Teaching with a heart
- Share via
Danette Goulet
Susan Phillips adores children.
Her license plate reads “kidzr[heart].”
And it was only her love for her two young grandchildren that could
tear her away from more than 30 years of nurturing the young of
Newport-Mesa.
It is with a somewhat heavy heart that the Balboa Island resident
retires from teaching kindergarten this week and turns The Susan Phillips
Day School over to Kim Cubeiro.
“Children have been my life,” Phillips said. “Having only had one
child myself, I wanted more -- and I certainly had them.”
With an adoring, wistful smile Phillips chuckled as she watched
children from her final kindergarten class head off with their parents,
chattering excitedly about their second-to-last day of class.
“I believe that if a child has high self-esteem, they can do anything
they want to do in this world,” she said. “So our approach [at the Susan
Phillips Day School] is we fit the academics in, but the biggest emphasis
is treating each other kindly, using proper words, learning to be
responsible kindergartners and feelings of self-worth.”
It is Phillips’ loving nature and teaching philosophies that made her
a coveted teacher by both parents and students.
“She’s fabulous, the kids are so well-prepared and have such a great
time,” said parent Alissa Janes, whose daughter, Daphne, attends the
school.
Phillips has taught kindergarten in Newport-Mesa for 35 years. She
spent the first 20 years at Killybrooke Elementary School in Costa Mesa
before going to work at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church School for seven
years. It was then that she took her loving, nurturing curriculum and her
assistant Andy McCunniff on the road and opened her own school.
Phillips planned to shut the doors to that school when she finally
retired -- until Kim Cubeiro came along.
Cubeiro is an experienced teacher and the mother of a recent student.
She had taken time off to have her children.
Despite her experience, Phillips said, Cubeiro has spent the last year
dogging Phillips heels so that she may continue the school exactly as it
has run for the past eight years.
So while parents say that she will be sorely missed by the community,
students may still be reared by her philosophies.
As for students who she has taught, they just feel they are fortunate
to have known her.
“She’s really nice,” said Nicolas Sargeant, 6. “She has the best hugs.
She’s the best teacher I ever had.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.