The Honorary Swede is a recognition given at each year's
Swedish Festival to a person who grew up in this community, but
who has spent most or all of their adult life in a location
other than here, and who has made significant contributions in
their professional, business, civic, community and religious
life.
The 2009 Honorary Swede is Jim Christensen of Holstein, Iowa.
He and his wife, Kim have two children. Their son, Korey
graduated this spring from Creighton University and will attend
Duke University Law School this coming fall. Their daughter,
Jaime, will be a high school senior this coming fall and among
other achievements is an ace softball pitcher. Our honoree plays
drums on the worship team at his church and is also part of a
rock band of 50-ish guys who play tribute concerts to Crosby,
Stills & Nash. Jim was the Commencement speaker for Stromsburg
High School in 2000.
This year's Honorary Swede had an active childhood, involving
himself in many and varied pursuits including Boy Scouts,
newspaper carrier, piano lessons, band, basketball and track. He
was a member of the Stromsburg boys basketball team that played
in the State Tournament. Outside of school, he worked summers at
an area church camp as a lifeguard and pool manager. He also
earned a private pilot's license at age 16.
After graduating with honors from Stromsburg High, he
continued his education at Northwestern College in Orange City,
Iowa, earning a bachelor's degree in social science and
elementary education. During his time in college, he lettered
four years in tennis and was awarded the Top Senior Band Award.
Our Honorary Swede began his teaching career in Wall Lake,
Iowa in 1979. He was married in 1980 and in 1982 they moved to
her hometown area where he began teaching 6th grade language
arts and science. Besides his teaching responsibilities, he also
made time to earn his instrument pilot's license, be granted a
Master's degree from South Dakota University and race sailboats
with his wife.
Jim's use of innovative science learning projects were loved
by his students. He was an early leader in implementing computer
usage on the elementary level. Beyond the classroom, he also
coached varsity girl's volleyball and track. His volleyball
teams placed first or second in their conference every year but
one over a 12 year coaching span.
But it is in the classroom where Jim really made his mark.
Applying what he had learned at a teacher workshop held at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston, he set up a project for his
students that required them to work in teams and develop a plan
for living on the planet Mars. For the Mars-Base Project,
students shared their work with two partner schools over Iowa's
Community Network, the first statewide two-way audio-visual
network in the nation. This was the first use of this network by
elementary students. Later that year, Sony asked him to
re-create this and other similar demonstrations as models for
other teachers using telecommunications networks. These were
also presented at the National Governor's Conference and the
National Science Teachers Convention. For this work, our honoree
was presented the Presidential Award for Excellence in
Mathematics and Science Teaching along with a $9,000 grant. He
was also named to the Governor's Leadership Council on
Education.
In the midst of Jim's teaching and coaching duties, he began
working summers as coordinator of NASA's Educator's Workshop at
the Johnson Space Center in Houston. His Mars-Base project was
shared with educators across the nation as well as in the
country of Wales. In 1999, he was recognized for outstanding
contributions to schools, teachers and students by the Education
Business Partnership Limited organization in Wales.
Jim was also employed by the Western Hills Area Education
Agency in Sioux City as a science specialist and technology
consultant. He also wrote a proposal that resulted in that
agency being selected to house the NASA Educational Resource
Center for the state of Iowa. Also, he promoted a science center
for the agency which stores and refurbishes over 200 hands-on
science kits used by schools in NW Iowa.
In 1999, NASA convinced him to work for them half-time out of
Houston in helping astronauts better know how to communicate
with students about their missions and their science topics
related to their work. Because of this, Jim knows a number of
the astronauts on a first-name basis. He has written two
experiments that have been selected for use on NASA's
Zero-Gravity Plane.
In 2001, our honoree was noted by his alma mater,
Northwestern College, with their Distinguished Alumni Award for
Professional Achievement.
Congratulations Jim Christensen - 2009 Stromsburg Honorary
Swede.
Brought to you by The
City of Stromsburg and the Stromsburg Chamber of Commerce
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