Bette Marschall Memorial Education Fund Announces Spring Grant Recipients


Back to School News      Print News Article

The Bette Marschall Memorial Education Fund (BMMEF) of The Columbus Foundation has awarded 11 grants totaling $2,833 to individuals in the Westerville City School District, as follows:

  • $496 to Juls Rathje, visual art teacher, to provide a guest artist at Hanby and Emerson as part of a Zentangles and Tiles project;
  • $200 to Debra Fulmer, Reading Intervention Specialist at Hawthorne Elementary, to help with tuition for a course in Bringing Reading Instruction from School to Home;
  • $194 to Katie Stuhlfauth, speech therapist at Heritage Middle School, to purchase materials for providing direct instruction in communication and other social skills;
  • $190 to Debbie Pellington, gifted facilitator at Genoa Middle School, to purchase materials for a Challenge Yourself project;
  • $400 to Susannah Lee, Aaron Starkey, Natalie Barrett, and Jodie Brown, teachers at Westerville Central High School, to purchase a school membership to IEarn (International Education and Resource Network), enabling Central students to participate in global projects, which align with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals;
  • $295 to Aislynn Valentine, teacher at Westerville South High School, to cover costs for a field trip to the Battelle Darby Creek Metro Park for her AP Environmental Science class;
  • $200 to Aislynn Valentine, teacher at Westerville South High School, to help pay tuition for a Future of Learning and Technology course;
  • $198 to Jennifer Kirk and Damon Mollenkopf, teachers at Westerville North High School, to participate in an online study to develop Project Based Teaching;
  • $225 to Mary Fuchs, teacher and newspaper advisor at Westerville South High School, to purchase a school membership to Ohio Scholastic Media Association, and to cover fees for 15 students to attend an OSMA conference;
  • $147 to Emily Jo Mills, school counselor at Alcott Elementary, to purchase a Calm Classroom kit and pre-K $ K manual;
  • $288 to Debbie Pellington (gifted facilitator) and Jenn Cole (teacher), Heritage Middle School, to purchase a class set of books for their Global Design for Change project.

Family and friends of Bette Marschall, who was a respected elementary school teacher and principal in Westerville City Schools for nearly 20 years, established the BMMEF to make monetary grants available to Westerville teachers, students, administrators, and non-teaching staff to achieve goals in one or more of the areas of Bette’s interests.  It supports those who believe education should be child-centered, based on developmentally appropriate standards, curriculum, and practices.  The fund is meant to promote practices in public education that educate the whole child − mind, body and spirit − and that result in citizens who think critically and act in good conscience.