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Dr. Betsy Coe will deliver Living Legacy remarks at the
AMS
2008 Annual Conference in Washington, DC.
At the conference, the Living Legacy Committee will present Betsy with
a memory book. If you would like us to include your words of congratulations,
classroom anecdotes, well wishes, or more,
please click
here.
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2008 LIVING LEGACY
DR. BETSY COE
Dr. Betsy Coe’s Living Legacy Committee will present her with a memory book at the 2008 AMS Annual Conference this spring in Washington, DC. If you would like us to include your words of congratulations, classroom anecdotes, or well wishes, please e-mail them to Amy D. Henderson. Please submit no later than January 1, 2008.
DONATE
TO THE LIVING LEGACY SCHOLARSHIP FUND
WRITE A MESSAGE TO BETSY COE
AMS
LIVING LEGACY HONOREES 1993 – PRESENT
The American Montessori Society Living Legacy is an honor created
by the AMS Scholarship Committee to recognize individuals whose
exemplary achievements have had significant impact within the Montessori
community. Donations to the AMS Living Legacy Scholarship Fund
support future teachers in AMS teacher education programs.
The following reflections about Dr. Betsy Coe were written
by Amy Henderson, Head of School, Montessori Children's House,
Fort Worth, TX
This
year’s Living Legacy paints on a canvas of life. Dr.
Betsy Coe has been in the spotlight of Montessori education for
over thirty years, she is an internationally known and respected
Montessorian who has made significant contributions to education,
Montessori teacher education, research, and peace education. Betsy
is the principal of the Middle School and High School at School
of the Woods in Houston. She has been a pioneer in helping
school all over the world to develop middle and high schools using
Montessori’s vision.
She created the first AMS secondary education course while serving
as the executive director of the Houston Montessori Center, a large
teacher education center that hosts about 100 students each year. It
draws people from all over the world that study the implementation
of the Montessori approach in early childhood, elementary, secondary
or at the leadership level. She has an AMS credential in
all four of these levels. Graduates from HMC had a common
theme at last year’s reunion held during the AMS conference
in Houston, the inspiration initiated by Betsy Coe.
Betsy has served on the AMS Board of Directors for twenty years
(this is longer than anyone else in the history of AMS), served
as president of AMS, Chair of the Teacher Education Committee,
given numerous presentations at conferences, chaired three AMS
conferences, given keynote addresses, hosted touring symposiums,
presented touring symposiums, held peace retreats, written articles
for Montessori Life magazine, M Magazine, the NAMTA Journal, and
has a chapter in the book, Montessori in Contemporary
American Culture. She is still continuing her gifts with
serving on various committees and task forces for AMS.
Betsy has demonstrated the art of promoting unity and professionalism
among Montessorians and Montessori organizations through her listening
and mediation skills. She has given countless hours of dedication
to build quality Montessori education worldwide. Serving
as a Montessori ambassador, she has given talks in several countries
including China, Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, South Korea, Chile,
Mexico, Canada, Panama, and the Dominican Republic. She has
also presented at the Hague Appeal for Peace and the United Nations.
Betsy does more than give words, she lives her beliefs. For instance,
she organized Montessori schools across the United States to donate
surplus materials for schools affected by Hurricane Katrina. Betsy
asked and received thousands of personal care kits from all over
the US for victims and collected thousands of boxes of Montessori
materials to help the schools demolished by this disaster, enough
boxes to fill three classrooms in boxes stacked four feet high. Then,
when an earthquake occurred in Pakistan she was responsible for
sending D cartons filled with personal care kits to also help those
devastated by the disaster.
Hopefully, for those of you that don’t know Betsy, I’ve
given you hints of her many contributions. She is a Montessori
teacher, a teacher of teachers, a teacher of teachers of teachers
(in other words, she is a leader of teacher educators), mother
of two Montessori adults who are both practicing Montessori teachers,
and, most gloriously, a Montessori grandmother of four Montessori
children. Beyond her many accomplishments, Betsy is kind,
compassionate, insightful person, and an inspiration to all of
us.
For more information, contact Kristine
Cooper.
last update
11/8/07
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