[For this year’s installment of my annual Charlottesville series—following the boys and my annual trip to my childhood home, natch—I’ve focused on a handful of representative places around town. Leading up to this tribute to the public schools that nurtured this AmericanStudier!]
First,
here are some of the many prior posts in which I’ve paid tribute to my amazing
Charlottesville public school teachers:
These
multiple posts
on my single favorite teacher (and without question the most evocatively and
pitch-perfectly named), Proal Heartwell;
This
one on the iconic figure who taught me to swim in the public schools, William
Byers;
This
one on an 8th grade English teacher and a high school Math
teacher who both helped me become the teacher I am today;
And this
one on a bunch of other inspiring Cville public schools teachers with whom
I was fortunate enough to work along the way .
In that
last hyperlinked post, I wrote about attacks on public schools and especially
public school teachers. That was from 2011, and let’s just say that the
attacks have not
exactly decreased in the 12 years since. There are lots of ways to resist
and challenge those attacks, but I believe one of the strongest is for those of
us who are the products of public schools, who work in public schools, whose
children attend public schools, who are supporters of and advocates for public
schools in every way to raise our voices, share our stories, express our
eternal gratitude to what these spaces have meant to and for us. So I knew I
couldn’t conclude a series on Cville places without saying clearly and proudly
that I love the Charlottesville public schools!
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Defining places—from your hometowns or anywhere else—you’d
highlight?
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