|

Visit us on Facebook
|
RECOGNITION PROGRAMS: 2008
HONOREES
AWARD RECIPIENTS

Congratulations
2008 FAAE Award Recipients
|
School
Board of Excellence
School Board of
Brevard County
Janice Kershaw, Chair
Amy Kneessey, Vice Chair
Robert Jordan
Dr. Barbara A. Murray
Larry E. Hughes
|
Leadership Awards
ACE of Hearts
JuDee Pettijohn
Deputy Secretary of State Cultural and Historical Programs
Doris LeeperAward
Constance Rogers
Visual Arts Teacher, Van R. Butler Elementary
Legislative Leader
Senator Evelyn J. Lynn, Volusia
County
Arts Education Professionals
Margot Knight
President & CEO of United Arts of Central
Florida, Orange County
Peter Stark
Director of the Orlando Ballet School, Orange County
Business Leader
Patty DeYoung
Executive Administrator of Darden Restaurants Foundation, Orange County
Deanna Costa
Producer of Education and Outreach
The Arsht Center, Miami-Dade County
Community Volunteer
Debbie Fahmie
Music Educator Teacher
Cypress Elementary School, Osceola County
School Administrator
Jayne Ellspermann
West Port High School, Marion County
|
ACE
of Hearts
JuDee Pettijohn
Deputy Secretary
of State Cultural & Historical
Programs
JuDee Pettijohn was appointed Deputy Secretary
of State for Cultural, Historical and Information Programs
in July 2003. She began her tenure with the Florida Department
of State in 1976; there, she worked with the cultural
grants programs from 1976 to 1985, and served as Grants
Bureau Chief and section head. In 1985, she became Assistant
Division Director and remained in that administrative
role until 1997.
From 1997 to 1999, Pettijohn served as Deputy State
Historic Preservation Officer and chief of the bureau
of Historic Preservation. Her responsibilities included
administrative oversight of the historic preservation
grants and folklife programs, Section 106 compliance
review, survey and registration for national register
nominations, architectural preservation services, certified
local governments, Florida Main Street, and other historic
preservation programs.
In 1999, Pettijohn briefly detoured to the Department
of Business and Professional Regulation. There, she served
as Chief of the Bureau of Testing and Director of the
Division of Professions, working with nineteen professions
and sixteen professional boards.
In 2001, she returned to the Department of State as
Director of the Division of Cultural Affairs, a position
she maintained until she was appointed Deputy Secretary
of Cultural and State Historical Programs by Secretary
of State Glenda Hood.
In her role Pettijohn is delighted to expand her scope
, which now includes not only the programs of the Division
of Historical Resources and Cultural Affairs, but also
those of the Division of Library Services. She is also
honored to work with a staff that she admires and respects
in all three divisions.
Pettijohn has served on the Boards of the National
Assembly of State Arts Agencies and the Southern Arts
Federation. She holds a bachelor's degree in psychology
from Ursinus College in Pennsylvania, and a master's
degree in library and information sciences from Florida
State University. However, she maintains that her real
education came from working at the Department of State;
for this she credits its remarkable staff, and knowledge
gleaned from current and past members of the Florida
Arts Council, Florida Historical Commission, State Library
Council, Florida Folklife Council, Markers Council, and
other professional boards at the Department of State
and the Department of Business and Professional Regulation.
Pettijohn is the mother of two children, Fred, 20,
and Jeannie, 18. |
| Legislative
Leader
Senator
Evelyn J. Lynn, Volusia
County
Senator Evelyn Lynn was elected to the Florida Senate
in November 2002 after serving eight years in the Florida
House of Representatives. Prior to her career in the
legislature, she spent almost thirty years as first a
teacher, then as assistant superintendent of the Volusia
County School District. She was also a City Commissioner
in Ormond Beach. Senator Lynn, who has worked with students
from kindergarten through university level, currently
serves as Chair of the Senate Committee on Higher Education
Appropriations. She is a member of the Senate Committees
on Children, Families and Elder Affairs; Commerce; Criminal
Justice; Communications and Public Utilities; Rules;
and was appointed to the Cancer Control and Research
Advisory Council by the Senate Presidents. She is a recognized
state and national leader on matters pertaining to children
and families, and on educational improvement.
During her years in the legislature, Senator Lynn has
been recognized for her support of business and economic
development as keys to improving education and family
security. Key accomplishments include working for the
passage of Florida’s A++ middle school and high
school redesign legislation, and serving as the first
woman elected to state office from Volusia County; she
is also the first woman to chair the House Committee
on Education Appropriations. With roles on the Education
Commission of the States, and the Women in Government
and Access to Higher Education Task Force, Senator Lynn
is also one of twelve current members of the National
Council of State Legislators Blue Ribbon Commission on
Higher Education.
