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Anne
Wang has been teaching in Swindon for over thirty-five years - the
last fifteen spent at Westlea Primary School, where she is currently
senior teacher.
Last year was an eventful time for
Anne when she won the regional National Teaching Lifetime Achievement
Award - and when you see her in action it is not difficult to see
why.
She gains the respect of her pupils
by treating them as people, taking time to hear what they have to
say and encouraging them in everything they do - both at school
and outside of the classroom.
At the same time, Anne has also witnessed
her home town become the fastest growing conurbation in Europe and
one that is now hungry for city status.
Despite Swindon's lack of apparent
cultural splendour, when you see how Anne and her class enthusiastically
talk about Swindon life you soon realise that there is more
to the town than first meets the eye.
She starts each class with a discussion
of what has been in the papers - and her children seem very clued
up on local and national issues.
Anne is also quick to recognise that
it hasn't always been an easy ride for Swindon.
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| David Murray John building,
Swindon |
"When the railway works closed,
the town could have collapsed. But it didn't. We've expanded and
many firms have kept going. Swindon people are fighters - there's
a Swindon spirit."
Anne is very proud to be a native
of Wiltshire - although she doesn't class herself as a Moonraker.
"I do love the folklore of Wiltshire
but I don't know enough about it. I've been away too long to be
a Moonraker"
She also realises how many of the
children who come to Westlea School are from families who have moved
to the area from elsewhere.
"Very few in Westlea come from
Swindon and therefore the school is very important for a sense of
community. Where else would parents meet each other?"

When people come to stay I show them
how really proud I am of Wiltshire.
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Anne
Wang
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The school stays busy throughout
the year - even during the summer holidays.
Anne says the grounds of the school
are always open and while the number of green spaces diminish the
school's playing fields have become even more important.
She also believes that keeping the
school at the heart of the community has prevented vandalism becoming
a problem.
So far as moving away again, Anne
is resolute that Swindon is her home and she's more than happy to
stay put.
"It's all right living here.
Swindon is central for most things - I've got a lovely house and
a church I enjoying going to and I've got really good friends here.
So I really wouldn't want to move."
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