FRANKFORT — Durell “Butch” Hamm, an English and communications teacher at Larry A. Ryle High School in Boone County, has been named Kentucky’s Teacher of the Year.
Hamm was honored – along with Melissa Evans from Corbin as Middle School Teacher of the Year and Jan Vaughn Horn of Clark County as the Elementary School Teacher of the Year – at a ceremony Friday sponsored by Ashland, Inc.
Hamm won a $10,000 cash prize as well as a sabbatical financed by the Kentucky Department of Education. Evans and Horn received $3,000 checks.
In all, 24 Kentucky teachers were recognized as 2010 Ashland Teacher Achievement Award Winners. Among the 24 were Sally Robinson, teacher at Berea Community High School; James Carrier, teacher at McKinney Elementary in Lincoln County; Jennifer Chaplin of Monticello High School; Anita Laney of Elliott County High School; and Melissa Singleton of Rockcastle County Middle School. Each of the 24 nominees received a $500 prize.
Hamm earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Morehead State University and library media services certification from Marshall University and a Rank I certification from Wayne State University. He received a Kentucky Distinguished Teacher Award from the Presidential Scholars and U.S. Department of Education and Excellence in Teaching Award from Campbellsville University.
Evans has taught for 16 years, most of them teaching science and language arts. She earned bachelor’s and masters degrees and her Rank I certification from Union College. But she deflected individual praise, instead sharing credit with her colleagues.
“It’s a really big honor,” Evans said. “But I feel like it’s shared with everyone in my district. It’s hard to really stand out in Corbin because you’re around so many excellent teachers. I feel like it’s because of my colleagues who inspire me every day.”
Evans said her teaching style is tailored to her middle school students – a time of life when they experience many changes.
“I don’t really like to lecture middle school kids because you’d lose them inside of five minutes,” Evans said. “So I try to keep them active and busy, hands on and minds on.”
Horn is beginning her ninth year teaching and sixth at Shearer Elementary in Clark County where she teaches language arts to fifth-graders. Horn earned her a bachelor’s degree at Transylvania University and a master’s degree and Rank I from Eastern Kentucky University. She is the recipient of a 2009 Campbellsville University Excellence in Teaching.
According to Helen Mountjoy, Secretary of the Education and Workforce Development Cabinet, Ashland has awarded $575,000 to 375 teachers since 1975.
Gov Steve Beshear was also on hand and said teachers have to be special for parents to entrust their children. They are underpaid, he said, and under appreciated.
“There is no more important job in the commonwealth of Kentucky than a teacher in our classroom,” he said.
RONNIE ELLIS writes for CNHI News Service and is based in Frankfort. Reach him at rellis@cnhi.com. Follow CNHI News Service stories on Twitter at www.twitter.com/cnhifrankfort.
State News
Hamm teacher of the year
Corbin's Melissa Evans Middle School TOY
- State News
-
-
It’s back to the drawing board for legislators
Confusion reigns in the wake of a judge’s ruling that state redistricting maps passed by the General Assembly are unconstitutional. That ruling said until the legislature offers a plan that meets constitutional muster, 2012 candidates for the legislature must run in the districts drawn 10 years ago.
-
Pending redistricting ruling overshadows legislative business
It has been hurry up and wait this week in Frankfort. With everyone waiting to learn if a Franklin Circuit Judge will throw out the legislature’s plan to re-draw legislative districts and a hold on the filing deadline for fall elections, lawmakers are watching the calendar and court docket more closely than that day’s orders.
-
ELLIS UPDATE: Lawmakers closer on new district mapping
Democratic House Speaker Greg Stumbo said Thursday that lawmakers in the Republican Senate and Democratic House are close to an agreement on re-drawing the congressional district map.
-
UK, UL leaders: Cuts are hurting higher ed
The presidents of the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville told a legislative panel that they will keep working to achieve the goals of higher education reform passed in 1997 in spite of on-going budget cuts. But they made it clear it won’t be easy.
-
Lawmakers closer on new district mapping
Democratic House Speaker Greg Stumbo said Thursday that lawmakers in the Republican Senate and Democratic House are close to an agreement on re-drawing the congressional district map.
-
Stumbo files anti-pill mill bill
Under provisions of a bill filed Thursday in the General Assembly, pain clinics would have to be owned by licensed health care practitioners and any health care professional who prescribes controlled substances would have to register with and utilize the state’s electronic tracking system.
-
Jill York files to run against Rocky Adkins
The new legislative district maps prompted some tough decisions by some key lawmakers – even before the new map and Tuesday’s filing deadline were cast into doubt by a Franklin Circuit Court restraining order.
-
Filing deadline extended for congressional races
While attorneys argued before a judge about the constitutionality of the state legislative redistricting plan, the General Assembly has extended the filing deadline for congressional races — because lawmakers can’t agree on a map for congressional districts.
-
GOP files suit over new state districts
Three Republican lawmakers and two private citizens filed suit Thursday in Franklin Circuit Court to have the House legislative redistricting plan declared unconstitutional.
-
Committee reviews pill mill bill
Just one day after state and federal law enforcement officials raided a Paintsville pain clinic for the second time in a year, a Senate committee Thursday began reviewing a bill to regulate such clinics.
- More State News Headlines
-
It’s back to the drawing board for legislators






