Oroville Mercury-Register

Strong influences help mold National Teacher of the Year

- By Mark Gillispie

OBERLIN, OHIO » It hardly seems a stretch to say Kurt Russell was born to be a history teacher.

Raised on his mother’s stories about segregatio­n and the civil rights movement in Alabama and influenced by teachers from his childhood, the 50-year-old Russell has spent the last 25 years teaching history and African American history at Oberlin High School outside Cleveland.

The Council of Chief State School Officers announced Tuesday that Russell is the organizati­on’s National Teacher of the Year for 2022. The group previously named him Ohio’s teacher of the year.

“Kurt’s extensive career shows the power of educators to shape the lives of students from the classroom to extracurri­cular activities to the basketball court,” CCSSO Chief Executive Officer Carissa Moffat Miller said in a statement.

Russell will spend the next year representi­ng educators and serving as an ambassador for students and teachers across the country, the organizati­on said.

His classroom journey to teaching began with his white kindergart­en teacher, Francine Toss, who read a picture book about the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as he and other students sat in a circle in her classroom.

“She had the audacity to introduce literature that was culturally relevant,” Russell said. “I thought, ‘Wow, that’s a guy who looks like me.’”

The die was further cast for his future career as an eighth-grader when he walked into a math class taught by Larry Thomas, the first Black male teacher he had encountere­d. Russell

said he was impressed by Thomas’ demeanor and how he carried himself in the classroom.

“He was someone who looked like me in front of the classroom who all the kids enjoyed,” Russell said. “This seemed like a profession that I could enjoy. It just changed my life.”

His parents, Jerry and Retta Russell, who grew up attending segregated schools in Alabama, moved to Oberlin in the late 1960s, his father for constructi­on work and his mother to escape the vestiges of the Jim Crow south.

His mother as a high school student in Linden, Alabama, marched with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who came to Linden at the invitation of the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, King’s close friend and collaborat­or in the civil rights movement. Students left school that day to join the march.

“That’s how I fell in love with history, by hearing

those stories,” Russell said.

Russell obtained his “dream job” of teaching in Oberlin, the city where he grew up, after graduating from the College of Wooster in 1994. He helped develop an African American history course at Oberlin High School in his first year there.

In addition to teaching two other general history classes, Russell and a music teacher have developed a class called Black Music in the African Diaspora that covers the blues, jazz and R&B.

He credited the school administra­tion for supporting the creation of the class. “They could have said, ‘No. We don’t need that right now,’” Russell said.

Oberlin High School Principal Brent Betts lauded Russell’s work.

Russell also is the boys basketball coach at Oberlin. His team finished the season with a 16-6 record and a conference championsh­ip. Betts said Russell sees the

developmen­t of young men as more important than developing basketball players.

“One of the greatest things about Kurt Russell is the classroom culture he’s created,” Betts said. “He’s created a culture where everybody has a voice and students feel comfortabl­e sharing their opinions.”

Russell has high expectatio­ns and demands academic rigor, Betts said.

“He does not allow them to settle for less,” Betts said. “They talk about tough subjects.”

Asked about critical race theory, an academic framework about systemic racism decried by conservati­ve politician­s and commentato­rs, Russell called it a “dog whistle.”

“I always tell individual­s I do not teach controvers­ial courses,” Russell said. “I teach different courses. There’s nothing controvers­ial about teaching about women’s rights or the gay rights movement.”

 ?? MARK GILLISPIE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oberlin High School history teacher Kurt Russell teaches an African-American history class in Oberlin, Ohio, on Thursday. The Council of Chief State School Officers on Tuesday publicly announced that Russell is the organizati­on’s National Teacher of the Year for 2022.
MARK GILLISPIE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oberlin High School history teacher Kurt Russell teaches an African-American history class in Oberlin, Ohio, on Thursday. The Council of Chief State School Officers on Tuesday publicly announced that Russell is the organizati­on’s National Teacher of the Year for 2022.

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