Shannon Verschueren - Crest Special Education Teacher/Case Manager, Resource Room/Structured Study Social Skills, HS Drill Team Coach
Location: Mercer Island High School and Crest Learning Center
Job description: Shannon provides direct instruction for students with I.E.P.’s (Individual Education Plans) who need support and additional instruction to be successful in general education. This might involve academic subjects like math, reading, or writing, or it could include instruction in organizational and personal skills. In her social skills class, for instance, students grapple with such subjects as how to go on a date or how to act on an airplane, via games, role play, and problem-solving questions. Shannon is fascinated by the differences in the way students learn and how their brains work. “I could have a student who is in AP level science but doesn’t understand how to have a conversation.” Shannon keeps in touch with students after they graduate, and has received a lot of positive feedback as they navigate through college. “Every day there is something to celebrate.”
Typical day: “My typical day is as structured as humanly possible!” says Shannon. “I have so many kids doing so many different things. Each of my students has a goal sheet so that he or she knows what to work on. Flexibility is the name of the game here.” Shannon, who would be a professional organizer if she weren’t a teacher, feels it is never too early to learn organization skills.
In her first period of the day, at Crest, Shannon focuses on self-advocacy. “When my students go to college,” she says, “they will need to know how to get extra support if they need it.” She does the same the rest of the day with her students at the high school, where she teaches structured study and social skills classes in the resource room, as well as one drill team class. “We are called Case Managers because we help the kids manage their time and plan long-term goals,” Shannon explains. “From eighth grade on, we begin asking them what they’re going to do after high school. They express their interests, and we help them determine the steps to get there.”
Best part of the job: “I love community building,” says Shannon. Working at both Crest, the high school, and as a drill team coach, has given her that opportunity. “Bridging the gap between special education students and Crest students has been awesome,” says Shannon. She has hosted dinner parties for the drill team at Crest, enlightening team members to the fact that there are summer class offerings at Crest. Shannon, who went to Mercer Island schools, learned early about the importance of interested teachers who are invested in the well being of their students. “I had great relationships with all my teachers,” says Shannon. “During times of stress, my teachers were my pillars of support, consistency and comfort.”
Something people may not know: Shannon is deeply rooted to Mercer Island. In fact, her senior class voted her most likely never to leave! Her mother graduated from MIHS in 1974, and Shannon herself graduated from MIHS in 2002. Several generations of Shannon's large family continue to live on the island today.
Years in district: This is Shannon’s third year with MISD.
Outside interests: “I've always done drill team; I was on the team for three years,” says Shannon. “It's a huge part of my life.” She also dances, (hip hop, jazz, ballet) and scrapbooks. She and her boyfriend, Matt Stock, also an MIHS grad, enjoy traveling. Shannon was a chaperone on the MIHS Senior Vietnam trip in February 2010. The money raised by the individual students and families funded orphanages there. The experience, says Shannon, was “life-altering. It was great to feel connected with so many kids I never would have had in classes otherwise.”
Monday, November 1, 2010
Bruce Harrington – Sixth Grade Language Arts/Social Studies Teacher
Location: Islander Middle School
How he sees his job: Before becoming a teacher in 2002, Bruce fulfilled a ten-year calling as a pastor. Teaching, he says, is a similar calling. “Teaching has a different book, a different bell, and a different building, but it’s the same job. It’s helping people discover themselves.” He encourages his sixth-graders to “do things in life you’ve never done before. Find your passion. Read a book from a different genre, take a class in something you’ve always wanted to learn – a musical instrument, a language, try skydiving. Challenge yourself! You have a whole life ahead of you — don’t put yourself in a box.” He offers himself as an example. “I NEVER would have predicted I’d end up teaching sixth grade! I wanted to be Indiana Jones! My hardest years in school were during junior high. But those experiences help me relate to my students and the issues they struggle with.”
Typical day: Bruce arises at 5:00 a.m. and walks his dog Jezebel, a ‘pound puppy’ of unknown lineage, for 45 minutes. He arrives at IMS at 7:00 a.m., allowing over an hour to finish planning the day ahead, snag a place at the copier before a line forms, and check in with his sixth grade teaching team. At 8:20 a.m. the bell rings and his classroom floods with energetic sixth-graders, bearing news items gleaned from CNN and the like. “I want my kids to be aware of social studies in the news,” Bruce explains. “They are constantly rushing up to me with articles about such topics as Stonehenge or some newly discovered Egyptian mummies.” Bruce teaches two LA/SS block periods. His final period of the day is a prep-period, when he confers again with his sixth grade teaching team, discussing things like student issues, curriculum, and field trips.
