| Teachers Remember "My kids know that I collect frogs," says Holly Yoder, a middle school teacher in Elkhart, Ind. "I have frog clickers, frog bouncy balls, anything with a frog. One year, I had a student who came back to see me bringing a little frog mouse pad." Yoder says that made her visit even more special. "The neatest thing I got was a scrapbook based on the book by P.K. Hallinan, My Teacher, My Friend," says Linda Huff, a kindergarten teacher in Bremen, Ind. "All year long [the student's parent] had [taken] pictures in the classroom which I thought were for her own child. If the story said we painted, she had a picture of us painting in class. It was just awesome and personalized." Huff keeps the special memento displayed on an end table in her home.
"The most precious gifts are priceless," says Carol Roberts, a preschool teacher in Akron, Ohio. "Some are simple crayon scribblings. Every one means the world to me. I keep everything. I can't think of any one that stands out. It's just nice to be appreciated." "The best gift that I got was from a high-schooler who wrote me a letter," says Wayne Bose, a fifth grade teacher in Bremen, Ind. "He said he had made a decision to be a math teacher. It's absolutely wonderful when you know you influenced someone like that." "In 1986, I was a first-year teacher in a low-income school," says Susan Heim, first grade teacher in Beaufort, S.C. "After one particularly bad day, I went out to my car to find a note under the windshield wiper. It was from one of my second grade boys, and it had a crudely-drawn heart with the words, 'You will always be in my heart.' Almost 20 years later, I still have the gift that I remember as being most heartfelt. That child couldn't have bought me a thing, but his gift meant the world to me and it still does." "I like to receive and give gift certificates to bookstores," says Linda DeVillier, a teacher and a parent at St. Peter's Catholic School in Beaufort, S.C. "With these, teachers can buy what they want for the classroom or something special for themselves to read." |