Home Adair County Campbellsville University honors three Adair County teachers

Campbellsville University honors three Adair County teachers

CU Awards 2022 - Adair County Schools
Adair County teachers receive awards at the 36th Annual Excellence in Teaching ceremony May 14. At far left is Dr. Donna Hedgepath, Campbellsville University’s provost and vice president for academic affairs, and at far right is Dr. Lisa Allen, dean of Campbellsville University’s School of Education. Along with Hedgepath and Allen are from left: Amanda Webster, Adair County Elementary School; Diana Eastham, Adair County Middle School; and Julie Brockman, Adair County High School, along with Chad Parnell, Adair County High School principal. (Campbellsville University Photo by Gerard Flanagan)
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Three Adair County teachers were honored at Campbellsville University’s 36th annual Excellence in Teaching Award Program on May 14. To jump to Adair County’s recipients, click here.

By Joan C. McKinney, director, Office of University Communications, and Scarlett Birge, student news writer

As a young child, Dr. Aaron Thompson, president of the Kentucky Council for Postsecondary Education (CPE), was often reminded by his parents of the importance of an education and the opportunities it would open up for him.

“They pushed education, and they pushed it hard,” Thompson said at Campbellsville University’s 36th annual Excellence in Teaching Award Program May 14 in Ransdell Chapel.

The Excellence in Teaching Award Program honored 218 teachers throughout the Commonwealth of Kentucky from 76 districts and/or private schools.

Growing up in Crawfish, Kentucky, in Clay County, the son of a coal-mining father who was illiterate, Thompson saw his father work long hours in the mines.

“My father always said, ‘Boy, you better get an education because if you don’t, you will break your back in the coal mine,’” Thompson said.

Thompson said his mother, who held an eighth-grade education, told him, ‘If you get an education, you’ll learn to read and write and how to count your money. If you do that, they can’t take it away from you.’

“She saw Jim Crow in full effect, where people would take stuff away from you if you didn’t have an education. I took that as education would give me economic prosperity. She was literally saying you would have the knowledge to problem serve and understand how to protect those things around you.”

Thompson, a first-generation high school student, congratulated the honored teachers and said they “fully understand the essence of learning.”

“I am a teacher,” Thompson said. He told the teachers it’s all about learning. “You are a role model, and you are a force of love at times,” Thompson said. 

He told the teachers they need to figure out the good in students and tell students they can be something special.

“Teachers’ engagement in and out of the classroom have the biggest effect on students’ lives,” Thompson said. “That’s the power you have.

“If you won an award today, you did something.”

He said maybe you didn’t follow the rules, but “sometimes you have to break out of the same old stuff that didn’t work. The status quo holds people back.”

He said the teachers have learned how to collaborate and how to reach levels of the students that haven’t been reached before.

“It’s the idea that you understand what learning is,” he said.

Teachers have to find ways to share with students so they have an opportunity to learn and excel.

“You have to teach self-actualization. You have to look at values and connect those values with what to do as a teacher,” Thompson said.

He said CPE focuses heavily on the disenfranchised. He said students see a teacher reaching out to a student who is disfranchised, and they feel good when a teacher helps that student who could have been written off.

“I appreciate you. I appreciate you because you have learned the essence of learning,” Thompson said. He urged them to celebrate with those you care about and to think how they got to this point.

Thompson congratulated Campbellsville University on her enrollment and said students are receiving a good education at the university.

Dr. Donna Hedgepath, provost and vice president for academic affairs, welcomed the teachers and their families and said, “Campbellsville University’s School of Education is committed to education. Today is about you and your sacrifices and commitment. This is one of my favorite events right up there with commencement.” She gave the invocation.

Dr. Lisa Allen, dean of the School of Education, welcomed the teachers to the program. She said teachers take risks and are innovative, problem solvers, mentors and leaders.

Dr. John Chowning, executive assistant to the president for government, community and constituent relations, read the names of the teachers in each district.

CU Sound, comprised of Campbellsville University students Jacob Hayes and Collin White as well as Kaylee Lawrence, a senior at Taylor County High School, sang two songs. Jamie Lawrence, executive director of ministry and church outreach, was accompanist.

Dr. Shane Garrison, vice president for enrollment services, said Campbellsville University has the most private university affordable master’s programs in the School of Education, and the university is the largest private provider of dual-credit courses in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, serving 4,000 students in 58 high schools and Christian academies. He said, “We believe in teachers.”

Garrison gave the benediction.

A total of 4,586 Kentucky teachers have been honored since the program began in 1987 with assistance from Earl Aaron and the Ward, Cundiff and Aaron Memorial Fund. The purpose of the program is to recognize the quality teaching and learning taking place in the school systems throughout Kentucky.  

The Excellence in Teaching Awards program is in partnership with Lexington’s CBS-affiliate, WKYT-TV.

The teachers are selected by their school districts in each grade level (preschool/elementary, middle and high school). 

Adair County’s teachers are below:

Amanda Webster, of Columbia, has taught at Adair County Elementary since 2012. She is a fifth grade social studies teacher.

She received her degree in elementary education from Western Kentucky University in 2012 and her degree of supervisor of instruction from the University of the Cumberlands in 2018. She is a 2008 graduate of Adair County High School.

She is the daughter of Janet and Dwight Roach of Columbia, Ky., and is  married to David Webster, and they have two children, Evelyn and Elijah.

Diana Eastham, of Columbia, teaches sixth grade English language arts at Adair County Middle School.

She received her Bachelor of Arts from Lindsey Wilson College in 1991 and her Master of Arts from Western Kentucky University in 1995. She is National Board Certified as a Middle Childhood Generalist. She is a 1987 graduate of Adair County High School.

She is married to Greg Eastham.

Julie Brockman, of Greensburg, teaches 10th grade history at Adair County High School. She formerly taught at Metcalfe County High School from 2007 until 2012.

She received her bachelor’s degree in social science and secondary education from Lindsey Wilson College in 2005 and is earning a Rank II from the Education Professional Standards Board. She is a 1994 graduate of Adair County High School.

She is married to Jonathan Brockman, and they have three children: Jacob, Justin and Jarett.

Campbellsville University is a widely acclaimed Kentucky-based Christian university that has enrolled up to 12,000 students yearly. The university offers over 100 programs of study including doctoral, masters, bachelors, associate and certification programs. The website for complete information is  www.campbellsville.edu.

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