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Remembering Janet and Roscoe
ALUMNI
In December of 2021, Gordon College was shocked and heartbroken by the loss of two beloved community members: Dean of the School of Education Dr. Janet (Spoerer) Arndt ’68 and College Electrician Russell “Roscoe” Duttweiler.
Dr. Janet Arndt May 23, 1947–December 13, 2021 Arndt served the College for more than 25 years in teaching and administrative roles. A 1968 Gordon alumna, she returned to her alma mater in 2001 as the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) licensure officer after a long career in public education and New Hampshire state politics. In 2008, she became the director of graduate programs in education even as she continued assisting teacher candidates and alumni in obtaining state teaching licensure in Massachusetts and elsewhere. Arndt developed and implemented the Master of Arts in Leadership degree program, which launched in 2016. She was instrumental in the establishment of the School of Education in 2019, being named dean upon its inception. That same year, she joined the President’s Cabinet as the faculty representative. Arndt is remembered as a talented, passionate educator whose dedication to the field and her students was evident in her work. Inspired by their own studies under Dr. Winifred Currie ’45, Arndt and her sister, Dr. Priscilla (Spoerer) Nelson ’74, had worked side-by-side at Gordon for the past two decades. Together they garnered national
recognition for the College’s education program, specifically for its strong commitment to evidence-based reading instruction and its academic selectivity. Prior to her career at Gordon, Arndt was a public-school teacher, early childhood specialist, guidance counselor and principal. A resident of Windham, New Hampshire, Arndt was a policymaker as a state representative in New Hampshire for 10 years. She was a member and past president of the International Christian Community for Teacher Education. Arndt earned her bachelor’s in psychology from Gordon, Ed.M. from Boston University and Ed.D. from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her areas of research were family/school partnerships, transitions, special education, mentoring, and the use of Universal Design for Learning in teacher preparation. In addition to Nelson, Arndt left behind her husband, Ken, who passed shortly after her; children Elissa ’00 (Matthew) Rader, Emily ’03 (Flavio) DeCastro, Ethan ’05 (Joice) and Erica ’08; and nine grandchildren.
Read more about Janet’s legacy on page 32.
30 STILLPOINT | SPRING 2022