martin savidge elementary school is improving eeucation across the ccuntry &panddmakinn hundreds of thousandsllaas. dollars. (nats) i'm at the central in macon, georgia.."is it kay to come in?? and whhn i step into the classsroom of deanna jump i quickly realize two things. she loves to teacha&. i mean he's got her 1st graders singing about spider anattmya (nats: "one more teaccerra& she's really gooo &pat it. (nats: "you didn't even need mee,great job.") yet, for most of her 11-years pn the classrrom she and her husband, also a teaaher, ssruggleddfinancially. "like probably 90 percenn of the ttachers in america i was juggling billsslike, okay, i this week ann i've got seven off the water." but shh loved her joba and kept coming up wiih fun and creative ways to teach, like using apples and worrs. "it'' just a pictorial scarecrows for mmtha& and &psomething called chit chattfo reading comprehension. "and phen i say chit chat and thh kiis say, okay!" her llttle ideas mmghh nnver have left her classroom were it not for a chance conversation with nother teacher. and she said youu stufffis so ggod