Evergreen Teachers Pull in a Bumper Crop of Teaching Awards

At the 2012 MiT Hooding Ceremony happy grads Robin Tuckett ’12, Kobi Wilson ’12, Kasinda Starmer’12, Justin Poland ’12

Loren Petty from the Master in Teaching Program, just sent around campus a lengthy list of Evergreen Master in Teaching alumni who have won awards in the last couple years. A brief scan brings the word “wow” mind:

Rob Cahill, MiT 2008, won the 2013 PK-12 Distinguished Educator of the Year Award from The Evergreen State College. Rob has taught math and science at Lakes Elementary in Lacey. In partnership with Thurston County Solid Waste, Cahill initiated and currently coordinates the “Food to Flowers” waste reduction program at Lakes. Cahill’s participation with the North Thurston School District math cadres and his dedication to his students’ have also earned him this recognition.

Pamelia Valentine, MiT 1999, was honored as the ESD 113 Regional Teacher of the Year (2013) by the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI). Pamelia teaches Visual Arts at Oakland Bay Junior High School in Shelton. Her principal stated, “Her classroom is truly a positive, safe and rich learning environment that provides students with educational opportunities well beyond the basics of visual arts. Furthermore, Ms. Valentine put students first, believes that all students can achieve at high levels, and does not give up on anyone, even those who have given up on themselves.”

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Cathy Delacruz ’03

Editor’s Note: Thanks to Evergreen faculty member Ruth Hayes for tipping us off to the work of Cathy Delacuz ’03, writer, filmmaker, teacher, and all around accomplished Greener.

Writer and filmmaker Cathy de la Cruz ’03

Cathy Delacruz ’03 says it best: Cathy Delacruz’ career might be considered “pretty cute”, and only in the most serious of ways. Growing up a Riot Grrrl in San Antonio, Texas was only the beginning of a raucous life-long journey in art, critical thought, and down and dirty fun. Take a look at her on Linked In.

Cathy made her mark at Evergreen where she focused her energy in the MediaWorks program and later did an independent work with faculty member Sally Cloninger.  Along the way, Cathy received several research and project grants to fund her filmmaking. After graduating from Evergreen, Cathy attended University of California, San Diego where she received an MFA in 2009.  She continues to stack up academic degrees and professional leaps of imagination and achievement.

A whimsical representation of something dead, most likely made dead by human action

Recently, Cathy published a beautifully written feature article in The Rumpus  on a woman practicing “vegetarian taxidermy.” Here’s an excerpt:

Vegetarian taxidermy is just what it sounds like: a no-animals-were-harmed replica of a trophy that usually represents some grave harm toward a nonhuman creature. Some might see Sharon’s work as art, some might see it as decoration, and some might see it as a big contradiction. I see it as all of these things, with a haunting idea lurking beneath its surface: these pieces present a pleasant and even cheerful representation of something dead. This paradoxical undercurrent is what drove me to seek out a meeting with the artist in the first place after spotting Sharon’s work at Pop-Cycle. I had been shopping for handmade local-artist postcards when I came eye-to-eye with the faux animal heads.

Read Cathy’s full article at The Rumpus.

 

 

Steven Dentali ’82 – Theory to Practice on a Global Scale

Steve Dentali ’82, New VP for Botanical Science at Herbalife

Here’s another boost to Evergreen’s growing reputation as a great science college. Global nutrition company Herbalife announced this week that Steven Dentali ’82 will fill the newly created position of Vice President of Botanical Science.

According to a story in StreetInsider.com, Steven will be “responsible for all activities related to botanicals, including the identification, documentation and validation of the appropriate botanical ingredients, formulations and processes that meet standards and requirements for product quality, efficacy, safety and regulatory acceptability.”

Read more about Steven’s 22 year career in the US herbal and dietary supplement industry and how he has become an acknowledged expert in the field. Continue reading

Mark Wilder ’06 is doing Something Ridiculous


If you are downtown in San Louis Obispo on a Thursday night you might actually find Mark in the center of a crowd – juggling knives, balancing on ladders, or riding a unicycle. Whatever he is doing its probably Something Ridiculous, which is the name of his duo street act! Sarah Linn of the San Luis Obispo Tribune has more on the activities of Something Ridiculous.

Herbal Alchemy Practiced Here: Shae Whitney ’10

Shae Whitney’10 is an herbal alchemist, owner of DRAM Apothecary. Her website is so enchanting, we  simply quote:

“A native of Colorado, Shae Whitney grew up on the plains and prairies amongst the rolling sage and musty pines where she developed a curious admiration for species of the plant kingdom. She then took this love and paired it with her years of experience as a bartender to create the recipes that are the heart of DRAM Bitters.”

