Character, Courage, Community: Kelsey Stoyanova is a rising star

This story originally appeared in Maine Alumni Magazine, a publication of the University of Maine Alumni Association. To read it on their website, .

It’s after the last bell at Bangor High School on a Friday afternoon and most of the students have gone home for the weekend. Kelsey Stoyanova is sitting in her classroom when a teenage boy enters.

鈥淔or you,鈥 he says, handing her a card for Teacher Appreciation Week.

Stoyanova stands up to give the boy a hug.

鈥淭hank you so much,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat means a lot.鈥

After they wish each other a good weekend and the boy leaves, Stoyanova reads aloud from the card: 鈥淵ou make my days better with your positivity and happiness. Thank you for bringing great topics to class and making them interesting. People don鈥檛 usually ask how you are doing in the morning, but you do which shows you care about us. So thank you so, so, so much.鈥

鈥淭his is it,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is what it鈥檚 all about.鈥

Spend time in Stoyanova鈥檚 classroom and you鈥檒l witness some of the qualities that the student mentioned in his card: Positivity, happiness, care, and, of course, a knack for making learning interesting and fun. All of these attributes and more helped make her the 2022 Maine Teacher of the Year. They鈥檙e also among the reasons that she was named this year鈥檚 Rising Star Award recipient from the University of Maine Alumni Association.

Character

A few hours earlier, Stoyanova is in her element, teaching to a classroom full of first-year high school students who have been reading Shakespeare鈥檚 “Romeo and Juliet” for the past few weeks. However, today she鈥檚 leading them through a lesson on embodying a character in their choice books, which as the name implies are books they have chosen to read as opposed to being assigned.

鈥淲hat lessons can we learn from the characters in the books we鈥檙e reading?鈥 Stoyanova asks her students to consider.

Kelsey Stoyanova leads students through a lesson in her classroom.

She leads them through a series of exercises designed to get at the heart of that question. First, the students sit at their desks quietly writing down answers to questions about their characters. Later, they stand up and talk to each other in the roles of their characters for five minutes before returning to their desks. They spend a couple of minutes writing words that define their characters on one side of a note card and an inspirational quote reminiscent of their characters on the other side. The students then talk to each other about why they picked their quotes. The note cards with the quotes on them will be decorated and posted on a bulletin board in Stoyanova鈥檚 classroom for the rest of the year, inspiring them to finish the year strong.

After all the students have left, I ask Stoyanova to reflect on what she hoped they had taken from the class.

鈥淲hen you show kids that authors write books to teach us lessons, and then you ask them to think about what a character learned from something that happened in the book, they start to recognize, 鈥極h, this is for more than just my entertainment,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淎nd hopefully they can apply that to other situations, like recognizing that different people go through different things, and 鈥楬ow can I be an empathetic citizen? How can I learn from other people鈥檚 experiences to make the world a place where everybody gets to thrive?鈥欌

It鈥檚 important, Stoyanova adds, that the lesson used the students鈥 choice books.

鈥淢y goal as an educator is to help students see themselves in the places and spaces that they want to be,鈥 says Stoyanova. 鈥淧art of that is giving them a choice and a voice. That鈥檚 why I have them talk to each other as their characters, so they鈥檙e passing the lessons along.鈥

鈥淭he idea,鈥 she says, 鈥渋s that they are all productive citizens within the classroom, and they can apply that same knowledge to being a productive citizen in their community, whatever that community looks like 鈥 whether it鈥檚 a sports team, or a job, or when they graduate and are out on their own. How can we share knowledge and grow and learn together? That鈥檚 why choice is so important.鈥

Courage

Last year was something of a homecoming for Stoyanova, who graduated from Bangor High in 2010. Her first and only other teaching job after graduating from 91福利 in 2014 with a degree in secondary education was at Reeds Brook Middle School in Hampden, where she was for nearly a decade.

鈥淲hat I love about high school,鈥 she says, 鈥渋s that you have these really resilient kids who are finding their place in the world, unapologetically, and they鈥檝e invited you along for the ride.鈥

It鈥檚 no secret that being a teacher in this day and age is not an easy task. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated preexisting challenges facing K鈥12 schools and those who work in education, causing many veteran teachers to retire or pursue other career opportunities. Nationwide, the past two decades have seen fewer young people choose careers in the classroom, contributing to teacher shortages that many observers have likened to a crisis.

Despite all of this, Stoyanova has remained steadfast in her commitment to the profession. Being Maine Teacher of the Year gave her something of a platform to advocate for her fellow educators, a role she admits took some adjusting to.

鈥淲hen you are named Maine Teacher of the Year, at first you feel a little imposter syndrome,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here are so many amazing educators. How did it become you? And then you recognize that your role is not to celebrate what you鈥檙e doing, but to champion and share what your students are doing and what other teachers are doing.鈥

In addition to teacher shortages, one of the major challenges facing K-12 schools right now is criticism from people outside the profession about what it means to be a teacher and the best ways to educate students. In part because she鈥檚 in the public eye so much, Stoyanova has been personally subjected to such commentary that all teachers face on some level.