Best part of the job: “Seeing students’ pride after they’ve done something they didn’t think they could do,” says Bruce. For example, his sixth-grade language arts culminating project is a 16 page story which students write and illustrate and bind into an actual ‘book.’ The content may be any genre they choose – fiction, non-fiction, or fantasy. “In the beginning of the year,” says Bruce, “getting a sixth-grader to write a full paragraph is like pulling teeth. By June, they will have illustrated and ‘authored’ their own book, something of which they are extremely proud.”
Something people may not know: Bruce grew up in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. As a young boy during the 1976 Bicentennial, he participated in many state celebrations. “My dad was a reenactor. He played an American Revolutionary Minuteman, adopting the persona of an ancestor who actually fought in the Revolutionary war. I was a flag bearer in the parades.” Bruce was a member of the color guard that greeted Queen Elizabeth II when she visited Boston. Bruce graduated from Andover Newton Theological School in Massachusetts, and received his grad degree in education from Worcester State (College) University in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Years in district: Bruce is in his seventh year with MISD.
Outside interests: Bruce lives in Seattle near Garfield High School. He plays the piano and enjoys gardening. “People think I’m crazy, but I LOVE yard work! I could mow the lawn seven days a week.” Bruce also has an interest in genealogy and is researching a complete family history for the benefit of his niece and nephew, tracing his family lines from the present all the way to the court of Queen Elizabeth I.
Location: Islander Middle School
How he sees his job: Before becoming a teacher in 2002, Bruce fulfilled a ten-year calling as a pastor. Teaching, he says, is a similar calling. “Teaching has a different book, a different bell, and a different building, but it’s the same job. It’s helping people discover themselves.” He encourages his sixth-graders to “do things in life you’ve never done before. Find your passion. Read a book from a different genre, take a class in something you’ve always wanted to learn – a musical instrument, a language, try skydiving. Challenge yourself! You have a whole life ahead of you — don’t put yourself in a box.” He offers himself as an example. “I NEVER would have predicted I’d end up teaching sixth grade! I wanted to be Indiana Jones! My hardest years in school were during junior high. But those experiences help me relate to my students and the issues they struggle with.”
Typical day: Bruce arises at 5:00 a.m. and walks his dog Jezebel, a ‘pound puppy’ of unknown lineage, for 45 minutes. He arrives at IMS at 7:00 a.m., allowing over an hour to finish planning the day ahead, snag a place at the copier before a line forms, and check in with his sixth grade teaching team. At 8:20 a.m. the bell rings and his classroom floods with energetic sixth-graders, bearing news items gleaned from CNN and the like. “I want my kids to be aware of social studies in the news,” Bruce explains. “They are constantly rushing up to me with articles about such topics as Stonehenge or some newly discovered Egyptian mummies.” Bruce teaches two LA/SS block periods. His final period of the day is a prep-period, when he confers again with his sixth grade teaching team, discussing things like student issues, curriculum, and field trips.
Best part of the job: “Seeing students’ pride after they’ve done something they didn’t think they could do,” says Bruce. For example, his sixth-grade language arts culminating project is a 16 page story which students write and illustrate and bind into an actual ‘book.’ The content may be any genre they choose – fiction, non-fiction, or fantasy. “In the beginning of the year,” says Bruce, “getting a sixth-grader to write a full paragraph is like pulling teeth. By June, they will have illustrated and ‘authored’ their own book, something of which they are extremely proud.”
Something people may not know: Bruce grew up in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. As a young boy during the 1976 Bicentennial, he participated in many state celebrations. “My dad was a reenactor. He played an American Revolutionary Minuteman, adopting the persona of an ancestor who actually fought in the Revolutionary war. I was a flag bearer in the parades.” Bruce was a member of the color guard that greeted Queen Elizabeth II when she visited Boston. Bruce graduated from Andover Newton Theological School in Massachusetts, and received his grad degree in education from Worcester State (College) University in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Years in district: Bruce is in his seventh year with MISD.
Outside interests: Bruce lives in Seattle near Garfield High School. He plays the piano and enjoys gardening. “People think I’m crazy, but I LOVE yard work! I could mow the lawn seven days a week.” Bruce also has an interest in genealogy and is researching a complete family history for the benefit of his niece and nephew, tracing his family lines from the present all the way to the court of Queen Elizabeth I.
