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Getting Into the Game


Hi everyone. My name is David G. Cassidy. I started in the May 2010 Cohort of the MAT@USC, and I’m pleased to be asked to be the latest student blogger for the program.

David G. Cassidy

As you can probably tell from my picture, I’m a bit older than your typical graduate student. I’ll be 51 next month. I received my undergraduate degree from Bridgewater State College in Massachusetts in 1982, and I’ve spent most of the last 30 years as a part time performing musician and a fulltime B-to-B magazine publisher. I still write and perform music (those of you who are old enough will know why I write and perform under a different name), but I’ve left behind my publishing career to become a high school English teacher.

There are several reasons why I’ve decided to become a teacher at this point in my life. To be sure, one of them is the current state of the publishing industry. The recent recession, coupled with rapidly changing technology, has caused uncertainty and massive layoffs in that industry. The future of publishing is in flux, and now is a good time for the old guard to make way for the new generation who will define and create whatever eventually replaces traditional magazine publishing. I’ve considered being a teacher at several times in my life, but always took the other path. Now, the time is finally right for me to take this path.

The most important reason why I’ve decided to enter the classroom is my experience with my own children’s education. I have one child with special needs and another child who is academically gifted. I am a “hands-on Dad,” so I have an intimate knowledge of the nuts and bolts of our local public school. Much of what I see I do not like, and I have never been shy about expressing my opinions. I also have several relatives who work in urban school districts, and I see the same problems there that I see in my hometown schools. To put it bluntly, it’s time for me to stop carping from the sidelines and to get into the game. If I want to see changes in our schools, it’s time for me to work from the inside to affect those changes. It was fortuitous that I found the MAT@USC, because the program is all about changing the face of American education. Being a “USC Teacher” means something quite specific, and I am eager to get out into the world and be that teacher.

I live in a rural area of Vermont, but as I progress through The Framing Experience course (the first course you take in the MAT program) I am quickly learning the problems and concerns of public education are the same whether your school’s windows look out over parked cars and city streets or John Deere tractors and hay fields. I’ll be writing more about this in future blog posts. I also hope to bring the perspective of a mid-life career changer to the blog. There are quite a few of us older students in the program, and I want to encourage any prospective older students out there to consider the MAT@USC.

My undergraduate experience was long ago, and I went to an excellent but relatively unknown, small state school. To be honest with you, I didn’t think I would be accepted to the MAT@USC (my grades from 30 years ago weren’t as good as I had remembered them being). I’m honored to now be a graduate student at such a prestigious school as USC; I am excited to be a part of the Rossier School of Education and their goal of changing public education, and I am pleased beyond telling that I can now and forever call myself a Trojan.

Fight On!

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  • African Abbott

    I am inspired by the story you tell… which is why the school wants to publish your blog. Here is my story in a nutshell… I am 50, have been teaching in East Africa for 13 yrs..never with any consistency but always satisfying… I am now looking at the possibilities for a Masters Degree in Teaching, esp. English, so that I can allow “African Academics” to have access to such online programs as this. Then I will probably do a Thesis based Master's in Teaching Methods in Africa…. Then… who knows… but I got lots of time to do it…

  • Chris Kelly

    Loved your blog David. I am 46 years-old, and I am a career math teacher in a private school. I am also a stdent in the MAT@USC. I have a 4 year-old daughter with Down Syndrome and a two year-old daughter, who seems to be fairly gifter; she has been reading words and speaking in complete sentences since she was 20 months-old. I look forward to more of your blogs. (I also was a big fan of the Partridge Family)

  • BerrSess

    HI David….I love reading your story. I'm also a parent who has been VERY disappointed with what's happening in our neighborhood school. They promise differentiation and meeting every student versus every student expected to meet each teacher….but it's largely just words. My oldest son, had a HORRIBLE kindergarten year, which still makes me want to cry now at the end of his 1st grade year. Thankfully, we got a wonderful 1st grade teacher this year, but the negative impact of kindergarten for him is still just under the surface of his emotions. I happen to already have a background in education. I got my first bout of grad school at teh Univ or Oregon in School Psych and have worked both as a teacher and school psychologist. When things started to go wrong for my son at school, I thought I'd just go in and tell them that I'm one of them….a friend…. and we'd work it out and all would be well. If anything, it was the complete opposite! They immediately got defensive and went off on their blame the student and blame the parent tirade. I was completely shell shocked! I wasn't even there to tell them how to do things differently, I was only there to tell them what was happening with my child and only expected them to respond as if they cared. I knew I would little to no impact on what and how they do things in terms of the nuts and bolts of how their school operated, but I DID think they'd consider what I had to share about my son….I'm the mom…don't I know my son best? They accused me of lying and MAKING my son anxious! Let's review, I sent my son happy, enthusiastic…running to the bus stop each morning, already reading. By November, he didn't want to go to school, by January, he was in tears at least once a week. As far as I could see, the variable that changed was him being at school. And by the way, I have two other teacher friends in two other states (we are a military family) who have had similar experiences. SO, now here I am looking at the MAT@USC to get more focused on teaching and when my youngest is a bit older, back to “work”. I share this story as a precaution to both parents and teachers now and in the future. Parents, don't expect teachers to be humble enough to respect the fact that you know your child best. And teachers….remember the magnitude of your impact on a student and that student's entire family when you take the position of blame and being uncooperative with their concerns. Even IF you seriously believe the family is to blame and they are creating a problem that doesn't exist, being abrasive and judgemental will not help you or the parents and it certaily doesn't help the student….and why we were all there in the first place? oh yeah, to educate a student for the purpose of propelling them forward into their future in the most positive way possible.

  • David

    Thanks for sharing your story. I have had similar experiences. To be sure, teachers have to deal with some fairly out of control parents and some parent's expectations have little basis in reality, but there are teachers and administrators out there who have forgotten what this is all about. Some of them ought to be looking into a mid-life career change, too.

  • David

    Thanks for sharing your story. I have had similar experiences. To be sure, teachers have to deal with some fairly out of control parents and some parent's expectations have little basis in reality, but there are teachers and administrators out there who have forgotten what this is all about. Some of them ought to be looking into a mid-life career change, too.