Now & Then

When Christie Rolph opened her classroom to a student teacher last fall, she was in for a surprise: the student teacher she was paired with was one of her former eighth-grade students.
Rolph was in her first year teaching U.S. history when her path first crossed with Kamilah Bugarin Rodriguez. Now, 12 years later, Bugarin Rodriguez is back in Rolph鈥檚 classroom, teaching side-by-side as her student teacher at Longmont High School.听
鈥淲hen Christie emailed me, I felt like it was a sign,鈥 said Bugarin Rodriguez. 鈥淎lso, she teaches all the classes I would love to teach, with a mix of AP human geo, world studies and psychology. This is the perfect spot for me to try everything.鈥澨
Bugarin Rodriguez loved studying psychology as an undergraduate, but it took a teacher-friend鈥檚 introduction to substitute teaching to realize she could share her passion through teaching. In CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 one-year Master鈥檚 Plus Teacher Licensure program, she鈥檚 working toward a master鈥檚 degree while gaining teaching experience.听
Rolph is grateful to be teaching with a talented, up-and-coming teacher and reconnecting with a former student.听
鈥淚 am excited for her,鈥 Rolph said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have a straight path to teaching either, so it is lovely to see her giving back to the community in this way.鈥
Discover more from Voices, vol. 8:
The Butterfly Effect
How one education alumna is spreading her wings and sharing her passion for nature one butterfly at a time
Loraine Glidewell's passion for rural education runs deeper than the Arkansas River
Before stepping into the world of academia, Loraine Glidewell was waist-deep in the waters of the San Luis Valley, sometimes literally
Following in Their Footsteps
An education historian's return to roots
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