Paul Mork Honored 2019
Paul Mork is a multi-sport coaching legend in the White Bear Lake Area School District and has received statewide recognitions from two Minnesota State High School coach associations. What many of Paul’s students know him from are his college prep English Literature and Creative Writing classes.
Paul was born and raised on a farm in southern Minnesota near the Iowa border. He attended Kiester High School located in southern Minnesota. “Attending a smaller school, it may be easier to try more sports, the arts, school paper and other things” Paul says of his high school years.” All students should be encouraged to try anything the school offers regardless of the size.” Paul’s football coach was also his English teacher. A door was opened as to the places and experiences great literature may take him. An added bonus to Paul’s literary adventure was his coach/teacher was previously a WWII spy for the Allied Forces.
Paul graduated from Kiester High School and attended St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, receiving his undergraduate degree in English, playing baseball, basketball and football along the way. His post-graduate work was accomplished at Macalester College in St. Paul where he earned his M. Ed. with an English emphasis.In 1959 Paul began his long teaching and coaching careers. The first 7 years of Paul's 37-year teaching and 56-year coaching experiences were at Wells, St. Charles, and Hayfield High Schools in southern Minnesota. However, the majority of his career took place in the White Bear Lake Area School District.
Paul came to White Bear Lake in 1965. College prep English was Paul's primary teaching assignment. “As the curriculum developed, Hero1 and Hero 2 were a semester each” he recalls. “Hero 1 included the Greek playwrights, Shakespeare and Tolstoy. Hero 2 moved to Dostoyevsky, Tennessee Williams, Eugene O’Neal, Faulkner, and Hemmingway.” Paul appreciated the chance to teach creative writing. “Every human being has creativity in them. It just needs to be tapped. Poetry was something all could have a little fun with. Those students that had the most fear about writing found they could get some satisfaction from the fact they could put it all together. A few submitted their writings to Scholastic Magazine and received recognition of their work.”
What would be one thing he would like to see be a priority for every student?“In an ideal world”, Paul smiled,” all students would be in a play. They would build self-confidence…stage presence to one degree or another. Experience what it is like to stretch yourself, explore a character, to ‘get out of your own skin’ and experience something different.’ When recalling former students mentioning to him, they felt they had a leg up in their college courses due to having taken one or more of his classes, Paul’s face lights up. “That is what is meant by ‘you receive more than what you give back’.”
Paul Mork retired from teaching in 1996, but continued to coach and author a book that encompasses his philosophy followed in both his teaching and coaching careers. Paul’s book, "The Power of Becoming: Achieving Personal Fulfillment," was published in 2005. The book is a series of eight essays, revolving around the idea of physical, psychological and spiritual elements coming together to realize personal fulfillment and illustrate how to 'become' what you hope to. "It was built on a motif that whether you are in the classroom or on a team, each year is a new year and what are you becoming?" Paul said.
In addition to teaching, Paul served in a variety of combinations as a high school varsity assistant and head coach. These positions included football, boys' and girls' basketball, baseball, and cross country. In 1966, his second year at White Bear Lake High School, Paul coached the boys cross country team to a state championship. He then began coaching in boys basketball, football, and track, taking the Bears boys basketball team to the state tournament in 1972. Later in his coaching career Paul added baseball and girls basketball. During his football tenure at White Bear Lake, Paul led White Bear Mariner High School from 1972 to 1983 and White Bear Lake Area High School from 1983 to 1993 compiling a head coaching record of 113-74 winning two suburban Conference Championships. In 1990 and 1991, Paul led the Bears baseball team. Paul came out of retirement and in 2002, returned to state tournament with the Irondale's girls basketball team. 2009 found Paul Mork directing the New Life Academy girls basketball team to the state tournament. Paul has been inducted into the White Bear Lake Area High School Athletic Hall of Fame, Minnesota State Football Coaches Association Hall of Fame (2002), and the Minnesota State High School Baseball Coaches Association (2015).
Paul Mork is one of those teachers that has touched hundreds of us, in ways he is not even aware of. If you never had the good fortune to have crossed paths with this extraordinary man, enjoy this gift that he has given us. Paul has four children and seven grandchildren. He has lived in White Bear Lake with his wife Marilyn, since 1965. He and "Mamie" have been married 52 years.