Student Story

Getting to the heart of teaching

By Andrea Bennett Published on
Stephanie Erickson

It takes a certain kind of person to be a great teacher. An excellent teacher needs skill, training, support and resources, among many other ingredients.

But the most important quality, according to Stephanie Erickson MAT 鈥08, is 鈥渉eart.鈥

That鈥檚 a quality of which Erickson has no shortage.

The talkative 27-year-old was a math major at California State University, Channel Islands, when she realized she wanted to teach in a Los Angeles school. She applied to the 海角论坛 School of Education鈥檚 Master of Arts in Teaching program for its focus on urban education in 2007, just when the school became home to (MfA LA), a five-year fellowship program that supports students with undergraduate degrees in math as they earn their master鈥檚 degrees and teach in high-need schools.

鈥淚 got a phone call from Director Pam Mason that felt a little like Christmas,鈥 Erickson recalled of learning that MfA LA would pay for her degree in addition to providing her with an annual stipend of $20,000 on top of her teaching salary. 鈥淚 kept saying, 鈥楥an you say that again?鈥欌

The MfA LA program aims to increase the number of high-quality mathematics teachers in local high schools by cultivating and financially supporting new teachers with a talent for math who might otherwise choose more lucrative professions. Fellows are having an impact on an estimated 6,500 students who are more likely to advance to a higher math class in the next school year than students of nonfellows.

Erickson said she鈥檚 always loved the process of mathematics and 鈥渟eeing numbers coming out from one step to the other,鈥 but she wasn鈥檛 sure whether to get into business or finance. She became sold on teaching after sitting in on a high school class during her junior year of college and thinking, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something I can do.鈥

Looking back, her first year as a student teacher at Locke High School was a major learning experience.

鈥淎s a teacher, if you go in pretending to be something you鈥檙e not, kids know, and they鈥檒l push and prod because they鈥檙e 15,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 recognized that I needed to be me in the classroom and let them know that. Here鈥檚 my passion; come join me. You don鈥檛 have to love it, but you definitely have to at least try. I learned you have to be 100 percent honest with yourself and your students, and I鈥檝e taught that way ever since.鈥

The support from MfA LA鈥攁 partnership between 海角论坛, Claremont Graduate University and Harvey Mudd College鈥攚as critical to her growth during this period.

鈥淲hen you have a bad day, you get down on yourself, but MfA says, 鈥榳e can see where you are and we鈥檙e going to help you get to a better place,鈥 and there鈥檚 no judgment,鈥 Erickson said. 鈥淭hey look at you and see potential, and when you feel that, you want to reach that potential. When I don鈥檛 hit the mark, I have resources to find out why and make changes. If you don鈥檛 have that community around you, teaching can be very hard.鈥

Erickson, a math teacher at Glendale High School since 2009, also learned to embrace the job as more of an art than a science.

鈥淭eaching in an urban school or a Title I school takes a lot of heart and perseverance, and no matter who you are, you鈥檙e going to fail sometimes. And math-oriented people are not used to failure. We love perfection,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t takes looking beyond your pride or the need for perfection and doing what you need to push kids to think differently and stretch themselves and figuring out the unique temperaments of each classroom. That鈥檚 kind of the art of teaching.鈥

Erickson鈥檚 colleagues call her one of the most 鈥渆nthusiastic鈥 and 鈥渆nergetic鈥 in Glendale High鈥檚 math department, and she admitted that her passion for her subject is usually quite evident.

鈥淢y kids will tell you that I dance across the room because I do, and they鈥檒l tell you that I jump on tables and chairs because I do,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y best days I鈥檓 able to communicate my passion enough to get them to buy in. That鈥檚 a good day, and I strive for that every day.鈥

After thriving in the MfA LA fellowship for the last five years, Erickson signed up for the program鈥檚 master teacher fellowship, which pays for one period during the day in which she can collaborate with other teachers to develop student-centered change at the school.

This fall, Erickson and veteran math teachers and mentors Sarah Morrison and Aurora Alamillo will be members of the only department in the school district to pilot a new integrated math curriculum that is aligned to Common Core State Standards.

鈥淚鈥檝e taught for 15 years, and when you鈥檙e in the classroom that long, you get into a routine, so I鈥檓 looking forward to challenging myself,鈥 said Alamillo, math department chair, whose classroom is just across the hall from Erickson鈥檚.

鈥淎s master teachers, we have a preparation period to work on this new curriculum, so there is no excuse for us not to hit it out of the ballpark, and we鈥檙e going to be held accountable with MfA, which is motivating.鈥

Each of the three MfA master teacher fellows will also take on student teachers, guiding them through lesson planning, student interactions and the general art of teaching.

The recently married Erickson gets choked up when talking about how the program has had an impact on her life.

鈥淭his program fundamentally changed my life, and I had so much support and learned so much,鈥 she said. 鈥淢fA LA looks at the heart of the teacher and pushes you to be better. Because we鈥檙e not all the same, but you have to start with the heart. They take someone with the heart and the desire to be in a classroom and push them to be their best.鈥

For information on how to support MfA LA, contact Lisa Shapiro, director of foundation relations, at (213) 740-5080 or lisashap@usc.edu.

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