Quantcast

Rock Island Today

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY RIVERFRONT CAMPUS: Two WIU School of Ag Alumni Teaching Together in Northwestern Illinois

0p

Western Illinois University Riverfront Campus recently issued the following announcement.

A pair of Western Illinois University alumni, who had parallel academic and athletic careers in the 1980s, have been implementing what they learned at Western through their jobs as high school agriculture teachers at West Carroll High School in Savanna, IL

Dan Hartman, a 1986 graduate, and Don Mathey, a 1984 graduate, both received degrees in agriculture education. Hartman was part of WIU's wrestling team, and Mathey was a member of the WIU baseball team.

For the past 13 years, both have been agriculture teachers and both credit WIU for providing them with the tools they need to teach a new generation about agriculture.

"Things have changed a great deal in the classroom since I attended WIU in 1986," said Hartman. "I feel the foundation in education I received at WIU allowed me to mature as a teacher and use the in-services that I gain to keep up-to-date."

Mathey said he still uses the agriculture mechanics curriculum he learned at Western, particularly the sections on electricity and surveying.

"WIU is a great school," he said. "I had great instructors. I loved the campus size and instructor/student ratio; and I still use what I learned there in my career today."

The two men learned about their WIU connection when Hartman was teaching at Mt. Carroll High School and Mathey at Thomson High School, and the two districts merged. When the merged district joined Section Two FFA in northwestern Illinois, Hartman and Mathey met fellow WIU alumnus Rick Pettit, a 1984 agriculture education graduate, who also teaches high school agriculture in the region.

At Mt. Carroll, Hartman and Mathey split the high school students, with Hartman teaching juniors and seniors and Mathey teaching freshmen and sophomores. Mathey said the pair shares responsibilities for the school's FFA chapter.

"Don and I work well together; he's allowed me to kind of be the lead teacher in the past 10 years or so, and our roles are reversing now since I am retiring after next year," said Hartman. "We were selected as outstanding teachers at the high school the past two years consecutively. We do have a great working relationship and we do socialize outside of school.

Each summer, the two take part in the Register's Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI), and will continue the tradition later this month. Both also coach athletics in their school district, Hartman coaching junior high wrestling and Mathey teaching varsity girls' softball.

Hartman and Mathey said they have both stayed connected to WIU since their graduation. Hartman said he returned to campus for last summer's implosion of Higgins Hall, and Mathey said he enjoys the WIU alumni magazine and staying in touch with WIU School of Agriculture Director Andy Baker.

"I always enjoy picking up my alumni button from the WIU booth at national FFA convention, or visiting them with them at state FFA convention or at the state Ag teachers convention," said Hartman. "I also see Dr. Baker throughout the year."

He added that WIU taught him how to deal with differing personalities.

"I am grateful to WIU for my education and my career," he said.

For more information about WIU's School of Agriculture, visit wiu.edu/ag.

Original source can be found here.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate