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Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Robbie Evans, ’13, earns White House Presidential Award

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Robbie Evans, a 2013 graduate of  Louisiana Tech through the University’s alternative certification  program, has spent the past 10 years of his professional life pouring  into the students of his “other” alma mater, Sterlington Middle School.

Robbie Evans

Because  of his “outstanding contributions to the teaching and learning of  science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and computer science,”  Evans has received the K-6 Science Presidential Award for Excellence in  Mathematics and Science Teaching (PAEMST).

Administered by the National Science Foundation (NSF) on behalf of  the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), the  program honors the most outstanding K-12 STEM educators with this  prestigious award.

The honorees were celebrated in a virtual PAEMST announcement ceremony, in conjunction with the White House OSTP, in February.

“Being honored with the Presidential Award is truly a humbling  experience,” said Evans, who graduated from ULM with a degree in  journalism in 1992 and spent two decades as a journalist before deciding  he “needed a career change and new challenges,” which led to his Tech  MAT degree and his career teaching tomorrow’s leaders.

“To win this award requires excellence in many areas of the science  classroom, and the only way to achieve that high standard is hard work  and dedication year after year,” he said. “Our students deserve teachers  who work every day toward excellence, and this award not only reflects  on my commitment, but also on the students, school administration, and  district support that have helped me strive to continue to grow as a  science teacher.”

The price he paid to follow his calling is inspirational by any barometer.

Evans was a reporter and senior writer for The News-Star in  Monroe for 18 years when he decided on a career change and discovered  Tech’s alternative certification program, a pathway toward teacher  certification. Because his undergraduate grades were a self-described  “dismal,” he spent two years taking and retaking classes to get his GPA  high enough to get into the program.

“Some semesters were a challenge — five classes, including physics,  chemistry, and geology — while working a news beat 40-to-50 hours a  week,” he said. “I did take a pay cut to teach, but it was worth it.

“The daily grind is tough,” he said, “but seeing kids finally  understand what you are teaching — that ‘Aha!’ moment in their faces a  couple of times a week — that makes it worth it.”

Determining the precise impact is impossible, but his gene pool  played a substantial role on both his decision to become a teacher in  career midstream and on his influence over students. His sister is a  special education teacher, and his father Archie, a teacher, principal,  and coach for 34 years, has been “the best inspiration for me as an  educator,” Evans said.

“He actually taught me and coached me in junior high and high  school,” he said. “He cared about his students, told them stories in  class — which made class fun — and was generally just a good, all-around  educator.”

A former coach like his dad, Evans got the opportunity to “get out of  coaching so I could focus on academics” and teaches only science now.

“I have always been a science nerd,” he said. “We have no textbooks,  which is OK because in my classroom, we do a lot of model design and  hand-on activities, which is engaging for the students…Science can be  fun for them.”

The pandemic actually helped him become a more effective teacher  because it “pushed me to learn how to use different digital platforms to  teach,” he said. “During the height of the pandemic, I had to teach  in-school students as well as virtual students, which forced me to learn  to engage students online. I learned to use different digital  applications to engage students, which I still use today in the  classroom.”

His application for the Presidential Award was 26 written pages and took him more than 80 hours to complete.

“The district nominated me in January 2020, and then COVID-19 hit,”  he said. “I turned in my application in October 2020, was named one of  two state finalists for science in December 2020, then had to suffer and  wait until February 2022 for the award announcement by the White  House.”

It’s not science, but it’s been said that good things come to those who wait.

“It means a lot,” Evans said, “because it’s validation from your  peers and other experts you’ve never met that makes this award  satisfying.”

Evans also serves in the Ouachita Parish School Systems Literacy  Design Collaborative (LDC) cohort, a districtwide initiative to improve  the reading and writing skills of students. As part of the LDC team,  Evans has developed and delivered presentations on literacy design to  school faculty and teachers across the school system during district  in-services and also has created exemplary science literacy modules  available to all sixth-grade science teachers across the district.

He was the 2017 Sterlington Middle School Teacher of the Year and is a teacher representative on his school’s Leadership Team.

Original source can be found here.

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