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UNIV MAGAZINE
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Huntington
alumnus garners statewide recognition
FOR RELEASE November 2, 2006
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Jay Peters |
HUNTINGTON, IN—Northwest
Elementary School Principal Jay Peters' special attention to special needs
students has earned him a statewide award.
Peters, a 1980 Huntington alumnus, will receive the Administrator Award from the Indiana Resource Center
for Families with Special Needs (IN*SOURCE) on Nov. 3 during the
organization's annual conference in Bloomington.
The
Administrator Award recognizes a school administrator's commitment to
working with students with special needs and their families. Peters was
nominated for the state award by Northwest resource teacher Jennifer Johns
and emotional disabilities teacher Cari Lindsey, as well as by several
parents of Northwest students. IN*SOURCE asks parents and teachers to
nominate administrators for the award through a newsletter.
In Johns and Lindsey's nomination letter, they praised Peters' "outstanding
work and caring attitude" toward all students at Northwest and special needs
students in particular and said his attitude is "contagious" among the
school staff.
They pointed out that Northwest houses the Huntington County Community
School Corporation's only emotional disabilities (ED) classroom, where
students come to learn in a self-contained, structured class when they have
difficulty functioning at their regular school buildings with other
students. Teachers help these students become ready to eventually re-enter
general education classes at their home schools.
"While many principals may look at this with disdain, Jay looks at this as
an opportunity to help these students, and he certainly rises to the
occasion," Johns and Lindsey wrote. "Once a child with an emotional
disability is transferred to Northwest, Jay immediately takes ownership of
that child's physical, emotional, behavioral, and educational needs. His
work with the special needs students at Northwest touches the lives of the
staff, students, families, and the community."
The teachers
told how Peters makes a point of building relationships with each student in
the ED classroom, as well as with their families.
"It is a regular occurrence to see Jay listening to a special needs child
struggle through his book report and then reward that student for all his
hard work, or assisting a wheelchair-bound child with toileting needs," they
wrote. "Jay has even been known to provide a shower, clothes, shoes, or food
to the special needs students when they are in need."
In addition to the ED classroom at Northwest, the school also has had
students in its general education classrooms who have special needs,
including some in wheelchairs, some who are visually impaired, and some who
are autistic.
Johns and Lindsey said Peters also headed up a campaign to purchase a
wheelchair-accessible van with a lift for a family at Northwest. The single
mother had two sons with spinal muscular atrophy, her van broke down, and
she could not afford repairs or another van, they said, and Peters raised
money to buy the family a suitable van.
Sandy Martinez, the mother of a general education and two special education
students who attended Northwest, also wrote a recommendation letter and
praised Peters for the individual attention he gives to each child in the
building.
"I can't express the gratitude I have for the peace of mind that came with
knowing my children were loved and well cared for while they were at
Northwest Elementary," Martinez wrote. "You cannot find a better principal
than Mr. Jay Peters. I wish we could clone him and put him in every school
my children will attend."
Parents of another student who transferred to Northwest last January wrote
that their son did not like school before transferring but feels comfortable
at Northwest.
"After (our son) started school, Mr. Peters would ask him how he was doing,"
they wrote. "If (our son) had a good week, the two of them would have lunch
together on Friday in the cafeteria. All in all, Mr. Peters has made our
son's life in school more enjoyable and productive. (Our son) never seemed
to have more fun at school, and his grades have never been better. We
believe this is a direct effect of Mr. Peters' influence on his staff as
well as on his students. Northwest would not be the same without Mr.
Peters."
Peters emphasized that the award recognizes not only him but others in the
Northwest community who help special needs students to succeed.
"I'm not about awards," he said. "I'm very humbled by it, but it's not about
me. It's about the true heroes - the students, the parents, the excellent
teachers we have, my resource teachers, as we have partnered together with
our parents and families, making that partnership that we believe all kids
can learn."
Peters quoted a saying that describes his philosophy toward dealing with
students: "'Kids don't care how much you know unless they know how much you
care.'
"It takes an excellent group of teachers and resource teachers that how how
to specifically program for kids to know how to make this work," he added.
"It hasn't always been easy, but we've been able to see the rewards."
Peters will receive the award during IN*SOURCE's Nov. 3 reception at the
Bloomington Convention Center. The awards reception will also honor others
who have demonstrated outstanding commitment to students with special needs
and their families.
The focus of the Nov. 3-4 conference is finding innovative traditional and
non-traditional methods to help special needs students find their learning
capabilities.
IN*SOURCE is the state organization that works with families of children
with special needs to help them understand the services available to them.
This article was written by Beth
Shindle, a staff writer for The Herald-Press in Huntington, Ind. The
article was posted with permission from The Herald-Press.
Huntington University is a comprehensive
Christian college of the liberal arts offering graduate and undergraduate
programs in more than 70 academic concentrations.
U.S.News & World Report
ranks Huntington among the best colleges in the Midwest.
Founded in 1897 by the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, Huntington
University is located on a contemporary, lakeside
campus in northeast
Indiana. The University is a member of the
Council for Christian Colleges
and Universities (CCCU).
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