The Margaret Shepherd award annually recognizes a teacher who works with students with special needs and is employed by a school, which is a member of VAISEF. Directors of schools may nominate someone from their facility who demonstrates a level of excellence and commitment consistent with the teaching career of Margaret Shepherd.
A nominee should be a teacher who:
Margaret Shepherd was born August 14, 1899 in Salem, Illinois. She attended Pomona College in Claremont, California for one year, and graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford University in 1921. The same year she was offered the job of teacher and Assistant Principal of the high school in Palmyra, Virginia. While there she taught history, Latin and French.
At that time teachers were required to be single, so upon her marriage, in 1922, she resigned. In February, 1934, she received an M.A. in Education from George Washington University. She taught briefly in an elementary school in Alexandria in 1942, and then founded the Rosemont Child Center, a pre-school, first, and second grade, which she continued until 1950.
In 1947 her first husband, James Armstrong, died. In 1948, she took two more courses from George Washington University. And in 1950 she married again, moved to Oakland Farm, and started a summer camp. She was then 50 years old. Oakland was begun as a year round boarding school in 1967. In 1980 Mrs. Shepherd wrote and published Phonetic and Structural Analysis — The Oakland Way. She remained a learner throughout her life and continued to take courses through the University of Virginia to maintain her certificate as a teacher. She renewed her certification, through coursework, when she was eighty-nine.
Mrs. Shepherd’s specialty was helping students who, despite years of effort, had been unable to learn to read. At Oakland children are assigned teachers who can best fit their special needs. She always took the “hopeless cases,” those who had been unable to master even the bare rudiments of decoding. Teaching academic skills was very important to Mrs. Shepherd, but she remained centered on the belief that her students needed to know about life in general, and that the development of a sense of pride in themselves was essential to their future success. Thus, while there was time for teaching, there was also time for personal sharing which communicated respect for the child.
In an interview just before her 90th birthday celebration, she said, “I’m doing the only thing that really matters to me. Oakland, this school, these children — they’re all I really want to do. I wouldn’t have any life at all, were it not for teaching.”
2025- Janelle Shaffer, Rivermont Schools
2015 – Gabrielle Pickover, The Oberle Academy
2014 – Melissa Shuler, Rivermont School – Fredericksburg
2013 – Christine Bounds, The Oberle Academy
2012 – Mary P. Oefelein, HopeTree Academy
2011 – Lydia Green, Oak Valley Center
2010 – Roger Styron, Grafton School – Richmond
2009 – Chanon Juhl, Little Keswick School
2008 – Frances Shirey, The Kellar School of Inova Kellar Center
2007 – Elaine David, The Dominion School
2006 – Michael Lee Bigby, Metropolitan Day School
2005 – Elizabeth Whiley, New Dominion School
2004 – Cathy Wray, Phillips School ~ Annandale
2003 – Donna Wells, Oakland School
Nomination Guidelines
The following questions are asked on the nomination form. Each question’s response may be NO LONGER than 200 words.
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