February 8, 2013
Five finalists named for 2013 Duval
County Teacher of the Year
Five outstanding educators were surprised in their classrooms,
will go on to EDDY Awards March 14
Jacksonville, Fla. - Five outstanding teachers
today were named finalists for the 2013 Florida Blue Duval County
Teacher of the Year. They are:
Scott Cason, Mandarin High School
Cameron Foley, Ramona Boulevard Elementary
Blair Nolan, First Coast High School
Apryl Shackelford, Northwestern Middle
Robyn White, West Jacksonville Elementary
"The finalists have been selected not only for being superb
teachers but great role models, leaders, mentors and visionaries,"
said Dr. Nikolai P. Vitti, Superintendent of Duval County Public
Schools. "It is with great honor that we commend these educators
for their tireless efforts in building our country's future
leaders. I wish them all the best."
The finalists were surprised in their classrooms on a Friday
morning "prize patrol" with the superintendent. They were selected
from the Teachers of the Year nominated from every public school in
Duval County, and then from 15 semi-finalists. The winner will be
named 2013 Florida Blue Teacher of the Year at the EDDY Awards on
March 14 at the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets
are available at eddyawardsjax.org.
The program is a joint venture of the Jacksonville Public
Education Fund and the Schultz Center for Teaching and Leadership.
Over the last five years, it has evolved beyond an awards ceremony
to build a network of exemplary teachers who are leaders in the
community and who work to improve our schools, student performance
and the teaching profession. The program is entirely funded by
private philanthropic support. The EDDY Awards were originally
founded by the Rotary Clubs of Duval County.
"The community is proud to honor these accomplished
educators," said Trey Csar, President of the Jacksonville Public
Education Fund. "Participants in the ONE by ONE campaign have said
that recognizing outstanding teachers and elevating the profession
is a top priority and these teachers are the best of the
best."
"These finalists represent great teaching that can be found
across Duval county in our public schools," said Deborah Gianoulis
Heald, President and CEO of the Schultz Center for Teaching and
Leadership. "We appreciate their intelligence, love of
learning and commitment to developing the children they teach to be
tomorrow's citizens."