Nov. 29, 2005 issue

Four years ago, I came to Eastern because it is one of the few institutions
training future teachers to teach students with emotional impairments.
During the last 30 years, I've come full circle as a student, teacher,
administrator and teacher of new teachers. I've had a full career and
I'm ready in my life to give back.
I'm delighted with Eastern. I love to teach and the students are fabulous.
They are young adults who really care about learning and want to know
everything there is to know.
I try to make the material come alive in my classes and, if I teach in
ways they can understand, I can capture the students' attention.
I love to teach my classes for emotional impairment majors, since that
is my main focus. In my classroom management course, I try to help the
students become proactive teachers who emphasize the positive in classroom
behavior control.
I've been educated at large universities, but I love the size of Eastern.
It has a great teaching atmosphere. And the Porter building has SMART
classrooms. I can bring in a PowerPoint presentation on a disk and use
a computer so every student can see the visuals on screen. Technology
makes teaching a breeze.
Beyond the teaching, it is wonderful to work in a department that is
friendly and supportive of each other's needs and responsibilities. The
special education department at EMU is one of the best places I have ever
worked.
In the future, I'll keep teaching at EMU until I retire one day.
