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IdahoPTV supports the entire learning ecosystem and promotes lifelong learning by offering educational programs, activities and resources across Idaho. Read about how IdahoPTV’s family and community education projects are changing lives in neighborhoods around our state.

Melissa Simmons

Woman with short red hair smiling in front of a teal background

This second-grade teacher at Dworshak Elementary School in Burley, Idaho, has found the next generation of teaching tools for her students and for the teachers in her district.

A first-grader stands at the front of a classroom at Dworshak Elementary School in Burley, Idaho. He’s wearing a headset and addresses a class of second-graders in front of him. Hands pop up, and he strides over to answer their questions. 

Second-grade teacher Melissa Simmons watches with pride. She has invited the boy to help teach the older kids how to code using the PBS KIDS ScratchJr app. And he’s really good at it.  

Simmons has seen how the ability to code will be an essential skill for children in their future careers, in jobs we don’t even know about yet. She explains, “I had this first-grader come to me for challenge reading, and he already knew how to code in PBS KIDS ScratchJr. I asked him to teach me how to use the app. I then invited him to lead the entire class of second-graders and teach them how to use the coding app.” She says, “ They went crazy! Those kids were so excited! I was so impressed with him.”

This young coder will be in Simmons’ second-grade class in 2022-2023. “I’m working on my knowledge of technology so I can be ready for him,” she says. And she knows they are both up for the challenge.

Born and raised in Idaho, Melissa Simmons has been teaching elementary school students for 29 years. And when you meet Simmons, you see that despite nearly three decades in the classroom, she hasn’t lost one bit of enthusiasm, passion, and energy for teaching Idaho’s children.

This veteran educator says she is always looking for more tools, better resources, and new ways of doing the best job possible for her second-grade class at Dworshak Elementary.

Simmons saw an advertisement for a July 2022 professional-development book study of The Startup Teacher Playbook by Darcy Bakkegard and Michelle Blanchet, hosted by Idaho Public Television’s Education Manager Kari Wardle

“Kari had been a teacher in my school district, so I knew of her. When I learned that Kari was in charge of this, I thought this is gonna be awesome,” Simmons says. “She made every accommodation to make this program work for us. She’s amazing.”

The Idaho State Department of Education requires that Idaho teachers obtain six professional development credits every five years to maintain teacher certification. Simmons says, “I appreciate the opportunity to earn professional development credits through IdahoPTV. Teachers always need to earn credits, and these are available on demand. Having the courses available for online, independent study that you can complete at your leisure is ideal for our teachers.”

PBS LearningMedia also has a suite of professional development courses for educators

Simmons admits she wasn’t very familiar with all that IdahoPTV’s Education team does in support of Idaho teachers. “I had no idea until I participated in this book study, and I am starting to dig deeper. I’ve made a list of things I plan to implement in my classroom.” She adds, “IdahoPTV is the best-kept secret out there.”

Lacey Watkins

Family posing in front of trees

An interventionist teacher and former classroom educator in Moscow, Idaho, Lacey Watkins shares tools she uses to introduce new topics with students and reinforce skills. 

Lacey Watkins’ enthusiasm is contagious.

The mother of two girls has taught preschool, kindergarten, and first grade; she now works as an interventionist teacher for grades K-5 at Lena Whitmore Elementary School in Moscow, Idaho.

When COVID-19 hit, and schools were closed, Watkins and a colleague started an educational radio broadcast so students could hear their teachers' voices and feel a sense of comfort. And when she heard about Idaho Public Television’s Classroom Idaho project to broadcast videos of Idaho classroom educators teaching lessons for grades 3-6, she was one of the first teachers to start recording her own lessons for the channel.

“I was so excited because IdahoPTV has the capability to get teachers out there when kids need them,” she says.

Watkins has long used PBS KIDS content with her own daughters. “I used Elmo songs with my kids when they were learning letters, and I pulled that into the classroom.” She said that singing the songs helps grab students’ attention, reinforce the letters, and provide memory aids.