Senator Lynn holds a bachelor’s degree from Queens
College in New York; a master’s degree from Stetson
University; and a doctorate in instructional leadership
and administration from the University of Florida. |
| Doris Leeper
Award
Constance Rogers
Visual Arts Teacher, Van R. Butler Elementary
Constance Rogers has been selected as teacher of the
year in each school where she has taught: Freeport (1993),
Bay (1996), and Butler (2003). A teacher since 1989,
Rogers is also a well-known presenter on inclusion in
the visual arts for VSA art of Florida (VSAFL)/Florida
Inclusion Network (FIN). She has presented at the VSAFL
annual statewide leadership 2002 and 2004 conference.
One of 18 VSAFL program partners, Rogers is also a member
of the Florida Art Education Association (FAEA), the
National Education Association (NEA), and the Association
for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD).
In 2006 she led her classroom in ArtLink, an
international art exchange program through VSA arts,
in which 51 U.S. classrooms partner with classes in twenty-five
countries. The ArtLink program was a great success
for Rogers and her students: One of her classroom participants
was chosen as a national finalist, and her artwork was
displayed at a Congressional Reception and traveled throughout
the United States on a two-year tour. The art work of
another student was chosen by former Lieutenant Governor
Toni Jennings to use on her holiday cards.
Through Rogers’efforts, Van R. Butler School
was recognized as an Arts Achieve School. Rogers’work
has been highlighted in a DVD and brochure, The Arts
and Reading: Making the Connection. Rogers has been
featured in the international publication Creative
Spirit and has published a short story, “Powerful
Classroom Stories by Accomplished Teachers.”She
has national board certification in early childhood and
middle school art. |
School Board
Award
School Board of Brevard County
Janice Kershaw, Chair; Amy Kneessey,
Vice Chair; Robert Jordan; Dr. Barbara A. Murray; Larry
E. Hughes
Under the governance of the five-member Brevard County
School Board, Brevard Public Schools (BPS) ranks as one
of the highest-achieving school districts in Florida
and has aspirations to be first in the nation. The School
Board holds Master Board distinction from the Florida
School Boards Association, one of 38 boards in the state
to have earned that status. In 2007, Brevard Public Schools
won the Florida Governor’s Sterling Award for organizational
performance excellence—only the second school district
to receive the honor at the district level (the first
was Pinellas County in 1993).
This spring, BPS was recognized as a national leader
in music education, honored by the National Association
of Music Merchants (NAMM) Foundation as one of the country’s “Best
Communities for Music Education.”Brevard was one
of only 110 school districts recognized across the United
States, and one of only three districts in Florida. The
positive, proactive leadership of the school board has
fostered many other achievements, including:
- Leading the State of Florida in music demonstration
schools, including twenty-three of the thirty-one schools
named statewide and all honorable mention sites;
- Initiating the Brevard Cultural Alliance Excellence
in Visual Arts Award in 2005, designating 13 schools
with this distinction and two schools with an honorable
mention;
- Using the Brevard Excellence in Visual Arts Award
to create a Florida Art Demonstration School model;
and
- Being selected four years in a row for the State
Congressional Art Competition, which showcases student
art.
|
| Arts Education
Professionals
Margot Knight
President & CEO of United Arts of Central Florida, Orange County
Since October 2001, Margot Knight has been President
and CEO of United Arts of Central Florida. She currently
serves on the executive board of the Orlando Regional
Chamber of Commerce, the board for the Orlando/Orange
County Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the alumni
board of James Madison University. In addition, Knight
is a member of the Rotary Club of Orlando. In 2004, she
was honored with a Woman of Distinction award by the
Girl Scouts of Citrus Council, and received the Women’s
Achievement Award in Arts & Culture in 2006. In 2007,
she received the prestigious national Michael Newton
Award from Americans for the Arts.
Knight, who also enjoyed a brief theatrical career
in history and the arts, was the oral historian for the
Whitman County, Washington Historical Society; director
of the Oral History Office at the Washington State University;
regional coordinator of the Washington Women’s
Heritage Project, and interim director of the Washington
(State) Commission for the Humanities. She has served
as President and CEO of the United Arts Council of Raleigh-Wake
County, North Carolina, and Executive Director of the
Idaho Commission on the Arts. She also served as the
assistant director of the National Assembly of State
Arts Agencies in Washington, DC. |
| School Administrator
Jayne Ellspermann
West Port High School,
Marion County
 Under the leadership of Jayne Ellspermann, the Principal
of West Port High School in Ocala, Florida, Marion County
Public Schools have developed and supported a visual
and performing arts secondary school. West Port High
School houses the Marion County Center for the Arts magnet
program in visual and performing arts.
