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Published by the TENNESSEE EDUCATION ASSOCIATION<br />

<strong>February</strong> 2012 Vol. 43, No. 6 www.teateachers.org<br />

Special Insert:<br />

Make Your Evaluation Work for You<br />

Let’s Fix<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>’s Evaluation System<br />

Gera Summerford:<br />

“<strong>Tennessee</strong>’s teacher<br />

evaluation system and<br />

supporting data system are<br />

so fl awed that they diminish<br />

the education program for<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> students.”<br />

page 3<br />

Tax Season Special:<br />

Corporate Tax Avoidance + How To Boost Economy<br />

page 4


Speaking out with you<br />

Gera Summerford, President<br />

Evaluation Not Suitable in Current Form<br />

One of the stated goals in the development of the new<br />

evaluation system was that it would provide timely feedback to<br />

teachers and help them improve instructional practice. I wish I<br />

could believe that is really happening in the majority of <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

schools. Instead, the burdensome nature of the new system is<br />

too often interfering with educators’ ability to do what they<br />

know is best for their students. How can we<br />

re-focus the the original intent, consider what<br />

we’ve learned from educators in our schools,<br />

and modify the evaluation system so that it<br />

can effectively help teachers improve student<br />

achievement?<br />

In many cases the observation instrument<br />

is simply not suitable. Teachers tell me they<br />

spend hours of precious time preparing to<br />

teach the “perfect” lesson with no assurance<br />

that their students will be positively impacted. It’s not reasonable<br />

to expect that every teacher demonstrates every performance<br />

indicator every day in every lesson taught. We know that the<br />

number and kind of teaching methods we use must be appropriate<br />

to the students’ development, the grade and subject being<br />

taught, and the learning objectives for the day. TEA is proposing<br />

evaluation changes to assure that expectations are aligned with<br />

how students learn and how teachers teach.<br />

We also know that student growth and achievement data<br />

used in evaluations must be reliable and relevant. Teachers have<br />

reported numerous student data errors in the past and so far a<br />

process for correcting erroneous data has not been provided. And<br />

certainly it is not appropriate to base 35 percent of a teacher’s<br />

evaluation on the test scores of many students she doesn’t teach<br />

and in subjects she doesn’t teach. TEA is proposing the use of<br />

additional measures for student performance.<br />

Administrators report the many challenges they face<br />

with complex scheduling of observations and finding time<br />

for constructive feedback to teachers. They also struggle to<br />

balance evaluations with the multiple other duties of managing<br />

a school. TEA is proposing ways to lower the number of required<br />

observations for accomplished teachers to reduce this burden on<br />

principals.<br />

Educators in <strong>Tennessee</strong> welcome the opportunity to improve<br />

instructional practice and we seek the support of our employers<br />

in achieving that goal. When TEA supported the Race to the Top<br />

Application, the promise to teachers was that rigorous annual<br />

evaluations would be accompanied by streamlined, transparent<br />

and fair procedures. To date, that promise has not been kept.<br />

Since implementation of the new evaluation system began<br />

last fall, TEA has gathered feedback from educators through our<br />

Board of Directors, regional meetings throughout the state and<br />

carefully designed surveys. TEA members have expressed their<br />

concerns, and we know that now is the time to make necessary<br />

improvements to the system.<br />

For a full review of TEA’s proposed changes, please visit our<br />

website, www.teateachers.org.<br />

Al Mance, Executive Director<br />

Governor’s Class Size, Salary Proposals Hurt<br />

Two weeks ago Governor Haslam announced a two-pronged<br />

education proposal. It removes the current average class size limits<br />

while leaving maximums in place, proposing to “give local school<br />

systems flexibility” in the structuring of class loads.<br />

The ultimate impact: a K-3 school with an enrollment of 500<br />

students—which would have 25 classroom teachers under current<br />

law—will have only 20 teachers if the district<br />

decides to structure classes using the mandated<br />

maximums of 25 students. This change will have<br />

a very real effect on teaching and learning for<br />

every teacher and student in the larger classes.<br />

The most important things that happen<br />

in schools occur between students and their<br />

teachers. The more teacher time and attention<br />

each student gets, the more he or she is likely<br />

to learn. Research tells us that the results are<br />

particularly good when 17 or less students are<br />

assigned to a teacher.<br />

A well-educated, dedicated teacher in a classroom with a<br />

manageable number of students is the best guarantee good things<br />

will happen. This arrangement provides the greatest probability<br />

that students who are intellectual, artistic or scientific have the<br />

opportunity to develop to their full potential.<br />

The governor’s plan also repeals the minimum state salary<br />

schedule, requiring districts to submit salary plans—which may<br />

include bonuses or incentives to teach special subject areas or in<br />

certain schools—to the state each year. Increases in salaries will be<br />

funded by money saved from increasing class size or from local funds.<br />

The governor projects that the money saved by raising class size<br />

will result in enough money to raise the state’s contribution for each<br />

BEP teacher from $38,677.49 to $42,250. No additional money is being<br />

added to the classroom component of the BEP. It is just being shuffled<br />

from one pocket to another.<br />

All this is proposed after the state adopted the national Common<br />

Core Standards, raised state standards and launched new teacher and<br />

principal evaluation systems. Nothing in this proposal supports higher<br />

student performance.<br />

Rather, this is another step backward into administrative practices<br />

of the past. If the governor’s proposal becomes law, we’ll see more<br />

opportunities for biased treatment than in a generation. Class<br />

sizes will increase the workload of good teachers while the mental<br />

development of students will suffer.<br />

John Kenneth Galbraith considered educational and scientific<br />

disciplines to be “enlightenment,” which he saw as among the “larger<br />

goals of life.” Such goals are much less measurable than “that which<br />

associates all progress with… increases in Gross National Product<br />

or levels of unemployment.” He said the goals of the industrial<br />

system are so narrow that they lend themselves to precise statistical<br />

assessment. But life is meant to be complex.<br />

We have seen a metamorphosis of thought in American society<br />

since A Nation at Risk made headlines in 1983. Industrial interests<br />

have taken control of our political and education systems and are<br />

using them to transform American society into a society to serve<br />

their goals. We now have statistical approaches to measuring student<br />

progress, teacher effectiveness and the success or failure of public<br />

schools.<br />

TEA will be working hard to get these proposals changed to be<br />

responsive to the needs of students, teachers and schools. Join us.<br />

You count.<br />

teach (USPS 742-450, ISSN 15382907) is published<br />

monthly (except for June, July and December) by the<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>, 801 Second Avenue<br />

North, Nashville TN 37201-1099. Periodical postage<br />

paid at Nashville, TN. The subscription price of $3.65 is<br />

allocated from annual membership dues of $254.00 for<br />

active members; $127.00 for associate, education<br />

support and staff members; $16.00 for retired members;<br />

and $10.00 for student members. Member of<br />

State <strong>Education</strong> Editors Conference (SEE).<br />

Postmaster: Send address changes to teach,<br />

801 Second Avenue North,<br />

Nashville, TN 37201-1099.<br />

MANAGING EDITOR: Alexei Smirnov<br />

asmirnov@tea.nea.org<br />

PUBLISHER: Alphonso C. Mance<br />

MANAGER OF COMMUNICATIONS: A.L. Hayes<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong><br />

801 Second Avenue North<br />

Nashville, TN 37201-1099<br />

Telephone: (615)242-8392,<br />

Toll Free: (800)342-8367, (800)342-8262<br />

Fax: (615)259-4581<br />

Website: www.teateachers.org<br />

BOARD OF DIRECTORS<br />

PRESIDENT: Gera Summerford* (800)342-8367<br />

VICE PRESIDENT: Barbara Gray* (901)353-8590<br />

SECRETARY-TREASURER: Alphonso C. Mance (615)242-8392<br />

DISTRICT 1 Leisa Lusk (423)928-6819<br />

DISTRICT 2 Melinda Reese (423)587-2120<br />

DISTRICT 3 Karen Starr (423)628-2701<br />

DISTRICT 4 Tanya Coats (865)637-7494<br />

DISTRICT 5 Sandy Smith (423)991-8856<br />

DISTRICT 6 Beth Brown* (931)779-8016<br />

DISTRICT 7 Bonnie T. Dixon (931)967-9949<br />

DISTRICT 8 Kawanda Braxton (615)554-6286<br />

DISTRICT 9 Erick Huth (615)973-5851<br />

DISTRICT 10 Guy Stanley (615)384-2983<br />

DISTRICT 11 Melanie Buchanan* (615)305-2214<br />

DISTRICT 12 Debbie D’Angelo (731)247-3152<br />

DISTRICT 13 Ernestine King (901)590-8188<br />

DISTRICT 14 Sarah Kennedy-Harper (901)416-4582<br />

DISTRICT 15 Stephanie Fitzgerald (901)872-4878<br />

ADMINISTRATOR EAST Johnny Henry (865)509-4829<br />

ADMINISTRATOR MIDDLE Margaret Thompson<br />

(615)643-7823<br />

ADMINISTRATOR WEST Charles Green (901)624-6186<br />

HIGHER EDUCATION Derek Frisby (615)898-5881<br />

BLACK CLASSROOM TEACHER EAST Paula Hancock<br />

(865)694-1691<br />

BLACK CLASSROOM TEACHER MIDDLE Alzenia Walls<br />

(615)230-8144<br />

BLACK CLASSROOM TEACHER WEST LaVerne Dickerson*<br />

(901)416-7122<br />

STATE SPECIAL SCHOOLS Vacancy<br />

ESP Christine Denton (931)647-8962<br />

TN NEA DIRECTOR Stephen Henry* (615)519-5691<br />

TN NEA DIRECTOR Diccie Smith (901)482-0627<br />

TN NEA DIRECTOR Diane Lillard (423)478-8827<br />

STEA MEMBER Caryce Gilmore (865)640-6590<br />

TN RETIRED Gerald Lillard (423)478-8827<br />

NEW TEACHER Candra Clariette (615)506-3493<br />

* Executive Committee<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Shortly after the new teacher and principal<br />

