Students were this teacher's trophies
By CRAIG BASSE and JON WILSON
Published October 19, 2005
ST. PETERSBURG - Adrian C. Davis won a trove of top
teaching awards while inspiring St. Petersburg High
School students for 37 years.
In 1972, he was named National Biology Teacher of the
Year for Florida; in 1978, Pinellas County Teacher of
the Year; in 1980, Pinellas County's Outstanding Science
Teacher.
But Mr. Davis, who died Monday (Oct. 17, 2005) at age
84, treasured his students more than the awards. "I've
got people all over town that are my trophies," he said
in 1978.
"My own dentist, my doctor, my ophthalmologist are all
my straight-A
students."
Mr. Davis, a 1940 St. Petersburg High graduate, returned
to his alma
mater as a teacher in 1950. A year before he retired
from the school in
1987, Mr. Davis was named Florida's Outstanding High
School Science Teacher.
An innovator, Mr. Davis introduced human physiology
(1954) and marine biology (1970) to the county school
system.
His most widely known high school courses were in marine
biology. He wrote his own textbook and took students on
field trips that captured their interest.
"He called his classroom "the sea in the attic' because
it was designed as a sea landscape," said Bill Grey, who
was St. Petersburg's principal toward the end of Mr.
Davis' career there.
Mr. Davis' personalized classroom in a third-floor
garret contained
thousands of specimens, aquariums and porthole windows
he cut out.
Students decorated the entry with life-size paintings of
octopuses,
squid, sharks and stingrays.
"It looked like Captain Nemo's ship in
20,000 Leagues Under the
Sea," Grey said. Mr. Davis' creativity
extended beyond the classroom. His oil painting of St.
Petersburg High is displayed in the school's front hall
case and serves as the cover for a high school history
scrapbook Mr. Davis compiled with Barbara Boggess
Stephens in 1996.
Mr. Davis entered military service during World War II
and saw combat. While hospitalized in the Philippines
recovering from an injury, he became interested in
medicine. He planned to go to medical school on the GI
Bill.
But after majoring in pre-med at Emory University and
working summers at Mound Park Hospital (now Bayfront
Medical Center) and a funeral home, he changed his mind.
He decided he was more interested in biology than
medicine.
He then made another career decision: to teach biology
rather than to
carry out research, which would have been more
financially rewarding. Teaching, he said, would be more
fun than "boring research, counting
pollen grains." Later, he confessed: "I love to teach.
It's the teacher who makes the subject interesting. A
good teacher is one that creates an epidemic of learning
by their contagious enthusiasm."
Les Burrows, a teaching colleague, said Mr. Davis liked
to tell a story
about a 15-year-old conducting a microscope experiment
in which the
teacher gave the boy a slide to examine. Soon, the
student exclaimed, "There are things down there!" As
Mr. Davis told the story, he hurried to the boy's work
station, peered through the microscope and shouted, "My
God! You've found paramecium!" Said Burrows: "Adrian
said, "I've seen a million paramecium, but it was his
first time."' The student went on to become an
orthopedic surgeon, Burrows said.
Students appreciated Mr. Davis' efforts. They dedicated
the yearbook,
NoSoWeEa, to him a record four times, in
1958, 1969, 1975 and 1988. And former students once held
an Adrian Davis Night, raising money to send the teacher
on a trip to Australia, said Bob Chick, who graduated
from St. Petersburg in 1957.
"He was a person who transcended learning. His idea was
to make sure you got an education," Chick said.
A year after Mr. Davis' retirement, principal Grey
unofficially named
the high school's science hall the "Bell Building." The
name referred to
a bell Mr. Davis had donated to the school, which was
placed over the
building's entrance and rung after major school
achievements.
"Hopefully, we can get that building renamed the Adrian
Davis Building," Grey said. After retiring from the high
school, Mr. Davis became an adjunct professor at St.
Petersburg Junior College (now St. Petersburg College).
He also served as director of the high school alumni
association.
In 1989 and 1990, he was asked to address Pinellas
County's new science teachers. In 1991, he gave the
keynote speech to middle school and high school science
teachers at their back-to-school work session.
In 1995, he retired from the junior college, where he
taught
oceanography and earth science. He moved to his Suwannee
River home in Mayo. Arrangements were pending at the Joe
P. Burns Funeral Home in Mayo.
Information from Times files was used in this obituary.
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