2006-2007 麻豆视频 City Unified School District Teachers of the Year

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Clayton Dagler

麻豆视频 Clayton Dagler:
In ninth grade, Clayton Dagler鈥檚 math teacher told him that he shouldn鈥檛 aspire to higher level math classes. Maybe the teacher was trying to do Dagler a favor. After all, the teenager did suffer from dyslexia and had a hard time in the class.

Instead, that demeaning comment had the opposite effect, giving Dagler the motivation to prove his teacher wrong. Instead of quitting math, Dagler continued to take higher level classes, eventually graduating from UC Davis with a mathematics degree.

That background has served him well as he works as a teacher at Luther Burbank High School, where he believes that every student can learn no matter what their situation or ability level.

That attitude is one reason that Dagler joins Marsha Stanley as a 2006 麻豆视频 City Unified School District Teacher of the Year.

鈥淗e, more deeply than any teacher I know, believes that students can be successful,鈥 Burbank Principal Ted Appel said. His experience with dyslexia 鈥渉as led him to understand that with good people around them every single student has can learn.鈥

Dagler said that his classroom struggles have allowed him to see the importance of small successes in learning.

To Dagler, even the students who say they don鈥檛 like math are teachable.
鈥淣inety-nine percent of those students don鈥檛 not like math, they don鈥檛 like failing,鈥 he said.鈥 Everyone wants to do good and everyone can. You have to show them small successes and build on that.鈥

Dagler has built on enough successes to watch several of his students attend college and major in math, a significant feat for many students at Burbank.

Both Dagler and Appel admit things weren鈥檛 so clear cut for Dagler when he was a rookie teacher.

鈥淏ut he learned how to engage kids, structure his classroom and establish good relationships with the kids and their parents,鈥 said Appel, who was working with new teachers when Dagler began his career. 鈥淗e struggled mightily, but he was always open to getting better.鈥

Dagler now laughs about his trials as a rookie in the classroom. The second year was much better than his first and his third year was even better than that, he said. Now he mentors new teachers and tries to teach the same lessons he learned from Appel.

鈥淚t takes time (to become a good teacher),鈥 Dagler said. 鈥淚鈥檓 still improving.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 important that teachers never stop finding new ways to teach and learning new things about what you are teaching. If you aren鈥檛 doing that, you shouldn鈥檛 be a teacher.鈥

While Dagler will enjoy a year of public accolades, he insists that there are plenty of others at his school deserving of such an honor.

鈥淭here are several teachers here who should be Teachers of the Year,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just one of many teachers at Burbank and in the district who are working hard to help students succeed.

麻豆视频 Marsha Stanley:
Thank you Mrs. Werfel. Wherever you are.

Mrs. Werfel, an English teacher at Santa Clara High School in the late 1960s, taught her subject in such a manner, that she inspired Marsha Stanley to follow in her footsteps.

Stanley, an English Language arts and drama teacher at Art Benjamin Health Professions High School, didn鈥檛 exactly follow immediately in Mrs. Werfel鈥檚 footsteps. She took a little diversion鈥攁 30-year career as a sales and service trainer for Pacific Bell鈥攂efore she became a teacher. Now that she鈥檚 there, her students, and her principal, couldn鈥檛 be happier.

鈥淪he鈥檚 the most positive person I鈥檝e ever met,鈥 Principal Matt Perry said. 鈥淚n terms of relationships, no one does it better.鈥

Her ability to build relationships is one reason Stanley joins Luther Burbank High School鈥檚 Clayton Dagler as a 2006 麻豆视频 City Unified School District Teacher of the Year.  Stanley is able to bring a positive energy to the students in her classroom and colleagues having a bad day, Perry said. 鈥淗er students love her,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 a very good role model for everyone, including adults.鈥 But what sets Stanley apart is the lengths she goes through to build the all-important relationships.

Quite often she can be found riding the light rail into work instead of driving. Her schedule just happens to coincide with some of her students who rely on public transportation to get to and from school. While Stanley says that riding light rail is an opportunity to grade papers while someone else does the driving, she also admits to looking forward to the conversations she has with students outside of the classroom setting.

鈥淚 get a chance to know the kids more one-on-one,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 interesting to sit and talk with them about what they are reading in a more relaxed atmosphere.鈥  Perry said that Stanley鈥檚 optimism allows her to find a way when others might be discouraged from pursing a task.

For instance, Stanley wanted students to put on a production. But Health Professions has no stage and no money for a set. Classes take place in portables while the permanent campus is being built. No problem for Stanley. Her students put on two performances at neighboring Jedediah Smith Elementary School. And Stanley negotiated a partnership with Music Circus, where students get to see performances and interact with the actors visiting the theater. 鈥淗er paradigm is anything is possible with students,鈥 Perry said.

Even with the honor of being named Teacher of the Year, Stanley still sees herself following in the footsteps of teachers like Mrs. Werfel. 鈥淚鈥檓 no different than 90 percent of the other teachers. I was just a little more lucky,鈥 Stanley said. 鈥淲e all want our students to succeed.鈥