3. Provide that teachers who achieve an evaluation that rating forms be provided to teachers after each<br />

evaluation was rolled out in <strong>Tennessee</strong>, TEA members rating of “Meets Expectations” (a three on the five- observation.<br />

and staff began evaluating its implementation,<br />

point rating scale) shall be eligible for tenure.<br />

5. Expand the 15 percent options and allow<br />

documenting areas of concern that adversely<br />

4. Streamline and strengthen the observation teacher choice as contemplated in the law.<br />

affect teaching and learning. TEA released its<br />

process:<br />

6. Ensure accuracy of all data used in evaluations<br />

recommendations to correct the state’s flawed system * Reduce the number of required observations for by providing a process for correcting erroneous data.<br />

at a news conference in mid-January.<br />

accomplished teachers. For example, professionally<br />

7. Deliver teachers’ final evaluation ratings<br />

“<strong>Tennessee</strong>’s teacher evaluation system and<br />

licensed teachers with a rating of three or better (on a no later than the last work day of the school year.<br />

supporting data system are so flawed that they diminish five-point scale) would receive one observation each Ensure that evaluation ratings are accompanied by<br />

the education program for <strong>Tennessee</strong> students,” said year and a full evaluation cycle comprising multiple recommendations for improvement and indications of<br />

Gera Summerford, Sevier County high school math observations every five years.<br />

Pleaseshare<br />

the support to be provided to help teachers orpost improve.<br />

teacher and TEA president (pictured on the cover). “As<br />

a result, students suffer as teachers and administrators<br />

* Utilize observation instruments which<br />

appropriately reflect how students learn and teachers<br />

Pleaseshare<br />

orpost<br />

are distracted from focusing on student learning in teach across the range of teaching assignments.<br />

order to meet the demands of the evaluation system.” * Simplify and streamline the observation<br />

TEA’s list of recommendations includes:<br />

instrument so criteria to be observed in a single lesson<br />

1. Designate the 2011-2012 initial implementation are realistic in both number and scope.<br />

year as a pilot/practice year for the new evaluation<br />

system so that no educator will be negatively affected<br />

* Provide constructive feedback to teachers<br />

from one observation before the next one occurs.<br />

<strong>Education</strong>alSupportPersonnel<br />

TEA Building<br />

by this year’s evaluation rating.<br />

* Base evaluation ratings on actual observations<br />

Saturday, April 21, 2012<br />

<strong>Education</strong>alSupportPersonnel<br />

9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.<br />

UniServ Staff contact information<br />

can be found on page 12.<br />

2 <strong>February</strong> 2012<br />

2. Prohibit the use of school-wide data as a<br />

substitute for individual growth data for non-TVAAS<br />

teachers. Rather, where TVAAS data does not exist,<br />

student growth shall be determined by appropriate<br />

criterion-referenced pre- and post-tests or comparable<br />

assessments.<br />

of teaching practice; prohibit manipulation of such<br />

ratings to fit a bell curve or expected student growth<br />

data.<br />

* Provide administrators and teachers with<br />

access to a scripting system so teachers can review<br />

and respond to observation data immediately. Require<br />

_____<br />

TEA Building<br />

Saturday, All ESPs April Invited 21, 2012<br />

9:00 TEA a.m. Building<br />

$15 Refundable – Registration 4:00 p.m. Fee<br />

_____<br />

Continental Breakfast and Lunch<br />

Saturday, All ESPs April Invited 21, 2012<br />

$15 Refundable CONFERENCESESSIONS:<br />

Registration Fee<br />

9:00 Continental a.m. Breakfast – and 4:00 Lunchp.m.<br />

NEWLAWS:SUMMARY&EXPLANATION&WHATCANTEADOFORME<br />

<br />

YOURRIGHTS:STATE&FEDERALLAW<br />

AConferenceFor<strong>Education</strong>alSupportProfessionals<br />

CONFERENCESESSIONS:<br />

MANAGINGMONEY&CREDIT All ESPs Invited<br />

NEWLAWS:SUMMARY&EXPLANATION&WHATCANTEADOFORME<br />

RETIREMENT<br />

<br />

YOURRIGHTS:STATE&FEDERALLAW<br />

SOCIALNETWORKINGDO’S&DON’TS<br />

$15 Refundable Registration Fee<br />

AConferenceFor<strong>Education</strong>alSupportProfessionals<br />

MANAGINGMONEY&CREDIT<br />

Continental Breakfast and Lunch<br />

RETIREMENT AConferenceFor<strong>Education</strong>al SupportProfessionals<br />

SOCIALNETWORKINGDO’S&DON’TS www.teateachers.org<br />

3<br />

TEA HEADQUARTERS STAFF<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: Alphonso C. Mance; ASST. EXECUTIVE<br />

DIRECTOR, AFFILIATE SERVICES: Mitchell Johnson; ASST.<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, PROGRAM SERVICES: Carol K.<br />

Schmoock; TEA GENERAL COUNSEL; Vacancy; MAN-<br />

AGER OF BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Stephanie Faulkner; IN-<br />

FORMATION TECHNOLOGY & SYSTEMS MANAGER, Galen<br />

Riggs; MANAGER OF UNISERV & BARGAINING CO-<br />

ORDINATOR: Donna Cotner; STAFF ATTORNEYS:<br />

Tina Rose Camba, Katherine Curlee, Virginia A.<br />

McCoy; MANAGER OF GOVERNMENT RELATIONS: Jerry Winters;<br />

GOVERNMENT RELATIONS ASSISTANT: Antoinette Lee; MANAGER<br />

OF COMMUNICATIONS & GRAPHICS: A.L. Hayes; WEB MASTER &<br />

COMMUNICATIONS ASSISTANT: Amanda Chaney; MANAGING EDI-<br />

TOR & COMMUNICATIONS ASSISTANT: Alexei Smirnov; MANAGER<br />

OF RESEARCH & INFORMATION: Melissa Brown; RESEARCH & IN-<br />

FORMATION ASSISTANTS: Susan Ogg; MANAGER FOR INSTRUCTION<br />

& PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: Terrance Gibson; INSTRUCTION<br />

& PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT COORDINATORS: Susan Dalton,<br />

Nicki Fields; COORDINATOR OF MEMBERSHIP & AFFILIATE RELA-<br />

TIONS: Duran Williams.<br />

Governor’s Bill Puts Thousands of Jobs at Risk<br />

Larger classes threaten student learning<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>’s teachers see Governor Bill Haslam’s proposal to raise the<br />

average class size and repeal the minimum state salary schedule as adding<br />

insult to injury during an increasingly stressful school year.<br />

As TEA President Gera Summerford fielded calls from members concerned<br />

with the governor’s proposal, she pointed out that there will be no new money<br />

dedicated to teacher salaries—just a shifting of funds that could harm students<br />

and their teachers across the state.<br />

“After all the changes in the law that affected <strong>Tennessee</strong> curriculum<br />

standards and the<br />

evaluation of teachers<br />

and principals, the idea<br />

that the governor would<br />

increase class size and<br />

freeze teacher salaries is<br />

the last straw,” Summerford<br />

said. “Our concern is not<br />

with increasing class size<br />

in some schools by one or<br />

two students, but with the<br />

possibility of every class<br />

CurrentClassSizeLimits(TCA491104)<br />

<br />

GradeAverageMaximum<br />

levelperschoolperclass<br />

<br />

K32025<br />

462530<br />

7123035<br />

Vocational2025<br />

<br />

being maxed out at the state maximum level. We know that in school systems<br />

and county commissions which have experienced funding challenges, it is very<br />

likely that class sizes would be increased significantly under this proposal.”<br />

Contrary to decades-long research highlighting the positive impact of<br />

lower class size on student learning, the Haslam administration is pushing<br />

a bill in the state legislature that could increase class sizes in <strong>Tennessee</strong> by<br />

five students on average, making 25-30 students in elementary grades and 35<br />

students in high school the new norm.<br />

The state’s average class size grew by roughly five students per class since<br />

2000, according to state data.<br />

Filed in the State Senate as bill 2210 and bill 2348 in the House, the<br />

legislation suggests that the funds “saved” by increasing class size would then<br />

be shifted to the salary component of the Basic <strong>Education</strong> Program (BEP), the<br />

funding formula through which state education dollars are generated and<br />

distributed to <strong>Tennessee</strong> schools.<br />

While increasing the salary factor in the BEP from $37,000 to $42,250 would<br />

normally be a good thing, the governor proposes to eliminate the state salary<br />

schedule – the only assurance that teacher pay will increase based on years<br />

of service and advanced degrees, according to TEA research. Increasing the<br />

salaries of just a few teachers would put thousands of education jobs at risk.<br />

As a veteran high school math teacher, Summerford quickly saw the fallacy<br />

in the way the new bill is presented. “One of the arguments supporting this<br />

proposal is the way things are now, if all the classes meet the state average,<br />

with the enrollment of just one additional student the school would have to<br />

hire another teacher,” she said. “The fact is, no matter what the maximum is,<br />

no matter what standard is set for class size, at some point in every scenario<br />

you’ll reach the tipping point where you would have to hire someone, which<br />

invalidates the argument about changing the maximum class size number.”<br />

Armed with data from its research division, TEA strongly opposes the<br />

governor’s legislation. “Increasing class size will undoubtedly have a negative<br />

impact on student achievement,” said TEA Executive Director Al Mance, whose<br />

column on the opposite page also addresses the controversial proposal.<br />

“Eliminating the state minimum salary schedule writes a blank check to local<br />

