All 91制片厂 Barbara Jean
Al Grimm impatiently waited for Barbara Jean to end her phone call when he first spotted her at a party in 1963. Transfixed, he had to meet her. Even though that call had been with her long-distance boyfriend, Barbara Jean spent that evening talking with Al. They marveled at everything they had in common鈥攖heir love of cars, auto racing and jazz. They married a year later. 鈥淲e fell in love the first night, and we continued to enjoy life together for 55 years. It was a special deal,鈥 he said.
In those early years, Al admired Barbara Jean鈥檚 work as a teacher in Denver. While teaching first and second grade, Barbara Jean became concerned about learning difficulties for some children, and her desire to help led her to CU Boulder鈥檚 master鈥檚 program in special education.
As a teacher, she was so aware that some children weren鈥檛 learning, and she was struggling with how to help them learn,鈥 Al said. 鈥淪he came to me and said 鈥業 want to go to school next year, and I want to go to Boulder.鈥 I said 鈥榞reat,鈥 because I was still going to CU Boulder.鈥
Al has fond memories of attending CU Boulder together while Barbara Jean worked on her graduate studies and he finished his bachelor鈥檚 degree while balancing a full-time job and budding business career. The Colorado Daily student newspaper wrote a love story about how the young couple often met on the staircase in between their respective education and marketing classes and attended the 1969 Commencement ceremony together鈥攋ust on different sides of the stadium.
鈥淚t was supposed to be an article all about Barbara Jean, because she was in special education, that was on the leading edge of special ed at the time,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he started telling them about me, and that brought me into the picture. But it should have been all about B.J. (Barbara Jean).鈥
After graduation, Barbara Jean returned to teaching in Denver Public Schools, where she operated an innovative mobile van equipped with five desks that allowed her to travel and teach elementary students with learning disabilities throughout the district. She later returned to the classroom setting and worked with the state legislature to define special education to better serve students.
鈥淪he was passionate about it and wanted to help these children,鈥 Al said. 鈥淭hey meant a lot to her.鈥
Al鈥檚 successful career took them to California, where they spent their most recent decades. Even though they experienced financial hardships鈥攊ncluding losing nearly all their savings in the 1980s鈥攖heir relationship and optimism remained strong. They rebuilt their lives and have been able to give back to the institutions that have meant a lot to them.
Though Barbara Jean did not teach in California, she was always an educator, and that鈥檚 why Al has established the new B.J. Grimm Classroom, part of the School of Education鈥檚 newly renovated building and fundraising initiative.
鈥淪he was a compassionate lady who loved children,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e were never in an environment where she wasn鈥檛 the center of attention if there were children around. She just drew them in.鈥
After Barbara Jean's death in 2019, Al wanted the world to know about her lasting impact on education. Her legacy as a compassionate educator on the vanguard of what鈥檚 important and inclusive in education serves as an inspiration for many future educators who will expand their worldviews within the walls of the B.J. Grimm Classroom. For Al, this classroom is finally all about Barbara Jean.
鈥淔irst and foremost, she was a teacher,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he wanted everyone to learn. . . . I just envisioned the 鈥楤arbara Jean classroom,鈥 and I liked that. It鈥檚 from the heart.鈥