Ellspermann supports educational projects that relate
to visual and performing arts, and cross-curriculum project
development, in Marion County Public Schools. She represents
the Florida Association of School Administrators on the
FAAE board, where she is a past president. Ellspermann
currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Florida
Association for Secondary School Administrators, and
has served as President of the Ocala Civic Theatre Board
of Directors and of the Marion Performing Ballet Board
of Directors. She holds a bachelor''s degree in psychology
from the University of Georgia, and a master's degree
in education in education administration and supervision
from the University of Florida. |
Arts Education
Professionals
Peter Stark
Director of the Orlando Ballet School, Orange County
Peter Stark danced leading roles at the New York City
Ballet, Boston Ballet, and Washington Ballet. At Boston
Ballet, Stark met and danced with Maria and Fernando
Bujones under artistic director Bruce Marks. He became
assistant to Fernando Bujones, then Interim Executive
Director at Ballet Mississippi. In 2000, Stark was appointed
director of Orlando Ballet School (OBS), and under his
leadership, the organization has grown to four school
locations in three Florida counties. OBS is widely considered
one of America's best ballet academies: It has enjoyed
two rave reviews in the New York Times for New
York performances, and its students are winning major
international ballet competitions and receiving jobs
with the world's best dance companies. In 2001, Stark
established accreditation for OBS with the Southern Association
of Colleges and Schools.
Stark has choreographed works for The Washington Ballet,
Central Pennsylvania Ballet and Orlando Ballet, including
the audience favorite Cinderella . In
addition to serving on grant panels for the National
Endowment for the Arts, Mr. Stark has been named Central
Florida Arts Educator of the Year and was featured on
the cover of Dance Teacher Magazine. He studied dance
under Andre and Leda Eglevsky, and at the School of American
Ballet, and business at Columbia University and Strayer
University. |
Business
Leader
Patty DeYoung
Executive Administrator of Darden Restaurants
Foundation, Orange County
A 28-year veteran with Darden Restaurants and the Darden
Restaurants Foundation, Patty DeYoung has been the executive
administrator for the Darden Restaurants Foundation for
17 years. In this capacity, she presents
grants to the Darden Restaurants Foundation Trustees
and is responsible for Darden's corporate contributions. DeYoung
is a member of the Communities Activities Committee,
which provides volunteer opportunities to Darden employees
and necessary services to the community.
DeYoung serves as a board member for the Orlando Repertory
Theatre, the Victims Service Center, and the Women's
Resource Center. She is a member of the Local Advisory
Council for the Association to Preserve the Eatonville
Community, which presents the Zora Neale Hurston Festival
every year. She was past president of the Board
of the Holocaust Memorial Resource and Education Center, and
the Board of Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida. DeYoung
is also a member of the Central Florida Donor's Forum,
a consortium of local funders, and the Florida Philanthropic
Network. |
Deanna Costa, Producer
of Education and Outreach
The Arsht Center, Miami-Dade County
Deanna Costa is Producer of Education and Outreach at
the Arsht Center. Through her efforts, the Arsht Center
has provided funding as well as technical and staff support
for 22 school-based residencies in inclusive classrooms,
culminating in three student performances in the Center's
Black Box Theatre. These performances, which include
students with disabilities, historically involved ten
schools total: four elementary, four middle, and two
high schools. In December 2007, this program was increased
to 12 classes. For many students, this program represents
their first visit to a performing arts institute and
the first opportunity to perform for a live audience.
Costa's tireless pursuit of her vision to promote inclusive
programming at the Center and support for other Center
administrators demonstrates her commitment to provide
a full range of cultural and learning experiences for
all Miami-Dade students. |
Community
Volunteer
Debbie Fahmie
Music Educator Teacher
Cypress Elementary
School, Osceola County
Fahmie is a vibrant and talented music educator at Cypress
Elementary School in Osceola County, and a tireless advocate
for arts education in the community. In 2008, Fahmie's
students performed The Last World Standing,
a tribute to veterans that was a joint program with the
Osceola County School of the Arts Band, Dance, Chorus,
and Tech Departments. This performance was attended by
veterans from throughout Central Florida.
Her excellence as a teacher was recognized when she
was named one of five finalists for the Florida Teacher
of the Year award in 2007. Also in 2007, Cypress Elementary
School was named a National School of Distinction in
Arts Education by the Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts. |
|
|
 |