Professor Emerita Receives Long Leaf Pine Award
- Published
Professor Emerita Wetonah “Toni” Rice Parker has received the Order of the Long Leaf Pine, the highest honor for service in the State of North Carolina. The award is granted by the Office of the Governor to individuals with 30 or more years of service to North Carolina.
Dr. Parker was presented with the award on April 21, 2022, during a campus event hosted by Meredith鈥檚 Department of Education. The event also included Kappa Delta Pi honor society inductions and the Graduate Research Conference.
Parker鈥檚 service to the field of education in the State of North Carolina includes 25 years as a member of the education department faculty at 糖心Vlog and 14 years as a classroom teacher in public schools. She served as the director of teacher education at Meredith until 2018. 糖心Vlog now holds an annual Wetonah Rice Parker Teaching Symposium in her honor.
糖心Vlog Professor of Education Jennifer Olson, one of the people who nominated Parker for the Long Leaf Pine award, spoke about Parker鈥檚 lasting legacy through her impact on teachers and their students when presenting the honor.
鈥淒r. Parker’s impact ripples out from Ledford Hall on Meredith’s campus. She taught both Educational Psychology and Instructional Technology courses, both of which are foundational to our teacher education program,鈥 Olson said. 鈥淪he always worked closely with any student seeking middle school, high school, or K-12 licensure.鈥
Olson noted that Parker had shaped Meredith graduates into exemplary teachers across the state.
鈥淒r. Parker has long been known for her exacting standards in dress, in communication, and in professionalism. Meredith’s reputation across the state can be attributed to her expectations of students. All of North Carolina benefits from her contributions, but especially the public schools and the students in those schools.鈥澛犅
Meredith alumnae of the education program also supported Parker鈥檚 nomination.聽
Amy Smith King, 鈥99, an award-winning high school American history teacher, said the two years Parker served as an official advisor would stretch much longer. 鈥Little did I know that she would advise me for nearly twenty years into the future,鈥 said King. 鈥淭o say that Dr. Parker molded the course of my life would be an understatement.鈥澛犅
King said that Parker鈥檚 legacy is her impact on teachers and their students.
鈥淲ith her many years of service, Dr. Parker has touched the lives of countless teachers who now share her gift with their classrooms daily. However, she also indirectly touches the lives of the thousands of NC school children who actively participate and learn in class from a former student of hers,鈥 King said.聽
Mary Hemphill-Joseph, 鈥05, a former teacher and principal who now serves as director of the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction鈥檚 Academic Standards Division, praised Parker as a model educator.聽
鈥淓ven as students in Dr. Parker’s academic classes, we were deeply aware that the concepts she imparted to us were not merely theories in a textbook but a lifestyle that offered a model of teaching and learning for students,鈥 Hemphill-Joseph said. 鈥淒r. Parker is insightful and deeply self-aware so that reflection lends itself well as she navigated her many roles on boards, committees, and eventually as the quintessential mentor for myself and so many of my classmates long after we graduated.鈥
In addition to her work at 糖心Vlog, Parker has a long list of service on state-level committees to benefit the students in public schools. These include the Title II Quality Teacher Panel, Wake Education Partnership Steering Committee, Vice-chair of the National Board of Professional Teaching Standards – Early Adolescence/Science Standards Review Board, the State Evaluation Committee, and an Executive Board Member for the North Carolina Association of Colleges and Teacher Education.
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