Check out the Photos

Coming Up!

No events

Birthdays

Sat, Jul 17
Sat, Jul 17
Thu, Jul 22
Sat, Jul 24
Tue, Aug 3
Wed, Aug 4
Fri, Aug 6
Sun, Aug 15
Sun, Aug 22
Thu, Aug 26
Sat, Aug 28

Who's Online

No users online

Related Articles Plus

In Memory - Terry (Smith) Ortiz E-mail

Terry Smith Ortiz - September 27, 2006

One-time Geologist Found Gold in Teaching

Like the rock formations she once studied as a geologist, Terri Ortiz, 50, was a considered a "rare find" as a teacher by her colleagues.
"She's just a great resource," said June Pederson, principal of Daniel Fernandez Intermediate School, where Ortiz taught sixth grade. "She was just a really good person who loved teaching and students. Her students knew how much she loved them."
Ortiz died Sept. 27 after a yearlong bout with cancer. She is survived by her husband, Steve Ortiz, a technical manager at Sandia Nationla Laboratories in Albuquerque, and two sons, Evan Tyler, 21, a senior at the University of Arizona, and Benjamin Garrett, 19, a sophomore at the University of New Mexico.

Born Terry Gwen Smith in Pawhuske, Okla., a small town near the Kansas border, Ortiz graduated from high school in Houston before attending Eastern New Mexico University in Portales, where she earned a bachelor's degree in geology. After earning a master's degree in the subject from the University of Texas at El Paso, she began working at Sandia Laboratories.

Ortiz's work at Sandia led to her becoming a teacher in the mid-1990s. After leaving the labs to raise her sons, Ortiz was hired by Sandia as a science adviser for the Los Lunas Schools. That experience inspired her to become a teacher, said friend and school colleague Monica Arguello.
"We led parallel lives," said Arguello, 43, who shared classes and carpooled with Ortiz when the two got their teaching degrees from the College of Santa Fe in 1996 and 1997.
"We both had sons who were into sports. We shared family vacations and sat in numerous gyms and soccer fields watching our kids play sports.
"She was extraordinary, one of the most dedicated teachers I ever met," Arguello said. "No matter how long it took, or what needed to get done, she was at school late day after day. She was always one of the last ones to leave."
Ortiz eventually became a mentor for new teachers and then a representative for them as president of the Los Lunas chapter of the National Education Association for the past two years.
Sharon Morgan, who is the state president of the NEA as well as head mentor in the Los Lunas Schools Teacher Mentor program, said Ortiz caught her eye as teacher and as a potential leader for the NEA.
"She exemplified everything good about the profession," Morgan said. "She was passionate about teaching and advocating for the staff. She was just so intelligent and such a creative thinker.
"But she always kept things real," Morgan said. "When she did training, she kept things practical. She was always a teacher, whether she was with adults or kids."
Los Lunas Schools Superintendent Walter Gibson, who worked with Ortiz as a teacher and in her capacity as co-president of Los Lunas' NEA chapter, said Ortiz was easy to work with but no pushover when it came to negotiations.
"She could be extremely strong when she believed in something," he said. "She was never strident or offensive. She could argue but was always persuasive. I knew when she was advocating for something that it was probably the right thing."
Despite her illness, Ortiz continued teaching, leaving for treatment just 13 days before she died.
"She really engaged the kids," Gibson said.
"You go into some people's classrooms and it's all teacher-directed," he said, saying he visited Ortiz's classroom just a month ago. "In her classroom, the kids were actively engaged all the time. She must have done a huge amount of planning."
"She was a real hands-on teacher," he said. "That's why the kids loved her so much."
A memorial service for Ortiz was held Monday at the Los Lunas High School Auditorium.
In addition, a fund has been set up in Ortiz's name through NEA-Los Lunas. The endowment will be used to fund scholarships for students going into education and for science-related materials and/or activities for teachers, said Morgan. Donations to the Terri Ortiz Memorial Fund can be sent to NEA-Los Lunas, P.O. Box 3511, Los Lunas, 87031.

 

written by:
By Kenn Rodriguez
Valencia County News-Bulletin