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Eckardt
Named Arch Coal Teacher Achievement
Award Recipient
GILLETTE,
Wyo. (May 6, 2008) – “We touch the
future every day,” says Ann Eckardt, who
teaches English and theater at Cody High
School.
“The life of a teacher is incredibly
rewarding, enormously influential, and
always challenging,” says Eckardt, who
has been a teacher for 14 years.
Today, Eckardt received another reward
for her teaching. She was one of only 10
Wyoming teachers to receive a 2008 Arch
Coal Teacher Achievement Award. The
awards were made at a ceremony at
Campbell County High School, where Arch
Coal Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer Steven F. Leer, Governor Dave
Freudenthal, Wyoming Superintendent of
Public Instruction Dr. Jim McBride, and
Wyoming Education Association President
Kathryn Valido honored the recipients.
“Ann Eckardt uses her understanding of
brain-based learning in her classroom,
while integrating the value or
individuality of each student,” says
Leer.
Eckardt bases her teaching on the
concept of brain-based learning, having
read about the subject and attended
conferences and workshops. She has
integrated what she has learned into her
teaching in the classroom. As a result,
she employs a number of practices that
keep her students’ brains active
throughout a class period.
“Because our brains slow down after 17
minutes, the students and I are up and
moving about every 20 minutes,” she
explains. “Activities may include
vocabulary charades, forming partners by
finding someone with the same colored
socks, or a three-minute round-dance.
This forces the two sides of the brain
to communicate, which leads to better
learning.
“The strength that affects my teaching
most is my ability to establish a
relationship with any student,” says
Eckardt. “I am an attentive listener and
truly interested in my students’ lives
outside the classroom, and they know I
accept them just the way they are.”
“Whether Ann is working with an
advanced, high achiever or a troubled,
low achiever, she is as selfless a
person as there is,” says colleague
Vincent Cappiello.
Eckardt has a Bachelor of Arts degree
from Gonzaga University, Spokane, Wash.,
a Master of Arts degree from Lesley
College, Cambridge, Mass., and earned
National Board Certification. She is a
Certified Support Person with the
National Board Certification program,
mentoring candidates.
She also is active in her community,
both with her church and as a member of
Families on the Frontlines, a support
group for the military serving in Iraq
or Afghanistan and their families in
Wyoming. She is the mother of a
twice-deployed Marine. At school, she is
engaged in Reading Excellence programs
that involve both students and their
parents, Link Crew, a program that eases
the transition into high school of
freshmen. She also mentors new teachers.
The award is underwritten by the Arch
Coal Foundation. In addition to
recognition, award recipients receive a
personal, $2,500 unrestricted cash
prize, a distinctive trophy and a
classroom plaque. Nominations of the
teachers are made by the public, and
selection is made by a blue-ribbon panel
of the teachers’ peers, all former
recipients of the Arch Coal award.
This is the eighth year the Arch Coal
Teacher Achievement Awards have been
made in Wyoming. The program is
supported by the Department of
Education, the Wyoming Education
Association, Taco John’s, Loaf ‘n Jug,
and the Wyoming library community.
Arch Coal is one of the nation’s largest
coal producers, and its Thunder Basin
Coal Company subsidiary employs more
than 1,200 people in Wyoming. Thunder
Basin’s Black Thunder and Coal Creek
mines sell more than 90 million tons of
cleaner-burning, low-sulfur coal on an
annual basis. Arch Coal is traded on the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: ACI) and
maintains its corporate headquarters in
St. Louis, Mo.
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