Sharon Draper

"Literacy, Laughter and Learning"
luncheon Keynote address
"Making Books Come Alive for Adolescent Readers" and "Using the Past to Empower the Future--The Legacy of Hope and Possibility"
breakout sessions
Bio
Sharon Draper
is a professional educator as well as an accomplished writer. She
has been honored as the National Teacher of the Year, is a five-time
winner of the Coretta Scott King Literary Award, and is a New York
Times bestselling author.
She was selected as Ohio's Outstanding High School Language Arts
Educator, Ohio Teacher of the Year, and was chosen as a NCNW
Excellence in Teaching Award winner. She received the Excellence in
Education Award, is a Milken Family Foundation National Educator
Award winner, and was the Duncanson Artist-in-Residence for the Taft
Museum. She is a YWCA Career Woman of Achievement, and is the
recipient of the Dean's Award from Howard University School of
Education, the Pepperdine University Distinguished Alumnus Award,
and the Marva Collins Education Excellence Award
Last year she was named Ohio Pioneer in Education by the Ohio State
Department of Education and received the Governor's Educational
Leadership Award. She has been honored at the White House on six
different occasions by President Clinton as well as President Bush.
After becoming one of the first teachers in the nation to achieve
National Board Certification in English/Language Arts, she was
elected to the Board of Directors of the National Board for
Professional Teaching Standards. She is currently on the Board of
the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future. Her
award-winning essay on education, "The Touch of a Teacher," was
published by the National Governor's Association in What Governors
Need to know about Education.
Actively involved in encouraging and motivating all teachers and
their students as well, she has worked all over the United States,
as well as in Russia, Ghana, Togo, Kenya, Ethiopia, Bermuda, and
Guam, spreading the word about the power of accomplished teaching
and excellence in education.
Her literary recognition began when, as a challenge from one of her
students, she entered and won first prize in a literary contest, for
which she was awarded $5000 and the publication of her short story,
"One Small Torch." She has published numerous poems, articles, and
short stories in a variety of literary journals. She is the
published author of
Tears of a Tiger
(1994)
Forged by Fire
(1997)
Darkness Before Dawn
(2001)
Romiette and Julio (1999)
Double Dutch
(2002)
The Battle of Jericho
(2003)
Copper Sun
(2006)
November Blues (2007)
Fire from the Rock
(2006)
Awards and Recognition
Tears of a Tiger
has received numerous awards, including the American Library
Association/Coretta Scott King John Steptoe Award for an outstanding
new book, and was also honored as an ALA Best Book for Young Adults.
It has been recognized as one of the best of the year by the
Children’s Book Council, the New York City Library, Bank Street
College, and the National Council for Social Studies. It was also
named as Best of the Best by VOYA and the American Library
Association as one of the top 100 books for young adults.
Forged by Fire,
the sequel to Tears of
a Tiger, is the 1997 Coretta Scott King Award winner, as
well as the winner of the ALA BEST Book Award and the Parent's
Choice Award.
Darkness Before Dawn,
the third book in the trilogy, is an ALA Top Ten Quick Pick, and has
received the Children's Choice Award from the International Reading
Association and received the Buckeye Book Award for 2005, and was
named an IRA Young Adult Choice for 2003.
Double Dutch
was honored as a Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People
by the Children's Book Council as well as one of the top ten sports
books for young adults for 2003 by the ALA, and Best of the Best for
2004, and received the Sunshine State Young Reader's Award for 2006.
Romiette and Julio
is also listed as an ALA Best Book and has been selected by the
International Reading Association as a 2000 Notable Book for a
Global Society, and by the New York Public Library in their Books
for the Teen Age.
The Battle of Jericho
is the 2004 Coretta Scott King Honor Book, one of the New York
Public Library's Book for the Teen Age, and is one of the 2005 Young
Adult Choice Books named by the International Reading Association.
We Beat the Street
is listed on the New York Times Bestseller List and is on VOYA's
Non-Fiction Honor List for 2006.
Copper Sun
received the 2007 Coretta Scott King Literature Award, was named as
one of the Top Ten Historical Fiction Books for Youth by Booklist,
was nominated for the 2007 NAACP Image Award for Literature, and
received the Ohioana Award for Young Adult Literature. Copper Sun is
also a CBC/National Council of Social Studies Notable Social Studies
Trade Book, received the Heartland Award for Excellence in YA
Literature, was named as an IRA Notable Book for a Global Society
and was named as Best Book of the Year by School Library Journal.
November Blues
received the 2008 Coretta Scott King Honor Book Literary Award.
Sharon Draper spent more than thirty years teaching junior high and
high school students how to appreciate the beauty of literature and
how to communicate their ideas effectively. Each year her students
received their own rewards in donning the class-designed "I Survived
the Draper Paper" tee shirt commemorating the legendary research
project that all her seniors had to complete to graduate.
She is an active member of the National Council of Teachers of
English, the International Reading Association, Top Ladies of
Distinction, and Links, Incorporated. Ms. Draper travels extensively
and has been a guest on television and radio programs throughout the
country, discussing issues of literature, reading, and education.
She is an accomplished public speaker who addresses educational and
literary groups of all ages, both nationally and internationally,
with entertaining readings of her poetry and novels, as well as
enlightening instructional presentations. She lives in Cincinnati,
Ohio, with her husband and a golden retriever named Honey.
I am a creator, an educator, a visionary…
I approach the world with the eyes of an artist, the ears of a
musician, and the soul of a writer. I see rainbows where others see
only rain, and possibilities when others see only problems. I love
spring flowers, summer's heat on my body, and the beauty of the
dying leaves in the fall. Classical music, art museums, and ballet
are sources of inspiration, as well as blues music, dim cafes, and
the jitterbug. I love to write; words flow easily from my
fingertips, and my heart beats rapidly with excitement as an idea
becomes a reality on the paper in front of me. I use all of these
elements to encourage my students as well as myself. I'm a learner
and a seeker of knowledge, and I take my students along on my
journey. I smile often, and laugh easily, and I weep at pain and
cruelty. I love what I do, and I'm good at it. I learned to dream
through reading, learned to create dreams through writing, and
learned to develop dreamers through teaching. I shall always be a
dreamer.
http://sharondraper.com/bio.asp

