USC alumni and Teach for America (clockwise from top left): Jeana Marinelli ('05), Cecilia Mo ('02), Lia Evans ('06), Danielle Duran ('04)
photo credit: Phil Channing (Marinelli); Irene Fertik (Mo); Wayne Lewis (Duran and Evans)
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Bridging the Achievement Gap
USC College alumni shine in Teach for America
By Wayne Lewis
June 2006
Even over a sometimes-shaky cellular connection from Boston
to Los Angeles,
the smile in Cecilia Mos voice was crystal clear. Mo (B.A., mathematics and
interdisciplinary studies, 02) was talking about her two years teaching math
at Jefferson High, not far from USC.
Some people wonder whether you can really reach kids. I met a sophomore named
Vanessa when I started. She was one of those kids who wanted help from anyone
that could give it. It really worked out well for me, because I had a lot of
help to give and, at least initially, no one wanted it. Mo developed a close
relationship with the student, a member of Jeffersons
academic decathlon team, which Mo coached. The team was recognized as most
improved in its division, and moved up nine places in a field of 59 the
following year.
Mo came to Jefferson through Teach for America
(TFA). This nonprofit national service organization recruits Americas top
college graduates, regardless of major, to spend two years teaching public
school in urban and rural low-income communities. These recruits are hired and
paid by school districts but receive an additional award of almost $10,000
for loan repayment or future educational costs. In fall 2005 more than 2,100
Teach for America corps members began teaching in schools across the nation.
TFA aims to erase the achievement gap, a troubling disparity in academic
performance. Well-off students statistically outperform their disadvantaged
peers, and white students perform better overall than black and Latino
students. The organization describes the gap as this generations civil rights
issue, and corps members are expected to lead their students to significant
academic gains.
A growing number of USC students are applying for Teach for America. This
year the program fielded its largest-ever crop of Trojan applicants, 149
students, representing a 40 percent increase over the previous year. Students
with majors within USC College accounted for almost three-quarters of this number.
The TFA mission fits in with the Trojan tradition of community service.
Danielle Duran (B.A., psychology, 04) sees a clear connection. She is
finishing her second year teaching seventh grade at Los Angeles Academy Middle School.
During her time at USC as a member of the Helenes, the service organization established a
Junior Helenes mentorship program for local high school students.
With service learning as part of the universitys culture, it becomes a part
of you, she said. Theres a voice in the back of your head, Who are you
helping? What are you doing to make somebody else's life better? I think part
of going to USC is wanting to make the world a better place.
A 2004 study showed that students of corps members score higher on average in
math than those taught by non-TFA teachers. In a 2005 survey, 75 percent of
principals whod worked with TFA participants said they regarded corps members
as more effective than other beginning teachers, and 63 percent rated TFA
teachers above the overall teaching faculty.
Admission to TFA is highly selective, with a typical acceptance rate of 17
percent. Trojan applicants have proven to be a cut above 28 percent of this
years USC applicants were successful.
One College senior selected for TFA this fall is Lia Evans (B.A., sociology and
Spanish, 06). At USC Evans has dedicated time to tutoring local
schoolchildren, helping lead the Joint Educational Projects USC Readers
program at Norwood Elementary. For her, the two-year TFA commitment is a
natural continuation of that work and a real-world application of what shes
learned at the College.
My coursework highlighted the social injustices in Southern California, the U.S.and around
the world, Evans explained. With service learning, actually getting into the
neighborhood, youre making those issues your own. That's why I looked for a
job that aligns with my passion for trying to make an impact in the lives of
people who are often marginalized in our society.
More than 60 percent of the programs participants continue careers in
education in some capacity after TFA. But TFAs vision is broader the idea is
to propagate a generation of doctors and lawyers, community advocates and
entrepreneurs, who are dedicated to educational equity.
Mo sees her TFA experience as putting a face to the issues in her studies and
future career in the policy world. I always felt like the scholars and the
practitioners who did the best work really understood the needs of the community,
she said, so I wanted that experience prior to further academic training. She
is finishing her masters degree at Harvards Kennedy School of Government and
will pursue a doctoral degree at Stanford starting this fall.
She was able to defer her acceptance to graduate school to be a corps member
because Harvard is one of about 70 universities, including USC, that partners
with TFA to offer admission deferrals, scholarships, tuition assistance or fee
waivers to corps members interested in graduate or professional training.
Universities partner with us because they really value what we do, said Pearl
Esau, director of TFAs Southern California recruitment efforts. They know our
corps members come out with tremendous
leadership skills and have gained firsthand insight into the factors impacting
low-income communities. That's something they're looking for.
Esau was a corps member before joining TFAs staff, and describes her two years
in the classroom as life-changing. College alumni in TFA echo this sentiment.
It's been one of the most intense and amazing experiences that I could ever
imagine, said Duran. I love my students, and I'm very proud of all their
accomplishments, just as proud as they are.
While the path of a new teacher is certainly not easy, the fulfillment found in
the teacher-student relationship is another common theme for many College
alumni corps members. Jeana Marinelli (B.A., health and humanity, 05),
finishing her first year teaching science in a Harlem
middle school, said, I still have close connections with my USC professors and
advisers. These meaningful relationships encouraged me to seek to build the
same with my students. At the end of the day, when Ive helped catalyze a
scientific understanding for my students, I know that these are going to be an
incredible two years.
Or, as another example, theres the rest of the story of Mo and her student
Vanessa: After I left for Harvard, we kept in touch. She was going to be the
first member of her family to attend college, and it hadn't crossed her mind
that she could go somewhere like Harvard. She was a really bright girl, so I
just kept pushing her, You don't have to think just of community college. You
can think bigger.
So she decided to apply to Harvard and shes here! Harvard gave her a full
scholarship. It was through her own hard work, but just knowing I helped put
that idea in her head, I was able to write that four-page letter of
recommendation, it's definitely a blessing when you know something good happened,
and you made a difference.
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