Gwen Nkwanyuo first came to Bryn Mawr in August of 1989. For fifteen years, she cared for children at every level of the Little School, from infant on up. She’s been serving as the associate director of the Little School since 2004. Although she is no longer in the classroom every day, Nkwanyuo still makes time to finger paint, drum and enjoy playground time with the youngest Mawrtians.
You’ve been working in early childhood education for more than 30 years, 29 of those years at Bryn Mawr, did you always know this is what you wanted to do?
I had other ideas for my career, such as a diplomat, lawyer, or magistrate...Before coming the the U.S., I graduated from Fourah Bay College in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Upon returning home to Cameroon, I needed to be employed while I sat for the entrance exams into the professional institutions for each of the potential career paths. So, I taught four-year-olds in a nursery school. Once I stepped into that classroom, I knew I had found my calling. I stayed there for four years and finalized plans to get a master's in early childhood education in London. My brother, who lives in Baltimore, said Towson University had the best early childhood department you can find, so I applied.
Why do you like working at Bryn Mawr's Little School?
Bryn Mawr felt like home for me from the first day. I have grown up here, so to speak. It has provided a place for me to become my true self - a mentor, a teacher, a leader, a life-long learner and a part of a great family called the Little School. My five years of secondary school was at an all-girls boarding school called Saker Baptist College in Cameroon. So many aspects of Bryn Mawr remind me of my school days -the choral groups, assemblies, sisterhood and the traditions, as well as high expectations for excellence and the confident women who are products of both institutions.
Is there a saying you try to live your life by?
The glass is always full enough for the situation at hand.
Tomorrow is not promised, make today count.
You work with the youngest Mawrtians at Bryn Mawr, what's your earliest memory from your school days?
My earliest memory is my first day of primary school and how it was determined that we were ready start school. You had to be able to reach your arm over the top of your head and touch your ear on the opposite side. I barely made it!