四虎影院

Student Teachers Make the Grade

A tight-knit cohort of five 四虎影院 student teachers shared inspirational stories about their experiences in the classroom at an emotional Celebration of Teaching April 28 on campus. Linda Ngo, Sam Cordes, Hannah Boelter, Simon Janzen and Shae Caragher, who all earned California Preliminary Credentials, spoke at the event, held for the first time since 2019.

Linda Ngo
Linda Ngo

鈥淭eaching is joyful and takes heart, compassion, patience, curiosity, skills, pedagogy as well as oodles of energy and courage,鈥 says Michelle Hughes, 四虎影院 professor of education. 鈥淎nd teaching is intellectually demanding work, it鈥檚 emotional work and it鈥檚 inspiring work.鈥

Student teaching during a pandemic meant wearing masks for most of the school year at 四虎影院 and in their schools. They got tested weekly for COVID, were vaccinated and boosted and overcame student absences. Some had to teach on Zoom while in quarantine.

Sam Cordes
Sam Cordes

鈥淭hey鈥檙e passionate, ready and eager to teach and courageously answered the call and challenge to teach and invest in K-12 students through the pandemic,鈥 Hughes says. 鈥淭hese student teachers and their cooperating teachers kept sane.鈥

Ngo, who spoke about 鈥淧ushing Through Pressure,鈥 said she felt many times that she was not enough. 鈥淭hroughout this year, every time I felt the pressure of life or teaching, feeling like I would just crumble, those around me reminded me that I was doing it, trying my best, and making a difference. Seeing the complete joy and pride on students鈥 faces when their iPad updates with their score reminds me how lucky I am to be teaching.鈥

Cordes, a future U.S. history high school teacher, said he admired the way the teachers he observed navigated the unknown with grace and style. In his talk, 鈥淓ducation as a Bridge,鈥 he explained how he tried to make history less intimidating and more inspiring and fun. 鈥淔or many students in my U.S. history course, the unknown is everywhere,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t may take the form of having a question about the Gilded Age or perhaps understanding economic concepts of inflation. It has been a blessing to make U.S. history accessible to students and move them from the unknown toward knowledge.鈥

Hannah Boelter
Hannah Boelter

Boelter, a kindergarten teacher, sensed her students鈥 frustration that their art projects failed to look exactly like the one on the board. 鈥淭heir George Washington face and hat kind of looked like an Eiffel Tower sitting on top of a garden gnome,鈥 she said. 鈥淎t that point, I paused the lesson and told my students my own version of an art tip I learned from Bob Ross. I told them it鈥檚 OK to make happy mistakes and that every line gone askew can be added to and become a beautiful and unique version of the original.鈥

Simon Janzen
Simon Janzen

When Janzen took over two college-prep physics classes, he worked to make them fun, exciting and real. 鈥淚 wanted students to look at something happening and know why it worked, or at least ask why it worked,鈥 he said. In his talk, 鈥淭he Power of the Demo,鈥 he explained the importance of engaging demonstrations, including experiments with water balloons and a game of tug-of-war. 鈥淪tudents are naturally curious and want to know what happens next, but it鈥檚 hard when scary math surrounds the cool physics,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I worked so hard to push students to stretch their curiosity and their creativity in my classroom.鈥

Shae Caragher
Shae Caragher

Caragher is a big fan of crying. In her talk, 鈥淐reating Space for Laughing when Everyone is Crying,鈥 she said that during her time as an English student teacher, every one of her students had something to cry and laugh about. 鈥淭eaching is both life-giving and so draining,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting and encouraging, hopeful and terrifying and discouraging, and I sometimes feel hopeless,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 simultaneously the most wonderful thing I鈥檝e ever done and also the hardest and craziest thing I鈥檝e ever done. Teaching is both ends of the spectrum and everything in between.鈥

Cooperating teachers included Amy Donnell of Hope Elementary (Boelter), Rachel Gonzales-Harris of Cleveland Elementary (Ngo), Kelly Savio and Hannah Krieshok of Dos Pueblos High School (Caragher), Sarah Bardin of Dos Pueblos (Cordes) and Kerry Miller of Dos Pueblos (Janzen).