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NLMUSD EDUCATOR SELECTED AS A 2018 L.A. COUNTY TEACHER OF THE YEAR

 

JOSIE HERNANDEZ was named one of the 2018 Los Angeles County Teachers of the Year on Sept. 21 at a ceremony held at Universal City.  The event, presented by the Los Angeles County Office of Education, featured the awarding of a $1,000 cash prize from California Credit Union to all 16 county winners.  

 

 

BY RICK DE LA TORRE

Josie Hernandez, an educator with a quarter century of service at the same elementary campus in the Norwalk-La Mirada Unified School District, has been named a 2018 Los Angeles County Teacher of the Year.

Hernandez, a kindergarten teacher at Moffitt Elementary School in Norwalk, was one of the 16 county teachers of the year who were announced by the Los Angeles County Office of Education at a formal ceremony held Sept. 21 at Universal City.

All the county winners will automatically advance, along with other county titlists from around the state, to the California Teachers of the Year competition later in the fall. 

The top state winner will then advance to the National Teacher of the Year contest that takes place next spring. 

“It is an incredible honor to be named a county teacher of the year,” said Hernandez, a resident of La Mirada, about her selection. “I work with some of the most passionate, dedicated and incredibly talented educators who share in my passion. I became an educator because I have a passion for storytelling. I believe that every child is a story, and I have the opportunity to influence the ending.” 

Hernandez began as a paraeducator at the Moffitt campus in 1993 and, after receiving a teaching credential, she became a full-time teacher for the school, starting as a 2nd-grade bilingual instructor. 

She was named last spring as the NLMUSD teacher of the year and the district’s entrant into the county competition. 

Hernandez is the second consecutive county titlist for NLMUSD. Last year, Jennifer Hodge, a visual arts teacher at Benton Middle School in La Mirada, was named a county teacher of the year. 

She finished as a finalist in the state TOY contest.

Hernandez, 44, a native of Orange County with four children of her own, is the first born of working-class parents who emigrated from Mexico. 

She is the first in her family to attend and graduate from college. 

 District Superintendent Dr. Hasmik Danielian noted that Hernandez brings a culturally sensitive teaching style to her classroom every day. “She is known for her wonderful passion and energy. Josie has been such a positive role model for her students.”

Judged as the county’s top public-school educators for this academic year, the 16 winners were selected from a field of 61 district-level teachers of the year who participated in the 37th annual county contest. 

The winners will serve as standard-bearers for the teaching profession and their 72,000 classroom colleagues countywide. 

Each of the winners received a $1,000 cash award from California Credit Union.

In addition to Hernandez and Hodge, there have been at least three other 

NLMUSD educators who have been named as county teachers of the year: Kelly Baker (2013), a district technology coach; Kristine Cvar (2000), the former NLMUSD director of elementary education; and, Gerri Gandolfo (1997), a counselor at La Mirada High School.