2004 Distinguished Alumni Award Winners
College Honors Seven Distinguished Alumni With Special Awards
Seven alumni were honored for their career achievement by UGA’s
College of Education on April 21 with the presentation of special
awards at the college’s annual Spring Celebration to recognize
faculty accomplishments and retirees.
Crystal
Apple Award - Karen
L. Rutter
Professional
Achievement Award - Sally
Krisel
Alumni
Service Award - Cecile
Waronker
Lifetime Achievement
Alumni Award - Wally Bassett
Lifetime Achievement
Alumni Award - Deborah Dillon
Lifetime Achievement
Alumni Award - Sharon Webber
Lifetime Achievement
Alumni Award - Roger Winston
Crystal Apple
Award
Karen
L. Rutter, (MEd ‘82, EdS ‘83, EdD ‘98)
of Snellville, Career and Technical Education Coordinator for
the Walton County School System, received the Crystal Apple Award,
an honor given to an alumnus in K-12 education who has made a
significant impact on student, school or school district performance.
Rutter, who received national board certification in 2002, was
selected as one of the top 20 teachers in the country as a USA
Today First Team teacher in 2001. Her program in early childhood
education at Loganville High School was chosen as “Exemplary”
by the National Centers for Career and Technical Education in
2001. She received the Atlanta Journal Constitution Honor Teacher
Award in 2000 and 1995, and was Walton County Teacher of the Year
in 1991 and 1986.
Professional
Achievement Award
Sally
Krisel, (EdD ‘00) of Athens, the Gifted Education
Specialist at the Georgia Department of Education, received the
Professional Achievement Award, an honor given to alumni for distinguished
service in the diverse fields of academia, healthcare, business
or government.
Krisel provides technical assistance to Georgia school systems
and Regional Education Service Agencies to help implement education
department rules and state laws guiding gifted education programs.
She assists Georgia school districts with the development of assessment
and identification procedures, curriculum guides, instructional
delivery models, and professional development activities for gifted
education teachers.
She has been recognized with several awards for her work in gifted
education and was selected for first cadre of Nationally Certified
Trainers in the National Association for Gifted Children’s
Parallel Curriculum Model in 2002. She taught K-12 in both public
and private schools in Athens for 13 years. She received the Clarke
County Foundation for Excellence in Teaching Award in 1990 and
was Clarke County Teacher of the Year in 1989-90.
Alumni Service
Award
Cecile
Waronker, (BSEd ‘57) of Atlanta, now retired
after teaching for 20 years in Atlanta area schools, received
the Alumni Service Award, given to an alumni that has demonstrated
outstanding and continued dedication in service and/or philanthropy.
As a UGA student in the 1950s, Waronker served on the College
of Education Student Council and was active in several educational
organizations on campus. She taught for 20 years in the DeKalb
County School System, the Atlanta School System and a private
school in Atlanta.
She was appointed by Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan
to the Presidential Scholars Commission. Waronker has served on
the College of Education’s Scholarship Committee for the
past few years and currently serves on the College’s Capital
Campaign Development Board.
Lifetime
Achievement Alumni Award
Four alumni were recognized with Lifetime Achievement Alumni
Awards, an honor given to senior alumni who demonstrate outstanding
success in the diverse fields of academia, healthcare, business
or government. This year’s winners are:
Wally
Bassett, (MEd, ‘73) of Warner Robins, principal
of Centerville Elementary School in Houston County for 28 years.
The school is a Georgia School of Excellence and was selected
as a National Blue Ribbon School, ranking it among the top two
percent of schools in the nation.
Colleagues, parents and co-workers praise Bassett for his active
role in all aspects of the school operation, his leadership-by-example
and an unyielding quest for excellence.
Deborah
Dillon, (PhD ‘85) of Edina, MN, professor
and chair of the department of curriculum and instruction at the
University of Minnesota. Dillon has been a leading teacher and
researcher in the field of literacy teacher education over the
past 20 years. She has served as editor for The Journal of Research
in Science and The Reading Teacher. She received an outstanding
teaching award from Purdue University where she served as associate
dean for research and development from 1993-97.
Sharon
Webber, (BSEd ‘80) of Greenville, S.C., who
co-founded Super Duper Publications with her husband, Thomas Webber,
in 1986. For the past 19 years she has authored and created a
wide variety of innovative educational materials for speech-language
pathologists, special educators, teachers and parents. In 1997,
her company established the University Partner Program for all
accredited Masters level speech-language training programs in
the U.S. and Canada. This program has donated millions of dollars
worth of complimentary therapy and educational materials used
by student clinicians in training. She established a scholarship
in 1998 at UGA for graduate students in speech-language pathology.
In addition, she established scholarships at the University of
Notre Dame and the University of South Carolina School of Law.
Roger
Winston, (PhD ‘73) of Athens, a UGA faculty
member for 24 years, has been recognized nationally, regionally
and locally as an outstanding researcher and teacher in the field
of student affairs. The excellence of his work is reflected in
the several major awards he was won over his career and capped
off by the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators’
Outstanding Contributions to Literature and Research Award in
2003.
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