Reflections Magazine Issue #74 - Spring 2011 | Page 20

Alumni Feature Innovative Educators Jason Finley ’03 T.C. Roekle ’68 Jason Sanderson ’92 Glen Taylor ’95 “A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence stops.” — Henry Brooks Adams, American Historian, Journalist and Novelist Siena Heights University goes back to its earliest origins as an institution that educates teachers. From its founding in 1919 as St. Joseph College until present day, Siena Heights has carved out a distinguished reputation as a place future teachers go to learn and prepare for their chosen vocations. The proof of that legacy is in our graduates, a few of whom are profiled in this issue of Reflections as being innovators who have made a lasting impact on their students. Finding His Place Career Change Has Jason Finley ’03 Teaching Award-Winning Program By Doug Goodnough Jason Finley ’03 doesn’t consider himself to be a great educator. “I mumble often, go off topic when I speak to groups, I don’t write well and hate PowerPoint,” said the 39-year-old teacher at Otter Valley Union High School in Rutland, Vt. However, what Finley does do well is provide his students opportunities for self-discovery and finding their own place and purpose in life. As a “place-based” educator, Finley helps students connect subjects like reading, science and math to actual events and places. Using a program he created called External Learning Opportunities, he designs students’ action research projects, helps facilitate exploration of an area of interest, aligns those interests to content standards and then designs a summative assessment through a service-learning project. 20 Reflection