| 
			
			 Grunder, who received multiple nominations on the way to earning the 
			honor, was cited for being “a teacher that goes above and beyond in 
			both her field and classroom.” Grunder’s enthusiasm, creativity, 
			motivational skills, student engagement and respect for students 
			were just some of the qualities cited in the nomination letters that 
			make the Spanish teacher a favorite among those who walk the halls 
			of MPHS. 
 The feeling is mutual on Grunder’s part as well. It’s evident how 
			much she truly loves her job teaching Spanish to the students she 
			affectionately calls, “My Hilltoppers.”
 
 “It's fun to be a part of something big. It's fun to see young 
			people try new things and succeed at them,” says Grunder, who also 
			has an allegiance to the Lincoln Railers as son Ben is a player on 
			the basketball team. Continuing to explain her love for teaching, 
			Grunder says, “I enjoy teenagers. Each day they bring something 
			funny and new to our discussions. And I love to talk, so being a 
			language teacher seems fitting.”
 
			
			 
			Grunder’s path to teaching is a story that Hilltoppers can relate 
			to. She hails from a small town and was involved in just about 
			everything her school had to offer. “I was born and raised in 
			Rockton, Illinois, which is a little town not that much bigger than 
			Mount Pulaski, right outside of Rockford,” she said. “I went to a 
			grade school where I had 25 kids in my 8th grade class and then went 
			to Rockton Hononegah Community High school, where I had 350 kids in 
			my class. I loved high school. I got involved in everything that I 
			possibly could. I played sports, I was in Student Council, involved 
			in Spanish Club, and everything you could fit into a schedule.” 
 Early in her athletic career, Grunder was a three-sport athlete. “I 
			played volleyball, basketball and softball. Volleyball was not my 
			thing, so my sophomore year I focused just on basketball and 
			softball.” Eventually she got into basketball a lot more. “I started 
			playing that a lot more than I did softball. I ended up just playing 
			basketball my junior and senior years. You know, I’m only 5’2”, so 
			playing varsity basketball was really hard. But we had a pretty good 
			team, and we had a lot of fun,” said Grunder, who’s other son, Adam, 
			plays basketball for Lincoln Junior High.
 
 Grunder stayed close to home when first going off to college. “I 
			went to college at Rock Valley Community College first, and got my 
			general education [credits] out of the way. Then I transferred to 
			Eastern Illinois University where I got my teaching certificate in 
			both English and Spanish, and studied abroad for a summer in 
			Madrid.” Madrid is a place she will revisit this summer when she 
			chaperones a group of MPHS Spanish students there as part of an 
			exchange.
 
 As far as landing in Lincoln, we can all thank Eric Grunder for 
			that. Eric, a Lincoln College professor, is responsible for bringing 
			Rachel to Lincoln and the rest is, as they say, history. The 
			Educator of the Quarter explained, “I met my husband at Eastern as 
			well, and he had already been employed at Lincoln College, so we 
			knew we were coming to Lincoln.”
 
 “As luck would have it, I was originally employed at Unit 5 in 
			Bloomington, and then one of the Spanish teachers at Lincoln decided 
			to go work at Unit 5 as well. So, we just traded jobs,” said Grunder. 
			“Kathy Stoyak left Lincoln High School, I took her position, and 
			then she came back to Lincoln High School not much longer after 
			that. It was fun because I could just basically walk to work. I 
			stayed there for nine years. I coached Scholastic Bowl, the dance 
			team, was a class sponsor, did all that stuff, and then we started a 
			family. I took a hiatus from full-time employment, and worked with 
			Sam Redding at the Academic Development Institute.”
 
			 
			“I loved that work,” she emphasized of her work at ADI. “They were 
			really good to me. I got to learn a whole bunch of new skills. We 
			did video production. I worked on a team that developed professional 
			resources for schools, teachers and administrators. I traveled the 
			country and got to visit all different kinds of schools, 
			interviewing principals, students and teachers. It was really 
			interesting and important work. I’m very proud of that work.”
 “Then I missed teaching,” Grunder admitted. “I missed teaching the 
			whole time, but I also wanted to be a mom as much as I could be. 
			Once the boys got a little bit more independent, I ventured back 
			into the classroom, and started back at Delavan High School 
			part-time. I enjoyed my time at Delavan very much, and then 
			full-time seemed doable. That’s when I came here.” Grunder is 
			speaking of the current position she holds in Mount Pulaski. She 
			took that position on full-time three years ago. “But I had also 
			subbed for 9 weeks here when Ms. Wubben had her maternity leave. So 
			I had already been here for a little while when I came back.”
 
 Mount Pulaski is fortunate to have Grunder’s name added to a list of 
			great Spanish teachers.
 
