Skip Navigation
We use cookies to offer you a better browsing experience, provide ads, analyze site traffic, and personalize content. If you continue to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies.

Bulletin Board

The latest news on NEA-Retired members around the country.
Jack Kinnaman Award recipients
Published: January 2025
This article originally appeared on NEA.org

6 Aspiring Educators win Kinnaman Scholarships!

NEA-Retired members generously contribute to the Jack Kinnaman Memorial Scholarship Fund each year to support NEA Aspiring Educators. Congratulations to the 2024 winners, who each received a $3,500 scholarship!

  • Amber Bloom, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg, Pennsylvania 
  • Paige Jones, Murray State University, Kentucky
  • Kaleb Mayes, University of Idaho, Moscow
  • Audrey Sargus, Kent State University, Ohio
  • Zachary Sheriff, University of Houston-Clear Lake, Texas
  • Alexandra Taffera, Marywood University, Pennsylvania

Meet the winners.

91-Year-Old Educator Teaches Movement to Children

Michigan retiree Opal Wong is entering her tenth decade, but she hasn’t slowed down in her mission to educate students and teachers about the mind-body connection. Wong, who lives in East Lansing, is a certified instructor of Brain Gym, a program that promotes learning through movement.

“The ultimate learning state is relaxed and alert, and we can help children find it,” says Wong, who taught elementary school for 37 years. “We know specific movements … can stimulate, unblock, or calm parts of the brain.”

Wong officially retired in 1994, but she taught movement in schools until the pandemic started. She recalls asking teachers for the students “who are giving you the most trouble.” Wong worked individually with those students.

Today, Wong still teaches movement to children, working out of her home.

One popular exercise, called “brain buttons,” helps stimulate oxygen flow, Wong says. “Put one hand on your stomach, one hand on your chest right under the sternum, and lightly massage—breathing in, letting go, three times. Then switch hands,” she explains.

Her students also like “crossovers”—touching an elbow to the opposite knee, and then switching sides. It gets both sides of the brain working together, she explains.

Students often tell Wong, “When I do this, I can think better.”

In April, Wong was even featured in a local news story about her lifelong impact on students.

Want to try Brain Gym? Wong recommends P.A.C.E. (Positive, Active, Clear and Energetic), at bit.ly/How2DoPACE. “Do it every day,” Wong suggests. “It works, and takes less than four minutes.”

—Adapted from MEA Voice magazine
 

Announcing the 2025 NEA-Retired Communications Awards!

Every year, the NEA-Retired Executive Council Communications Committee recognizes NEA-Retired affiliates for outstanding communications work in the following categories:

  • Established State Retired Newsletter (Published more than three years)
  • State Retired Newsletter (Published fewer than three years)
  • Established Local Retired Newsletter 
  • E-newsletter
  • State Retired Website
  • NEA-Retired Spotlight Award (State active newsletter/magazine covering NEA-Retired issues)
  • Newsletter Hall of Fame

To apply, visit nea.org/CommAwards. Applications must be postmarked by April 15, 2025.

NEARI logo

A labor union and professional organization.

Our Association is a remarkable blend of union and professional organization, with a proud history of serving Rhode Island. Since its inception in 1845, our members have been at the center of every struggle to advance the finest of American dreams: the promise of a quality public education for every child. One in every 100 Rhode Islanders is a member - chances are, you know us already!