CENTRAL – Katelyn Muth, a senior at Daniel High School, has been awarded the South Carolina Teaching Fellowship.

Muth will join the freshman cohort at the College of Charleston this fall where she will be offered numerous professional development opportunities and be involved with communities and businesses through various service projects and partnerships with local schools.

The state’s Teaching Fellows Program, operated by the Center for Educator Recruitment, Retention, and Advancement (CERRA), was established in 1999 by the SC General Assembly to address the shortage of teachers in our state. The mission of the program is to recruit talented high school seniors into the teaching profession and help them develop leadership qualities.

Each year, the program provides Fellowships for up to 210 high school seniors who have exhibited high academic achievement, a history of service to their school and community, and a desire to teach in South Carolina.

Applicants for the program undergo a rigorous selection process that includes an online application, an interview and presentation in front of a team of three educators, and a scored response.

Following the selection process, applicants who are awarded a Fellowship receive up to $24,000 in yearly scholar¬ships (up to $6000 a year for four years) to attend a Teaching Fellows Institution in South Carolina. Each Fellow agrees to teach in South Carolina one year for every year he or she receives the Fellowship.

For more information about the South Carolina Teaching Fellows Program, visit teachingfellowsc.com.

Katelyn Muth, a senior at Daniel High School, has been awarded the South Carolina Teaching Fellowship.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/web1_dhsmutchteachingfellowMUTH.jpgKatelyn Muth, a senior at Daniel High School, has been awarded the South Carolina Teaching Fellowship. Courtesy photo

Staff Report