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Why
I Teach
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Teaching permeates the Crow blood.
Wendell Crow's grandmother taught in a rural school,
his mother was a teacher, both his brother and
sister were teachers, they all married teachers,
and even his cousin Sheryl - yes, that Sheryl
Crow - was a teacher before she went on to become
better known as a rock star.
"Once I began teaching, I never looked back,"
Crow says. "I never doubted that teaching
was an honorable, fulfilling profession."
As department chair in communications, Crow is
required to teach at least one class. "But
I always think of myself as a teacher first, an
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Crow began teaching at Little Rock Central High
School in 1965, shortly after it was the focus
of the nation's integration crisis. But it was
his training in editing, printing and graphics
on the family's newspaper that landed him his
first lecturing position as a master's student
at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale.
"I always knew that the professional education
I received from our family business would make
all the difference."
That streak of Midwest practicality shines forth
in Crow's lectures, which he calls eclectic; and
is manifest in his greatest job satisfaction,
which he said is "learning that a student
has just landed a first real job based on what
I taught them. I hope that some of my lessons
about how to deal with people professionally,
respectfully and ethically will stay with them
throughout their careers."
Teaching, Crow says, helps keep him in touch with
what students think and need. "I always end
up marveling at how well they manage their lives
in these times to make it through to graduation."
He says he is especially pleased that Fullerton
is a refuge for disadvantaged students who, "in
some cases, may be breaking ground educationally
for their families and who may be laboring under
huge burdens to be here. I sense that they know
they can take sanctuary here and survive."
After being at Cal State Fullerton since 1977,
Crow will retire next summer. "But, I will
miss this place and what I've been able to do
here," he says. "Collegiality isn't
an abstract notion here; people care about this
place and about each other, and I always feel
part of something important."
Dr. Crow manages Graphics Production of ProComm
Magazine.
Read about this at TITAN Magazine.
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