The Stegherr family: Matthew, clockwise from top, Crissy, Maggie and Theo. Crissy Stegherr is “Teacher of the Year” at Madison Elementary School. PHOTO / JbeeH Photography

Crissy Stegherr, ‘Teacher of the Year,’ transitions with success to virtual instruction

MADISON – Clarissa ‘Crissy’ Stegherr, “Teacher of the Year” at Madison Elementary School, flipped drawbacks of virtual instruction to give her students a solid, learning environment.

Stegherr recognized many wonderful teachers in Madison City Schools. “I am honored and humbled that my peers felt I was deserving of this award. This year, in particular, was an incredibly challenging year for us all,” she said.

In 2013, Stegherr started working with first grade at Mountain Gap Elementary School in Huntsville. “In 2015, I decided to try to move to Madison City Schools because this was the community I grew up in and ultimately wanted to give back to,” she said.

“I was hired at Madison elementary and began teaching alongside teachers that taught me,” Stegherr said. In her first year, she worked on the same grade level as two former teachers.

She has taught first and second grade. In 2018, Stegherr helped start and co-sponsor a STEM club.

“As a teacher, I want to create a safe educational environment where students can grow physically, mentally, emotionally and socially, as well as create an atmosphere where students are invited to share ideas and take risks to reach their full potential,” Stegherr said.

Stegherr flipped the drawbacks of virtual teaching/learning to a major success this year. After volunteering as first-grade virtual teacher at Madison elementary, Stegherr’s main goal was “to create a safe learning environment, even through a screen. Lots of planning and reimagining learning went into teaching this way, but my students were wonderful and showed up ready every day to learn and participate,” she said.

A Madison native, Stegherr attended Athens State University to earn a bachelor’s degree in education. Her husband Matthew works for Dynetics. Their daughter Maggie will start kindergarten at Madison elementary this fall, and son Theo is 17 months old.

“Having a four-year-old and one-year-old keeps me pretty busy,” Crissy said. “When I’m not working, I really enjoy spending my free time with my friends and family.”

“I love baseball! My husband and I enjoy watching baseball but also learning the history of teams,” Crissy said. “Our goal is to tour all 30 major league stadiums; so far, we’ve been to five of them.”

James Clemens High School

Liberty’s Shravan Balaji wins ‘Best of Fair Award’ in regional science fair

Events

Trash Pandas hosting Elvis tribute night contest on May 21

James Clemens High School

French, Latin students at James Clemens excel in testing

Harvest

Enable Madison County announces needed asset at event

James Clemens High School

Koswoski awarded Department of Alabama’s ‘VFW Scout of the Year’

James Clemens High School

Lilliann Markowitz achieves top rank in Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts and Sea Cadets

Bob Jones High School

Madison’s JROTC cadets challenged in Rocket City Rivalry Day

James Clemens High School

McDaniel, Stundtner, Vaughn and Woodard earn national grants

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – May 15, 2024

Madison

Bob Jones bests Central-Phenix City in opening game of State Championship

Harvest

TARCOG’s Senior Fun Fest moves to Agribition Center at Alabama A&M University

Bob Jones High School

Heavyweight Baseball- Bob Jones To Play For State Championship

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones holds off James Clemens in epic Final Four series to reach state final

Huntsville

Huntsville crews continue to assess damage and clear debris following strong storms

Bob Jones High School

Chess league to host Summer Camp in June

Madison

American Legion to honor Gold Star families on Memorial Day

James Clemens High School

Dr. Kerry Donaldson honored as ‘Alabama PTA Principal of the Year’

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones Jazz Band to play at Jazz Brunch at Madison Senior Center

Harvest

Madison Lions’ air filtration helps Village of Promise, Second Mile

James Clemens High School

Jets audio/visual students ace state, head to nationals

James Clemens High School

James Clemens, Liberty reach finals in Science Bowl

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – May 8, 2024

Bob Jones High School

City Rivalry Like Never Before: Baseball Playoffs- Bob Jones vs. James Clemens- A “Hatfields and the McCoys” Local Battle

Madison

Barons best Trash Pandas in pitchers’ duel

x