Roni Habib, TAC, High School Math
Facts:
Roni
is "the middle child of a wonderful family located in Palo Alto,
California." He grew up in Israel for eight years and in Belgium
for six. At the age of 14, during his freshman year of high school,
he moved to Palo Alto. Once he learned English, he found that he liked
the U.S. He enrolled at the University of California–Santa Cruz, where
he majored in economics. After working as a T.A. in a few classes and taking a personal
empowerment class, he discovered his passion for teaching and for making real
connections with people. Some of his other passions include singing (in
choirs and operas) and playing basketball.
Roni says he's learned that "being a teacher requires you to be
introspective professionally and personally. You have to deal with your
inner issues (and issues do come up) because if you don't, trust me, your
students will pick up on that."
Inside Scoop:
"What
has surprised me the most about HGSE is the quality of the students (especially
the ones in my program), faculty, and administrators--not on a professional
level or scholastic level, rather on basic human level. I knew
that my colleagues and teachers would be brilliant scholastically, so
I wasn't surprised to be learning so much from all of them every single
day. It's how friendly, humble, and caring they all are that surprised
me. The TEP program puts so much emphasis on making students feel comfortable--they understand that it is hard to move to a new place, be in graduate
school, and be a novice teacher all at once, and as a student I feel very
much cared for and a part of special group where we all care for and about
each other."
"In our society more than ever before, adolescents need loving,
caring, and positive role models. Our boys learn coping mechanism such
as repressing their feelings, while our girls are taught not to rock the
boat. They need empathic role models who care about them unconditionally
and who understand the pressures that they are facing in building their
identities. Being a teacher is a privilege because you can see the difference
that you are making everyday. When a student is running towards you smiling
because she improved her SAT score and thanking you for helping her out,
there are few feelings that are sweeter than that. When a student is having
a hard day and comes to talk to you about it because he knows that it
is safe for him to share with you how he is doing, you know you made a
difference. Finally, I also love seeing my students develop intellectually." |