Student advocate Barrett retires
Bobbie Barrett still remembers little
Jimmy Prince and the students like him.
Jimmy Prince was one of Barrett’s
students when she was student teaching in Missoula. He was the kind
of student who maybe didn’t have the best home life. Maybe he was
up against the odds when it came to making it through school. But
he was just the student Barrett still thinks about after 50 years
in education.
“I’ve always tried to be a voice for
those students who had no other voice or advocate,” she said. “I
knew I really wanted to be involved with something that gave kids a
chance. I’ve always tried to have a heart for those kids.”
That early experience would set the
stage for much of Barrett’s 50-year career in education. She
retires this year from the Whitefish School District as curriculum
director and principal for Whitefish Independent High School. She
also served as principal at Muldown Elementary before accepting her
current position.
Many students have followed since her
student teaching experience. She taught in Spokane, Wash.,
Lewistown and served as a principal in Cut Bank before coming to
Whitefish.
At a recent retirement party for
Barrett, colleagues poured buttons into a large jar to represent
the students Barrett has cared for over the years. There were more
than 3,000 buttons placed in the jar.
“It was heavy,” Barrett said of the
jar. “It was pretty amazing. It’s been a long career. I hate for it
to be over.”
A few buttons didn’t make it into the
jar, in a way representing those few students who did fall through
the cracks over the years.
Barrett admits she sometimes thinks of
students whom she doesn’t know how their story ended. She also
thinks of the success stories.
“We try to think about the kids we’re
now working with,” she said.
Paraeducator Karen Cordi thanked
Barrett for her service to the independent high school during a
lunch last week at the school.
She told the Native American story of a
grandfather who tells his grandson that he has two wolves fighting
inside of him. One wolf is an evil, unhappy wolf and the other is
beautiful and good. The grandson asks which wolf will win the fight
and the grandfather replies the wolf that is fed will win.
“For the past 12 years Bobbie has fed
us with kindness, truth and compassion,” Cordi said. “It’s because
of you that it’s grown.”
Counselor Kelly Talsma praises Barrett
as someone who focuses on the things that matter.
“She has focused on kids and
academics,” she said. “She has dedicated her life to
education.”
Barrett believes in the goal of the
independent high school and its students, however, she gives credit
to the program and its staff, saying she is able to contribute from
a broader picture.
“It’s been well designed,” Barrett
said. “It’s the people that make it work. (The students) are proud
of it and want their own school.”
Barrett speaks with a fondness for the
independent high school and its students. About 120 students have
graduated from the school since it opened 12 years ago. Many of the
students who attend the school are those that Barrett has worked to
never forget.
“The kids who go there each have their
own story,” she said. “They are bright and articulate, but they’re
kids who need a different environment and approach to learning.
They are students who likely would not have graduated. We feel
we’ve made a distinct difference for them.”
Career highlights
Besides her involvement in the
independent high school, Barrett names a few other highlights of
her career.
She lists being part of the district
when it earned a national award from the U.S. Department of
Education for its Title I program and overseeing the renovation of
Muldown in the early 1990s.
As Whitefish’s first curriculum
director she was involved in the creation of the Northwest Montana
Educational Co-op. The co-op is a group of mostly rural schools
that combine for curriculum development. The group formed when the
state Office of Public first began requiring district’s to have a
full-time curriculum director.
Whitefish eventually chose to opt-out
of the co-op, but Barrett is proud that it continues today.
“We were able to merge and share ideas
about what curriculum should be like,” she said. “It’s been very
successful. Our part in that was to help it start. It’s nice to see
something that you have cared about and worked on to continue.”
Past and future
Although she won’t be directly involved
any longer, Barrett still looks to the future of education with
excitement.
“The influence of technology in
teaching and how it will look in six months or a year,” she said.
“The influence in how you teach and how kids learn.”
Barrett says she’ll miss being apart of
education and can’t imagine spending her life any other way. Ever
since her time as a young woman in Helena babysitting children,
education has been her path.
“I thought about physical therapy or
the medical field, but by the time I started college I knew,” she
said. “Maybe it’s just in your blood to do this that long. At this
point in my life I can’t picture myself doing anything else.”