TKY Inspiration and Stories
Guest blogger and third year teacher Lily Nienstedt provides a humorous and thoughtful take on five reasons to become a middle school teacher in Louisville, Kentucky.
Former Teach Kentucky applicant Nicole Harp and her husband own Break the Mold CrossFit in Louisville where they have partnered with Steve’s Club to offer free classes for at-risk youth
Teach Kentucky educators are remaining in these turnaround schools, developing themselves as mature, seasoned school leaders.
Ask any teacher the top-five most demanding aspects of their job, and most likely “classroom management” or “discipline” will end up on the list.
What I enjoy most about my role as an educator is helping students become people who can exist and thrive in our current world. This year, I was given the opportunity to teach a class focusing on leadership.
What’s the Story? Louisville Youth Community Wellness Advocates launched on September 17th-18th, as six educators and 17 students from Fern Creek and Manual High School retreated into the woods at local Bernheim Forest to begin the learning experience.
Third year teacher Jonathan Perez has been selected to receive one of 15 Fulbright scholarships awarded to University of Louisville students this year! He will be teaching English in Brazil starting in February, 2017.
In the summer of 2015, I had the honor of being selected as a Hope Street Group Kentucky State Teacher Fellow. Hope Street Group is a nonprofit, unbiased organization funded by The Gates Foundation whose goals are to create change agents within the spheres of public education, healthcare, and careers.
Teach Kentucky, in cooperation with Jefferson County Public Schools, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and the Sutherland Foundation has arranged a new level of scholarship support for non-certified educators in STEM disciplines (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math).