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Emma Cooper, Emma E. Cooper Primary

Emma Cooper, Emma E. Cooper Primary

There aren’t enough good things to can say about the woman who was my first-grade teacher and therefore my formal introduction to education. She taught me such essentials as reading, writing my name, math and more.

But more than that, Mrs. Cooper was a staple of our small, island community; by the time she was teaching me she had already taught my father, aunts, uncles and so many of the leaders in my hometown. Everyone loved her, and they still do, for her emphasis on teaching the whole student. No one left her classroom without learning what it meant to be kind, how to share, how to have good manners, how to speak respectfully to adults and to each other and so much more. She didn’t just teach us, she loved us!

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Mrs. Wallace, Sale County Grammar School for Girls

Mrs. Wallace, Sale County Grammar School for Girls

Mrs. Wallace was our (young and new-fangled) geography teacher in an English girls’ selective grammar school in the 1960-’70s. Although we thought it traditional and constraining, looking back I realise that the teachers wanted all the girls to realise their potential and make a difference in the world.

Mrs. Wallace once asked – off the cuff – “Why is this place like this?” I felt as if my head had caught fire and a new world had exploded before my eyes. That little question opened up concepts of a sense of place – geography, history, sociology, biology, psychology, politics, geology, meteorology and on, and on, and on. The world and ways of thinking about it were connected. I wanted to know more about what gave a place meaning and the role we played in that. The rest, as they say…

Thank you Mrs. Wallace. This is the first time that I’ve had the opportunity to say so.

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