Science & Biotechnology Teacher, Aragon High School, San Mateo
Katherine Ward currently teaches Advanced Placement Biology and Biotechnology at Aragon High School in
San Mateo. She graduated from the University of California, Davis in 1990 with a degree in Human
Development and received her teaching credential in Life Sciences in 1996 from San Francisco State
University. She is a passionate teacher who delivers a rigorous academic and quality laboratory
experience rich with multimodal opportunities for students and continuously strives to education and
enable informed, aware and scientifically literate citizens. She established the Biotechnology course
at her school and is a mentor for her school's US FIRST Robotics Team. She works extensively with
students to help them secure summer internships with local colleges, companies and biotechnology
education partnerships. She is a strong advocate for powerful teacher professional development and
education reform. As a teacher consultant, Katie helped to found the Design Challenge Summer
Institutes for Teachers at the Tech Museum in San Jose. As a GeneConnection Steering Committee
member she assists the program with providing biotechnology and pedagogical support for San Mateo
County science teachers. In addition, she works as a teacher consultant providing biology content
expertise to the Exploratorium Teacher Institutes each summer helping middle and high school teacher
from all over the country prepare low-cost, "scroungeable" alternative materials for classroom
laboratory and modeling activities and produce innovative new activities. Katie was a member of the
California State Curriculum Framework and Evaluation Criteria Committee in 2009 and was selected as
sole representative of the nation's K-12 mathematics and science teachers on the blue-ribbon, 23-member
national Carnegie-IAS Commission on Mathematics and Science Education Reform convened to make
significant and actionable recommendations for K-14 mathematics and science education reform addressed
to federal and state governments, local school districts, colleges/universities, businesses and foundations.
The report, "The Opportunity Equation" was released in June 2009.
Updated 2/01/12