Two teachers from the Mount Diablo Unified School District and the Liberty Union High School District have been named Contra Costa County Teachers of the Year, county officials announced this week.
Joseph Alvarico of Ygnacio Valley High School in the Mount Diablo Unified School District and Annalouisa Gonzalez-Ortega of Freedom High School in the Liberty Union High School District were named the 2023-2024 Contra Costa County Teachers of the Year, County Superintendent of Schools Lynn Mackey announced.
The announcement was made during the county’s 51st annual Teacher of the Year Celebration, which was held at the Lesher Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek. The pair are now entered into the California State Teachers of the Year program.
A total of 21 Contra Costa Teachers representing 16 school districts were honored during a VIP Donor Reception at The Garden in Walnut Creek and a celebration at the Lesher.
“Joseph Alvarico and Annalouisa Gonzalez-Ortega exemplify all the extraordinary public-school teachers in our county,” Contra Costa County Superintendent of Schools Lynn Mackey said in a statement Thursday. “Next stop is the state’s Teacher of the Year program, and I am delighted to root for these two educators as the California Department of Education decides California’s Teacher of the Year.”
County Teacher of the Year Joseph Alvarico has a master’s degree in business administration, a Master of Science in biology, and a bachelor’s degree in secondary education.
Alvarico was born into a family of educators but did not set out on a path to become a teacher until a full-ride college scholarship in his native country, the Philippines, was awarded to him. The scholarship required him to work as a teacher for at least one year. He became a teacher intern in the 1990s and has been “hooked” on teaching ever since.
After immigrating to the United States, Alvarico has spent multiple years instructing middle school and high school students in Mt. Diablo Unified School District. With his on-the-job experience in the tech industry, he weaves real world experiences into his lessons, the county said of Alvarico.
Teaching teenagers, being a lifelong learner and building a community with his students is the secret sauce that has turned his robotics and yearbook students into design and engineering professionals, the county added.
County Teacher of the Year Annalouisa Gonzalez-Ortega is a first-generation Mexican American who was raised by parents who always emphasized the importance of education. She was a translator for her family at an early age and learned to become her own advocate early in her educational journey. After being dismissed by her high school counselor when she asked for help with her college applications, she went on to become the first person in her family to apply, be accepted, attend and graduate with two bachelor’s degrees from St. Mary’s College.
While working on her graduate degree, she worked as a high school teacher and soon realized her passion was to advocate for students like her. She has focused her 26 years of teaching on being a role model for students who need help navigating the educational system, the county said.
Gonzalez-Ortega is highly active in Freedom High’s English Learner Advisory Committee and participates in numerous volunteer opportunities and programs to support English language learners in her community.
Alvarico and Gonzalez-Ortega were selected as winners from four finalists that were announced in the spring. The other two finalists were Danya Townsend formerly of Olympic High School in the Mount Diablo Unified School District, and Patricia Ogura of Hercules Middle and High Schools in the West Contra Costa School District.
The finalists were selected from the 21 district teachers of the year who represent 16 school districts, the Contra Costa County Office of Education, and the Contra Costa Community College District.
Alvarico and Gonzalez-Ortega will represent Contra Costa County at the California State Teacher of the Year competition. The State Teachers of the Year are expected to be announced in mid-October.
The County Teacher of the Year program is coordinated by the Contra Costa County Office of Education.
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Not Mr. Kyle Whitmore?
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BFD
My wife was a fantastic teacher and patriot for Mt Diablo. Worked her you know what off but never made teacher of the year. So about the honor, I think it misses many amazing teachers.
Was your wife’s indoctrination score high enough?
Not sure what you are implying.
Perhaps your wife adhered too closely to actually teaching students rather than indoctrinating them with social garbage. If so, kudos to your wife. She has my vote.
My wife kept old books and put the new books with the garbage in it on the shelf in a closet. Before she had a steady job she was substituting in schools in the county. In one school a kid took a swing at her and she picked him up and put him in a garbage can head first. No one messed with her.
Dictators of the year. Your children do not know what gender they are anymore because if these demons they call teachers!
I cannot support any district teachers who did not FIGHT to get kids back in the classroom. They were almost all complicit in years of child abuse and deserve our contempt forever more. And now, do they teach them to make it up? NO, they indoctrinate with their opinions. We pulled for private. THEY were actually teaching and THEY actually cared. MDUSD is awful and WCCSD is right there with them.
Lighten up, Francis.
You don’t think private schools indoctrinate with opinion? Oh boy.