Tuesday, February 9, 2016

RIP CPR



RIP CPR

My friend Carlton Porterfield Robardey (CPR) passed away on Monday February 8, 2016.  He was a major influence in my life.  I first met Carlton in the summer of 1983 when I was a new hire at Texarkana College.  I was working on preparing for fall classes when Royce Granberry, Jerry Wright and Carlton dropped in on me.  Jerry was actually retiring and I was replacing him.  It seems that these guys, probably led by Carlton, had cooked up something new for me to do.  Carlton was very concerned with science education and elementary science education in particular.  They wanted me to create a biology course for elementary education majors.  They also wanted to create a physical science course.  Delbert Dowdy was given that job.  We implemented these courses at TC the next year in fall 1984.  I really didn’t know what I was doing but Carlton guided me.  He would say, “hey, let’s go to this workshop or let’s go to this convention” and so I gradually learned about elementary science education and I think Delbert and I were able to create some pretty good courses that the students liked.
A few years later, Carlton says “we need to get a grant to help in-service science teachers”.  He made contact with folks bringing out a new hands-on science program called FOSS.  They got us in with the groups doing field tests.  So off to Dallas we go for training.  We then used this program as a basis for a Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board Grant to train in-service elementary science teachers using FOSS as the activity base.  Dr. David Brown was our fearless leader as project director because Carlton and I didn’t want to deal with the grant red tape.  It was a very successful grant.
A few years later some students came to us saying they wanted a teacher certification in elementary science.  They were excited by the science courses at TC and the science teaching methods course Carlton taught at what was then East Texas State University at Texarkana.   We then talked to Dr. Stephen Hensley, ETSU president and Dr. Carl Nelson, TC president.  Carlton was, of course, very persuasive and we pulled it off.  He had great verbal skills.  We would use TC science professors with doctorates, and now joint appointments, to teach the necessary upper-level science courses at ETSU.  So we were now certifying science teachers.
A few years later, a friend of ours in the science education community (Dr. Karen Ostlund) convinced the director of the Texas Regional Collaboratives for Excellence in Science Teaching that we should get a grant.  So we applied and received grants for about 15 years.  Unfortunately, before our very first collaborative meeting with science teachers Carlton had a stroke.  I carried along alone until the grant became a little too much and I didn’t apply anymore.
So you see that Carlton was very instrumental in the success that A&M-Texarkana is now enjoying in science.
I never knew CPR 1.0 who I understand was a pretty wild and crazy guy.  I knew CPR 2.0 very well.  He was a wonderful mentor, colleague and friend.  He was like having another brother.  He loved people and especially science teachers—of course he married one!  He never met a stranger.  He was one of the most giving people I have ever met.  He loved his family.  All of them, the biological children, the adopted children, the step children and all the grandchildren.  He often worried over them as they experienced challenges in their lives.  He loved his wife, Debbie, dearly. 
I have missed him for a long time now.  I know he has been released from a fickle body and is soaring with all of the other departed science teachers.