Juliana Urtubey – 蜜桃影视 America's Education News Source Tue, 11 May 2021 17:10:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Juliana Urtubey – 蜜桃影视 32 32 Nation's Top Teacher is a Special Educator from Nevada /article/immigrant-bilingual-special-educator-named-national-teacher-of-year-says-shes-devoted-to-finding-all-our-students-strengths/ Sat, 08 May 2021 13:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=571781 Get essential education news and commentary delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up here for 蜜桃影视鈥檚 daily newsletter.

Children with special needs are among those whose learning has suffered the most because of the pandemic. But that鈥檚 not what Juliana Urtubey sees when she looks at her students at Booker Elementary in Las Vegas.

鈥淥ur brains work in slightly different ways. Our job is to find all of our students鈥 strengths,鈥 she said about special education teachers. That perspective, she said, has given her an advantage over the past year. 鈥淚 was mining for students鈥 strengths.鈥

On Thursday, the Council of Chief State School Officers named Urtubey the 2021 National Teacher of the Year. Surprised with flowers from First lady Jill Biden, Urtubey is the third special educator to receive the honor. Advocates said having a special education teacher as spokeswoman for the field over the next year could help as they push for an increase in federal funding for children with disabilities. But Urtubey said her focus will be much broader. Her message is that all students deserve a 鈥渏oyous and just鈥 education in schools where they feel a 鈥渄eep sense of belonging.鈥

That starts, she said, by incorporating children鈥檚 culture into classroom lessons and their experiences at school.

鈥淭o me, as a Latina, our public institutions can鈥檛 separate our students from their families,鈥 said Urtubey, who moved with her parents to the U.S. from Colombia and was trained as a bilingual teacher in Arizona when the state passed a law requiring English-only instruction. 鈥淚 think about the tremendous loss of language and culture in this country.鈥

At Crestwood Elementary, where she worked before Booker, she helped that became an outdoor classroom for the school and another way to make immigrant families feel welcome.

Ciara Byrne, founder and CEO of Green Our Planet 鈥 which works with schools to teach science, technology, engineering and math through school gardening 鈥 remembers how plain and uninviting Crestwood looked in 2014 when she first talked with Urtubey about being part of the program.

鈥淪he was just full of beans and talking about how she was going to transform it,鈥 Byrne said. 鈥淲ithin three years, there were murals all over the place.鈥

Many were painted by mothers of the 鈥済nomies,鈥 a student garden club that meets on Friday mornings. In fact, when Byrne wants to show the nonprofit鈥檚 work off to potential sponsors, she takes them to Crestwood, which not only has several planter beds, but also butterfly, bee and pollinator gardens.

Urtubey, far right, with some Crestwood Elementary 鈥済nomies.鈥 (Green Our Planet)

Jose Silva was assistant principal at Crestwood at the time. He took notice of Urtubey鈥檚 鈥渃aring approach鈥 and her expertise in working with special needs students. Now he鈥檚 principal at Booker, where he said her dedication to the school extends to her colleagues.

With the title of learning strategist, Urtubey coaches other classroom teachers on providing instruction for students with special needs and has served as a mentor to new teachers. But even veteran educators said they benefit from working with her.

Rosie Perez, another special educator at Booker, called Urtubey when she was working on a certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. They had never met before, but Perez said she 鈥渋nstantly noticed her amiable and warm-hearted personality.鈥

鈥淚 am in the 19th year of my teaching career and am still eager to learn,鈥 Perez said, adding that she 鈥渃ould not think of anyone better to begin this step in my career, to learn and grow along with, but Juliana.鈥

鈥楾hrough a lot of loss鈥

Urtubey鈥檚 positive outlook doesn鈥檛 mean the past year hasn鈥檛 been traumatic 鈥 for families and teachers. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been through a lot of loss,鈥 she told CBS This Morning host Gayle King, after she learned she was the winner.

In an interview with 蜜桃影视, she noted the past year has probably been the most difficult in her teaching career 鈥 a sentiment shared by those in the special education field nationally. An American Institutes for Research released last fall showed that 58 percent of districts have found it challenging to comply with the requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act during the pandemic. And almost three-quarters said it was 鈥渕ore or substantially more difficult鈥 to accommodate students鈥 individual learning needs.

Urtubey, Nevada鈥檚 first recipient of the national award, said her emphasis on students鈥 social and emotional connections made the loss of in-person learning less disruptive. 鈥淥ur classroom community just translated over鈥 to a remote format, she said. She worked with school nutrition staff to make sure meal distribution worked for families鈥 schedules and tracked down students who moved during remote learning.

Her 鈥渞esilience is indicative of how hard special education teachers have worked this year,鈥 said Dennis Cavitt, president of Council for Exceptional Children, a membership and advocacy organization. But he added that her recognition also comes as advocates are pushing for funding to address shortages of special education teachers and a lack of diversity in the workforce. President Joe Biden has asked for a $2.6 billion increase for special education.

鈥淗aving Juliana in the spotlight this year will help carry that message forward and energize the entire education community around those goals,鈥 Cavitt said.

Urtubey said she doesn鈥檛 know if she鈥檒l return to Booker after her year on a national stage. But she鈥檚 working with Silva and Green Our Planet to create another community garden 鈥 what she described as a 鈥10,000-square-foot outdoor oasis鈥 鈥 and leave a lasting mark on the school.

鈥淚鈥檓 definitely going to stay connected to my Booker family,鈥 she said.

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