To mark Teacher Appreciation Week, May 6-12, Governor Ralph Northam will teach in a public school in Virginia.

But Governor Northam is not the only state official who will teach for a day. Other state officials and the state’s First Lady will also teachfor a day. This won’t be a challenge for the state Secretary of Education, Atif Qarn. He was a middle school social studies teacher when he was invited by Governor Northam to be Secretary of Education.

Northam is the real deal. Will your Governor mark Teacher Appreciation Week? Would he or she agree to teach for a day? What will Betsy DeVos do? In New York, Governor Cuomo pays more attention to School Choice Week than to Teacher Appreciation Day.

The Roanoke Times suggests that Northam visit rural schools where water drips into the classroom through a leaky roof.

“Come the second week of May, some Virginia students will see a new teacher in their classroom.

“Gov. Ralph Northam has pledged that, as part of Teacher Appreciation Week May 6-12, he’ll substitute as a teacher somewhere in Virginia. So, too, will Virginia First Lady Pam Northam, the governor’s chief of staff, Clark Mercer, and state Secretary of Education Atif Qarn. The governor won’t have far to go if he doesn’t want to. His office in the state capitol is only about eight minutes away from Bellevue Elementary in downtown Richmond — perhaps a little closer since the governor’s motorcade might not have to stop for lights.

“We have a different suggestion, though. The governor ought to go as far away from Richmond as he can go and still be in Virginia. He ought to go to Lee County, in the state’s far southwestern tip, a place that’s closer to seven other state capitals that its own.

“Specifically, the governor ought to go to Flatwoods Elementary in Jonesville. As a doctor, Northam would be well-qualified to teach Lora Roop’s fourth-and-fifth grade science classes.

“We also hope it’s a rainy day, because then the governor can get the full effect of teaching in her classroom — he can watch the rainwater dripping through the ceiling into the trash cans that are strategically set out in the classroom. Perhaps he can even join the students in mopping up the floor.

“Perhaps then the governor can fully appreciate the shocking disparities between some of Virginia’s rural schools and some of its suburban ones. In Loudoun County, fifth-graders are learning computer science. In Lee County, they’re learning how to clean the floors.”