunchbox’ stories home to share
with your family. She is definitely a
very special teacher.”
DeBiase teaches at Mylan Park
Elementary, Morgantown, W.Va. “I believe
all students can and will learn, but not
always in the same way or at the same
rate,” she notes. “Many and varied
teaching methods and styles must be
employed to meet the needs of all
students in a classroom.
“Teaching today is very different from
how it was when I started,” adds the
34-year teaching veteran, who sometimes
shares her experiences with student
teachers. “I always tell them if they
truly love children and want to make a
difference in their lives for the good,
be a teacher. They can be the one stable
influence that can guide a child down
the path of lifelong learning.”
DeBiase earned her bachelor’s and
master’s degrees +15 hours at West
Virginia University. She has continued
her development over the past three
decades through participation in
numerous and varied in-services,
conferences and workshops. “One is never
too old to learn new things and new ways
to make teaching exciting for both me
and my students,” she notes. At school,
DeBiase has participated in
education-based forums, committees and
councils. She has helped raise funds for
the Leukemia Society, March of Dimes and
American Heart Association. DeBiase also
has served in the Neighborhood Watch
Group, and she is an active member of
her church choir.
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.
The teacher recognition awards are
underwritten by the Arch Coal Foundation
and supported in program-promotion by
the West Virginia Department of
Education, the West Virginia Education
Association and the West Virginia
Library Commission. The Arch Coal
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, Inc. is the nation’s second
largest coal producer. The company’s
core business is providing U.S. power
generators with clean-burning,
low-sulfur coal for electric generation.
Through its national network of mines,
Arch supplies the fuel for approximately
6 percent of the electricity generated
in the United States. The company is
listed on the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE: ACI) and maintains its corporate
headquarters in St. Louis, Mo.
Information about each of the 12
recipients is posted on the Arch Coal
Web site: www.archcoal.com.
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