school boards as to how state salary funds would be distributed.”<br />

TEA Unveils Seven-Point Plan to Fix Evaluation


Where Has All the Money Gone?<br />

By Melissa Brown<br />

As we prepare to file our taxes, comparing<br />

our effective tax rates with those of<br />

presidential candidates and high networth<br />

individuals, it’s quite easy to<br />

tune into the national conversation<br />

as corporate tax loopholes come<br />

under scrutiny. In discussions about the economy<br />

nationwide, we hear that the fiscal situation at home<br />

in <strong>Tennessee</strong> and with the federal budget are getting<br />

more dire. The growing income disparity further<br />

erodes the already shrinking middle class, pointing<br />

out the disproportionate burden being placed on<br />

working families. Meanwhile, corporations continue<br />

to exploit loopholes in the tax code and avoid shared<br />

responsibility. The analysis below is an attempt to<br />

answer the question: What is the impact of corporate<br />

tax loopholes?<br />

Lost State Revenue<br />

A December 2011 study by the Citizens for Tax Justice<br />

and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy<br />

reported on the state and local income tax payments of<br />

265 profitable Fortune 500 companies.<br />

The report focused on 265 Fortune 500 companies<br />

that fully disclosed their tax payments, finding the<br />

following:<br />

• 68 companies paid no state income tax at all in<br />

at least one year from 2008 through 2010 and 16 of these<br />

companies had multiple no-tax years.<br />

• In 2009, 32 companies paid no state income tax.<br />

• The corporations were able to avoid a total of<br />

$42.7 billion in state corporate income taxes from 2008<br />

through 2010. U.S. profits totaling $1.33 trillion were<br />

reported to shareholders. Paying the 6.2 percent average<br />

state corporate tax rate, the corporations would have<br />

paid $82.6 billion in state corporate income taxes over<br />

the 2008-10 period. Instead, they paid only $39.9 billion.<br />

The companies used in the study operate throughout<br />

the United States. However, these companies do not<br />

disclose profits and taxes on a state-by-state basis, so<br />

the findings do not show conclusively whether specific<br />

companies paid any income tax in specific states.<br />

The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government<br />

reports that corporate income taxes make up only 5.7<br />

percent of state revenues, which is down from 9.7 percent<br />

in 1980.<br />

Lost Federal Revenue<br />

A November 2011 report by the National <strong>Education</strong><br />

<strong>Association</strong> noted that $222.7 billion of federal revenue<br />

was lost for years 2008 through 2010 due to corporate<br />

tax avoidance. A total of $9.8 billion could have gone to<br />

public schools and colleges nationwide.<br />

How did this affect education funding in <strong>Tennessee</strong>?<br />

The scenarios below describe how the lost revenues could<br />

have been used to improve our society and potentially<br />

boost the economy.<br />

Lost Federal Dollars for <strong>Education</strong> and Other Aid<br />

• $200 million in lost federal dollars for education<br />

• Dollars would have supported 2,859 education jobs<br />

• $1,500 lost federal dollars for Other Grants to State<br />

and Localities.<br />

Lost Federal Dollars for Title I Grants<br />

• Would have provided $180 million in grant dollars<br />

that would have benefited 205,296 students in poverty<br />

• Average funding lost per student in poverty: $878.<br />

Lost Federal Dollars for Special <strong>Education</strong><br />

• $200 million in lost grant dollars that would have<br />

benefited 119,455 students with disabilities.<br />

Lost Federal Dollars for Pell Grants<br />

• $191 million that would have benefited 148,462<br />

students in need<br />

• Average dollars lost per student in need: $1,286.<br />

Lost Federal Dollars for Head Start<br />

• $170 million in grant dollars that would have<br />

benefited 8,060 additional children in poverty who would<br />

have been enrolled in a Head Start program.<br />

Clearly, the amount of lost state and federal revenues<br />

due to corporate tax avoidance is significant.<br />

The amount of lost federal dollars alone could<br />

have funded or expanded programs for <strong>Tennessee</strong>’s<br />

children, expanded existing services and provided<br />

education positions for some of <strong>Tennessee</strong>’s 9.1 percent<br />

unemployed, based on the <strong>Tennessee</strong> Department of<br />

Labor and Workforce Development November 2011<br />

unemployment rate. At a time when the state continues<br />

its efforts to rebound from the Great Recession, budget<br />

revenues lost through corporate tax avoidance would not<br />

have been a luxury. According to experts who worked on<br />

many taxation studies, a fair tax burden is a necessity<br />

in funding education more appropriately, providing jobs<br />

and lessening the tax burden on the average working<br />

family.<br />

Melissa Brown is TEA manager of research.<br />

Stockpiled, Snow Days<br />

Rules Unchanged This Year<br />

Are school systems still allowed to use<br />

stockpiled days for snow days? TEA received a<br />

number of inquiries from teachers as to whether<br />

the State Department of <strong>Education</strong> has changed<br />

its policy on the use of stockpiled days for<br />

snow days. The Commissioner of <strong>Education</strong> has<br />

released the following statement in response to<br />

these inquiries:<br />

“State law allows school systems to stockpile<br />

up to 13 days by increasing the school day up to<br />

30 minutes and to use this excess time to make<br />

up for instruction missed due to dangerous or<br />

extreme weather conditions, such as snow. No<br />

approval is required from the commissioner<br />

provided the excess time is used for this purpose.<br />

Any school system that has adopted a school<br />

calendar with stockpiled days will be able to use<br />

that excess time for snow as it has in the past.<br />

“State law requires the approval of the<br />

commissioner if:<br />

1. A school system is using stockpiled<br />

days for other limited purposes outlined in the<br />

law—natural disasters, serious outbreaks of<br />

illness or dangerous structural or environmental<br />

conditions rendering a school unsafe for use; or<br />

2. Outright waiver of the 180-day<br />

instructional requirement in the event of a<br />

natural disaster or serious outbreak of illness.<br />

“For example, if a school system chose not<br />

to stockpile but then faced an illness outbreak<br />

where students missed a large number of days of<br />

instruction, it could apply to the commissioner<br />

for a waiver of the 180 day requirement.”<br />

Neither state law nor the State Department<br />

of <strong>Education</strong> has changed any law or policy<br />

regarding the use of stockpiled days for snow.<br />

Get Empowered, Connect<br />

At Minority Affairs Conference<br />

Mark your calendar and make plans to attend<br />

the Johnella Martin/TEA Statewide Minority<br />

Affairs Conference on March 23-24 at the<br />

DoubleTree Hotel in Chattanooga.<br />

Titled “Empowering and Connecting<br />

Educators to Meet Challenges, Today and<br />

Tomorrow,” the conference promises an exciting<br />

lineup of speakers and workshops. Registration<br />

deadline is March 12.<br />

Panelists Mary Mancini, <strong>Tennessee</strong> Sen. Jim Kyle, Sen. Andy Berke and Rep. Joe Pitts.<br />

How to Fix Our Economy<br />

Experts suggest strategies, question<br />

state use of incentives to business<br />

It may not be obvious when one enters the state<br />

legislature these days, but <strong>Tennessee</strong> has viable<br />

options as it tries to get its fiscal house in order.<br />

“Right here in the state legislature, when a bill<br />

is introduced, it seems the first question that gets<br />

asked is whether it’s good for business. The fair<br />

approach is to ask whether it’s good for the people<br />

of <strong>Tennessee</strong>,” said Mary Mancini of the <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Citizen Action organization during the Jobs and<br />

the Economy Summit held at the end of last year in<br />

Nashville.<br />

Panelists and attendees agreed that education<br />

funding is the foundation of economic prosperity in<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>.<br />

“<strong>Education</strong> is a primary economic driver for<br />

the state and its localities,” said Matthew Murray,<br />

professor at the University of <strong>Tennessee</strong> Center<br />

for Business and Economic Research. “<strong>Education</strong><br />

also creates important spillover benefits, such as<br />

increased longevity, lower infant mortality rates,<br />

more volunteerism and higher voting rates.”<br />

But current trends suggest that the focus in<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> has been elsewhere. With <strong>Tennessee</strong>’s<br />

unemployment rate hovering above the national<br />

average at 9.6 percent, and per-capita income<br />

growth of only 60 cents a year during the last 10<br />

years (in inflation-adjusted figures), it is clear that<br />

the economic engine needs adjusting. The gap<br />

between the poorest and wealthiest Tennesseans<br />

keeps growing wider. In fact, the state now ranks<br />

fifth in the nation in terms of wealth disparity,<br />

according to Michael Kahn, associate director of<br />

finance and economics at NEA.<br />

“Currently in <strong>Tennessee</strong>, tax structures are<br />

out of sync with the economy, and school funding<br />

is inadequate and inequitable. Schools lack the<br />

capacity to do their jobs, but teachers are being<br />

held accountable for student outcomes,” said Kahn.<br />

“These trends undermine our future economic<br />

prosperity.”<br />

To solve the state’s fiscal problems, Kahn<br />

suggested ensuring adequate and equitable<br />

funding for public education through a system of<br />

revenues that involves a level playing field for all<br />

businesses, large and small. “Above all, if we want<br />

to keep our economic edge in the knowledge-based<br />

global economy, we must make investment in public<br />

education our top priority,” he said.<br />

To the obvious argument that there is no<br />

money, Kahn questioned <strong>Tennessee</strong>’s current use of<br />

the so-called economic development subsidies to<br />

corporations. When the state of <strong>Tennessee</strong> offered<br />

$577 million in subsidies to lure the Volkswagen<br />

plant to Hamilton County, Kahn said the lost<br />

revenue could have been spent more wisely. Under<br />

the VW agreement, the city of Chattanooga and<br />

Hamilton Co. will forego $200 million in property<br />

tax collections for 30 years, and that’s just one<br />

example of the myriad subsidies being doled out by<br />

state and local officials to businesses every year.<br />

At the same time, education funding in <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

