January 29, 2018
Savannah Educator Voted Finalist for DJJ Teacher of the Year
(Decatur, GA) – Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) Commissioner Avery D. Niles is pleased to announce that Savannah educator Tammie Waters Colson was a finalist for the Georgia Preparatory Academy’s (GPA) 2017 Teacher of the Year. Colson was recognized for her service during a special presentation at the State of Georgia’s Tift College campus in Forsyth.
As an educator, Colson is committed to turn her students into life-long learners. “It is my goal to externally motivate my students to work, but more importantly to love the idea of learning something new,” she said. “With so many circumstances against them, it is a privilege to have the opportunity to positively impact their lives. I want my students to know that their lives have only just begun and there is so much more to come.”
Commissioner Niles, who also serves as Superintendent of the DJJ School System, said, “It is one of my proudest moments at our commencement exercises each year to recognize the most inspiring and most committed teachers in the Georgia Preparatory Academy system. However, the task of narrowing down the field of finalists is often extremely difficult for our selection committee due to the number of truly talented educators we are fortunate to have on staff,” he commented.
Colson, who is an English-Language Arts teacher at the Savannah Regional Youth Detention Center (RYDC), was recognized as a Teacher of the Year finalist as part of winter graduation ceremonies for students from DJJ secure facilities throughout the state.
In her classroom, Colson engages her students by incorporating hands-on learning stations and group discussions into her lesson plans. She encourages her students to make connections between what they learn in school to the world around them. Colson also stays after school on her own time to tutor students needing extra help with reading comprehension.
Commissioner Niles said, “We are genuinely impressed with the progress our students are making and by the dedication of our principals and teachers like Tammie Waters Colson.” Commissioner Niles and GPA Associate Superintendent of Schools Jean Lee congratulated all the finalists for their dedication and professionalism.
Other Teacher of the Year finalists were Sandra Marrongelli, English-Language Arts teacher at the Atlanta Youth Development Campus (YDC); Sam Hicks Queener, Jr., science teacher at Macon YDC and Betsy Stone, social studies teacher at Aaron Cohn RYDC. The Teacher of the Year Award was presented to social studies instructor Harold Farmer, who teaches at Rockdale RYDC in Conyers.
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The Georgia Preparatory Academy is Georgia’s 181st School District and is accredited by AdvancED/Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). The mission of the Georgia Preparatory Academy is to provide a comprehensive educational program which will facilitate the successful reintegration of each student into the community and workplace.
GPA students are held to the same scholastic standards to earn their diplomas as pupils in Georgia’s traditional state schools. Students receive 330 minutes of regular or special education inside DJJ’s security barriers each school day. Every course taught at GPA schools meets the quality education standards of the Georgia Department of Education.
About DJJ
The Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) is a multi-faceted agency that serves the needs of this state’s young offenders up to the age of 21. The Department employs more than 4,300 men and women at 26 secure facilities and 97 community services offices throughout the state to effect justice and redirect the young lives in the agency`s care.
Including those who are placed on probation, thousands of youth are diverted each year to evidence-based community programs, sentenced to short-term incarceration or committed to the Department`s long-term custody by juvenile courts. It is the duty of DJJ’s professional corrections staff to preserve public safety and safeguard the citizens of Georgia, as well as protect the victims of crimes so that they can rebuild their lives.
At the same time, DJJ holds juvenile offenders accountable for their delinquent conduct so that they can take responsibility for their actions through probation, supervision and secure detention. The youth are provided with medical and psychological treatment, as well as education and programs designed to equip them with the social, intellectual and emotional tools needed to achieve their successful reentry and reintegration into community, workplace and neighborhood settings as more productive and law-abiding citizens.