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Date: 7/9/2007 UC DOCTORAL STUDENT SEEKS TO DIVERSIFY THE TEACHING PROFESSION
The Holmes Scholars program is a network of students of color who are preparing to become professors of education or future leaders of K-12 schools that share partnerships with colleges or universities. These partnerships are working to reform teaching, learning and professional practice in schools and higher education, in line with the goals of the Holmes Partnership, of which the UC College of Education, Criminal Justice, and Human Services (CECH) is a member. UC President Nancy L. Zimpher served as the first president of the Holmes partnership from 1996-2000. Stallworth’s personal educational pathway took a dramatic turn when he was just a sophomore at Cincinnati Public’s Walnut Hills High School, when he was awarded a scholarship to Choate Rosemary Hall – a preparatory boarding school located in Wallingford, Conn., for high-achieving students. “Out of the 1,000 students who were there, there might have been around 31 African-Americans, and that pretty much included the town as well,” Stallworth recalls. “It was a tremendous culture shock at times, not just in terms of race, but also financially. Everyone was very nice, but they couldn’t understand that for me, it just wasn’t normal to pick up and fly to Los Angeles for the weekend.” But that one opportunity led to another: enrollment at the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in biological basis of behavior and was drum major of the marching band his junior and senior year. He says his undergraduate degree combined studies in psychology, biology and anthropology. The next likely step, he says, would have been medical school to pursue adolescent psychiatry, but on his return to Cincinnati Stallworth says instead, he was drawn to teaching, so he got his preparation at UC and spent eight years as a math teacher at Hughes Center. He adds that he once again found himself a minority among the other teachers – an issue that stretched beyond race. “I noticed we weren’t seeing many math and science teachers wanting to enter the field. Eight years out of college, I was still the second-or-third youngest teacher in our department. “I loved teaching. I loved the classroom – you really had to take a shoe horn and pry me out of my classroom, but the more I thought about it, the more I thought I might make more of a difference trying to prepare future math teachers,” he says.
As he looks ahead to a career in higher education, Stallworth wants to add to the diverse ranks of university professors preparing first-year teachers for their own careers. “There’s so much we can accomplish by having a great, diverse teaching staff serving the population. As we work with these students (taking part in the Southwest Ohio Secondary Teaching Academy), we’re showing them that teaching is not just a matter of waving our arms and throwing out worksheets. They have to understand the material, and that means we, as teachers, must understand the material from every possible angle so that we can reach every student. “We also want to take a lot of the mystery out of college, so during these Saturday sessions, we’ll be explaining online applications and college entrance essays.”
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