is now less than it was in 1970, and teacher salaries<br />

remain largely unchanged over the last 20 years,<br />

said Kahn.<br />

Adding another item to the economic<br />

prosperity wish list, Murray questioned the lack of<br />

transparency in tax increment financing currently<br />

used by localities for new economic development.<br />

“TIF financing likely does more to reallocate<br />

economic activity than create new activity,” he<br />

said. “TIFs may also divert funds from schools to<br />

financing of new development.”<br />

While offering a solution, Kahn invoked the<br />

name of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, the<br />

champion of fair taxation among the wealthy.<br />

“Just imagine the top one percent of income<br />

earners in <strong>Tennessee</strong> with an annual income of<br />

about $1.3 million paying at the same effective<br />

rate as the bottom 20 percent,” he said. “It would<br />

generate $2.2 billion—enough to wipe out the<br />

adequacy gap and fix the structural deficit.”<br />

Such measures may cause pro-business hawks<br />

to cry foul, but Kahn insisted that they won’t hurt<br />

small business because, according to IRS data, only<br />

2 percent of small business owners make more than<br />

$250,000 a year.<br />

“As China doubles its investment in education,<br />

no politician should be able to get away with saying<br />

that they care about our state’s and country’s<br />

future while shortchanging education,” said Jerry<br />

Winters, TEA manager of government relations,<br />

who attended the conference.<br />

More than 96% of<br />

TEA Dues Qualifies<br />

For IRS Tax Deduction<br />

The portion of TEA dues expended<br />

for government relations activities for<br />

2010/2011 is 3.82 percent.<br />

TEA members can deduct 96.18 percent<br />

of their dues for IRS income tax purposes.<br />

TEA provides a pass-through procedure<br />

whereby members contribute to TEA-FCPE<br />

(<strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong> Fund for<br />

Children and Public <strong>Education</strong>).<br />

The amount of TEA-FCPE pass-through<br />

for the current year is $4.41 per active<br />

member and $2.21 per ESP staff member.<br />

Members who do not desire to<br />

participate may divert these funds to other<br />

government relations activities — such as<br />

promotion of the TEA legislative program<br />

and lobbying — by completing and mailing<br />

the accompanying form, postmarked no<br />

later than April 10, 2012.<br />

I request that the portion of my dues eligible<br />

to be passed through to TEA-FCPE be used in<br />

other TEA Government Relations activities.<br />

Name (please print)<br />

4 <strong>February</strong> 2012 For details, visit www.teateachers.org.<br />

5<br />

Address<br />

City State ZIP<br />

Social Security Number<br />

Active Member<br />

School System<br />

Signature<br />

<strong>Education</strong> Support Professional<br />

Student Member<br />

Mail to: <strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>,<br />

801 Second Avenue North, Nashville, TN<br />

37201-1099. (This form must be postmarked or<br />

received no later than April 10, 2012.)<br />

www.teateachers.org


March 2012<br />

sun mon tues<br />

wed thurs fri sat<br />

1<br />

NEA’S Read<br />

Across<br />

America Day<br />

2 3<br />

4 5 6 7 8 9 10<br />

11 12 13 14 15 16 17<br />

18 19 20 21 22 23 2<br />

24<br />

25<br />

26 27 28 29 30<br />

31<br />

WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH<br />

NEA’S Read Across America<br />

Building a Nation of Readers<br />

Tip ip of f the th the Month MMonth th<br />

How will you help the Lorax spread his<br />

message? How about planting a reading garden<br />

or creating a pledge tree? You’ll fi nd these ideas<br />

and more at www.seussville.com.<br />

Link of the Month<br />

Stay connected to NEA’s Read Across America<br />

through our website and Facebook page. Go<br />

to www.readacrossamerica.org to pledge and<br />

www.nea.org/readacross to download materials.<br />

Activity of the Month<br />

Proud of your Read Across America activities?<br />

Post and tweet your favorite photos, upload your<br />

videos to Schooltube and Youtube, and blog<br />

about ab b your favorite books. Sharing your stories<br />

will w inspire others to do the same.<br />

MARCH M DATES<br />

March 2 NEA’s Read Across America Day<br />

March 5 Teen Tech Week begins<br />

March 14 Pi Day<br />

March 17 St. Patrick’s Day<br />

www.nea.org/readacross<br />

w<br />

dacross<br />

6 <strong>February</strong> 2012 7<br />

Teen Tech<br />

Week begins<br />

Pi Day<br />

St. Patrick’s<br />

Day<br />

www.nea.org/readacross<br />

The<br />

Lorax, written and<br />

illustrated ill t t d by b Dr. D Seuss, S moves<br />

from page to screen nationwide<br />

on Read Across America Day.<br />

Here’s your chance to share your<br />

love of the book and fi lm.<br />

Published in1971 in 1971 by RandomHouseChildren’s Random House Children Children’s s Books Books.<br />

www.seussville.com. Artwork used with permission.<br />

Create a Dr. Seuss<br />

Reading Event<br />

The following is a simple<br />

scenario for elementary or<br />

middle school teachers who<br />

want to conduct a Read Across<br />

America event in their classroom.<br />

This is by far the most typical<br />

celebration and can be easily<br />

adapted to other situations.<br />

Consult your principal<br />

and obtain approvals. Most<br />

principals love Read Across<br />

America and are happy to get<br />

involved.<br />

Look at your school’s calendar<br />

and choose a date to celebrate.<br />

The official day is March 2. If this<br />

conflicts with another event,<br />

feel free to pick a different day.<br />

Some schools celebrate the<br />

week before or after. Talk to your<br />

principal and check your school<br />

calendar as early as possible to<br />

avoid any last-minute problems.<br />

Read the copyright and<br />

licensing arrangements. It’s<br />

important to honor NEA’s<br />

agreements with Dr. Seuss<br />

Enterprises in order to maintain<br />

this special relationship.<br />

Consult with your school<br />

librarian. It’s likely that he or<br />

she is already familiar with Read<br />

Across America and may have<br />

ideas to offer. Reserve books in<br />

advance—there may be a run on<br />

Dr. Seuss titles!<br />

Ask other teachers if they<br />

are making plans. Consider<br />

coordinating your efforts for a<br />

school-wide event.<br />

Invite guest readers to<br />

come to your class on March<br />

2 and read to your students.<br />

There is something powerful<br />

about a policeman, firefighter,<br />

mayor, radio personality, pastor,<br />

high school quarterback, or<br />

grandmother sharing their love<br />

for reading.<br />

Be sure to ask your guests<br />

to talk about why reading is<br />

important in their lives, and<br />

about their favorite books when<br />

they were kids. Afterwards,<br />

encourage your students to write<br />

thank-you notes.<br />

Make arrangements for a Dr.<br />

Seuss birthday cake if resources<br />

allow.<br />

Visit www.nea.org/<br />

readacross for more ideas.<br />

www.teateachers.org


NEA Representative Assembly 2012 Delegate Nominees<br />

TEA Members Run for NEA RA State Delegate Positions<br />

Delegates announce nominations for NEA’s<br />

highest decision-making body<br />

Biographical information and photographs submitted by candidates for state<br />

delegate positions to the National <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>’s Representative Assembly<br />

in Washington, DC, June 30-July 5, 2012, are published in this four-page section.<br />

All properly qualified candidates will be listed on ballots which local association<br />

presidents will receive by March 1.<br />

For Category 1, NEA members will vote for two district delegates based on the<br />

district in which they teach. Category 1 includes candidates who are classroom<br />

teachers, education support professionals or persons who serve in other nonsupervisory<br />

positions.<br />

In Category 2, NEA members may vote for any three of the candidates. This<br />

category includes members who are supervisors, administrators or retired NEA life<br />

members. Information about clustering for supervisors/administrators and small local<br />

associations was printed in the November 2011 issue of teach.<br />

Any NEA-retired life, education support or active member not affiliated with a<br />

CATEGORY I<br />

District 1<br />

Leisa Lusk — Special<br />

<strong>Education</strong> teacher at David<br />

Crockett High School in<br />

Washington Co. Building<br />

Rep. for Washington Co. EA.<br />

Former WCEA vice president<br />

and president. Member of<br />

WCEA bargaining team.<br />

Chief spokesperson for WCEA<br />

bargaining team, grievance<br />

team committee chair, representative at TEA and<br />

NEA assemblies, current and past member of the<br />

TEA board of directors, legislative contact team<br />

member. Previously taught in Sevier Co.<br />

Anna Booher — Currently<br />

TEA FUND Council member<br />

and Membership Committee;<br />

served 1 term on TEA Board;<br />

3 time Bristol EA president;<br />

TEA Distinguished Educator;<br />

2 time Rotary Teacher of the<br />

Year; attended 13 NEA RAs;<br />

has served on 8 different TEA<br />

committees numerous times<br />

over 37 years; locally, is involved in numerous association<br />

activities, including FUND chairperson<br />

and Executive Committee; high school teacher in<br />

the Bristol City school district; holds graduate<br />

degree; Career Ladder III; ADK; DKG.<br />

District 2<br />

Gera Summerford — Math<br />

teacher from Gatlinburg-<br />

Pittman High School and has<br />

taught in Sevier County since<br />

1982; earned B.A. in mathematics<br />

and German from<br />

Baylor University, master’s<br />

degree in mathematics from<br />

the University of <strong>Tennessee</strong>,<br />

Ed.S. degree from Lincoln<br />

Memorial University; former chief negotiator for<br />

Sevier County <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>; numerous<br />

other local leadership positions. TEA Board of<br />

Directors 2003-2006, TEA Vice-President 2006-<br />

2010, was elected TEA President in June 2010.<br />

Melinda S. Reese — Currently<br />

presiding on the TEA Board of<br />

Directors for District 2 and<br />

as HCEA’s President;<br />

HCEA’s Negotiations Chief<br />

Spokesperson; Active member<br />

of HCEA’s Executive Board;<br />

Served on the following HCEA<br />

committees: Negotiations,<br />

Membership, HCPACE,<br />

Legislative, & Newsletter; Chairperson of TEA‘s<br />

2009-2010 Professional Negotiations‘ Committee<br />

and participant of many TEA-sponsored events,<br />

such as Summer Leadership School, Bargaining<br />

Conferences, Area Cluster Meetings, TUEAC,<br />

Spring Symposium, Legislation/Lobbying days,<br />

local delegate to TEA RAs, & various workshops.<br />

Jackie Duncan *<br />

District 3<br />

Karen Starr — Morgan<br />

Co. native, received her<br />

bachelor of science degree<br />

in elementary education,<br />

grades 1-8, from <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Technological University.<br />

