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Donald Francis Tronetti

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Donald Francis Tronetti

Birth
Port Allegany, McKean County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
27 Jun 2000 (aged 39)
Driftwood, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Emporium, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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American Educator, Musician and Substance Dependence Treatment Curriculum Specialist. Donald F Tronetti graduated from Cathedral Prepatory School in Erie Pennsylvania in 1978. Majoring in Music Education, he attended Edinboro Univeristy and completed his BA in 1983. Teaching positions included Blessed Sacrament School in Erie, East Pennsboro School in Cumberland County, Pa, and St Francis School in Norristown, Pa and St Boniface School near Erie Pa. Completing a Master's Degree in Curriculum, he taught part-time at Gannon University and then worked as a Drug and Alcohol Addiction Curriculum Specialist at Maple Manor in Port Allegany, Pa, remarking at the time "my office is in my old kindergarten classroom." His hobby of collecting and restoring rare Case kives led to the large and definitive collection of trapper knives currently on display at the Case-Zippo museum. Tronetti was the author of a major work on management of students with Attention Deficit Disorder. His wife, Debra Warner Tronetti, survived him by only a few years.
American Educator, Musician and Substance Dependence Treatment Curriculum Specialist. Donald F Tronetti graduated from Cathedral Prepatory School in Erie Pennsylvania in 1978. Majoring in Music Education, he attended Edinboro Univeristy and completed his BA in 1983. Teaching positions included Blessed Sacrament School in Erie, East Pennsboro School in Cumberland County, Pa, and St Francis School in Norristown, Pa and St Boniface School near Erie Pa. Completing a Master's Degree in Curriculum, he taught part-time at Gannon University and then worked as a Drug and Alcohol Addiction Curriculum Specialist at Maple Manor in Port Allegany, Pa, remarking at the time "my office is in my old kindergarten classroom." His hobby of collecting and restoring rare Case kives led to the large and definitive collection of trapper knives currently on display at the Case-Zippo museum. Tronetti was the author of a major work on management of students with Attention Deficit Disorder. His wife, Debra Warner Tronetti, survived him by only a few years.


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