Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Grant elates outdoor- skills teacher

$ 30,000 to buy climbing wall, other equipment at Rogers school

- DAVE PEROZEK

ROGERS — Deb Walter said she was “overwhelme­d and thrilled” upon receiving $ 30,000 to buy mountain bikes, a climbing wall and other outdoor recreation­al items for her students to use at school.

Rogers Public Education Foundation officials visited New Technology High School on Wednesday to surprise Walter, the physical education teacher, with an oversize check made out to her. Walter clasped her hands over her mouth as Gaven Smith, foundation vice president, approached her with the check.

“I’m just really taken aback by this because this is a lifetime dream for me, to get to teach at a school where I get to do my thing,” Walter said, addressing a few dozen students assembled in the school’s gymnasium.

She thanked school administra­tors and the foundation.

The $ 30,000 grant “gives us the money to finally get this thing launched off and do it, just really form an amazing program for you guys,” Walter said. “And anything and everything you want to learn, we can teach you to do here at New Tech.” The students applauded. “Are you guys excited?” Walter asked.

“Yeah!” the students shouted back.

It was the second grant the foundation has awarded using money bequeathed by George Merwin, an outdoor enthusiast who died in 2014. Merwin left more than $ 100,000 to the foundation to provide teacher grants in the area of outdoor activities.

Jeff Belk, a Rogers High School outdoor- education teacher, received the first Merwin grant last year. The foundation awarded Belk $ 29,674 for kayaking, archery, fly- fishing and camping equipment.

Walter, along with fellow New Technology High School teachers J. D. Gunnell and Mark Morley, submitted their applicatio­n under the title “Learning Starts on the Feet — Not the Seat.”

About one- third of the grant will pay for a 16- foot climbing wall. The rest of the money will go toward 25 mountain bikes, 15 land paddles and equipment to teach camping, outdoor cooking, fly- fishing, archery and more.

“We feel our proposal for the George Merwin grant continues Mr. Merwin’s legacy of sharing his love of education and nature through teaching real world outdoor experience­s to young people,” the grant applicatio­n stated.

Among the needs identified in the applicatio­n is to engage the school’s students — especially those deemed most at risk of dropping out — in multiple ways to reduce stress.

“The proposed climbing wall will provide us a unique space to teach strategies that are critical for improving emotional brain health and greater capacity for confidence, cognition, and retention in their academic subjects,” the applicatio­n states.

The teachers hope to have the climbing wall completed before the end of 2017.

Walter is passionate about giving back to the students and getting them to try outdoor activities, Smith said.

“These are kids who wouldn’t have these opportunit­ies and these experience­s otherwise,” Smith said. “And those are the type of teachers and type of passion we like to support as a foundation. These people are doing God’s work. They’re giving back. They frequently try to do these things out of their own pocket. So we’re here to supplement them and empower their passion to give our students a chance at being better citizens tomorrow.”

There were four applicatio­ns for the Merwin grant this year. Multiple teachers were involved in most of them, said Karyn Tecle, the foundation’s developmen­t director.

The foundation formed in 1996. It distribute­d more than $ 167,000 in teacher grants and awards in 2016.

Walter has worked for the district since 1999. She taught at Kirksey Middle School and Crossroads, the district’s alternativ­e school, before moving to New Technology High School this school year.

Kirksey Middle School got a climbing wall in 2013 while Walter worked there. Fundraisin­g for that wall took a few years.

Lance Arbuckle, New Technology High School’s principal, called Walter “awesome.” She wanted to come to the school, and he believed she’d be a good fit, he said.

“Every day in everything we do, we try to do education differentl­y,” Arbuckle said. “Deb and I had quite a bit of conversati­on about what it means to do physical education differentl­y. It really fit in well with her style.”

It was 10 years ago this month that Walter received another honor: The National Associatio­n for Sport and Physical Education named her its National Secondary Physical Education Teacher of the Year.

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