She has earned a master’s<br />

degree and Ed.S. degree in<br />

curriculum and instruction<br />

from <strong>Tennessee</strong> Technological<br />

University. An active member since she began<br />

teaching in 1991, Karen has served several years<br />

as her building representative and attended<br />

numerous TEA conferences to represent her local<br />

association.<br />

Donna Jerden — Educator for 25 years and<br />

currently the librarian at Central Middle School<br />

in Wartburg, with 21 years of experience in the<br />

classroom and 4 years on TEA staff. Spent 11 years<br />

as a classroom teacher and ten years as a librarian.<br />

BS, MA, and Ed.S. from TTU with certification<br />

local association who wishes to vote in the election may receive a ballot by writing or<br />

calling TEA, 801 Second Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37201-1099, (615) 242-8392 or<br />

(800) 342-8367.<br />

The National <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong> Representative Assembly (RA) is NEA’s<br />

highest decision-making body. With over 9,000 delegates, it is also the world’s largest<br />

democratic, deliberative body.<br />

The RA is convened every July during the Annual Meeting. While the first two days<br />

are devoted to discussions, conferences, and exhibits, the highlight is the Representative<br />

Assembly itself. During this important event, delegates debate issues that impact<br />

American public education, elect NEA officers, and set policy for the 3.2 million-member<br />

<strong>Association</strong>.<br />

In conjunction with the Annual Meeting, NEA also hosts several pre-RA events,<br />

including the Joint Conference on the Concerns of Minorities and Women. The annual<br />

two-day event attracts more than 1,000 active and retired teachers, education support<br />

professionals (ESP) and higher education employees. Participants explore societal<br />

trends, the latest education research, current reform, best practices, and other critical<br />

issues affecting students and employees. We invite you to come and lend your voice to<br />

the conversation.<br />

Margaret Morgan *<br />

District 4<br />

in Elementary, Library, and<br />

Beginning Administrator.<br />

“I have always enjoyed<br />

storytelling and politics,<br />

but I’m most adamant about<br />

children and their access to<br />

quality public education.”<br />

Tanya Coats — Instructional<br />

Coach (CIF); Green Magnet<br />

Math & Science Academy;<br />

KCEA treasurer, KCEA<br />

Executive Board Member,<br />

Member of TEA Board of<br />

Directors for East <strong>Tennessee</strong>;<br />

KCEA committee member<br />

of the following: Minority<br />

Affairs, Public Relations,<br />

Elections, Human Resource; Green Magnet’s SWS<br />

Leadership Team, Coaches Network. Serves as one<br />

of TEA Minority Affairs chairs. “As a former chair of<br />

TEA’s Administrative Task Force Committee, I have<br />

learned that representing everyone is important.”<br />

Paula Hancock — 8th Grade<br />

Mathematics Teacher, Vine<br />

Middle Magnet School;<br />

TEA Board of Directors,<br />

East <strong>Tennessee</strong> Black<br />

Classroom Teacher; KCEA<br />

<strong>Association</strong> Representative;<br />

KCEA Minority Affairs<br />

Committee; TEA Resolutions<br />

Committee; TEA Representative Assembly; NEA<br />

Representative Assembly.<br />

Anthony Hancock — Special <strong>Education</strong> Teacher;<br />

Comprehensive Development Classroom (CDC),<br />

Bearden Middle School. Knox County EA: Minority<br />

Affairs Leadership Committee, <strong>Association</strong><br />

Representative. TEA: State Resolutions member,<br />

Southeast Regional Minority Leadership Training<br />

Committee, Minority Affairs<br />

Leadership committee, New<br />

Teachers Training Committee,<br />

State Delegate – RA Assembly.<br />

NEA: NEA Resolutions<br />

Committee.<br />

Karen Peterman — Knox<br />

County classroom teacher<br />

with 28 years of experience.<br />

BS, BA, MS (+45 hrs). KCEA<br />

Executive Board, 2005 TEA<br />

Distinguished Classroom<br />

Teacher. Former local<br />

president, vice president,<br />

secretary, treasurer,<br />

newsletter editor, chief<br />

negotiator and TUEAC<br />

president. Served on TEA’s<br />

IPD Commission, Resolutions, Status of Women,<br />

and NEA Concerns Committees 17 TEA & 15 NEA<br />

Representative Assemblies. “I hope that you<br />

will allow me to represent you at this important<br />

national meeting.”<br />

Joan Washington —<br />

Solutions’ Teacher, Beaumont<br />

Elementary, Knox County: 24<br />

years experience. Member:<br />

KCEA Executive Board, KCEA<br />

Minority Affairs, TEA, NEA.<br />

Candidate for Distinguished<br />

Teacher Award. Committees:<br />

Teacher Evaluation Advisory<br />

and TUEAC. Served on Mentoring Team for Knox<br />

County, Project Grad Cooperative Management<br />

Consistency Discipline Coach for several years,<br />

Chair of <strong>Education</strong> Advancement Fund, Alpha<br />

Kappa Alpha Sorority. Children of God Ministries’<br />

Secretary. “I would like to serve as your 2012 NEA<br />

RA State Delegate.”<br />

District 5<br />

Diane Lillard — Kindergarten teacher at<br />

Waterville Elementary. She is a graduate of<br />

Lee University with a B. S. in Early Childhood<br />

Elementary <strong>Education</strong> and 29 years experience.<br />

She is currently serving on the NEA Board of<br />

Directors. Local association<br />

experience: Bradley County<br />

EA president, treasurer,<br />

executive board, chief<br />

negotiator, membership<br />

chair, newsletter editor,<br />

communications chair, PR&R<br />

chair, AEW coordinator,<br />

Research chair, Read Across<br />

America coordinator.<br />

State Experience: TEA ION, Communications,<br />

Membership, Member Benefits, IPD Commission,<br />

Insurance, Professional Negotiations.<br />

Sandy Smith — With Hamilton<br />

County since 1987. B.S.<br />

degree from the University of<br />

Chattanooga and a M.Ed. from<br />

UTC. Completed graduate<br />

work through Project<br />

Re-ed at the University of<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>. Currently serves<br />

as H-PACE chair (4), HCEA<br />

Board of Directors (3), TEA<br />

State Special Schools Committee(2). Previous<br />

activities include TEA IPD Commission (3), HCEA<br />

IPD Chair (3), Chair of Legislative Branch (3),HCEA<br />

Legislative Committee (3), TEA/HCEA Legislative<br />

Contact (1), Grassroots Cadre (3), KEYS facilitator,<br />

Superintendent’s Advisory Council (6).<br />

Sandra C. Griffin — More than 30 years in education,<br />

middle school reading teacher. Personal<br />

motto: “Don’t let anyone extinguish your flame<br />

for achieving greatness.” B.S. Clark-Atlanta<br />

University; M.Ed. Trevecca University; Doctor of<br />

Bible Ministry, Covington Theological Seminary.<br />

Member of TEA-NEA, HCEA Board of Directors,<br />

district negotiation team, H-Pace, TEA-Legislative<br />

Contact, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Phi<br />

Delta Kappa Sorority, Daughters of Isis, PHA,<br />

Member of Warren Chapel AMEC. Married to Rev.<br />

A.C. Griffin, Jr. Mother of Tanacha L. Griffin and<br />

A.C. Griffin III.<br />

Deborah Taylor — Algebra I<br />

educator at East Ridge High<br />

School, more than 25 years<br />

in Hamilton County schools;<br />

TEA committees—Status of<br />

Women and Minority Affairs;<br />

TEA/NEA Representative<br />

Assemblies; served as HCEA<br />

AR and alternate. <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

State University (B.S.), Trevecca (M.Ed.), Delta<br />

Sigma Theta Sorority, Phi Delta Kappa Sorority,<br />

DOI, PHA. “Serving as your 2012 NEA Delegate at<br />

the RA would be an honor.”<br />

Michael Plumley — Media<br />

Specialist at Waterville<br />

Community Elementary<br />

School in Bradley County. I<br />

have been a member of the<br />

<strong>Association</strong> for all of my<br />

professional career of 35<br />

years. I have served my local<br />

in several areas of leadership<br />

including AR, secretary,<br />

treasurer, president-elect, member of the<br />

executive board, negotiations team, membership<br />

chair. I have served TEA on many state<br />

committees including Professional Negotiations,<br />

Communications, Member Benefits, ESP, IPD<br />

Commission, TEA Resolutions, and currently on<br />

ION Committee.<br />

Bryan Massengale — Band<br />

director at Rhea Central<br />

Elementary School, Rhea<br />

County since 1984. “I live<br />

on the farm where my father<br />

was born in 1923.” B.S.<br />

degree in music education,<br />

University of <strong>Tennessee</strong>,<br />

Knoxville, 1980; M.S. degree<br />

in Administration & Supervision, UT-Knoxville,<br />

1993; Ed. S. in <strong>Education</strong>al Leadership, <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Tech University. Rhea-Dayton EA president, past<br />

president, newsletter editor, chief negotiator;<br />

NEA: past NEA Today local editor advisory board;<br />

attended 12 previous NEA Representative<br />

Assemblies.<br />

8 <strong>February</strong> 2012 9<br />

District 6<br />

Beth Brown *<br />

Tommy Scott Price — Math<br />

teacher at Coffee County<br />

Central High School since<br />

1996. Current and past<br />

President of the Coffee Co.<br />

EA. Served as local delegate<br />

to TEA/TEA RA for several<br />

years. Recently appointed<br />

chairman of the PECCA Special<br />

Question Committee for Coffee County Schools.<br />

B.A. in secondary education mathematics, 1993.<br />

M.Ed., MTSU, 2007. Taught at Hamilton Co. Schools<br />

between 1993 and 1995.<br />

District 7<br />

Bonnie Dixon *<br />

Derek Frisby *<br />

Barbara Fisher — Lebanon<br />

Special School District, 31<br />

years; B.A. education, M.A.<br />

administration/supervision,<br />

+45, TSU; Lebanon EA<br />

Executive Board advisory;<br />

TEA Executive Board; past<br />

Status of Women chair; TEA<br />

RA 23 years; NEA RA 18 years;<br />

Retired Teachers Legislative<br />

Committee; Minority Affairs advisory; Phi Delta<br />

Kappa Executive Board; Delta Sigma Theta; Kappa<br />

Omicron Phi; “I will continue to represent the<br />

vision, ideals and commitment of the NEA.”<br />

District 8<br />

Kawanda Braxton *<br />

District 9<br />

Candra Clariette *<br />

Stephen Henry — MNEA:<br />

President, Vice-President,<br />

Treasurer, Parliamentarian,<br />

Board-District Director,<br />

Executive Committee, Chief<br />

Negotiator; Committee Chair-<br />

Budget & Finance, Public<br />

Relations, Bylaws, Human<br />

Relations; PACE Council,<br />

Martin Human Relations Award, TEA: Board of<br />

Directors, TEA-FCPE Council, Committees-NEA<br />

Concerns, Executive, Negotiations, Credentials,<br />

Human Relations, Communications, Chair-ION &<br />

Human Relations; “I Can Do It” Trainer, Johnson<br />

Human Relations Award, TUEAC, NEA: Board<br />

of Directors & Executive Committee-Official<br />

Observer, Committees-SOGI, Equity & Ethnic<br />

Harmony; NEA-FCPE Council, HCR Division-<br />

National Trainer, NCUEA, 2011 <strong>Education</strong><br />

International World Congress Delegate.<br />

Erick Huth — Vice president<br />

of the Metropolitan Nashville<br />

<strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>,<br />

which he represents on<br />

the TEA Board of Directors.<br />

He also serves as trustee<br />

and executive committee<br />

member of the <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Consolidated Retirement<br />

