Moab teacher tops in Utah, cites his father as example
He focuses on helping students realize dreams
Utah Teacher of the Year Hal Adams, left, of the Grand School District in Moab, with his father, Clemont Adams, who was also a longtime teacher, at the Utah Teacher of the Year Banquet at the Red Lion Hotel in Salt Lake City on Friday.
As a student, Hal Adams never had it easy. He was labeled the "black sheep" of his family because of a speech impediment.
And it made him angry.
But an English teacher's need of his passionate views changed all that by asking Adams to be a member of the school's debate team. It moved him.
Friday night Adams, an educator for the past 17 years the last seven spent at Grand County High School was awarded the state of Utah's Teacher of the Year Award at the Red Lion Hotel in Salt Lake City.
But to Adams, it was his destiny to become a great teacher. After all, he had a legacy to follow.
His father, Clemont a "passionate" educator for 37 years, as described by Adams was a huge part of what influenced him to become an educator.
"This night is probably the night I've felt my whole life," Adams said. "It's living up to the heritage I have as a teacher."
Choking up a bit, he looked up at his father in the audience and said the greatest compliment he'd ever received was that, "He's like his dad."
As a teacher, Adams works to make learning subjects like history and debate interactive and real for his students. He brings famous historic personalities to life in his classroom and takes students on trips to national historic sites in places like Washington, D.C.
In his application for the honor, Adams stressed the importance of students gaining real-life experiences in order to encourage them to achieve their dreams.
He recounted in his application an experience when he took a group of students to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to meet Bruce Babbitt, who was in charge of the department but Babbitt wasn't in.
One of his students, a young Navajo girl, asked to go into Babbitt's office and sit in his chair. Upon the secretary's approval, Adams's class moved into the office as she sat in the chair. The class grew quiet, and when she was ready, the girl got up and said, "Let's go I've seen it and felt it, now I know what I'm after."
Adams isn't a stranger to receiving awards for his teaching; he's won nine in the past. But he doesn't let it get to his head recalling the words of an elder in a Native American community he once taught in after winning an award, "This is just a moment in passing," the elder told him. "Go home and be a good teacher."
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Four killed in plane crash near St. George...
- Identities released in St. George fatal plane...
- Holiday campers surprised by canyon snowfall
- West Jordan teen releases 5th iPhone app
- Several Utah high schools moving to 4-year...
- Saturday showers temporarily halt HAFB air...
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen gets...
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen...
57 - Orrin Hatch is now the hunted —...
30 - Billboard battle heats up as company...
29 - Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin...
24 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
23 - How will Palin endorsement affect Hatch...
20 - Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk...
19 - Romney's veepstakes: Buzz builds around...
18






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments