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A 'nice, little country home'


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May Stewart was only 18 years old when she took her first teaching job at a rural school in Converse County. The job began a 29-year career of teaching in six different schools, most of which had fewer than 10 students.

Teaching in a rural school was always fun, but it was hard work to keep such a school up and running, Stewart said.

"I chopped wood, I built fires," she said, adding that, at times, she made as little as $2,100 a year.

Stewart was a presenter at Thursday's 25th Annual Women's History Celebration held at Casper College. This year's presentations focused on one-room schools in Natrona County and the teachers who dedicated countless hours to rural students and schools.

Natrona County has four schools that are considered rural schools -- Alcova Elementary, Powder River Elementary, Red Creek Elementary and Willow Creek Elementary. Times have changed some since Stewart first began her teaching tenure, but rural schools have maintained their place in education for Wyoming's students.

Joan Fenster, the teacher at Alcova Elementary, compared her school to a, "nice, little country home." Alcova enrolled eight students for this school year in grades kindergarten through sixth.

Fenster admitted that she worries her students might not be getting all the education they need because she can get spread a little thin.

"It's the hardest job I've ever had," she said. "Having six grades is a challenge in this day and age."

Alcova's school building has three classrooms, a library and a gym. Fenster said students from Red Creek Elementary are frequent visitors to the school, where they share the gym and classroom space.

Having such a small student body makes it easy to build relationships with every student and with families. Parents are actively involved in helping plan and raise money for field trips, Fenster said, including one three-day trip each year. Last year, the class went to Denver, the first time two young boys had ever been in a city.

Fenster said she always cries when it's time for her students to move on from their little rural school.

"It's like a little family," she said. "You become very attached to them."

Reach education reporter Jasa Santos at (307) 266-0593 or at Jasa.Santos@trib.com.


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J.R.T. wrote on Mar 28, 2008 10:21 AM:

" My mother would have thought that $2,100 for a year of teaching school was wonderful! She taught in rural schools in the Sandhills of Nebraska during the mid-1930's. If I remember right, she did finally get $30/month at her last school. Her wages were paid in county warrents. Fortunately for her, a local merchant was willing to pay her the dollar value for her warrents. He then collected the interest from the county once they were solvent enough to redeem the warrents paid after the depression ended. Some banks and merchants took advantage of the situation and only took the warrents at a discounted value. With her wages she kept gas in the car, any food that they could raise was bought as well as a bedroom suite and a cookstove (both new!). Quite an accomplishment to say the least "

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