 |
Michele Moore Schmidt with students |
Michele Moore Schmidt of Lawrenceville,
a graduate of Westminster Choir College (WCC) of Rider University,
is the recipient of the Governor’s Recognition Award for
Teacher of the Year in the East Brunswick School District.
Schmidt, who has been teaching music at Irwin School for the
past four years, will be honored at a Board of Education meeting/awards
ceremony at Churchill Jr. High School on May 4. She, along with
teachers from various Middlesex County school districts, will
also be recognized on May 24 at the Pines Manor in Edison.
Nominated by colleagues from school, Schmidt was singled out
for various outstanding attributes, among them her effective instructional
techniques and methods, her ability to establish a productive
classroom climate and rapport with students and increase student
achievement and her commitment to developing feelings of self-worth
and love of learning in students.
“This was definitely unexpected,” said Schmidt, who
graduated from Westminster in 1998 with a bachelor’s degree
in music education. She is currently pursuing a master’s
degree in music education at Westminster. “I feel very honored
to be recognized in this way by my peers.”
Schmidt enjoys many aspects of her job. She currently teaches
general music and directs a fourth and fifth grade combined chorus
and an a cappella choir at Irwin. “I work with a very supportive
group of teachers that take an interest in what I do,” said
Schmidt. “The students are wonderful. I work in a school
that is rich in diversity, and this makes for very interesting
teaching. I am continuously learning about my students’
cultures, their music, and their ideas.”
Committed to critical pedagogy for music education, she employs
different learning styles to allow students and teachers to become
unified as learners in the process. Her musical philosophy was
shaped at Westminster, where she has felt a strong sense of community
when it came to making music. Schmidt carries this concept both
inside and outside of her school. In addition to directing Irwin
School’s Faculty Choir, for the past three years, she has
been a faculty member at Westminster Conservatory, the community
music school of WCC, teaching choral readiness to children ages
five and six, the fundamental and principles of good singing.
Over the years, Schmidt has received several grants to enhance
her teaching initiatives. One grant involved a collaboration of
her fourth and fifth grade chorus with the American Boychoir Training
Choir that resulted in a CD. Most recently, Schmidt has organized
trips for her students to perform for residents at a local assisted
living home in East Brunswick and to perform the National Anthem
for the Somerset Patriot’s baseball team in Bridgewater.
Westminster continues to be an instrumental part of her growth,
both personally and professionally. She quickly names her husband,
Class of 2000 and 2001 alumnus Patrick Schmidt,
assistant professor of music education at WCC and Dr.
Frank Abrahams, chairperson of music education, as having
a profound impact on her teaching. Other influential teachers
are Allen Crowell, former conductor of the Westminster
Singers; Rochelle Ellis, adjunct assistant professor
of voice; and Drs. Jay Kawarsky,
and Stefan Young, professors of music composition,
history and theory.
“Teachers and students teach each other yielding transformative
experiences,” said Schmidt. "I want my students to
feel empowered through music and as musicians. I see music as
a vehicle for change in how students and teachers think, react
and understand themselves and others. I want to help others see
the potential music could have in their lives.”