System, a trustee on the Metro Teacher Retirement<br />

System, the Metropolitan Professional Employee<br />

Insurance Trust and Sick Leave Bank. Formerly:<br />

NCUEA Parliamentarian and Regional Director,<br />

MNEA chief bargaining spokesperson, Bylaws,<br />

PR, Building Chair for MNEA; president <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Urban <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>s Council.<br />

Earl Wiman — NEA Executive<br />

Committee, Teacher on<br />

special assignment,<br />

Metropolitan Nashville Public<br />

Schools; past TEA president,<br />

vice president, executive<br />

committee member, TPACE<br />

Committee member and<br />

board member; holds<br />

undergraduate, graduate and<br />

postgraduate degrees; has attended numerous<br />

NEA RAs and served on the NEA Resolutions<br />

Committee; chaired state committees, involved<br />

in numerous local association activities,<br />

Metropolitan Nashville EA Executive Committee.<br />

Jeannine Renfro — Has been a teacher in Metro<br />

Nashville Public schools for 13 years. She has<br />

served as a Metro Nashville <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong><br />

Representative, Chair of the Scholarship and<br />

Communications Committees, and was a member<br />

of the local negotiation team. Jeannine has also<br />

attended TEA Bargaining Conference, NCUEA Fall<br />

Conference, Quality Schools Summit, TEA-RA and<br />

NEA-RA. “I would consider it an honor to serve<br />

and represent TEA District 9 at the 2012 NEA<br />

Representative Assembly.”<br />

Kenneth Martin —<br />

Currently serves as MNEA<br />

Parliamentarian and Chair<br />

of the MNEA Committee on<br />

Constitution, Bylaws, and<br />

Standing Rules. Martin is<br />

an exceptional education<br />

teacher at Martin Luther<br />

King Magnet School. Former<br />

roles in MNEA include Treasurer, <strong>Association</strong><br />

Representative, Negotiations Team Member,<br />

Minority Affairs Chairperson, Budget Committee<br />

Chairperson, Special <strong>Education</strong> Committee Chair,<br />

TEA delegate, NEA delegate, and MNEA organizer<br />

for NEA Target of Opportunities Campaign.<br />

Theresa L. Wagner — Professional: Adapted<br />

Physical <strong>Education</strong> Teacher in Louisiana (1986-<br />

98); Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools<br />

Physical <strong>Education</strong> Teacher (1998-present).<br />

MNEA: Chair Human Relations Committee<br />

(2007-08; 2010-11); Executive Board Director<br />

(2007-present); Chair Membership Committee<br />

(2008-10); Delegate to TEA Representative<br />

Assembly (2006-11);<br />

Groupsite & Facebook Social<br />

Media Administrator (2009present).<br />

TEA: Legislative<br />

Editing Committee (2006-<br />

08); Status of Women in<br />

<strong>Education</strong> Committee (2008-<br />

10); Membership Committee<br />

(2010-present); TUEAC<br />

President (2010-present);<br />

TEA Delegate to NEA Annual Meeting (2008-11).<br />

NEA: Human and Civil Rights Division/GLBT Cadre<br />

trainer (2007-present).<br />

Claudia Davidson *<br />

Carrol Trusty — Career Ladder<br />

Level III teacher with more<br />

than 30 years experience<br />

teaching English, debate and<br />

drama in Davidson, Wilson<br />

and Rutherford Counties,<br />

currently teaches at Antioch<br />

High and is lead teacher for<br />

Twilight School. Her service<br />

includes 2011-13 MNEA Secretary, <strong>Association</strong><br />

Representative, TEA Professional Negotiations<br />

Committee, MNEA Rights and Responsibility<br />

Committee, NEA Annual Meeting Review<br />

Committee, Bargaining Team, delegate to the<br />

TEA Representative Assembly, and delegate NEA<br />

Annual Meeting.<br />

Avery Ewing *<br />

Michele Sheriff — Has<br />

taught in Metro Nashville<br />

Public Schools for 19 years<br />

and currently teaches fourth<br />

grade EL at Gower Elementary<br />

School. As an active member<br />

of MNEA, she currently<br />

serves as the MNEA Building<br />

Representative and serves<br />

on the Professional Rights and Responsibilities<br />

Committee. Former roles in MNEA include<br />

<strong>Association</strong> Representative, Negotiations Team<br />

Member, and she attended the TEA Bargaining<br />

Conference. “I would consider it an honor to<br />

represent District 9 at the 2012 NEA RA.”<br />

Vernon Porter *<br />

Trevor Holt — Library<br />

information specialist at<br />

Brick Church Middle School,<br />

was elected MNEA Treasurer<br />

in 2011. Prior to joining<br />

MNPS, Dr. Holt was employed<br />

at <strong>Tennessee</strong> Preparatory<br />

School as a teacher-librarian<br />

and MTSU as an associate<br />

professor in educational leadership. She has<br />

served on TEA’s Special Schools and Status of<br />

Women committees; MNEA District 1 Director;<br />

MNEA Minority Affairs Committee Chair; MNEA<br />

delegate to TEA and NEA; and as <strong>Association</strong> Rep<br />

at TPS.<br />

www.teateachers.org


Deborah Smith *<br />

Rosemary Wade *<br />

District 10<br />

Christine Denton *<br />

NEA Representative Assembly 2012 Delegate Nominees<br />

Guy Stanley — Speech/<br />

psychology teacher (42),<br />

Greenbrier HS, Robertson<br />

County; RCEA: president (7),<br />

vice president, PACE chair;<br />

TEA: Board of Directors,<br />

Professional Negotiations,<br />

Communications, Legislative<br />

Editing, NEA Concerns<br />

Committee, Design Team: TEA<br />

RA (26); NEA RA (17); NEA: Board, Congressional<br />

Concerns Committee, Read Across America<br />

Advisory Committee; co-chair, NEA Southeast<br />

Regional Planning Committee; <strong>Tennessee</strong> High<br />

School Speech and Drama League Hall of Fame;<br />

“Stand up for Stanley and he will stand up for<br />

you.”<br />

Alzenia Walls — Career &<br />

Technical <strong>Education</strong> teacher at<br />

Station Camp High School in<br />

Sumner County. She received<br />

a Bachelor of Science Degree<br />

from University of Arkansas at<br />

Pine Blue; Master of <strong>Education</strong><br />

Degree from University of<br />

Nevada, Las Vegas and a<br />

Doctorate Degree from Nova<br />

Southeastern University, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.<br />

This is her 34th year in public education; 27 years<br />

in the Clark County School District in Las Vegas,<br />

Nevada and 7th year in Sumner County, where she is<br />

currently president of SCEA.<br />

Jane Ligon — Senior<br />

Administrative Assistant/<br />

Bookkeeper at Bransford<br />

Elementary, Robertson<br />

County. RCEA – 1st Vice<br />

President, Chair of the Ethnic<br />

Minority Affairs Committee<br />

and member of the <strong>Education</strong><br />

Support Professional<br />

Committee; TEA – State<br />

Special Schools Committee; NEA – Secretary<br />

of National Council of <strong>Education</strong> Support<br />

Professionals, member of Advisory Committee on<br />

Membership, Ethnic Minority Affairs, and Status<br />

of Women Caucus. Former member TEA and NEA<br />

Board of Directors, delegate to the TEA and NEA<br />

Representative Assembly for numerous years.<br />

Mike Brown — Retired<br />

in 2006, currently works<br />

part-time with at-risk high<br />

school students; active in<br />

Robertson County EA since<br />

1976; served as first vicepresident<br />

and membership<br />

chair; represented RCEA<br />

at numerous TEA and NEA<br />

RAs, seminars and academies; former TEA<br />

Board member representing Middle <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Administrators and former TEA Executive<br />

