ANSWERS: 9
  • Mr.Kamioka gosh i know thats spelling is wrong too =[ he was my 7th and 8th grade language arts teacher. Everything that he taught me i use daily. he was the one teacher that was there no matter what and wanted to know about every students real life. He would ask me how my mom was doing and what the surgery was when she had cancer. he was the first one to show up at the funeral. i love him completely. definatly my favorite teacher ill ever have
  • Mrs. Donnegan, my art teacher from high school. She was the best teacher ever. She was amazing. She made my high school years better.
  • I would nominate 2: My highschool Italian Teacher Signor Russo. He was so passionate about what he taught. He made you want to learn and he would do anything to make you learn. Really a prime example of the teacher who would go the extra mile. or... Mrs. Shepherd, my highschool english teacher, who is in her last years of teaching not because she wants to leave but because she doesn't. She teaches because she loves to teach, she loves her students and she is just an amazing person. Really lets the students in and makes them feel like they are a part of everything. The administation has tried to force her to retire but I believe they could stop paying her and she would still come everyday. She even went as far to make her own curriculum that colleges have now adopted. She also coached speech and debate, and just to listen to her speak was a blessing.
  • Dr. McIntyre. He made me like every math class I took with him, even the crazy senior level (college) courses. Classical Analysis was the best!
  • Jodie44, she has taught me quite a bit, and considering the density of my skull that is quite and accomplishment.
  • Mrs. Helmquist, my eighth grade English teacher, is my nominee. She taught me more about grammar (all mistakes on AB are my fault from poor memory) in one year than any other teacher and all others, combined. She was hard and she was fair. As co-nominee, I would nominate Hal Curtis, brother of actor Keene Curtis, who was my theater teacher. Because of him, I got a scholarship and a job! I was so glad I called him six years after graduation to tell him thanks. He was very happy to hear from me and we talked for two hours - worst long distance charge I'd had to that date and the most worthwhile. He died two weeks later.
  • My english teacher Miss Laycock. She was very strict and severe, she taught me how to structure and write a good essay. She had favourites in our class and i wasn't one of them. I really wanted to get her attention but she ignored me. It was the best thing she could have done because i worked all the more diligently to try and win her praise. In other classes i was disruptive and didn't work. But she got the best out of me. Learning how to write an essay stood me in good stead for all my other courses, and eventually ( after flunking school the first time round and having to go back to it in my twenties) ultimately helped me to gain a place at Oxford University.
  • I would want to nominate my French teacher, Mr. Gladstone. He was quite strict and he always pushed us and pushed us. But I did learn from that. He was and still is a brilliant teacher.
  • My Biology teacher, because he put up with a lot of annoying football players and still managed to teach me a lot about Biology.

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