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Silver Belt | Nurturing students, growing plants: Gila County’s Teacher of the Year

Photo courtesy of High Desert Middle School Bethany Gray proudly holds the 2023 Gila County Teacher of the Year award. Pictured with Gray are Gila County School Superintendent Nick Montagu, Gila County School Superintendent Roy Sandoval, and Grove Unified School District Associate Superintendent Christa Dalmorin East, PhD.

Originally from Manitou Springs, Colorado, Bethany Gray took a circuitous route to High Desert Middle School at the Globe Theater, where she inspired 8th grade parents and peers to become Gila County Teacher of the Year. Awarded. One of the recommenders explained how Gray “inspires more students to take an interest in science and encourages students to maintain higher standards of behavior in class.” added that she “finds time to tutor students in math and other subjects.” She started a gardening club with her students and taught them how to grow plants. ”
After graduating with a BA in U.S. History from the University of California, San Diego, Bethany Gray began her educator career as a park ranger in some of the Southwest’s most iconic national parks. Encouraged by wildlife research, at NAU she completed three years of postgraduate studies and held a series of positions as a field biologist throughout the Southwest.

“I have family in central Arizona, but as the years went by, I sought a more regulated and stable work experience,” she said. “A close friend at the time encouraged me to apply for a teaching position nearby, so I was hired as a middle school teacher at a small Montessori school. There was a garden fence, I don’t know where I would be without that momentous event, but I wouldn’t be where I am today.

“Middle school chose me, and I chose them right then. Many of them graduated this year, some entered college last year. They also inspire me with their curiosity, the paths they take and what influences them.I feel like I have finally found my home in teaching here. and was recently able to add a Master of Science in Education to my education.My first year at The Grove was as completely transformative as my first year as a secondary school teacher. There’s a mix and magic here that Arizona can’t match, and I want to work with kids like this, connect them with their communities, and help them understand what the world has in store for them. I feel very lucky to be a part of the team that has it.”

Marne Perez, runner-up, teaches special education to preschoolers at Rice Elementary School in San Carlos. Her recommender described how Perez “writes activity-packed lessons that keep her students engaged and learning.” These activities include storytelling, role-playing, singing, and sometimes animation is used to capture the student’s attention. She incorporates her Teaching Strategies Gold Early Childhood Criteria and uses data-driven decision-making to support student learning. ”

Jennifer Madrid, the runner-up, is a physics teacher at San Carlos High School and has been teaching the subject for 19 years. She has worked as a Research Advisor, Robotics Coach, Mentor Teacher, National Honor Society Advisor, and Project Lead the Way Biomedical Science Teacher. She is currently a Physics and Research (Biological Sciences) Teacher and Science Coordinator at San Carlos High School. Her recommender wrote: “Jennifer Madrid impacts the lives of her students as a scientist and is a teacher emeritus at San Carlos High School. I teach them to understand the value of

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