“I allowed them to use PBS KIDS apps because I knew they would be appropriate and educational,” Watkins adds.

To introduce the topic of measurement to her kindergarten class, she had them watch a clip of Peg + Cat. The kids watched the characters learn to measure and laughed at their antics. “So when they went out to do the measuring themselves, they had the group background knowledge to build off of.” Plus, she says, it’s important to make learning fun.

Watkins has been doing some of her own learning at IdahoPTV, taking advantage of the professional development opportunities the station’s education department offers. “I took a course on social-emotional learning. It was very high quality, and I walked away having tools that were applicable to students in the classroom.”

Watkins admits she’s “nerdy about Idaho history.” But it’s not always easy to find Idaho history content, she says. Then she discovered IdahoPTV lesson plans on Idaho historical figures featured on Idaho Experience. A favorite lesson focuses on author Annie Pike Greenwood.  

“I appreciated the perspectives from Idahoans and historians," Watkins says. "I feel like more fourth-grade teachers need to know about this.” 

Melissa Reed

Kids raising their hands

This Weiser, Idaho, teacher benefits from Idaho Public Television’s expertise in online learning and in the classroom. 

Melissa Reed just started her 22nd year teaching Idaho youth. And on this August afternoon, she’s staying late in her classroom, waiting to visit with parents at Weiser School’s Back to School Night.

Melissa’s students have benefited from the expertise of Idaho Public Television’s Education Manager, Kari Wardle over the years. 

Kari traveled to Pioneer School in Weiser and met with Melissa and other teachers, sharing useful apps and tools for teaching. Melissa says “It was a game changer.” 

“The kids learned to research and after all they learned they wanted to continue researching all the time, because they loved this new tool.” 

Then during the pandemic, Melissa had to quickly switch to teaching online. She needed resources and relief. Her first call?  Kari Wardle.

“Kari was a tremendous resource when we had to make the last-minute decision to teach online due to COVID. We needed to learn new ways to engage the students.”

When Melissa saw how engaged the students were in the lessons, she incorporated the tools and new lessons, such as Apple Classroom into the class’s daily routine. She started each day with a mystery person, place, based on Michael Soskil’s Five Clue Challenge.

Melissa says this exercise inspired students to come up with their own daily challenges and take on leadership roles in the classroom.

“It’s hard to keep students engaged online, and we are always looking for new ways to keep them excited about learning,” Melissa says. “The tools that Kari shared allowed me to get my students seated, thinking, and ready to learn as soon as they entered the classroom.”

What’s more, she explains, is that the resources are free. “If someone is looking for something new and engaging for their students, whether online or in person, they should give these tools a try. Everything is free. Our school didn’t have a lot of money, so any extra free resources we can find is a big deal.”

Paige Somoza

Headshot of Paige Somoza

This PBS Digital Innovator, teacher and instructional coach makes it clear: “sit and get learning” is a thing of the past. Idaho Public Television puts learning in the hands of the students while teaching them twenty-first-century skills.

Paige Somoza has just finished her summer canning: strawberry and rhubarb pie filling. She loves a good project.

Somoza takes lessons from Idaho Public Television and PBS and brings them into her job as a teacher and instructional coach. Paige is crystal clear that the old concept of “sit and get learning” is a thing of the past. 

“Project-based learning teaches practical skills that students need to solve problems and succeed in life," she says.  "Idaho Public Television brings solid educational resources into a community, and puts learning in the hands of the students while teaching them twenty-first century skills that they will absolutely need to succeed.”

Recently while organizing a collaborative national film festival for Idaho high school students, she had an “aha” moment. “Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought that I could facilitate something like this, but through all I’ve learned from national and local PBS, I realized we are all striving for the same thing: a sense of belonging and a sense of celebration for the community.”

Somoza says that her experience working with PBS and Idaho Public Television has shown her “the educational resources are based on improving lives, not economic gain; it’s about enriching everybody’s experience and building a strong community.”