On April 6, successfully defended her ¶¶Òőapp dissertation, titled âBut what if you just listened to the experience of an immigrant teacher?: Learning from Immigrant/Transnational Teachers of Color.â
In a way, the outcome was unsurprising, because Rabadi-Raol had already been charming a much broader audience with the same idea on âT±đ±ô±ô-Čč-°ŐČč±ô±đ,â the noon-time read-along she has conducted every Monday and Wednesday on TCâs âCome Together, Right Now... Virtuallyâ website since the COVID crisis began.
Ayesha Rabadi-Raol: Ed.D., Early Childhood Education
Consider her selection for the showâs first airing. Where Are You From? written by Yamile Saied MĂ©ndez and illustrated by Jaime Kim, is about a girl who repeatedly is asked the bookâs title question, but has trouble answering until her abuelo (grandfather) steps in to explain. The book encourages immigrant children and the children of immigrants to understand and develop pride in their heritage, and know that they come from the love of their ancestors.
More than 300 viewers watched that segment.
âI didnât expect so many people to watch and respond,â says Rabadi-Raol. âI heard from people I hadnât heard from in a long time.â
Iâm looking at what we can learn when the experiences of immigration and race come together in early childhood teacher education through poetic counter-stories and poetic testimonial.
âAyesha Rabadi-Raol
Though Rabadi-Raol reads from childrenâs books during each 30-minute episode, her selections address race, class, gender, (dis)ability, multicultural experiences and other themes calculated to engage listeners of all ages around. She reserves time at the end of each session to address teachers, parents and guardians about ways they can help children respond to the text â for example, by discussing the story or by drawing a picture, creating a dance or writing a poem.
Ayesha Rabadi-Raol reads Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain on Wednesday, April 15. Written by Verna Aardema/ illustrated by Beatriz Vidal.
Itâs a formula that, along with Rabadi-Raolâs upbeat, lyrical delivery (and promotion by TC on its social media accounts) is proving to be quite appealing. Children ranging from ages 2 to 14 have been sending responses via email, text message or social media, including photos, videos or voice files of themselves or their own projects. With a supervising adultâs written permission, Rabadi-Raol holds these contributions up to the camera during the next session. And as COVID-19 forces a growing number of people worldwide to seek entertainment at home, the showâs following continues to grow. Rabadi-Raolâs sister in India promotes the readings on Whatsapp; a new Twitter friend logs in from the Bookworm Cafe in Lagos, Nigeria; and there have been viewers from Indonesia, the United Kingdom and Canada. She now has a Facebook page for Tell-a-Tale, where the broadcasts have received more than 1,300 views.
Graduates Gallery 2020
Meet some more of the amazing students who earned degrees from ¶¶Òőapp this year.
Rabadi-Raol, who broadcasts âTell-a-Taleâ from Toronto, where she is riding out the crisis, grew up in a middle-class family in Mumbai, India, where she earned a bachelorâs degree in applied art and taught at a child-development center for 14 years. Assembling scholarships from organizations among her Zoroastrian community in India, she immigrated in 2014 to work on her masterâs degree at ¶¶Òőapp.
Rabadi-Raol subsequently was encouraged by TC Professor Mariana Souto-Manning to apply to the Collegeâs doctoral program in Early Childhood Education. âI said âyes,â but I donât have any money,â she recalls. But with financial assistance that has included a Harry Passow Scholarship and later a Milman Literacy Fellowship â through which she worked with special-needs children in Harlem schools, and as a Doctoral Research Fellow at TCâs Rita Gold Early Childhood Center â she completed her Ed.D. requirements this spring. In her first year as a doctoral student, she earned a âdistinguished passâ on her doctoral certification exams and is very grateful to the TC community for all the support and encouragement she has received.
Doing these broadcasts during this period of isolation gives me a sense of contributing something, a sense of routine,â she says. âBut I also need children in my life, and this has enabled me to connect with them.
âAyesha Rabadi-Raol
Her dissertation and the âTell-a-Taleâ project highlight Rabadi-Raolâs commitment to educating teachers about equity and justice â work she will continue when she assumes her appointment this summer as an assistant professor at Sonoma State University in California.
âIâm looking at what we can learn when the experiences of immigration and race come together in early childhood teacher education through poetic counter-stories and poetic testimonial,â she says of her dissertation.
Rabadi-Raol would like to expand the âTell-a-Taleâ project â possibly beyond the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic crisis â to include TC students reading books in Spanish and other languages. She herself speaks four languages, including English and Hindi, she notes, but none of them, except English, are very widely spoken in the United States.
As much as she enjoys interacting with TC students and other adults, Rabadi-Raol cares most about working with children.
âDoing these broadcasts during this period of isolation gives me a sense of contributing something, a sense of routine,â she says. âBut I also need children in my life, and this has enabled me to connect with them. And that is a source of joy.â