Committee member; “I wish to continue to serve<br />

the membership of TEA and ask for your support as<br />

a state delegate to the 2012 NEA RA.”<br />

Larry Proffitt — Teaches<br />

7th grade language arts and<br />

social studies at Greenbrier<br />

Middle School in Robertson<br />

Co. He is a former president<br />

of the Cocke County EA.<br />

Larry has represented<br />

members at several TEA and<br />

NEA representative assemblies since becoming<br />

an advocate as a student and continuing into<br />

his professional career. He serves locally as a<br />

new member of the RCEA bargaining team and<br />

as a legislative contact to Rep. Joshua Evans.<br />

Represents members’ interests on the TEA Board.<br />

District 11<br />

Melanie Buchanan *<br />

District 12<br />

Debbie D’Angelo — Debbie<br />

D’Angelo has taught for 12<br />

years in the Henry County<br />

School System. TEA board<br />

member. Currently serves<br />

as reading specialist<br />

for Harrelson School,<br />

working with students in<br />

Kindergarten through third<br />

grade who score below grade<br />

level in reading. D’Angelo has been a member of<br />

the <strong>Association</strong> for 10 years. She has been the<br />

Vice President, President and currently is the<br />

Membership Chair for her local <strong>Association</strong>. She<br />

has been actively involved as a member of the<br />

the local negotiation team, attended Summer<br />

Leadership, Bargaining Conference, Southeast<br />

Regional Conferences, and the NEA-RA.<br />

District 13<br />

Ernestine King — Special<br />

education teacher in<br />

Shelby County Schools. Her<br />

credentials include A.S.,<br />

B.S., Med, Ed.S., serving<br />

on the board of directors,<br />

Shelby County <strong>Education</strong><br />

<strong>Association</strong>, District 7. She<br />

has served on the Minority<br />

Affairs Committee, IPD<br />

Commission, Human Relations Committee, TEA’s<br />

Special <strong>Education</strong> Ad Hoc Committee, Legislative<br />

Committee, and Human Relations Committee.<br />

Ernestine has attended several leadership<br />

conferences and TUEAC spring symposia. Other<br />

experiences include NEA’s Southeast Regional<br />

conferences; NBCT mentor, NBCT scorer, NEA’s<br />

grant reader. She joined as student member of<br />

TEA/NEA in 1997.<br />

Diccie Smith — Has worked<br />

27 years for Shelby County<br />

Schools. Served on various<br />

committees, held various<br />

leadership positions and<br />

attended many workshops<br />

and conferences on the local,<br />

state, and national levels.<br />

Attended several TEA/NEA<br />

Representative Assemblies. Currently a resource<br />

co-teacher—5th and 8th grades (LA/Math),<br />

represent District 7 (SC-PACE), ethnic minority<br />

director-at-large (NCUEA), a member of the<br />

Legislative Contact Team, SCEA, TEA, NEA Board of<br />

Directors. “I am committed to advocating for you,<br />

our students and public education.”<br />

Sammy Jobe — Currently<br />

president of the Shelby<br />

County <strong>Education</strong><br />

<strong>Association</strong>. Heath/physical<br />

education teacher, boys’<br />

basketball coach (17 years)<br />

Collierville Middle School,<br />

Shelby County. B.S.Ed.<br />

- University of Memphis,<br />

M.S.Ed. Administration and Supervision -<br />

Trevecca Nazarene University. 45 hours post<br />

graduate studies-elementary certification. SCEA<br />

Board of Directors-8 years; Nashville Capitol<br />

Hill lobbying – 12 years; Building AR-11 years;<br />

election committee co-chairman; liaison for<br />

SCEA newsletter; Educator Benefits; TEA Board<br />

of Directors; 14 TEA RAs; four TEA Leadership<br />

Academies; TEA membership committee--two<br />

years.<br />

District 14<br />

LaVerne Dickerson —<br />

Currently serving third year<br />

on the TEA Board of Directors;<br />

member of the Memphis<br />

<strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>;<br />

locally fifth grade teacher<br />

at Westhaven Success<br />

Academy; Memphis <strong>Education</strong><br />

<strong>Association</strong> Bargaining Chair;<br />

have chaired Minority Affairs, IPD, Read Across<br />

America; state level - currently Minority Affairs<br />

chairman; have attended TEA RAs for many years<br />

and NEA RAs for approximately 10 years; recently<br />

won a 3600 Award for going above and beyond<br />

teaching expectations; 36-year veteran teacher.<br />

Sarah-Kennedy Harper — Proud teacher of<br />

Memphis City Schools in West<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>. Currently serving<br />

her second term on the TEA<br />

board of directors. Having<br />

taught for 15 years, she has<br />

been a delegate to the TEA<br />

RA a number of years. “I know<br />

now that teaching is what I<br />

was born to do and a teacher<br />

is who I am. It’s in my blood.”<br />

Martha A. Shaw *<br />

Tabatha Holmes *<br />

Anecia Scott *<br />

Carolyn Jamison *<br />

Anthony D. Harris *<br />

Hattie Woodard *<br />

Mildred J. Williams *<br />

Vincent Thomas *<br />

Yalaunda Y. Taylor *<br />

Sharon B. Macklin *<br />

Annette Gladney *<br />

Jerry O. Graham *<br />

Adrienne Jones-Jewell *<br />

District 15<br />

Stephanie Fitzgerald *<br />

Dana Payne *<br />

Monica Hayes-Roberson *<br />

Jennifer P. Webb *<br />

Edward Harper *<br />

Frednardo Davis *<br />

Osea Creggett *<br />

Glenda Patterson Jones *<br />

Crystal E. Harper *<br />

Denise Cunningham *<br />

Erika Sugarmon *<br />

DeJuan Parker *<br />

Yolanda Crawford *<br />

Tiffany T. Reed *<br />

Brenda Porter *<br />

Derick Bell *<br />

CATEGORY 2<br />

Barbara Gray — Assistant principal, teacher<br />

Shelby County Schools<br />

since 1972; currently:<br />

TEA Vice-President, chair<br />

NEA Concerns Committee;<br />

Shelby County EA positions:<br />

president, vice-president,<br />

Administrator SCEA Board<br />

(2), Minority Affairs,<br />

Constitution & By-laws,<br />

Member Benefits, SC-PACE,<br />

Membership committee, building representative;<br />

TEA positions: West TN Administrator, chair State<br />

Board Contact Committee; Executive Committee<br />

(2), ION, Membership Chair, Communication,<br />

Technology, Administrative Task Force, Credential<br />

committees, lobbying, and numerous other<br />

activities. Attended TEA RA, NEA RA. “I would like<br />

to be your voice at 2012 NEA RA.”<br />

Charles Green *<br />

Johnny Henry *<br />

Margaret Thompson — I have represented<br />

administrators from middle <strong>Tennessee</strong> on the<br />

TEA Board for the past three years. I have taught<br />

school for more than 30 years. I have been an<br />

administrator for seven years in Robertson Co.,<br />

all the while being a member of Robertson Co. EA.<br />

Throughout my years of <strong>Association</strong> membership,<br />

I have worked on numerous committees, as well as<br />

recruited membership. During my tenure on the<br />

Board, I have attended four NEA RAs.<br />

Paula Brown *<br />

Brad Corum *<br />

Danny Weeks — Has been<br />

an educator in the Robertson<br />

County system for 22 years;<br />

currently serves as Supervisor of<br />

Secondary Schools; <strong>Association</strong><br />

experiences include STEA State<br />

President, local president,<br />

treasurer and delegate; has<br />

served on the Middle <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

EA Executive Committee, where<br />

he later served as president; served on the TEA<br />

Board of Directors representing Middle <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

administrators, 1998-2003.<br />

Melinda Douthat Pruitt —<br />

Special <strong>Education</strong> Supervisor,<br />

Greene County Schools,<br />

30 years: 16/teacher, 14/<br />

administrator; B.S./M.S.<br />

UT-K, Doctorate ETSU;<br />

GCEA: treasurer 2004-2006,<br />

president 2001, 1995,<br />

president-elect 2000, 1994,<br />

vice president 1999, 1993; TEA: Committees—<br />

Status of Women 2006-2007, ION 2003-2004,<br />

Membership 2001-2002, Insurance 1999-2000,<br />

Negotiations 1997-1998, Administrator Task Force<br />

2005-2006; TEA RA (16), NEA RA (12); Honors: TEA<br />

Distinguished Administrator 2001-2002; Who’s<br />

Who in American <strong>Education</strong> 1989-2009. “I would<br />

appreciate your vote for state NEA RA delegate.”<br />

* — no photo or bio at press time.<br />

The 2012 NEA RA will be held June 30<br />

through July 5 in Washington, DC.<br />

TEA Salutes 2011 National<br />

Board-Certified Teachers<br />

Hats off to 29 TEA members who became new National<br />

Board Certified Teachers (NBCTs) in December 2011 as<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> continues to advance the National Board<br />

Certification movement.<br />

With a total of 535 National Board-certified teachers<br />

in <strong>Tennessee</strong>, the state currently ranks 27th nationally.<br />

“This is wonderful because there has not been a<br />

statewide incentive or a fee assistance program,” said<br />

Susan Dalton, coordinator at the TEA Instruction and<br />

Professional Development division which assists TEA<br />

members in getting new certification and continuing<br />

education. “There has been limited federal assistance<br />

to bring the numbers up, and it will be interesting to see<br />

whether those districts that have offered incentives will<br />

continue the practice under the new laws which eliminated<br />

collective bargaining in <strong>Tennessee</strong>.”<br />

Dalton said there is strong evidence that TEA has<br />

played a crucial role in promoting full certification<br />

through the Take One! grant process. For instance, of the<br />

10 newest NBCTs in Hamilton Co., five started as Take One!<br />

participants. In Cleveland City and in Bradley County,<br />

both new NBCTs started as Take One! participants. “We<br />

had a similar Take One! success story last year in East<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>,” Dalton said.<br />

Although the class of 2011 is not the largest class, it<br />

has a high percentage of TEA members in recent years.<br />

Visit www.teateachers.org for certification info.<br />

Cleveland City: Angelia Goodwill<br />

Davidson County ($850 fee assistance and $4000<br />

annual supplement): Mary Bradshaw, Andrea Crews,<br />

Juanita Moore, Seth Swihart<br />

Franklin Special Schools (professional leave<br />

assistance, $4000 annual supplement): Mary Curtis,<br />

Jennifer Hacker, Susan Nash<br />

Hamilton County (candidate support, retake<br />

assistance, $4000 annual supplement): Brinn Dalton,<br />

Karen Fogo, Jennifer Greever , Autumn Hart, Steven<br />

Hinkle, Virginia Kidd, Tara Tharp<br />

Hawkins County: Rhonda Richards<br />

Kingsport City Schools (fee and retake assistance,<br />

professional leave assistance): Sara Eik<br />

Memphis City ($6,000-$10,000 annual supplement):<br />

Kemm Browne, Kim Buie, Michelle Hope, Atina Scott<br />

Jones, Michelle Elmore Lake, Patrece Morrow, Amy<br />

Murdock, Kamilah Whitley<br />

Roane County ($4000 annual supplement): Christy<br />

Ruskey<br />

Williamson County (fee assistance, video/logistical<br />

assistance, $4000 annual supplement): Amanda Clarke,<br />

Sue Jordan, Tiffany Wilson-Mobley<br />

<br />

<br />

10 <strong>February</strong> 2012 11<br />

www.teateachers.org


STEA members and TEA-retired teachers support Blue Springs Elementary School faculty in Bradley Co.<br />

