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Arch Coal
Names Davis Teacher Achievement Award
Recipient
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (Feb. 27, 2008) – When Melanie
Rowe Davis thinks about her teaching
philosophy, a vision of the 1970s action
figure Stretch Armstrong comes to mind.
“The amazing thing about Stretch was
that he could stretch his arms and legs
to protect himself and others from the
bad guys,” she notes. “When his work was
finished, his body reshaped back into
his muscular self, stronger than before
and ready to face the next challenge.
“Teaching the whole middle school child
is a challenge,” she adds. “To meet this
challenge head on and effectively impact
student learning, I must attempt feats
of flexibility, much like Stretch,
realizing that each student learns
differently, has a different skill level
and comes to my classroom daily with
varied emotional and physical needs.
Like Stretch, my strength as a teacher
is that I can stretch and morph into any
form and direction to meet the needs of
my students.”
Today Davis “morphed” yet again – and
found herself ranked among West
Virginia’s top teachers. She was among
only 12 teachers statewide to earn a
2008 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, West
Virginia Superintendent of Schools Dr.
Steve Paine and West Virginia Education
Association (WVEA) President Charles
Delauder.
“Melanie Davis is a role model from whom
we all could learn a valuable lesson,”
notes Leer. “She is determined to
overcome the challenges of her
profession, making her a stronger, more
effective teacher – to her own benefit
and that of her students, school and
state.”
Davis has taught middle school for
nearly a decade, most recently at
Ritchie County Middle School, Ellenboro,
where she teaches language arts to
seventh-grade students. One way she
holds students’ interest is by “flying
them around the world.” They start the
year with an airline ticket to a
learning adventure that begins the next
day.
“All year, we travel from country to
country, as we study literature from or
about that country,” Davis explains.
Once in flight, students flew back in
time and were attacked by German bombers
over London. After making an emergency
landing, they were transported by train
to the English countryside – like the
characters from The Lion, the Witch and
the Wardrobe, by C. S. Lewis. “At the
end of the year, students look through
their passports and reflect on the
learning that took place and the changes
in their skills and themselves,” she
adds.
Davis earned her bachelor’s degree at
Millersville University, Millersville,
Pa. She has achieved certification from
the National Board of Professional
Teaching Standards, a rewarding
experience that made Davis want to help
other teachers do the same. As a result,
she currently is mentoring two teachers
in the certification process. Davis
wrote and received a grant enabling her
to start a no-cost, after-school
drama/forensic program for middle-school
students. She also received two grants
used to help build a safe and
handicap-accessible playground for an
elementary school. Afterward, she
organized fundraisers to build and
install new equipment. Davis further
serves her community through other
education-related initiatives and
community service projects, such as a
backpack and school-supply drive for
young victims of Hurricane Katrina, in
which her students were also involved.
In addition to recognition, award
recipients receive a personal, $2,500
unrestricted cash prize, a distinctive
trophy and a classroom plaque. Also, the
West Virginia Foundation for the
Improvement of Education, a foundation
of WVEA, provides public schools of the
recipients with $1,000 grants 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, WVEA 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 is one of the nation’s largest
coal producers. 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.
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