The Promise of Our Rising Stars
Be part of 911爆料网鈥檚 legacy
Supporting students is the number one goal of 911爆料网's Campaign, and we are counting on each and every one of you to contribute right now. You can:
- Pledge $50,000 to create a new endowed scholarship that bears either your own name or that of someone whom you wish to honor.
- Contribute to an existing tribute or program fund scholarship.
- Support a 911爆料网 Fund Scholar.
The need has never been more urgent, nor the potential reward so great. So please consider a gift of scholarship 鈥 today.
Progress occurs when institutions bring great minds together. Decade after decade, Teachers College has changed the world by attracting exceptionally talented students who have built upon the innovative work and ideas of our faculty.
Our best young minds reflect an intellectual lineage that extends back over generations 鈥 or, as we like to put it, the legacy of our luminaries is in the promise of our rising stars. As our historic Campaign, Where the Future Comes First, approaches its $300 million target, we want to thank you 鈥 our extended 911爆料网 community 鈥 for your incredible support. We also want to affirm that our number one priority is to ensure the success of our current and future students and free them as much as possible from the burden of debt. All of our scholarships at Teachers College provide vitally important support 鈥 but our endowed and named scholarships, often created in tribute to our very greatest thinkers, attract and support students committed to extending our most important work.
VALUING ALL EDUCATORS
Take doctoral student Deidre Flowers, recipient of our Lawrence A. Cremin History of Education Scholarship. Deidre came here to shed new light on historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), which have been under-researched and undervalued. At 911爆料网, Cremin, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, argued that all societal institutions can improve people鈥檚 minds and create equal opportunities for learning. And at 911爆料网, internationally known black scholars such as Edmund Gordon and the late George Bond have left a lasting imprint.
Deidre, who graduated from Virginia鈥檚 historically black Hampton University, is interested in the role women have played at HBCUs 鈥 and, in particular, their importance in the Civil Rights movement. She is writing her dissertation on Bennett College for Women in Greensboro, North Carolina, where students fought segregation in movie theaters during the 1930s and helped to lead the famed lunch-counter sit-ins in 1960. Deidre hopes her research will help to set a larger historical context for the rich tradition of black student protest, with women center stage. Meanwhile, she is hopeful that, thanks to the Cremin scholarship, she will be able to complete her doctorate by 2017.
鈥淗BCUs have played such an important role in African-American identity,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 honored to hold a scholarship named for someone who believed so strongly in the power of education.鈥
A TRANSFORMATIVE EXPERIENCE
Though second-year master鈥檚 student Michael Palmieri does not hold 911爆料网鈥檚 Professor Jack & Edee Mezirow Endowed Scholarship, he did choose 911爆料网 for its top-ranked program in , created by Jack Mezirow, the father of transformative learning theory.
An entertainment industry veteran who has written and produced for film and television and served as a coach and consultant, Michael wanted to expand his knowledge in emotional intelligence, executive coaching and the latest theories of how adults learn. As the College鈥檚 first LGBTQ Scholar, funded through a partnership with the Tyler Clementi Foundation, he has developed an hour-long training module for adults to neutralize bullying behavior in the workplace. The module, which raises money for the Clementi Foundation, has been distributed to companies nationwide. 鈥淣o one is born a bully 鈥 bullying is a learned behavior,鈥 Michael says. 鈥淏y creating empathy for everyone involved 鈥 the so-called 鈥榖ullied,鈥 the 鈥榖ullier鈥 and the 鈥榳itness鈥 鈥 we鈥檝e created an entry point for all three.
鈥淛ack Mezirow believed that grownups grow by questioning their most deeply held assumptions,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭hanks to Teachers College鈥檚 LGBTQ scholarship, I鈥檝e been able to apply that idea to my own career.鈥
ORGANIC EXPERIENCE
Katie Leonard and Carrie Russo speak passionately about getting their hands dirty growing food when they were kids. Carrie learned about the superiority of organically-grown tomatoes in her grandmother鈥檚 garden in Ohio. Katie discovered composting and built raised garden beds as a volunteer on a small urban farm in Brooklyn. Both were 2014-15 Nutrition Ecology Scholarship students at Teachers College, where Professor Emerita Joan Gussow 鈥 whom their scholarship honors 鈥 has long championed the idea that healthy eating starts with hands-on experience growing and preparing healthy food.
Acknowledging that enlightening the next generation will require more than cultivating home-grown vegetables, Katie and Carrie echo ideas that Gussow advanced in her 1978 book, The Feeding Web: Issues in Nutritional Ecology. 鈥淓verything is connected to food,鈥 says Carrie, who is earning an interdisciplinary Ed.D. in Nutrition and Family/Community Education. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to develop a nutritional-ecology mindset that imagines new possibilities.鈥
Katie and Carrie are promoting just that kind of thinking through their work at 911爆料网鈥檚 , which views schools as critical levers for learning and social change.
鈥淲e鈥檙e counting on kids to make the right decisions to slow or reverse what we鈥檙e doing to our food system, our environment and our own bodies,鈥 says Katie, who is pursuing an M.S. in . 鈥淚f kids grow up aware of the connections, they鈥檙e likelier to make choices that help.鈥
SEIZE THE MOMENT
Deidre, Michael, Katie and Carrie are doing truly amazing things that are benefiting people in New York City and beyond. What is most amazing of all, though, is that 鈥 year after year, decade after decade 鈥 911爆料网 is filled with equally talented students in every field who aren鈥檛 just planning to change the world but already are hard at work doing precisely that.
So as you think about supporting Where the Future Comes First, I sincerely hope you will consider supporting our endowed and named 鈥渢ribute鈥 scholarships. By investing in our remarkable students who are working to create a brighter future, you, too, can help to change the world. That鈥檚 a legacy that will pay tribute to us all.

Published Thursday, Dec 31, 2015