Glynn Servy |
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| Education Professional | |||
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30309, United States |
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About Glynn Servy
Foreign language teacher Glynn Servy has taught four different languages, and he has helped students in Europe, the United States (U.S.), and Japan become proficient in second languages. In the U.S., Glynn Servy worked for eight years as a high school teacher in the state of Georgia, teaching Spanish and French. In this role, he helped establish French and Spanish clubs and was a member of the student senate and school council. Glynn Servy was successful in aiding his students to achieve conversational fluency in one semester. A majority of his students also chose to register for advanced classes in French.
Glynn Servy has taught languages to students from a wide variety of backgrounds. He has taught English to kindergarten students and teachers in Japan and French to lab technicians in Georgia to facilitate their interactions with counterparts in France. While in Italy as an Ambassadorial Scholar for Rotary International, Servy tutored individuals in English. Other teaching experience includes Spanish instruction for a Continuing Education program and French lessons for the Governor’s summer Honors Program in Georgia. In the summer of 2010, he taught an advanced level course on the French Impressionists.
While in the United States, Glynn Servy studied at Wake Forest University in North Carolina, receiving a Bachelor of Arts in History. He received his Masters in Spanish Language and Culture at Salamanca University in Spain. Currently, Servy is undertaking studies in foreign language education at Auburn University in Alabama. As part of the program, he has written several papers on French art museums.
Servy is a gourmet and a wine aficionado, having studied culinary arts in Rome. He has a background in acting and singing, which he occasionally uses to entertain at weddings and in nursing homes. He is also active in community service, assisting with meals through Project Open Hand and sorting donated clothing for a program on behalf of the Episcopal church.


