Howe, 50-year teacher, faculty inductee Friday

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"She was firm, someone that probably some kids would be afraid of," Snodgrass said. "But if you did what you were supposed to do, you were fine."

Tom Lesan, Southwestern Community College vice president of economic development, learned that lesson early in his fourth-grade year.

"The first day of class, I was running around and not paying attention," Lesan recalled. "Mrs. Howe got my attention, believe me! And, she had it from then on. I don't like to overstate things, but if she wasn't the best teacher I ever had, she was in the top three. And, she scared the bejeezers out of me!"

Howe completed her degree while teaching in Creston, first at Creston Junior College — now Southwestern Community College — and later at Drake University.

SWCC endowment
Her loyalty to SWCC was repaid in the development of a scholarship program in her name. She purchased a $25,000 life insurance policy on herself, naming the SWCC Education Foundation as the beneficiary. Her gift was acknowledged in a ceremony during the annual foundation board meeting in June 1995.

Through this scholarship endowment, scholarships are awarded to students living within a 50-mile radius of the SWCC Creston campus. A stipulation is that they are education majors.
"She wanted to make some kind of legacy for people who wanted to become a teacher," Snodgrass said.

Determined to teach for 50 years, Howe retired from Creston schools in 1994 at age 67. But, she didn't stop working with students.

Howe mentored students after retiring, especially helping those involved in researching history projects. She also became involved in volunteering at the Union County HIstorical Complex in McKinley Park. The Lincoln No. 5 school building was moved there shortly after it closed.

"Her passion was helping others learn ... at school, through talks to community organizations, to students working on projects, or family and friends in the area," Snodgrass said.

Extra attention
And, Lesan said Howe was a teacher who cared about her students long after they left her classroom.

"She would clip out something in the newspaper if I did something, and send it to me with a note on it," he said. "Even after I was married and back in town, we moved close to where she lived and she made a point to come down and talk about how we were neighbors now. She was always paying attention."

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