My interest in community service began during my time at Bryn Mawr, when I became very involved with community service organizations. As a senior, I spent every Saturday on the fields of Gilman, mentoring and playing with kids from an East Baltimore community center who lacked safe playgrounds and recreational equipment. I saw teaching as a natural extension of this community involvement. I was also profoundly grateful for the outstanding education I had received at Bryn Mawr, and teaching gave me a way to extend that education to those who were not so fortunate.
Fresh out of college, I was an idealistic do-gooder who truly believed that I had the potential to make a difference in the lives of children. Teach For America provided me with a support system of other like-minded individuals, a way to grow and learn as a young adult, and a perspective about the world. Initially, I saw TFA as a stepping stone to law school, but once I spent times in schools I knew that education was my long-term career.
When I started TFA in 1999 in East Oakland, California, I was absolutely shocked by the educational inequity in our nation’s public schools. I simply could not believe that well over half of our nation’s urban and rural students cannot read at a basic level, or that children growing up in low-income communities are seven times less likely to go to college than their upper class counterparts. I was also completely shocked by the dire circumstances of the conditions of our schools – classrooms crumbling ceilings and without books or even enough desks for each student. Another thing that I found, and that I don’t think many people appreciate about teaching in general, is what a craft it is, and how long it takes to refine that craft. People assume that just because they love kids, that they are capable of being an effective teacher, and that teaching is a 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. job with three months of the year off. In reality, teachers are constantly learning and growing and planning and pursuing their own professional development.
After my time with Teach For America, I was fascinated by the processes of how children learn to read and by the diagnosis and remediation of struggling readers. While working on my doctorate at UVA, I learned to be a producer and consumer of peer-reviewed research, which was an entirely new kind of writing for me. I knew that I wanted to be an educator in a university setting, where I could influence K-12 students by helping prepare highly effective teachers. I also wanted to be at a university that was committed to social justice, that invested in training doctoral students, and that pushed me to research and publish my writing. What has been fun is that my professional life seems to have come full circle since 1999, when I joined Teach For America. A significant number of my current students are Teach For America corps members who are teaching in charter schools in Harlem and the South Bronx.