By: Logan Day, Caney Creek High School Junior
Conroe ISD Student Journalism Network
CONROE, TEXAS (August 28, 2024) â Caney Creek High School journalism adviser Stephen Green was 14 when he first sat in his high school Journalism I class. Thatâs when he got his first assignment.
On his paper by the end was a jumbled, unstructured, mess of random facts strung together with bullet points; it could hardly be called an editorial. Through the seams of that choppy list, was a spark of passion. He had only taken journalism because his friends were. But Green found a connection through voicing his opinion in writing. It was âa lightbulb momentâ for him.
Fast forward 18 years and Green has won the title of 2024 Texas Association of School Administrators Region 6 Secondary Teacher of the Year, after winning the same title at the campus level and in all of Conroe ISD. Green is one of 20 left in contention to become one of three finalists for state teacher of the year. The finalists will be announced Wednesday, Sept. 4. The three finalists advance to an interview before the state winner is decided in October.
âI consider myself not just a teacher, but a journalist who teaches,â Green said. âI have always seen journalists and teachers as doing roughly the same thing at different stages of peoplesâ lives: educating. Teachers guide you through a basic education in high school and college, while journalists take over from there by showing how that knowledge is present in the world around you.â
Before teaching, he worked as a reporter and editor for The Courier newspaper for two years and The Huntsville Item before that. As a daily news outlet, his workload regularly consisted of 12-hour days, writing three to four stories a day. To add to the stress, he was âonâ even when he wasnât working because of the demands of a small newspaper staff.
âI just needed a break and the broader industry wasn't going in the direction that I liked anyway, so I thought maybe itâs time to pivot,â Green said, noting that he always liked the idea of teaching. âI happened to see that Conroe ISD and Caney Creek were hiring for a debate coach, so I applied for that position. By chance, the next year, the journalism teacher was leaving, and so I took that role.â
Greenâs teaching method focuses around creating a student-led team, similar to the ones he experienced in the journalism industry. Students, for example, are in charge of their own grades and lead one another with a team of managers using guidelines Green and the editors jointly create.
âIf you ask any administrator about my program, they will undoubtedly tell you one thing: The kids run the show,â Green wrote in his application for Conroe ISD Secondary Teacher of the Year. âI firmly believe kids are smarter than many give them credit for; theyâre thoughtful, considerate, and wise. Students learn best when they own the work.â
Ever since Green was a child, he has had a fascination with knowledge and finding solutions for problems he saw. Now, he uses that knowledge and experiences to build the skills of young journalists.
âLearning requires struggle,â Green wrote. âBalancing a safe place that allows for students to struggle, fail and succeed simultaneously is delicate. They canât just fail; they need to get back up and figure out how to succeed. They must feel the struggle.â
Previous students have told him repeatedly that his introductory class is âone of the hardest theyâve taken.â That is intentional. Green makes his class as college-like as possible to give students high standards to reach for rather than lowering the bar.
In 2024, he had three graduates pursue journalism in college as a result of his mentorship, including former Executive Editor Natalia Molina, now a journalism major at the University of Texas at Austin.
âBefore deciding on journalism, I couldnât figure out a major to choose because I was scared to follow what I was truly passionate about,â Molina said. âGreen served as a guide in encouraging and helping me decide the path I'm currently on. I have him to thank for allowing me to discover my writing style and learn more about the different types of writing within the journalism community.â
Greenâs workload is full schedule year-round with both award-winning debate and journalism students.
Last year, four Student Media members were named to the UIL ILPC All-State Journalism Staff. The staff finished ranked as the No. 5 overall photography program in the state, including No. 3 in sports, No. 2 in photojournalism, and â in conjunction with Leigh Anne Treistmanâs commercial photography program â No. 3 in portrait photography. The journalism program ranked No. 3 at the Texas Association of Journalism Educators fall convention.
In debate, students have consistently won district and regional titles, as well as advancing to state and national competitions. In the summer of 2023, he coached Baylee Cammack to No. 4 out of 1,100 competitors in extemporaneous debate at the national tournament in Phoenix â the largest field in the history of the National Speech & Debate Association.
Though, for Green, awards come from passion for what one does.
âThe journalism classroom is where students exceed their own expectations,â Green wrote. âI really donât care if students can identify rule of thirds, calculate proper exposure, or edit captions on paper, I care if they can do it for real. This program is designed to produce real-world journalism by telling real stories about real issues and celebrating real victories.â
Multiple teachers rely on Greenâs leadership. He is not only the Student Media adviser, but an assistant debate coach, UIL Academic Coordinator, and was on the campus Site-Based Decision-Making Committee last year.
This year, he is the Media Arts PLC team lead and also serves as the president-elect of TAJE where he will serve on the board for six years helping lead the nationâs largest scholastic journalism state organization.
âWhile he's been in the program weâve seen the newspaper grow, the yearbook grows, weâve really just seen a lot of development in the program,â head debate coach Joseph Collatos said. âBefore he came over as director, (UIL academics) was really just something the school did, but he really has put a focus on trying to recruit coaches and really emphasizing to them the importance of recruiting and developing those students. He really has motivated the coaches, and I think weâve seen it in programs like science, in social studies, in journalism, in debate.â
Green said he wanted his more than 7,000-word set of essays for the application to help others see what he sees in class.
âMy ultimate goal was to give whoever reads them a sense of not just what we do, but also to feel what we do,â Green said. âRegardless if I won or lost, I wanted to tell our story as a school and for my programs. I wanted people to hear how great the people at Caney Creek are and how hardworking and caring the students are.â
Green has no plans on leaving in part because of his emotional connection to the journalism industry. His passion is demonstrated through his students and their futures.
âI felt this was an important job to take if I don't feel that I'm not in the industry,â Green said. âIâm at the ground level you know, I've got to inspire and train the next level of people who are going to go in and do journalism and tell stories the right way.â