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Teacher of the Year

Maths teacher Dan Walton from St John's Catholic Comprehensive School in Gravesend wins Secondary School Teacher of the Year 2009 at the prestigious National Teaching Awards. View Transcript
View Synopsis EVY BARRY reports.

A teacher from Kent is officially one of the best in the country. At a star-studded ceremony at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, Dan Walton from St John's Catholic Comprehensive School, Gravesend becomes the 2009 Secondary School Teacher of the Year. He's a maths teacher whose approach to his subject has made the subject very popular at his school.

DAN WALTON, Secondary School Teacher of the Year: 'Obviously I take a pride in getting kids to enjoy the subject and I think it is a subject you can enthuse and engage kids of all abilities with and it's a subject that lends itself to activities that kids will enjoy, so if I can, if other teachers can move forward and make the kids enjoy it in a similar way, then that would be fantastic.'

One way Dan has achieved his success is through technology.

DAN WALTON: 'The beauty of maths is that if you give the kids some questions and say there's five answers you could get them maybe to add their answers to get a single over all answer which is obviously quite short and something you could text in and doesn't take too long and with the interactive white board that we have in the school it can be quite visual. As soon as the kids text their answer, the answer comes straight in on the boards behind you and you can see what they've text in and who it is - it's got their names on it and it's quite exciting for the kids to see if other groups have got the same answer and which groups got their answer in first so yes that's one thing; it's anything really, anything that I can do to make a maths topic or maths lesson more enjoyable I will do.'

The awards were founded by Lord Puttnam in 1998 and there are 12 categories which are open to all schools across the UK.

LORD PUTTNAM: 'The Teaching Awards are an absolutely invaluable enabling device in ensuring that none of us ever forget what we owe the teaching profession.'

Recognition also comes from Prime Minister Gordon Brown at a reception in Downing St.

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