Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Educators

*This is a Missing Articles worklist for WikiProject Women in Red for women educators. It includes teachers, researchers and other members of educational efforts excluding college and above. *These articles are held to an additional standard; they must satisfy Wikipedia's Notability (academics) criteria. People on these lists may or may not qualify.

Australia

 * Samantha Gall (née Maxwell; Class of 1992) - Teacher, counsellor. Awarded the National Excellence in Teaching Awards QLD, 2002; Pride of Australia Medal QLD
 * Sarah Chapman (teacher), winner of the 2013 Prime Minister’s Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching in Secondary Schools
 * Anita Trenwith, winner of the 2012 Prime Minister's Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching in Secondary Schools
 * Dr Jane Wright (teacher), winner of the 2011 Prime Minister’s Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching in Secondary Schools
 * Debra Smith, winner of the 2010 Prime Minister’s Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching in Secondary Schools
 * Isla Stamp (1906–1991), Kindergarten director and public servant bio
 * Beth Stubbs (1918–1998), Kindergarten director and public servant bio
 * Jean Sutherland (teacher) (1903–1983), Kindergarten teacher bio
 * Mary Williams-Cooper (c.1920–1989), Aboriginal leader and Kindergarten teacher bio
 * Maud Wilson (1870–1946), Kindergarten teacher bio
 * Margaret Yule (1910–1985), Kindergarten teacher and special needs teacher bio

Canada

 * Janet Isabel Carruthers (born 1894) Canadian teacher and children's writer. Carruthers taught in a school for Native Americans in the Canadian bushland of North Ontario.
 * Constance Rulka, (1926-2014) Teacher, Examiner in English for the Oxford and Cambridge Joint Matriculation Board. Author of textbooks in English language and Poetry for Macmillan Publishing company, School Trustee for Squamish School district 48, wrote a regular weekly column entitled “Sound Schools” for the Chief newspaper in Squamish as well as articles for Teacher Newsmagazine. Chief Examiner and Assistant Registrar for the West African Examinations Council. She was awarded The Educational Press Association of America “Distinguished Achievement Award” given for excellence in Educational Journalism (1992). In 2003 she was awarded the Golden Leaf Award - “Writing and Editing” Educational Issues Reporting from the Canadian Educational Press Association. On June 13, 2006, School District No. 48 honored Constance Rulka’s contributions and renamed the Howe Sound Secondary School Library “The Constance Rulka Library”

Denmark

 * Arlette Lévy-Andersen (1924-2022), French-Danish Auschwitz survivor and educator
 * Marie Mørk (1861-1944), founder of the still existing Mørks Skole
 * Sylvia Schierbeck (1896-1977), opera singer and educator

India

 * Margaret Barr (educator) (1899-1973), British-born educator (she rejected the term "missionary") to the Khasi Unitarian Union, 1933-1973 [Margaret Barr – A Universal Soul Edited and Compiled by Y. Surrendra Paul]

Japan

 * Kuroda Chika ja:黒田チカ (en)
 * Namihira Emiko
 * Hara Hiroko ja:原ひろ子, [https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/tits/16/8/16_8_8_93/_article/references (ja)
 * Yasui Kono ja:保井コノ, student of E. C. Jeffrey Cytologia29/11/3/11_3_452/_article
 * Torikai Kumiko ja:鳥飼玖美子 first woman symultaneous interpreter, PhD English Education
 * Miura Lully ja:三浦瑠麗 international politics, supports conditional conscription, or drafting. PhD law
 * Ohinata Masami ja:大日向雅美 (ja)
 * Nakano Nobuko ja:中野信子 neuroschientist, past member of MENTA, DM
 * Nakatsu Ryoko phonetics
 * Uryu Shigeko ja:瓜生繁子, Baroness Uriu (Nagai Shigeko (ja)
 * Ueta Takako ja:植田隆子
 * Nikaido Tokuyo ja:二階堂トクヨ (ja)
 * Tange Ume ja:丹下ウメ (ja)
 * Ichibangase Yasuko ja:一番瀬康子
 * Konagaya Yuki ja:小長谷由紀
 * Tanaka Yuko (educator) ja:田中優子 First university president

Mexico

 * Gema López, Public Educator and Teacher from Baja California Mexico.

New Zealand

 * Jan Taouma, established the first samoan immersion school in NZ.

Poland

 * Natalia Twersky, grew up in Poland and survived Auschwitz. An award is given in her name

Sierra Leone

 * Roosevelt Secondary School for Girls in Freetown, Sierra Leone

Sudan

 * Omdurman Girls' Secondary School

United States

 * A-L
 * Jacqueline Anderson (educator) educator and writer, on lesbianism and feminism
 * Emma Archer, home demonstration agent in Arkansas
 * Margaret Bancroft (1854-1912), teacher for students with disabilities, New Jersey Hall of Fame inductee, entry in The Book of Gusty Women
 * Mary Cornelia Barker, schoolteacher and teachers' union leader,
 * Emma E. Booker Early 1900's African-American educator
 * Eloise Cofer, Dr involved with home demonstration work in N. Carolina
 * Bethania Crockett/Bethania Crockett Bishop/Bethania Bishop Bennet, principal at Oxford Female Institute,,,,,
 * Marie Cromer, home demonstration agent
 * Maria Elena Flood, educator from El Paso, Texas.
 * Christina L. Gutiérrez, educator, editor, writer,
 * Elsie Jones Hare, (1903-1985) Educator, Florida Women's Hall of Fame
 * Helen Hefferman, California commissioner of Education and prominent progressive educator. See: Kathleen Weiler, Democracy and Schooling in California (2011).
 * Mary Evelyn V. Hunter, Texas African American home demonstration agent
 * Emma Eccles Jones, developer of kindergartens in Utah in 1927, working from Whittier School (Logan, Utah)
 * Helen Connor Laird (1888-1982), first woman president of the Marshfield Board of Education in Wisconsin, philanthropist,
 * Dazelle Foster Lowe, African American home demonstration agent in N Carolina,


 * M-Z
 * Carolyn Manuszak former president of Villa Julie, now Stevenson University
 * Debra Moser, professor and assistent dean in the College of Nursing and holder of the first endowed chair in nursing at the University of Kentucky, recipient of the 2018 Sarah Bennett Holmes Award
 * Shirley Neeley, Texas educator, ,
 * Susie V. Powell, Mississippi home demonstration agent
 * Frances Virginia Praytor, (1899–1974), teacher and co-owner of bookstore, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
 * Sara A. Ramírez, educator, writer, editor
 * Mary L. Ray, African American home demonstration agent in Arkansas
 * Corinne A. Seeds, California progressive educator. See: Kathleen Weiler, Democracy and Schooling in California (2011).
 * Ada Ruth Stovall, (1913-2008), first woman appointed assistant state director of vocational education for the Alabama Department of Education, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
 * Mary Elizabeth Phillips Thompson, (1855, 1927) teacher and principal at Lincoln Normal School, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
 * Edna Westbrook Trigg, home demonstration agent in Texas