Student Teachers, Retirees Help Three Schools<br />

Student teachers and members of the TEA-Retired<br />

<strong>Association</strong> joined forces last year to bolster the spirit of<br />

students and staff of three <strong>Tennessee</strong> schools in need of<br />

financial and emotional help.<br />

STEA members raised nearly $3,000 with their retired<br />

colleagues through a service project designed and<br />

implemented by the TEA student affiliate.<br />

“With the help of local associations, we identified three<br />

schools in each of the three grand divisions of the state,”<br />

said Nicki Fields, STEA coordinator with the Instruction and<br />

Professional Development division of TEA. “We were able<br />

to support programs most in need of funding at Gordon<br />

Elementary in Memphis, Buena Vista Elementary in Nashville<br />

and Blue Springs Elementary in Bradley County.”<br />

Thanks to the joint fundraising efforts, Gordon Elementary<br />

students received much-needed standard school attire.<br />

Buena Vista Elementary teachers received additional<br />

funds to boost the school’s backpack program, through which<br />

students in need receive food for the weekend as well as<br />

various incentives for good grades.<br />

“In Bradley Co. we helped a school that was destroyed by<br />

the tornado last April,” said Caryce Gilmore, a student member<br />

at the University of <strong>Tennessee</strong>-Martin and STEA president<br />

(pictured above, center). “Blue Springs Elementary teachers<br />

and kids were at school when the tornado hit. Once they were<br />

evacuated, they were able to salvage only some of their things.<br />

A lot of them lost pretty much everything.”<br />

After spending the remainder of the school year in<br />

gymnasiums and libraries across the county, Blue Springs<br />

faculty learned that their school would not reopen in August.<br />

“We were told to reapply for jobs like we did something<br />

wrong,” said one teacher who asked not to be identified. “Now<br />

we’re split up across the county in different schools, like our<br />

students.”<br />

Nine Blue Springs classroom teachers received gift cards to<br />

purchase schools supplies. For some of them, this was the first<br />

opportunity to reunite after the tornado.<br />

“We talked about that day and we all cried,” said Fields. “It<br />

was just a good, emotion-filled visit.”<br />

Having encouraged Bradley County administrators to<br />

build a new school where Blue Springs faculty and students<br />

can reunite once again under one roof, STEA and TEA-Retired<br />

members are preparing to expand their efforts to more<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> schools.<br />

TEA Calendar of Events<br />

March 1 Deadline for submitting nominations<br />

for Don Sahli-Kathy Woodall<br />

scholarships<br />

March 2 Read Across America Day<br />

March 11 Daylight savings time begins<br />

March 13 Deadline for submitting TEA<br />

Constitution and Bylaws amendment<br />

proposals and nominations<br />

and biographical information for<br />

candidates for TEA offices<br />

March 16-17 TEA Symposium, Gatlinburg<br />

March 22-23 FTA Convention, Nashville<br />

March 23-24 Student-TEA Convention, Nashville<br />

March 23-24 Minority Affairs Conference,<br />

Chattanooga<br />

April 8 Easter<br />

Need information, services?<br />

Mitchell Johnson<br />

Assistant Executive Director for Affi liate<br />

Services<br />

Donna Cotner<br />

Managers of UniServ<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>, 801 Second Avenue<br />

N., Nashville, TN 37201-1099<br />

(615) 242-8392, (800) 342-8367, FAX (615) 259-4581<br />

UniServ Coordinators<br />

District 1 — Harry Farthing, P.O. Box 298, Elizabethton,<br />

TN 37644; phone: (423)262-8035, fax: (423)262-<br />

8053; Assns: Carter, Hancock, Hawkins, Rogersville,<br />

Johnson, Sullivan, Bristol, Kingsport, Northeast State<br />

C.C. District 2 — Jennifer Gaby, P.O. Box 70, Afton,<br />

TN 37616; (423)234-0700, fax: (423)234-0708; Assns:<br />

Cocke, Newport, Elizabethton, Greene, Greeneville,<br />

Unicoi, Washington, Johnson City, ETSU. District<br />

3 — Tina Parlier, P.O. Box 74, Corryton, TN 37721;<br />

(865)688-1175, fax: (865)688-5188; Assns: Claiborne,<br />

Grainger, Hamblen, Jefferson, Sevier, Union, Walter<br />

State C.C. District 4 — Jon White, Knox County<br />

<strong>Education</strong> <strong>Association</strong>, 2411 Magnolia Ave., Knoxville,<br />

TN 37917-8289; (865)522-9793, fax: (865)522-9866;<br />

Assns: Knox, UT-Knoxville, Pellisippi State C.C., TSD.<br />

District 5— Jason White, Assns: Anderson, Clinton,<br />

Oak Ridge, Campbell, Cumberland, Fentress, Morgan,<br />

Scott, Oneida, TSD, York Institute District 6 — Reba<br />

Luttrell, 503 Cardinal St., Maryville, TN 37803; phone/<br />

fax: (865)983-8640; Assns: Blount, Alcoa, Maryville,<br />

Monroe, Sweetwater, Loudon, Lenoir City, Roane,<br />

Roane State C.C. District 7 — Jim Jordan, P.O. Box<br />

4878, Cleveland, TN 37320; phone/fax: (423)472-3315;<br />

Assns: Bledsoe, Bradley, Cleveland, McMinn, Athens,<br />

Etowah, Meigs, Polk, Rhea-Dayton, Cleveland State<br />

C.C. District 8 — Theresa Turner, 4655 Shallowford<br />

Rd., Chattanooga, TN 37411; (423)485-9535, fax:<br />

(423)485-9512; Assns: Hamilton County, Chattanooga<br />

State C.C., UT-Chattanooga, Department of Higher<br />

Ed. District 9 — Jeff Garrett, 801 Second Avenue<br />

North, Nashville, TN 37201; (615)242-8392, ext. 228, or<br />

(800)342-8367; Assns: Coffee, Manchester, Tullahoma,<br />

Franklin, Grundy, Marion, Sequatchie, Van Buren,<br />

White, Warren. District 10 — Shannon Bain, 1001<br />

Rhett Place, Lebanon, TN 37087; phone: (615)547-7769,<br />

fax: (615)547-7879; Assns: Clay, DeKalb, Jackson, Macon,<br />

Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Smith, Trousdale, TTU.<br />

District 11 — Arthur Patterson, 101 Copperas Court,<br />

Murfreesboro, TN 37128; phone: (615)907-9912, fax: (615)<br />

907-5490; Assns: Cannon, Sumner, Wilson, Lebanon<br />

S.S.D., Volunteer State C.C. District 12 — Susan<br />

Young, P.O. Box 422, Madison, TN 37116-0422; phone/<br />

fax: (615)865-9700; Assns: Cheatham, Rutherford,<br />

Murfreesboro, MTSU, TSB, TN Department of <strong>Education</strong><br />

District 13 — Forestine Cole, Ralph Smith,<br />

Metro Nashville, 531 Fairground Court, Nashville, TN<br />

37211; (615)726-1499, fax: (615)726-2501; Assns: Metro<br />

Nashville, Nashville State C.C., TSU, Department of<br />

Higher <strong>Education</strong> District 14 — Rhonda Thompson,<br />

801 Second Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37201;<br />

(615)242-8392, ext. 321, or (800)342-8367; Assns:<br />

Clarksville-Montgomery, Robertson, APSU District 15<br />

— Miley Durham, P.O. Box 10, Lawrenceburg, TN 38464;<br />

phone/fax: (931)766-7874; Assns: Bedford, Giles, Lawrence,<br />

Lincoln, Fayetteville, Marshall, Moore, Motlow<br />

State C.C. District 16 — Jackie Pope, 2326 Valley<br />

Grove Dr., Murfreesboro, TN 37128; (615) 898-1060, fax:<br />

(615) 898-1099; Assns: Lewis, Maury, Williamson,<br />

Franklin S.S.D. District 17 — Cheryl Richardson-<br />

Bradley, 801 Second Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37201;<br />

(615)242-8392, ext. 233, or (800)342-8367; Assns:<br />

Decatur, Dickson, Hardin, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys,<br />

Perry, Wayne District 18 — Maria Uffelman,<br />

P.O. Box 99, Cumberland City, TN 37050; phone/fax:<br />

(931)827-3333; Assns: Benton, Carroll (West Carroll)<br />

Central, Clarksburg, Huntingdon, McKenzie, Gibson,<br />

Bradford, Humboldt, Milan, Trenton, Henry, Paris,<br />

Stewart, Weakley, UT-Martin, FTA District 19— Lorrie<br />

Butler, P.O. Box 387, Henderson, TN 38340; (731)989-<br />

4860, fax: (731)989-9254; Assns: Chester, Hardeman,<br />

Henderson, Lexington, Jackson-Madison, McNairy,<br />

Jackson State C.C. District 20 — Karla Carpenter,<br />

P.O. Box 177, Brunswick, TN 38014; (901)590-2543,<br />

fax: (901)382-1433; Assns: Crockett, Dyer, Dyersburg,<br />

Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, Union City, Tipton,<br />

Dyersburg State C.C. District 21 — Zandra Foster,<br />

3897 Homewood Cove, Memphis, TN 38128; phone/fax:<br />

(901)377-9472; Assns: Fayette, Shelby, Southwest Tenn.<br />

C.C., University of Memphis. District 22/MEA — Ken<br />

Foster, Executive Director; MEA UniServ Directors:<br />

Marilyn Baker, Susanne Jackson, Terri Jones,<br />

Tom Marchand, Herman Sawyer, MEA, 126 South<br />

Flicker Street, Memphis, TN 38104; (901)454-0966, fax:<br />

(901)454-9979; Assn: Memphis.<br />

www.teateachers.org<br />

www.nea.org<br />

12 <strong>February</strong> 2012

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