 Just as Grunder is inspiring a whole new generation of students 
			eager to learn, she herself was lucky enough to be inspired by the 
			Spanish language that eventually would lead her to pursuing her 
			passion. “We were blessed to have native speakers for Spanish 
			teachers at my high school, so every single one of my teachers - two 
			of them were from Spain and one was from Puerto Rico, were native 
			speakers. It was great, and they always intrigued me. I just thought 
			that they were cool that they could speak a different language,” 
			Grunder said. “I was always curious about their culture, so really, 
			they didn’t necessarily inspire me to get into education, but I was 
			very interested in the topic.”
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
				 
				 
				 
Grunder continued telling the story of her journey that led her into teaching. 
“Then, as I went through my first two years of college, I started teaching 
English as a second language on the campus through the learning center. I really 
just fell in love with that part of it. I was eighteen and I had adult students 
who were all different languages and I had to teach them basic English. I had a 
really great director there who mentored me, and that’s where I decided that I 
really like this. And then I graduated from Rock Valley and went to Eastern 
Illinois, and of course, they have a good teaching program. When I was there, 
they also had a very diverse Spanish teacher program. I had a Cuban teacher, a 
Venezuelan teacher and an Argentinian teacher. It was really diverse at that 
point in time. It was really nice. It was a good fit for me.” 
 Luckily for the hundreds of students who have passed through her classes, it has 
been a good fit for them, too. Grunder is known to incorporate food and fun into 
her teaching and on one recent morning in the classroom, she allowed her Spanish 
Club to hold an event called, “Chocolate, the Breakfast of Champions.” Grunder 
was on a roll talking about this event. “We did all things chocolate. We had 
churros and chocolate. We had a little pastry called magdalenas. We had 
champurrado, which is Mexican hot chocolate. We had chorizo, which is sausage 
and chocolate. We had strawberries and bananas and pineapple and chocolate.” 
Smiling, she added, “And it was wonderful. We did a chocolate bar, all the way 
from milk chocolate to eighty-five percent cacao.”
 
 “The seniors gave a history of chocolate and how it was discovered in Mexico and 
how it traveled through Spain. France likes to take a lot of credit for it, but 
really the Mexicans and the Spaniards originally discovered the cacao,” Grunder 
said.
 
 Food, fun and learning. Grunder has it figured out to a tee.
 
 Grunder is also responsible for starting an exchange program at MPHS, something 
that is a hit with both students and parents. Both the Spain Exchange and the 
Costa Rica Exchange have been very successful in the initial efforts and no 
doubt the excitement for the programs will continue to build.
 
 
Mount Pulaski hosted students from Spain early in the school year and in 
exchange the MPHS students will visit Madrid this coming summer. 
 In addition, students went on a Costa Rican adventure last summer and in a few 
days, the Costa Ricans [Ticos] will visit central Illinois. All of these 
adventures got off the ground due to Grunder’s relentless efforts and tireless 
planning.
 
 Grunder explained about the upcoming visitors set to arrive in Mount Pulaski 
this Friday. “Our Ticos are coming January 6. We’re very excited about that. We 
have 10 students and two teachers. There are seven of the students who hosted 
our students and three new students. It’s very exciting. It’s going to be a very 
fast turnaround. It’s just 10 days, and they’re really just in school four and a 
half because they arrive on Friday and we’re taking one day for a field trip.”
 
 Grunder also told of just some of the adventures she has planned for the Costa 
Ricans. “We’re doing sites in Springfield. We’re doing historical sites and we 
are also doing some adventure stuff for them. We are going to take them ice 
skating, which of course is something they’ve never done. We are going to Sky 
Zone and we’ll do a little shopping in there along with the Abraham Lincoln 
Presidential Library and Museum.”
 
 For the small-town girl who continues to influence her students to dream big and 
explore the world, Grunder has truly found a good fit within her career. 
“Honestly, teaching is just natural to me. It's a part of who I am, not what I 
do,” Grunder says. “When I wasn't in the classroom, a part of me was unhappy. 
Even when teaching is tough, it's usually for the best reasons - trying to help 
a student through something, trying to say and do the right thing, trying to be 
an important part of that something bigger. I teach because I care...about all 
of them. And if they walk out of my room and do something with their 
Spanish....bonus!”
 
 Congratulations, Rachel, on this very deserving honor!
 
				 
			[[Teena Lowery] 
 A final note on Grunder, who received the traveling Educator of the 
			Quarter trophy from Rob Siebert. “It’s funny that Rob Siebert 
			preceded me in this process because his wife, Jill, and I grew up 
			together,” she said. “I went to school with her and her brothers. 
			She grew up just a few miles from me.” It is a small world after 
			all.
 Past related articles 
				
				 |