Certain last names seem to dictate career interests.
Such is the case with Victoria Henry Cervantes.
Growing up in New Mexico, Cervantes âadored the written word,â keeping a journal and feasting on fiction and poetry. She spent much of her 20s working in Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Honduras and Peru as a Fulbright Fellow, literacy teacher, and counselor to teen mothers. She learned to confront with equanimity young peopleâs lack of access to literacy education â especially âtrauma-informedâ literacy education that responds to studentsâ experiences with poverty, racism and other challenges.
Victoria Henry Cervantes: M.A., Literacy Specialist
It was the discovery that those same gaps are equally severe in the South Bronx that last year brought Cervantes to ¶¶Òőapp as a masterâs degree student in the Literacy Specialist program.
âIâd tell friends about high school students who were just learning to read and write, and theyâd say, âIn the United States?ââ she recalls. âBut these are kids whose educations often have been interrupted by immigration or years spent in refugee camps. Itâs a misunderstood population with unmet academic and emotional needs that can lead to life-long problems, because kids who canât read or write often grow up to be exploited. And a lot of teachers are wildly unprepared to teach them, as I was.â
Graduates Gallery 2020
Meet some more of the amazing students who earned degrees from ¶¶Òőapp this year.
In TCâs program â home to the legendary , led by Lucy Calkins, Robinson Professor in Childrenâs Literature â Cervantes found the kind of formalized preparation she was looking for.
âTC taught me foundational skills, such as phonics, but Iâve also learned that being literate is not just about reading, itâs about communicating via different media and navigating the world,â she says. âMy awareness of multiple literacies has made me a much better educator because it made me recognize the different assets of each student.â
TC taught me foundational skills, such as phonics, but Iâve also learned that being literate is not just about reading, itâs about communicating via different media and navigating the world.
âVictoria Henry Cervantes
Cervantes calls her student assistantship with the Reading & Writing Project an âincredible opportunityâ to polish competency in curriculum management and the integration of literature into classroom environments. As one of TCâs Arthur Zankel Urban Fellows, she also worked with emergent bilingual learners in high-need schools across the city.
As a result of those two experiences, Cervantes has become interested in staff development and a career âworking and supporting whole groups of teachers.â While sheâll always keep a foot in the classroom, she wants to support teachers working in displacement camps with students in crisis.
âIt is incomprehensible for me to think of a life without reading and writing, but thatâs a reality for so many people,â she says.
Changing that reality is a tall order â but you get the feeling that this Cervantes wonât be tilting at windmills.