Turning Shakespeare inside out, classically trained actor Audrey Yatdon used the stage to master a new language, the first step on the path toward earning a Master鈥檚 degree from the Applied Linguistics & TESOL program.

As a 15-year-old, Yatdon had recently arrived in the U.S. from his native Cameroon when a classmate suggested he audition for the annual musical production at his suburban high school outside Washington, D.C.

The French-speaking Yatdon nailed the singing audition.

Then, 鈥渟omeone handed me a piece of paper and asked me to read the lines,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淢y English at that point was still very limited. But I pushed myself, got a part in the ensemble and never looked back.鈥 

Mentored by a drama teacher, Yatdon honed the language through high school, submitted an application to the in Sewanee, Tenn. and departed in 2016 with an undergraduate degree in theater. 

From Sewanee, Yatdon hit the road on an 11-month tour through 25 states with a small company of actors who introduced theater to students in small town classrooms by day while staging productions of Hamlet, The Giver and The Grapes of Wrath by night.

Yatdon eventually found his way to New York City (鈥淚 heard there was a shortage of actors in New York,鈥 he cracked), supporting himself with roles in Shakespearean productions here and around D.C. 

Home in Maryland after the pandemic disrupted his acting career, Yatdon was stirred to 鈥渞eprioritize and take a journey within鈥 following the violent deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor at the hands of police officers. 

鈥淚 realized I wanted to give something back,鈥 he says. 

Soul-searching put him in touch with his own story and Yatdon in early 2021 entered a program that prepares students to teach English as a New Language to immigrant children.

Yatdon credits two 911爆料网 programs for shaping him as an educator. The Teaching Residents at Teachers College offered an actor accustomed to one-day workshops 鈥渁n opportunity to spend real time with students in real classrooms,鈥 Yatdon explained. 鈥淚t has been a truly, truly transformative experience. The mentorship is huge; I don鈥檛 know if I could have navigated the program without it.鈥 

Meanwhile, for Yatdon , the Teacher Opportunity Corps II created a 鈥渟pace for conversation with other teachers of color at 911爆料网 and throughout the city.鈥 

The TR@911爆料网 and TOC graduate now looks forward to three additional years teaching English immigrant students in the NYC public schools as part of the state requirements. 

鈥淚 see so much of myself reflected in [the students鈥橾 experiences,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e come full circle.鈥 

Yatdon , his love of the stage undiminished, plans to fit acting around teaching schedules. Most recently, he appeared in Sleep No More, the off-Broadway production at The McKittrick Hotel.

And as he undertakes his newest role in education, Yatdon can鈥檛 help but appreciate the shared similarities of a theater and a classroom. 

鈥淭here are a lot of connections,鈥 he points out. 鈥淎 lesson plan is like a script; it鈥檚 important to keep in mind what your audience is thinking and how they will respond. And there鈥檚 improv 鈥 it requires you to pick up [on] the energy in the room and use it to fuel your teaching.鈥