July 2012 NEWS The Southwest Portland Post • 5 Rieke School teacher wins Fulbright Award, faces a year in England By Jillian Daley The Southwest Portland Post Mary Rieke Elementary School teach- er Jeff Sturges and his family were spending spring break at his mother in law’s Arizona home when he got the email. Sturges, his wife Rebecca and their two children were about to head to a spring training baseball game on a sunny day in late March. Sturges paused to check his messages when he noticed a letter from the Insti- tute of International Education, which administers the Fulbright Classroom Teacher Exchange on behalf of the U.S. Department of State. The letter said he had 10 days to ac- cept an invitation to participate in the exchange program, an opportunity to trade jobs and residences with a teacher in Britain. “I just screamed: ‘Rebecca, you bet- ter come in and view this right now,’” Sturges said. “And I said: ‘How do you feel about moving to Melton Mowbray in Eng- land?’ and she was like: ‘What? Oh my God, oh my God’ and started scream- ing. Then, my mother in law came in, then the kids. We were very excited, very excited.” He leaves for his yearlong gig this Au- gust. He is among 41 U.S. teachers of- fered exchanges for this coming school year, according to Fulbright Teacher Exchange Program records. Sturges soon learned the honor was huge but comes with big changes and some sacrifices: His life and his coun- terpart Robert Pearce’s life are very different. The Sturges family of four will squeeze into Pearce’s three-bedroom terrace house in Melton Mowbray. There is a washing machine in the kitch- en, no dryer because the British line-dry their clothes, and no dishwasher.. Sturges’ wife will leave her job at the Oregon Convention Center to be by his side, making them a one-income family. The British school where Sturges will work, in a village called Waltham, was built in 1847 and has less than 100 students, Sturges said. He will be one of four teachers. Pearce, a single man, will occupy the Sturges family’s four-bedroom home. Mary Rieke Elementary, built in the 1960s, had 420 students last school year, and the school has about 20 teachers, not counting teaching assistants, Stur- ges said. Sturges is the first Mary Rieke El- ementary teacher to receive the honor and one of 42 Portland Public Schools to participate since the program began. He and Oregon Episcopal School eighth grade Spanish teacher Tessa Daniel are the only teachers from Port- land selected to participate this year. More than 14,000 U.S. teachers have participated in the Classroom Teacher Exchange, one of many Fulbright Hillsdale Business and Professional Association 36th Annual Customer Appreciation Blueberry Pancake Breakfast Sunday, July 29th, 8:30am-noon, Casa Colima Parking Lot $6 Adults, $4 Children, Plus... Our annual Hillsdale Benefit Booksale 10 am-3 pm Anne Slocom-Edmund - Optometric Physician Heather Dudzik - Optician Annie Wolf - Optometric Physician programs, since it was estab- lished in 1946 under legislation that former Sen. J. William Ful- bright of Arkan- sas introduced. Seven coun- tries participate, and Sturges chose Britain because it was the only country where he could teach primary school and did not have Mary Rieke Elementary School teacher Jeff Sturges is one of to be fluent in the 41 teachers in the U.S. to be awarded a Fulbright Classroom country’s mother Teacher Exchange. Sturges accepted and will be teaching in tongue. England this coming school year. (Post photo by Jillian Daley) Applicants to the program must have at least 5 years He was inspired to take on a class- of classroom teaching experience, and room full of children after quitting his must demonstrate a seriousness of pur- job to stay at home for a year when his pose and a commitment to the program. daughter was born. “They want men and women who Armed with a bachelor’s degree from will make a difference,” Sturges said. the University of California-Santa Cruz, Sturges said he hopes to become a he enrolled in a Masters in Education better teacher by putting himself in a program at Portland State University. new environment-- to find out what He graduated summa cum laude. he is doing right and what he could He’s now been teaching for eight improve. “Life is about taking chances years, six of which he spent at Mary and opportunities,” he said. Rieke, where he seems to have made Sturges, whose parents, grandmother a good impression, at least on fourth- and sister are educators, previously grader LilyAnna Chin. worked in the food industry, choos- “It feels like I can trust him, and it’s ing to follow in the family tradition a good for everyone to know that he won decade ago. an award for something he really cares about,” said Chin. Rieke School principal Andrea Porter is excited for the knowledge he will bring back, and Porter said this is a bright spot amid a mass of budget cuts at Portland Public Schools. “There’s so much bad stuff going on,” Porter said. “This is a really good thing, so we’re very proud of him, and we’re very excited for ourselves. It’s a win-win.” Former Terwilliger School building purchased by Montessori school Sunstone Montessori School has pur- chased the former Terwilliger School building at 6318 SW Corbett Ave. from the Portland School District, Sunstone principal Cathy Newman told the South Portland Neighborhood Association last month. The school is moving to the property after eight years in the Bridlemile neigh- borhood, Newman said. The building had previously been leased to the Portland French School, and its relationship with its neighbors was sometimes strained. The private school installed fences to curtail access to open areas previously used by neighbors, and its policies on after-hours use of the building were so restrictive that the neighborhood asso- ciation, which had been meeting there, sought other quarters. Newman said she welcomed use of the grounds by neighbors, and that she had had a volleyball net installed in the front yard. The principal was somewhat more equivocal about another issue: a desire by some neighbors to use the yard as an off-leash area for dogs. “I’m a dog owner myself, but this is where children will be playing,” Newman said. At the least, dog own- ers will be required to clean up after themselves, she said. – Lee Perlman