Denver Home Living Huettner Capital Fall 2018 | Page 27

I KATHY ZOOK IS AN INSPIRATION TO STUDENTS AND COLLEAGUES ALIKE f you happen to see a grown woman walking through Denver International Airport carrying a fully dressed cheetah stuffed animal with its own passport, there’s no need to worry about the woman’s sanity. Chances are you’ve bumped into Kathy Zook, a teacher of gifted and talented third-, fourth- and fifth-graders at Hodgkins Elementary just north of downtown Denver—or one of her colleagues—taking the class mascot on another adventure. With a passport chock full of country stamps, the stuffed animal— known as Chester the Cheetah—has been to destinations most of Zook’s underprivileged students—83 percent of whom qualify for free or reduced lunch—can only dream about. Zook uses Chester—and the journals and videos he keeps (with her help!)—to widen her students’ horizons and expose them to places and cultures well beyond their Denver classroom. When Zook is not busy with Chester, she can often be found at RAFT Colorado (short for Resource Area for Teaching, an organization profiled on page 28 of this issue), where she works to develop challenging hands-on projects for her students on a wide range of educational topics, including circuitry, strawberry DNA, and color spectrums of light, to name just a few. When her students finish one of these projects, Zook challenges them to go home and teach their parents the same lesson they have learned. As an avid supporter and promoter of RAFT—which develops creative, hands- on learning tools for the classroom—Zook has a unique eye for recognizing the many alternative uses for unusual items donated to the program by local businesses. Back in 2011, she received the first annual Mary Simon Outstanding Educator award for “outstanding teaching of academics and 21st-century skills using innovative materials and hands-on learning.” 27 Zook currently sits on the organization’s Teacher Advisory Board to help other teachers take advantage of all the inexpensive resources RAFT has to offer. Over her 33 years of teaching, Zook has made a huge impact on her students and colleagues by her extreme dedication— which was no more evident than when she developed breast cancer in 2017. Rather than handle her illness privately, she openly shared her diagnosis with students, parents, and staff, teaching age-appropriate lessons about her illness and recovery. The staff took to wearing pink shirts emblazoned with the breast cancer symbol—along with the phrase “On Wednesdays, we wear pink to support Kathy Zook”—while the students showed their support with plenty of cards, hugs, and words of encouragement. One student even nominated Zook as “Teacher of the Week” on radio station KOSI 101.1—an award she was proud to receive in January 2018. Never one to sit still, Zook’s next adventure will take place high above Denver when she embarks on a hot air balloon ride with funds raised by her colleagues to support her during her illness. No word yet on whether Chester will be on board, but no doubt Zook will figure out a unique way to share the experience creatively with her students.