It just adds up
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Mike Sciacca
Carol Brouhle’s answering machine message at school says that if she
can’t get to the phone, she’s busy trying to “make mathematics as easy as
pie for students.”
Her clever pun is evidence of a personality that has managed to do
just that for many students. That combined with her teaching fundamentals
and her dedication to the job have earned Brouhle one of her profession’s
top honors. She is one of five teachers who have been named as
California’s Teachers of the Year.
Brouhle has taught mathematics for the past six years at Westminster
High of the Huntington Union High School District. Prior to that she
taught for nine years at Ocean View High, but left Ocean View when the
opportunity to work at Westminster’s magnet program, Math Educational
Resources Integrated with Technology and Science, or MERITS, presented
itself.
Overall, the Fountain Valley resident has been teaching for 24 years.
“I just love the profession,” Brouhle said. “It is unbelievable to be
honored like this. There are so many teachers in the state who do so many
fantastic things inside and outside the classroom. I am very fortunate to
receive such an honor.”
Nominations for California Teachers of the Year are submitted by
county offices of education, as well as some private schools, following
local competition. The process involved reviews at the district and
county levels before reaching the state level, Brouhle said.
Once a candidate reaches the state level, nominations are reviewed by
a committee representing a broad cross-section of the state.
Although Brouhle, whose husband Bob teaches mathematics at Marina
High, is overwhelmed with the honor, she is quick to credit her fellow
teachers and administrators at Westminster for helping her attain this
award.
“I have such a wonderful support system at Westminster,” she said.
“There’s no way that it would be possible for me to receive this [honor]
without this staff at Westminster High. They are amazing.”
Brouhle says that her love of teaching traces back to her family’s
support for education. Childhood experiences, she said, convinced her
that it is possible to educate children of varying backgrounds and
develop each individual to their fullest potential.
“For me, mathematics really is a language,” Brouhle said. “It gives me
order and I see beauty in things. I try to convey that to my students.”
Principal George Green said that Westminster High has a “tradition in
excellence” when it comes to teaching and noted that several Westminster
teachers previously had been teacher of the year candidates. Brouhle is
the first, he said, from the school to earn the state honor.
“She is a star,” Green said of Brouhle. “Carol personifies all the
positive and constructive efforts a teacher has for a student, students
of all ability levels. She’s humble and the bottom line is that she makes
all her students successful.”
One of Brouhle’s accomplishments has been to implement the magnet
program for students interested in careers in math, science and
technology. She said that students spend their first two years in an
intensive math, science and techonology-based curriculum, then spend
their final two years on mentoring and volunteer activities in the
community.
Brouhle participates on several local, regional and state committees,
the California Math Council and the National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics, are among them. In 1999 she was named a Wal-Mart Teacher of
the Year.
Word of her accomplishment has spread across the Westminster campus,
Green said. Her feat also was announced on the school’s marquee.
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