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Tag: Ryan Berglund

  • Millbrook Magnet High educator named Wake County Public School System 2024 Teacher of the Year

    Millbrook Magnet High educator named Wake County Public School System 2024 Teacher of the Year

    CARY, N.C. (WTVD) — A teacher at Millbrook Magnet High School was named 2024 Wake County Public School System Teacher of the Year on Monday evening.

    Ryan Berglund has been a Sustainable Agriculture Academy teacher at Millbrook since July 2019.

    He started teaching Career and Technical Education after working as a welder and equipment fabricator.

    He is also a graduate of Millbrook High.

    When sharing his approach to teaching, Berglund wrote, “Our students are able to build some amazing projects that show their true understanding of the objectives in the course. I always tell my students, ‘I will not be there in the real world to tell you how to build it, you will have to figure it out.’ This takes their understanding to a new level.”

    Berglunf holds a bachelor’s degree in Agriculture Education from the University of Mount Olive but his secret weapon is that he is the only agriculture teacher in North Carolina who is an AWS Certified Welding Inspector.

    Because of his unique qualifications, he can provide his students with a welding certification that industry professionals equate to passing the bar exam to become a lawyer. Under his mentorship, 64 students have become certified welders ready to enter the workforce upon graduation.

    He said that his experience with educational differences has shaped how he interacts with his students.

    “In the third grade, I was diagnosed with dyslexia. In resource classes, I was able to see how students with disabilities have been given a different lens to look through that is not right or wrong, just different. This is a mindset I try to instill in all of my students,” Berglund said.

    As Teacher of the Year, Berglund will get to participate in the Go Global NC international study program in the Netherlands during the summer of 2025. The trip is sponsored by the Dan Royster Memorial Teacher Award, in honor of a former WCPSS science teacher.

    He will also have the opportunity to attend the Global Leaders Teacher Fellowship conference compliments of Participate Learning.

    Berglund also received an engraved award, a $100 gift card to Angus Barn, a $1,000 check from sponsors, a weekend stay at the Umstead Hotel and Spa, a $100 Amazon gift card and even autographed hockey gear donated by the Carolina Hurricanes, among other prizes.

    To top it off, he will also have the use of a 2024 Chevrolet Tahoe, compliments of Capital Chevrolet, for the next year.

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    WTVD

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  • Educator was a welder before entering the classroom. Now he’s Wake’s Teacher of the Year

    Educator was a welder before entering the classroom. Now he’s Wake’s Teacher of the Year

    Ryan Berglund of Millbrook High School in Raleigh was named the Wake County school system’s 2024 Teacher of the Year.

    Ryan Berglund of Millbrook High School in Raleigh was named the Wake County school system’s 2024 Teacher of the Year.

    Wake County Public School System

    A Millbrook High School teacher who overcame dyslexia and now works at his alma mater has been named Wake County’s top educator.

    Ryan Berglund, a Sustainable Agriculture Academy teacher at Millbrook High in Raleigh, was named the 2024 Wake County Teacher of the Year at a ceremony Monday night. Like a growing number of educators, teaching is a second career for Berglund.

    Berglund was a professional welder and equipment fabricator before becoming a teacher at Millbrook in 2019. That prior experience has benefited his students.

    Wake says Berglund is the only agriculture teacher in North Carolina that is an AWS Certified Welding Inspector. Under his mentorship, 64 students have become certified welders ready to enter the workforce upon graduation.

    During his acceptance speech, Berglund said he tells his students he’ll work harder than they will. But he also tells them they’ll be able to do something successful when they work harder than him.

    “I always will put as much possible as I can into it, but I need them to put in more in than I am, and when they’re doing that you’ll see the true success,” Berglund said. “We’re able to see that every single day In the programs that we have and what our students are currently doing.”

    Dyslexia helps him relate to students

    Berglund said being diagnosed with dyslexia and short-term memory loss in the third grade helped shape how he now interacts with his students. Berglund took special education classes to learn how to read and write.

    “In resource classes, I was able to see how students with disabilities have been given a different lens to look through that is not right or wrong, just different,” Bergulund said in his Teacher of the Year portfolio. “This is a mindset I try to instill in all of my students.”

    Berglund graduated from Millbrook High. He has a bachelor’s degree in Agriculture Education from the University of Mount Olive.

    Berglund helped implement Millbrook’s Supervised Agriculture Experience program that allows over 350 students annually to gain work-based learning experiences. Students in the program have started businesses, worked with local agriculture enterprises and created their own service programs.

    ”I’m super, super excited to able to say that this year’s Wake County Teacher of the Year is also supporting our number one industry: which is agriculture,” Berglund said.

    Last year’s Wake Teacher of the Year also had not planned on being a teacher. Terry Hennings was a U.S. Air Force medic with 25 years of military experience before he became a Civic Literacy and African American Studies teacher at Garner High School.

    WCPSS Teacher of the Year finalists

    Berglund was chosen among the Teacher of the Year winners for each individual school. The list was whittled to 10 finalists:

    Juan Cruz, a fifth-grade teacher at Buckhorn Creek Elementary in Holly Springs

    Susan Ennis, a career and technical education/science teacher at Leesville Road High in Raleigh

    April Guenzler, an Intervention teacher at Lockhart Elementary in Knightdale

    Monica Hall, a kindergarten teacher at Timber Drive Elementary in Garner

    Kelly Hurry, a second-grade teacher at Laurel Park Elementary in Apex

    Whitney Masterson, an eighth-grade science teacher at Mills Park Middle in Cary

    Madison Parker, a special education teacher at Alston Ridge Elementary in Cary

    Karen Rahe, a sixth-grade math teacher at Dillard Drive Middle in Raleigh

    Ashely N. Smith, a seventh-grade English language arts teacher at Zebulon Middle

    Berglund’s prize package includes a $1,000 check. He’ll also get use of a 2024 Chevrolet Tahoe, compliments of Capital Chevrolet, for the next year.

    He’ll go on to compete in North Carolina’s Teacher of the Year program.

    This story was originally published May 6, 2024, 8:37 PM.

    Related stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.

    T. Keung Hui

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