Schools

Oakland County Classroom Teacher is Michigan Teacher of the Year

Honoree shares his passion for closing socioeconomic and achievement gaps by encouraging students to stand up to injustice and inequity.

Rick Joseph, a fifth- and sixth grade teacher Birmingham Covington School, has been named Michigan Teacher of the Year for 2015-16.

The announcement was made Thursday by state school Superintendent Mike Flanagan, The Detroit News reports. Joseph, a veteran with 20 years in the classroom, was selected from 487 applicants and was among five finalists, including Emily Pohlonski, a science teacher at Novi High School.

Joseph said that when he decided to become a teacher, he wanted to help close achievement and socioeconomic gaps – a passion he shares in a privileged community like Birmingham.

Find out what's happening in Clawsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“... I am keenly aware of the need for my students to be sensitive to the economic inequities that exist in our region and the world,” Joseph said. “The greatest reward I find in teaching is when a child tells me that they have stood up for injustice and have fought for equity.”

Joseph’s selection comes with a $1,000 award for Birmingham Public Schools. Josephs also gets the use of a new car for a year, and a seat at regular meetings of the State Board of Education.

Find out what's happening in Clawsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The other three finalists Michael Craig, special education and agriculture teacher, Charles R. Drew Transition Center, Detroit Public Schools; David Stuart, history and English teacher, Cedar Springs High School, Cedar Springs Public Schools; and Luke Wilcox, math teacher, East Kentwood High School, Kentwood Public Schools.

_____

Photo courtesy of Michigan Department of Education

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Clawson