Three of the women who risked their lives to save their students were killed in the Newtown, Connecticut, massacre.
First-Grade Teacher Victoria Soto, Age 27
Victoria Soto's lifelong dream was to become a teacher. Her last moments were spent rushing her students into a closet when gunshots started going off. When the gunman entered her classroom, she shielded her students from incoming bullets.
Soto graduated from Eastern Connecticut State University with an elementary education and history degree and was studying for a master's degree in special education at Southern Connecticut State University. Soto loved spending time with her family and her dog, a black Labrador named Roxie. She had been at Sandy Hook for more than five years, having started as an intern before becoming a teacher.
"It brings peace to know that Vicki was doing what she loved, protecting the children, and in our eyes, she’s a hero,” her cousin Jim Wiltsie said. “She lost her life doing what she loved. I don’t think she would have it any other way. She loved kids. Her goal in life was to be a teacher and to mold young minds, and that’s what she achieved, and unfortunately lost her life protecting those children.”
Source: resources3.news.com.au
First-Grade Teacher Kaitlin Roig, Age 29
Kaitlin Roig survived the tragic events at Sandy Hook Elementary school. Thanks to her heroism, so did 15 children. When she first heard gunshots, she quickly ushered 15 students into a tiny bathroom and pulled a bookshelf across the door before locking it. Roig told her students to be "absolutely quiet."
"I just knew we had to get in there, I just kept telling them it's going to be OK. We are going to be alright," said Roig.
Roig, who has been a teacher at Sandy Hook Elementary School for more than five years, refused to even unlock the bathroom door for police. "I didn't believe them," she said to ABC News, holding back tears. "I told them if they were cops, they could get the key. They did and then [they] unlocked the bathroom."
Source: images.watoday.com.au
School Psychologist Mary Sherlach, Age 56
Mary Sherlach had worked at Sandy Hook Elementary School since 1994 and was one year away from retirement. She enjoyed her work as a psychologist and helping young kids. When gunshots rang out, her first instinct was to head toward the danger. Like principal Dawn Hochsprung, she died protecting kids by confronting the gunman.
She was married for 31 years to her husband, Bill, and had two adult daughters, ages 25 and 28. Her older daughter was a high school choir teacher. She had a website where she kept parents informed on the school's special education system.
Former school superintendent John Reed praised her as a friendly, smart, and loving person.
“If there ever was a person, by qualifications and personality, to work with children, to be a school psychologist, it was Mary,’’ Reed said.
Image by AP / AP
Music Teacher Maryrose Kristopik, Age 50
Maryrose Kristopik's actions during the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting can't be described as anything but heroic. Thanks to her, 20 students survived Friday's tragic events.
When the first shots rang out, the quick-thinking Kristopik moved her class of 20 into a nearby closet and barricaded the door.
"I did take the children into the closet and talked with them to keep them quiet. I told them that I loved them," Kristopik said in an interview with the Daily Mail. "I said there was a bad person in the school. I didn't want to tell them anything past that." Kristopik held the door tightly closed even as the gunman reportedly was yelling "Let me in! Let me in!"
One mother of an 8-year-old student in Krisopik's class said her daughter was safe due to her heroic actions. "My daughter's teacher is my hero," the mother said to the Newtown Patch. "She locked all the kids in a closet and that saved their lives."
“All of the staff members worked hard at our school to help our children,” Kristopik said to the NY Daily News. “Now it’s time to focus on helping the families who lost their children today.”
Source: i.dailymail.co.uk