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Clay Hildebrand – a sixth grade math
teacher at Smokey Road Middle School – has been named as a
finalist for Georgia Teacher of the Year.
Hildebrand is the 2007 Coweta County Teacher of the Year, after
being named as Smokey Road’s top teacher by his peers. He was
named as one of 10 finalists for 2009 state Teacher of the Year
(TOTY) by State Superintendent of Schools Kathy Cox, at Thursday
morning’s Georgia Board of Education Meeting.
Hildebrand – a former Marine – now moves to interviews where he
will be considered as the top Georgia teacher for 2009.
The finalists for 2009 TOTY were chosen from a pool of 141
applicants that were selected as the TOTYs in their school
districts, by a panel of judges that included teachers
(including past Georgia winners and finalists), administrators,
community leaders and others. The 10 finalists were chosen based
on the scores of the essays on their applications.
"I want to offer my sincere congratulations to each of the
finalists. I know that any one of them would make an excellent
Georgia Teacher of the Year," said Superintendent Cox. "I'd also
like to congratulate all of the district-level teachers of the
year. Each of them is a shining star in their community and
around the state."
Hildebrand was informed of his finalist status Wednesday, in a
call from the State Department of Education. “I was flattered
just to be named Smokey Road’s Teacher of the Year last year, so
I was really taken by surprise with that,” he said. “I told them
I thought they had the wrong Clay Hildebrand.”
Hildebrand and Smokey Road Principal Laurie Barron announced the
honor to school staff. Then they called Clay’s wife –
Evans Middle School Improvement Specialist Christi Hildebrand –
and Superintendent Blake Bass to tell them.
“Superintendent Bass was excited for me, but he asked me if I
had called Christi first. That’s what I love about Coweta
County,” said Hildebrand.
Clay Hildebrand’s students definitely think he deserves the
honor.
“Mr. Hildebrand’s great. He really helps us out with things we
don’t know, and he’s always teaching us new stuff,” said student
Doriun Pittman.
“He deserves it because he’s really nice and a great teacher to
have,” Payton Cofield added.
“He doesn’t just sit behind a desk. He really makes us work and
he makes it fun,” said Joshua Morse.
Student Kim Jarrell summed it up. “He’s just the greatest
teacher,” she said.
Principal Barron speaks highly of him, too. She hired the
Hildebrands to teach at Smokey Road from Fulton County schools,
where the two had taught since moving to Newnan from Florida.
“Mr. Hildebrand really is a great math teacher,” said Barron.
“But it’s more than that. He volunteers at the school, he’s one
of our teachers who tutor students on their own time after
school on Monday nights, and he is involved in the community
outside of school. He also really cares about students and you
see that in how he knows every one of them and knows how to
motivate them.”
“His students like him, and they definitely respect him. He is
great academically and he knows and teaches the standards, but
he goes beyond that. He earns what he gets from students by
relating to them. Ultimately, who cares about teaching
philosophy or any of that if you don’t care about kids first?”
she said.
Hildebrand is in good company with the state TOTY distinction.
The Coweta County School System is the only school system in
Georgia with three state teachers of the year, including
Lorraine Johnson, Nancy Royal and Jamie Lipscomb. There have
also been 13 Georgia TOTY semi-finalists from Coweta since 1986.
Smokey Road Middle School teacher Pam Brown was one of those
finalists.
Over the next month, a panel of judges will observe and
interview each of the 10 finalists. The winner will be announced
at the Georgia Teacher of the Year Banquet on May 9, 2008 at the
Georgia Aquarium.
The 2009 Georgia Teacher of the Year will spend next school year
traveling around the state and the nation serving as an
ambassador for the teaching profession. The winner will also be
entered in the National Teacher of the Year competition. All
finalists will serve on Superintendent Cox's Teacher Advisory
Council.
The 2008 Georgia Teacher of the Year is Ms. Emily Jennette, of
Marietta, a teacher at Sawyer Road Elementary School.
The 2009 Georgia Teacher of the Year Finalists include:
- Clay Hildebrand, Smokey Road Middle School, Coweta
County, 6th grade Math & Literature
- Leanne Maule, Cartersville High School, Cartersville
City, English, Language Arts, British Literature
- Gina Coss, Sedalia Park Charter Elementary School, Cobb
County, 5th grade, Early Intervention Program
- Christopher Spraggins, Columbus High School, Muscogee
County, Honors Chemistry, AP Biology, Physics
- Aletha Snowberger, Davidson Fine Arts Magnet School,
Richmond County, AP World History
- Daniel Petritz, Conyers Middle School, Rockdale County,
Science
- Tracy Wilson, Americus-Sumter County High School,
Sumter County, Special Education
- David Curtis, Callaway High School, Troup County, AP
Physics, Chemistry, Biology
- Dwight Stafford, Performance Learning Center, Walton
County, Business Education and Information Technology
- Stephanie Shelton, Washington County High School,
Washington County, English/Latin

Clay Hildebrand – a math teacher at Smokey Road Middle School –
has been named as a finalist for Georgia Teacher of the Year.
Hildebrand and principal Laurie Barron are shown with
Hildebrand’s sixth grade students, congratulating him Thursday.
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