Olga Hechavarria
Ed.M. TEP (TAC) '04
High School Mathematics
Facts:
Olga
grew up in San Diego, one of five kids, in a poor, predominantly Mexican
neighborhood. She "flew the coop" to Boston University, then
transferred to Cornell, which she loved. After repeatedly changing her
major (bio to economics, to business, to math), she settled on math as
a result of taking "this neat little class for people like me who
couldn't decide if they wanted to teach or not. Loved it, and the rest
is history." She decided to become a teacher because "being
a teacher is very powerful, and it's a job where you're never doing the
same thing over and over again. You are in control and can change how
you want to teach and be creative as you see fit."
"There is a need for teachers who actually want to teach and are
willing to hold all their students to the high expectations they will
have to meet to be prepared to enter the world. It is a huge responsibility
that only people that believe in the purpose and need for good education
should undertake."
Inside Scoop:
"TEP really is a little community. When I got the phone
call telling me that I had been accepted, that was one thing. When I called
back with questions they recognized who I was the second I mentioned my
first name, which made it feel very personal. They have lived up to the
expectation of this being a program where we all really know each other
and care about one another."
"The summer co-teaching was a lot of fun. The kids were a challenge
but they DO want to learn. Take the time to build a safe learning community
that they buy into because it really pays off. You can't teach someone
or expect them to respect you if they don't know you and you know nothing
about them."
Stories are accurate at the time they are published and will not be updated to account for changes such as new jobs.
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