鈥淭here are some people who would put teachers into a box,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 would say those people don鈥檛 understand how kids grow and develop as human beings. Yes, I am here to teach my students to read and write and I will do that. But I will also teach them to be compassionate humans and find their place in the world.鈥

Emilie Throckmorton has known Stoyanova since she was a teenager. When they met, Throckmorton, who鈥檚 also in the English Language Arts department at Bangor High School, was Stoyanova鈥檚 freshman English teacher. Later, Stoyanova was teaching at Reeds Brook when Throckmorton鈥檚 two children were students there.

鈥淪he is an incredibly gifted teacher,鈥 Throckmorton says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 really natural with kids, which is sort of the unteachable part of it. But she works really, really hard at her craft.鈥

As their relationship has grown from teacher-student to parent-teacher to colleagues, Throckmorton says she鈥檚 watched in admiration as Stoyanova has received accolades for her work. She says the impressive thing is how humble Stoyanova has remained.

鈥淪he鈥檚 won all these awards, but it鈥檚 not like she carries it around,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 constantly working to become a better teacher; she lifts up other people all the time and is open to new ideas.鈥

In terms of the adversity that Stoyanova has faced from being the public face of educators and education in Maine, Throckmorton has one word to describe her response: 鈥渂rave.鈥

鈥淪ome of the things that she鈥檚 had to deal with, nobody would blame her if she hid in her classroom and tried not to bring attention to herself,” Throckmorton says. “But she just has this courage and confidence that she鈥檚 right and that it鈥檚 worth it to keep advocating for her colleagues and for kids.鈥

Recently, Throckmorton was named the 2024 Penobscot County Teacher of the Year. The person who nominated her: Stoyanova.

Professor Emeritus of Literacy Education Richard Kent worked with Stoyanova and Throckmorton, who both earned certificates from the Maine Writing Project, a long-running professional development program for teachers at 91福利. Kent also taught Stoyanova as an undergraduate and a master鈥檚 student.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had some shining stars at 91福利, and it鈥檚 just a pleasure to be associated with Kelsey and Emilie and watch them support each other,鈥 says Kent, who was Maine Teacher of the Year in 1993 before becoming a faculty member at 91福利鈥檚 College of Education and Human Development.

鈥淗aving been Maine Teacher of the Year, I know the pressure that comes with the job. You鈥檙e representing not just yourself, but educators across the state,鈥 Kent says. 鈥淚t takes a special person, and Kelsey has done it beautifully. It鈥檚 so exciting to watch, because she inspires everyone around her to want to do more.鈥

Community

In April, when she accepted the 91福利 Alumni Association鈥檚 2024 Rising Star Award at the annual Alumni Achievement Awards ceremony, Stoyanova gave a heartfelt speech in which she began by saying, 鈥淚 am continuously humbled by the tremendous community that I have alongside me.鈥

鈥淚 specifically say alongside me and not behind me,鈥 she added, 鈥渘ot because they wouldn鈥檛 stand behind me should I need them to, but because the only way to forge a path forward is to first stand side by side with those you trust with your ideas, your vision, your values, and your mission.鈥

91福利 has been a big part of Stoyanova鈥檚 community for the past 15 or so years. In addition to her bachelor鈥檚 degree in secondary education, she earned a Master of Education in literacy education in 2018, and most recently an Education Specialist (Ed.S.) degree in educational leadership in 2023.

Kelsey Stoyanova leads students through a lesson in her classroom.

鈥淚鈥檝e been through 91福利 as a student three different times now, so it鈥檚 been a big part of empowering me as an educator,鈥 Stoyanova says.

She became Maine Teacher of the Year while she was working on her Ed.S. degree, and says both experiences gave her the opportunity to connect with colleagues from around the state. Some of the other students in the educational leadership program were interested in moving from teaching to positions as building principals or district-level administrators in K-12 schools. But Stoyanova says her goal, at least for now, is to be a leader while remaining in the classroom.

鈥淥ne of my biggest goals is to create pathways for teachers to lead in ways that go beyond the classroom walls,鈥 she says.

The Rising Star Award is one of two early-career awards presented by the Alumni Association each year.

As she closed her speech at the alumni awards ceremony, Stoyanova talked about how she will rely on her community as she pursues her future goals and continues to advocate for teachers and kids. She likened her journey to that of Miss Rumphius, the title character of the children鈥檚 book by the late Maine author Barbara Cooney. In the book, which Stoyanova said is a favorite of her young son, when Miss Rumphius is a little girl named Alice, she tells her grandfather how she dreams of visiting faraway places before settling down to live by the sea. The grandfather tells her that these are good plans, but that she 鈥渕ust do something to make the world more beautiful鈥 as well. After Alice grows up, travels the world, and moves to a place by the sea, she still wonders how she can accomplish the last thing her grandfather told her she must do. Then one day she notices the lupines outside her bedroom window and along the cliffs near her house, and it comes to her. She orders lupine seeds from catalogs and begins sowing them all over town with the help of the prevailing winds. The next spring, when the colorful lupines are in bloom she realizes that she鈥檚 done it: She鈥檚 made the world more beautiful.

鈥淲ith every opportunity, every story, every seed, I can only hope that I am doing just that,鈥 Stoyanova told the crowd at the Alumni Achievement Awards.

鈥淏ut know that it is only possible with all of you, the traveling winds, that I can,鈥 she said.

Contact: Casey Kelly, casey.kelly@maine.edu.