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Her name was Mrs. Brower and she taught Spanish. She also had degrees in history and English and had lived in several different countries (Japan, England, Australia, Mexico, Ireland, Holland, and more) because her husband traveled with his job. Her well-rounded knowledge made her fascinating to listen to and she was very good at keeping us kids involved in the discussion. She would also occasionally ignore the curiculum and just sit down and tell us stories. She was a very intelligent person and a strong female role model.

2006-12-17 15:40:02 · answer #1 · answered by sueflower 6 · 0 0

Mr. Picon, he taught world history. He always associated the history with something: a song, a game, or a feeling, so I never forgot it. His methods were unconventional (though not extremely) and I will never foget him.

I remember after test he used to always ask why we would miss certain questions so he could better his explinations of things. He was always trying to better his course, as well as his students. He worked hard to get some kids into college and worked harder at getting money for students who got there on their own but couldn't afford it. A good, good man!

2006-12-17 15:39:10 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Mr. Root, because he always talked about his life. Oh, and we always watched a movie there.

2006-12-17 15:35:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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