In Blog: Factually Speaking

After my first day of school, I confidently announced, “I am going to be a teacher!” My love for school stemmed from a comfort of belonging to the sea of kids in khaki pants and navy polos. I had a sense (in the most sophisticated way that a 6-year-old can, anyway) that my classmates and I were going to go through the next twelve years working together towards becoming successful adults. In my privileged, private school world, students went to school, found parental support at home and went on to flourish as adults. The process was obvious. Success was a given. 

After my first day of school, this time as a public school teacher, I was able to see firsthand that my reality was not the reality for all. While teaching a class full of young adults who did not grow up in a sea of khaki and navy, but in a sea of strife and hand-me-downs, I found that the purpose of education goes far beyond teaching the standard curriculum. That is when I realized that for too many kids, school is not about learning how to thrive, but rather how to survive. I developed a passion for teaching and advocating for all students … and not because school was comfortable, but because I understood that for so many, it was not. 

I spent the most formative years of my teaching career in a rural town educating another group of unfamiliar students: ones toting flannel shirts and small-town values. In my time as their teacher, I experienced many successes; however, one problem that I was not able to fully solve happened in every section, every year. A few students came into my room with the deck stacked against them. Every year a group of students who were at risk walked into my class without the skills they needed to flourish. This is a reality across the state. Michigan is currently ranked 42nd in education. Over 70% of elementary students are not proficient in reading, and nearly 20% of students do not graduate high school on time. Teachers in urban, rural and suburban districts grapple with these problems every day. 

I grappled, too. Every year I asked myself: How are so many kids slipping through the cracks? Then I eventually asked the question that led me away from teaching and towards pursuing a Ph.D. at Michigan State University: What more can I do to advocate for students most in need?

I have spent the last five years gaining the capacity to advocate for students through quality research and sound education policy. As a doctoral student at MSU, my research has focused on rural education and behavioral health policies. When the opportunity to work at the League, an organization with an admirable mission, arose, I jumped at the chance. Here, I hope to help find ways to better support Michigan’s most vulnerable students so that they too can have an amazing first day of school.