Ilanuary 15,J96^ THE SALEMITE Page Three Betsey Guerrant "Miss Student Teacher”, Will Represent Salem Representing Salem at the spring [North Carolina Education Associa- Ition convention will be Betsey I Guerrant. She Lina Farr and May Terry [were chosen by SNEA to compete the annual selection of Salem’s [representative at the spring meet- I ing- Betsey taught at James A. Cxray I High School under Miss Clara 1 Field. She instructed five classes [of tenth-grade biology and was in [charge of one study hall. Betsey [lectured every day and kept a [simple running outline on the black- I board, adding each day’s material [to it. The main problem she found jin changing from college to high [school biology was the inadequate laboratory equipment, with only six [microscopes for an average of 35 [students. She found that visual [aids and other emotional ap proaches—“anything you see, feel, [draw or touch’’—got the best re- jsponses. Betsey said, “I really [learned that this theory was the [most effective teaching method I [had.” Betsey used “clearing-up” periods [once a week. These promoted scien- Itific interest and more objective dis- [cussions. She cleared up common [misconceptions and fallacies as “If [you hit a Pekingese on the back [of the head, his eyes will fall out.” jShe also brought up current events, [in science. In fact, Tuesday after-' [noon three students visited her in [Bitting to discuss their project on [incubated eggs. Trying to repro- [duce an experiment in a current Imagazine, they had to put 30 eggs [into the incubator and turned the Iheat up to 160 degrees. Betsey was loffered their 30 baked eggs. Her students were naturally in- Iterested in things which involved [them directly. For example, she [used parasitic worms to tie in the [fheory of scientific evolution from [lower to higher forms. Betsey plans to teach in Atlanta jjnext year, “Whether I’m married |to Russ then or not.” She will teach biology or general science in junior or senior high school. She feels that the new education program is “very adequate.” She said “I thought during the methods course that a lot of it was over- idealistic, but I found that I used most of it.” She approves of the combination of the methods course and practice teaching because “We concentrated and got it over with.” She said “If possible 1 would like to have been observed more and had more criticism of my teaching.” Now an accredited teacher upon her graduation, Betsey says “I really feel like I could go into any classroom. I’m not at all skeptical about teaching now.” Lina and May both taught at Ardmore Elementary School. Lina’s teacher was Mrs. Frances Groat and May’s was Mrs. Louise Clark. Both girls are majoring in history. To bring history into her second grade discussion, Lina took advant age of the story on Ike’s tour in the Weekly Reader. She asked how many knew who the first presi dent \yas. She was horrified when only three children raised their hands. “So, from that day forth, my first question was, ‘Who was the first president?’” From this she began discussing “what a Capi tol city was and that although Eisenhower was president, other people made rules, people from other states who went up to Wash ington.” Lina says “Believe it or not, they were interested.” Then one day an air raid siren went off. Lina began explaining, “We don’t like Russia, because Russia will not let you discuss. They are trying to make us like them and if we have. a war, we will have to have a place to hide and this (the siren) is the warn ing.” Lina plans to teach in Greensboro next year. She says she “hopes to get married within the next three years, but will continue teaching for a few years.” Lina also approves of the new education program because she feels iviay 1 erry, you “Learn by Doing”, especially by teaching all day for two weeks. But she says, “I do feel you should take another education course such as elementary art, instead of a regular course. I don’t feel I got full benefit from this course.” May brought in her major, his tory, into her first grade classroom by discussing Armistice Day and why it was a holiday. She ex plained to the children “It was the day a big war ended.” She also got a vigorous discussion of why the two new states, Alaska and Hawaii, were different, especially when she brought out a map. May felt the hardest thing to do in teaching the first grade was to “get on their level without talking baby talk.” She says, “you have to be sincere because they can catch you. First-graders, she feels, “are (really better judges of human na jrari*, and joeta^y piay coiic ture than adults are.” She found out that she had to be sincere the hard way. One day, to control a noisy class, she de clared that she had a “two-way radio to Santa Claus and that she would tell him when they were bad.” Her first-graders laughed at her and from then on she had to control her imagination. May will be married in August to Don Drummond Put plans to teach “wherever my husband is, probably in Spartanburg.” Commenting on the education programs, she liked the fact that practice teachers can go directlj' from the methods course into actual teaching without a summer inter vening. tlllj lit! Salem's amazing new HIGH POROSITY paper "air-softens" every puff Invisible porous openings blend just the right amount of air with each puff to give you a softer, fresher, even more flavorful smoko. 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