under the sun THE BRUNSWICK&EACON THURSDAY. AUGUST 29. 1991 Union Principal Starts Year With New Teacher 's Enthusiasm HY SUSAN USIIKK Zelphia Grisscll was looking forward u> ihc open ing of school this year with confidence and a smile. Alter a year as interim principal at Union Primary School, she was appointed to the post on a permanent basis in July. She welcomed the news. "I have the same kind of enthusiasm 1 had the first day I was a teacher," the Longwood native said in an interview several days before faculty members were to report to school in mid-August. "This has given me a new lease on life." Mrs. Grissctt says she likes know ing that the success of Union Schix>l depends in part on her and that she is to blame if it is not successful. "If this school has a successful year, it is as much be cause of the faculty and staff who have rallied behind me as it is me," she said. Mrs. Grissett came to Union five years ago as an as sistant principal, moving from West Brunswick High School where she had taught social studies and history for 1 2'A years. At first she resisted her placement at an elementary school, when her experience was at the secondary level. But a stint as summer school principal dealing with grades K-12 convinccd her otherwise. "I had died and gone to heaven and didn't realize it," she said. "I was happy to come back to Union that fall." Tins past year of transition was good for her, she said. "There were a lot of challenges, but I needed that. It was timely. I compete against myself." In fact, at 40, she thrives on challenges, enjoys deal ing with situations that are not routine ami that she hasn't planned for that day. "At a certain point in the classroom the challenges weren't there any longer," she reflected. "I was ready for a change." "The responsibility ! have now is good for me at this time. It is revitalizing," ."-he said. "1 think I'm better at this than I am at being a wile and mother." That may be, but she certainly fulfills those roles as well. "I'm still mama, chief cook and bottle washer" she said, to a family that includes Lynn, her husband of 18 years; Megan, a sophomore at West Brunswick High; Talya, a seventh grade student at Shallottc Middle; and Lynn Jr., a first grade student at Union. But, citing a lack of time, she recentl) "resigned" from helping in a family business operated by her husband, who is also a stevedore. Mrs. Grissctt considers herself a "pretty good" seamstress and recently took up wallpaper hanging. She's learned to appreciate the therapeutic aspects of yard work and enjoys reading historical romances. The manual-type work she chooses in her spare time frees her mind, she says, to think through ideas. Then she sits \ SlAf ?? PHOTO BY SUSAN USMfct UNION PR f. MANY SCHOOL Principal '/.elphia (irissett (left) meets a prospective volunteer. Palsy Rushing of Sunset Reach, between completing preparations for a new school year. " When they come through your threshold, you give them everything you've got." -Zelphia Grissett. Principal Union Primary School down to write, oflcn for one course or another. ' Professional Student* Since entering the classroom as an educator, she hasn't given up her own role a> learner. She says she still has a great deal to learn in her new role, both about the young child and being an administrator. She's enrolled in the Principal's Kxecutive Program ai the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Once that's completed, she plans to continue work on a sixth year degree with superintendent's certification. Already this self-proclaimed "professional student" has a master's of education in secondary social studies from the University of South Carolina and a master's of education in administration from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Hut soon het heavy schedule as a student \s ill slacken when Megan starts college. "I have three more years to he a professional student," says Mrs. Grissett. "Then I'll have to lake it in hits and pieces." In her high expectations ol hersell and others Mrs. Grissett is very much a child ol the parents she speaks ol with obvious respect and affection: Alease Gore, "a beautiful black woman," and Harlie Gore, "a tall, big honed man, a wise man." She adds, "lie's always told me to do the best I could, but to keep tilings in perspec tive." The oldest of three girls, she went to l.ongwood Elementary School, then Union High School. Hut uith voluntary desegregation, in ninth grade she those to at tend Shallotte High School. During that year her mother went to work outside the home. The Shallotte school bus stopped two miles from the Gore home, l or halt a year, Zelphia Gore walked the two miles. The following year, with her mother still working, she returned to Union, "with no regrets." "I had some good experiences there." she said, "in cluding an opportunity to attend Governor's School." That summer on campus led her to attend college, "a dream come true". In her VA years at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro she earned a bachelor's degree in history, and "always the obedient daughter," teacher certification in social studies, at her parents' urging. She had no intention of teaching, though. When she came home that winter, degree in hand. "I had contact ed the Air Force about officer training school," she re calico, a broad smile crossing her face at the memory-. "Bui when the recruiter called the house, my mom told him I wasn't interested. Then she tore up the materials." Her parents then made her "heat the bushes" lor a job. She ended up as in interim lilth grade teacher lor three months at the end of the 1972-73 school year. In her five years at Union she has grown to appreci ate the importance of the primary school level and the responsibility of those teachers. "This is where it all be gins," she said. "If they gel a gd start here..." She hopes that her enthusiasm will be as contagious among faculty and staff as it once was in the high school classroom. And she wants her staff to be committed. "It's a big challenge. I take a hard line on people who come and mark time." she said, a hint of steel creeping into her voice and profile. ' t's a moral thing there for me. It's our future we're dealing w ith. If you can't cut it, move on." Her approach to the profession is as straightforward as Zclphia Grissett herself: "If you become an educator that binds you to do ev erything you car. do lor the child *uh whom you arc entrusted, to use all the resources you have available. "When they come through your threshold, you give them every thing you've got." 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