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What makes Loyola Academy a special place?
Without a doubt, the people make Loyola the place that it is. We have incredible, dedicated teachers and staff who believe in students and care about them beyond academics. Loyola is a community in every sense of the word. People care about each other here, and the relationships formed with colleagues, students, and parents continue to mean a great deal to me.
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What book changed your life?
Learning How to Learn by Barbara Oakley changed my teaching and emphasis on learning skills as it is important and impactful for students to know how their brains work to make learning more efficient and lasting.
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If not currently in your role, what do you think you'd be doing instead?
Teaching is the only career I ever considered, and I can’t imagine having spent the majority of my career anywhere but Loyola.
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What advice do you have for students today?
Be curious about the world. Meet as many people as you can while at Loyola. Understand that your interests and passions will change, so be open to the many opportunities which Loyola provides. Be aware that change may be uncomfortable, but that doesn’t mean it won’t lead to wonderful experiences. Talk to your teachers about your struggles as they care about you as people and not just students. Make time for reading, for reflection, for time spent outdoors. Give yourself a daily break from technology, and don’t have phones in your room when you sleep. Be kind to yourself and to all you meet. Remember to put God first and everything else will fall into place.
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What Loyola moment will you never forget??
That is not possible for me to answer as I have 35 years of memories. From working with and learning from my mentor, Carol Hopkins (the founder of the OSH program), to continuing to learn and grow under Sara Cagle’s vision, leadership, and goals for the program today. I have memories of SCUBA trips with students to Mexico and throughout the Caribbean. Those trips are full of fun, laughter, and awesome underwater experiences and continue through the Alumni Dive Club.
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I cherish memories of coaching tennis and the young ladies, and their parents, with whom I was able to know and form friendships. Tennis memories are more about singing in the vans, laughing, and spending time together rather than what happened on the court, although the teams experienced a great deal of success. I was proud to be honored with the Frank Amato Excellence in Coaching Award in 2007. More than anything, I will always treasure the memories of the OSH students I have had the privilege of teaching, the relationships which have formed, and the incredible group of teachers with whom I was privileged to work. The OSH program, its students, and teachers are special people, and I will remember so many of them forever.
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What is one thing people might not know about you?
My family moved to Roanoke, VA, after my first semester junior year at Regina. I graduated from Villanova and taught behaviorally disturbed (a terrible name, but that is what they were called then) students for two years at William Fleming High School in Roanoke, where I also served as the head girls’ varsity volleyball and basketball coach. I moved back to Chicago and taught Boys Hope students at St. Athanasius for four years before starting in the O’Shaughnessy Program in 1988.
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Aside from the curriculum, what do you hope students learn from being in your class?
I want my students to understand that there is nothing they can’t accomplish if they are willing to put in the time and work necessary. Achievements only follow work and dedication. Confidence follows success, which comes from time and work, and the more confident students are, the more they will risk and take on challenges. Students are in control of their learning and they should never let someone else tell them they can’t achieve something they are willing to pursue. I have seen many former students do incredibly well in college and graduate school, and have successful careers in which they have passion, find joy, and make a difference in this world.
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What do you like to do in your spare time?
Exercise, bike ride, play tennis, walk on the beach, meet with friends, spend time with family, read, SCUBA, and travel as often as possible.
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Over the course of your time at Loyola, what has changed?
There have been many changes, from going coed in 1994 and with that the addition of the new building and the West athletic campus and, more recently, the pool and Performing Arts Center.
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When I started there was one computer lab available to students and now everyone has an iPad. There have been various daily schedules and multiple dress codes. For many years the OSH Center was where the current STEAM classroom is located, and the library had two floors; now the OSH center is under the library. A positive change for the OSH program and our students was the addition of literacy specialists to help students make greater gains in their reading, writing and critical thinking skills. Our students are always reading a book they choose for fun, a practice that will helpfully expand throughout the entire school as the benefits are so important!
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Over the course of your time at Loyola, what has stayed the same?
The mission has stayed the same, and the many ways in which teachers and staff put the students well-being first.