Here continues the appreciative swiping of content, this time from Shae’s Facebook page:
“Dram Apothecary was inspired by the idea that the inclusion of bitter herbs in our everyday diet is essential for vibrant health, mental clarity and agreeable digestion. We offer a line of bitters, teas and tonics that have been designed to taste as wonderful as they will make your body feel, because good health should be enjoyable on the palate.”

How elegantly, entrepreneurial. How Evergreen. Another great Greener story to share with students.  Evergreen Entrepreneurs! Sing out and be counted!

 

David Hunter MiT ’11 Offers Hope for American Education and He’s Totally Cool

David Hunter MiT ’11

Editor’s note: Some of the content, below, is from HlnTV. Read the full story about this classroom super star.

A day on the job for Bellevue-based middle school teacher David Hunter starts just like any other teacher’s day: He gets to class, settles his students down and takes attendance before he gets down to business — talking about zombies and geography.

Hunter’s unique approach takes subjects that some kids struggle to pay attention to and turn them into something that they look forward to. His idea was to create a full geography curriculum (using National Geography Standards) taught in the context of a zombie apocalypse. Using textbooks, teaching plans and role playing as tools, he draws his students into a dynamic scenario that allows them to have fun while learning.

More media attention for David:
KPLU interview
https://www.facebook.com/adsum

MiT alumni, share some of your thoughts and techniques with The Evergreen Mind.

 

Paying Attention to Attention: Linda Stone ’77

lindastone.net: a “must-follow” blog for life-long learners

Linda Stone ’77 personifies the Evergreen mind.  If you don’t already know her work, this is your chance. Atlantic Monthly’s James Fallows interviewed her for the June 2013 issue. Here is the intro:

A longtime tech executive, Linda Stone worked on emerging technologies at Apple and then Microsoft Research in the 1980s and ’90s. Fifteen years ago, she coined the term continuous partial attention to describe the modern predicament of being constantly attuned to everything without fully concentrating on anything. Since then, she has frequently written and lectured about the challenges of living in an always-on, hyper-connected world.

And here is how Linda frames her Attention Project on her blog:

Attention is the most powerful tool of the human spirit. We can enhance or augment our attention with practices like meditation and exercise, diffuse it with technologies like email and Blackberries, or alter it with pharmaceuticals. In the end, though, we are fully responsible for how we choose to use this extraordinary tool.

We encourage you to get acquainted with Linda’s work, subscribe to her blog and make Linda part of your learning network.

What do you think about tech, mind, evolution?

Drew Carey ’76 Makes Waves Among Small Businesses

Dr. Drew Carey ’76

Dr. Drew Carey ‘76 is the Principal Scientist at CoastalVision, an environmental services firm in Newport, RI. Earlier this month, he received the Rhode Island and New England Microenterprise of the Year Award for mentoring small businesses.  Drew has developed a collaborative business model that allows small businesses to share resources and workload.

“It’s unusual for an environmental services company to receive this kind of award,” Drew said, “so I am very pleased”.

The award was presented on June 12th at the Rhode Island Salute to Small Business Awards Luncheon. CoastalVision was among ten small businesses receiving awards this year from the U.S. Small Business Association’s Rhode Island District Office.

Drew is a marine scientist with over thirty years’ experience in environmental monitoring and marine policy. In 1999, he formed CoastalVision LLC and began working with groups to address environmental management challenges for an array of ocean and coastal policy issues. Drew graduated from Evergreen in 1976 after completing a Bachelor of Science with a focus on geology and biological oceanography. He earned PhD in Geology and Marine Ecology from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.

Stormwater: Life in the Gutter – Stokley Towles

Editor’s note: Stokely Towles’ is both a librarian at Evergreen and a performance artist.

For more than a decade, solo performer Stokley Towles has been studying us. He examines the mundane aspects of life in Seattle like an anthropologist from another planet–our libraries, our trash system, our police force, the history of a single city block–and delivers his findings in rich, understated monologues full of bizarre, colorful trivia and bittersweet observations about how people navigate the world and each other. His latest study, Stormwater, is about the rivers that run beneath our feet. – Brendan Kiley, The Stranger Weekly

To watch a full performance of Stormwater: Life in the Gutter click here.

Patti Dobrowolski ’80: Imagine Your Way Out of Disaster

Patti Dobrowolski ’80, author, and founder of “Up Your Creative Genius”

Creativity consultant and author Patti Dobrowolski ’80 is now a TEDX alumna. Her presentation, part of TEDX Sacramento, provides an oasis for the busy mind and is great way to reclaim imagination from the mental whirlwind of life. Here’s an example of Patti’s positive view on thriving in the face of stress and strife:

“Fear is wonderful because it sparks your imagination. Fear forces you to pretend. We imagine our way out of disaster. … Imagination is the engine of our lives…”

Give yourself a break and, as Patti says, “Let imagination take it from here.”

See Patti’s listing in the Evergreen Writers Directory and take a peek at her her book, Drawing Solutions: How Visual Goal Setting Will Change Your Life.