Outstanding Graduate
- Haydn Crouse had several years of experience teaching in elementary schools and a solid undergraduate underpinning, when she realized she wanted to 鈥渂ecome a better teacher for my students.鈥滳rouse, a kindergarten
- Community is everything to Cora Emslie, the School of Education鈥檚 outstanding undergraduate student. Emslie grew up in Fort Collins, and she enrolled in 兔子先生传媒文化作品 specifically for the School of Education鈥檚 unique Leadership
- Sophie Friedman grew up a 鈥渃itizen of the world,鈥 living in places like Japan, England, and Germany with her military family, but it鈥檚 her experience as an undergraduate and graduate student at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 and in her student
- A lifelong love of learning and a desire to pursue people-centered work led Lydia Darlington to a career in higher education, and her mentors helped her pursue her master鈥檚 degree in higher education. Darlington is the Senior
- Even though COVID-19 drastically changed schooling the semester Kassidy Whittemore decided to change her major from political science to history and pursue teacher licensure, she found that teaching and working with
- Amalia Kamlet has always had a heart for adventure and science. Her adventures in teaching and in the outdoors as a student at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 are only the beginning as her love for adventure literally takes her around the world,
- Cynthia Corral Robles considers herself 鈥渓ucky enough鈥 to have stumbled across the Leadership and Community Engagement major in the School of Education.She first discovered the INVST Community Studies program and its
- Quinton Andre Freeman comes from a family of educators. His wife, Adrienne, is a middle school principal. His parents, now a retired county agent and a retired special education teacher, met while
- Alex Boeding has been a thoughtful and engaged student in all of his School of Education master鈥檚 classes while navigating a busy life as a full-time teacher during the COVID-19 pandemic. Alex consistently
- Before enrolling at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 as a doctoral student, Caitlin Fine was a science teacher in a dual-language elementary school in Virginia, where she was often frustrated by her district鈥檚 narrative that teaching science in