Amy Kerby – Kindergarten Teacher
Location: Island Park Elementary
How she sees her job: “I want to give my students a positive introduction to school. I want to help them become independent learners by providing them with choices, and teaching them to explore their surroundings. My class is a place where they learn to interact socially, follow directions, and develop skills to help them become learners with a zest for life and learning.”
Typical day: “Our day starts with a ‘calendar routine,’” says Amy. “We sing the days of the week, and review the day ahead. We have a student ‘meteorologist’ who reports on the weather. We track how many days we’ve been in school, which is a lesson in math.” The students break for recess, which is only for kindergarteners so as not to be overwhelming. After recess, they have a Literacy period, where they blend words and talk about sounds, while simultaneously learning sign language for the new words, a practice that helps kinesthetic learners. “The kids can sing/sign Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and several other songs,” Amy says. “They will perform the songs at Island House Assisted Living in November as their first field trip.“
The students also practice reading in small groups while Amy meets with individual students to discuss reading goals. After lunch they rest briefly with heads on desks. Science is next – they are currently learning about trees. Then comes an art project or Free Choice – free time for students to choose an activity: blocks, imaginative play, games, puzzles, legos, or art materials. “Free Choice is a great time for trying out social skills,” says Amy, “and gives me more opportunity to meet with kids individually.”
Best part of the job: Watching her students master new skills and seeing the joy it brings them. “It’s really fun to see how much they grow and learn. They start the year so young and they grow so much.”
Something people may not know: Amy is a quilter, a craft she learned from her mother. These days, she focuses on baby quilts for her two children – Tristan, age two, and Liam, four months. Liam was born with a heart defect and required open-heart surgery shortly after his birth. “The thought of surgery was scary,” Amy confides. “A baby’s heart is the size of a strawberry. But he is our miracle baby. He came home from the hospital after only two weeks. We’d expected it to take twice that long.” Baby Liam is now fully recovered and the family is content because husband and daddy, Tye, a former member of the Marine Corps, is home for good after deploying to Iraq three times. He now works a civilian job at a box plant in Seattle. “We are very glad to have him back,” Amy says.
Years in district: This is Amy’s fourth year with MISD.
Outside interests: Amy loves to read and go trailer camping. The family takes frequent weekend jaunts, often to the Hood Canal area and Deception Pass. They live in Renton.
Location: Island Park Elementary
How she sees her job: “I want to give my students a positive introduction to school. I want to help them become independent learners by providing them with choices, and teaching them to explore their surroundings. My class is a place where they learn to interact socially, follow directions, and develop skills to help them become learners with a zest for life and learning.”
Typical day: “Our day starts with a ‘calendar routine,’” says Amy. “We sing the days of the week, and review the day ahead. We have a student ‘meteorologist’ who reports on the weather. We track how many days we’ve been in school, which is a lesson in math.” The students break for recess, which is only for kindergarteners so as not to be overwhelming. After recess, they have a Literacy period, where they blend words and talk about sounds, while simultaneously learning sign language for the new words, a practice that helps kinesthetic learners. “The kids can sing/sign Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and several other songs,” Amy says. “They will perform the songs at Island House Assisted Living in November as their first field trip.“
The students also practice reading in small groups while Amy meets with individual students to discuss reading goals. After lunch they rest briefly with heads on desks. Science is next – they are currently learning about trees. Then comes an art project or Free Choice – free time for students to choose an activity: blocks, imaginative play, games, puzzles, legos, or art materials. “Free Choice is a great time for trying out social skills,” says Amy, “and gives me more opportunity to meet with kids individually.”
Best part of the job: Watching her students master new skills and seeing the joy it brings them. “It’s really fun to see how much they grow and learn. They start the year so young and they grow so much.”
Something people may not know: Amy is a quilter, a craft she learned from her mother. These days, she focuses on baby quilts for her two children – Tristan, age two, and Liam, four months. Liam was born with a heart defect and required open-heart surgery shortly after his birth. “The thought of surgery was scary,” Amy confides. “A baby’s heart is the size of a strawberry. But he is our miracle baby. He came home from the hospital after only two weeks. We’d expected it to take twice that long.” Baby Liam is now fully recovered and the family is content because husband and daddy, Tye, a former member of the Marine Corps, is home for good after deploying to Iraq three times. He now works a civilian job at a box plant in Seattle. “We are very glad to have him back,” Amy says.
Years in district: This is Amy’s fourth year with MISD.
Outside interests: Amy loves to read and go trailer camping. The family takes frequent weekend jaunts, often to the Hood Canal area and Deception Pass. They live in Renton.
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