These five graduates from Pitt鈥檚 School of Education are now award-winning K-12 educators. In their own unique and heartfelt ways, they are reshaping the classroom to maximize each student鈥檚 potential. Their work is shaping the future, which ultimately benefits us all. (Photography by Tom Altany, except as noted.)
Charles 鈥淐huck鈥 Herring (EDUC 鈥97G, 鈥17G)
Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, South Fayette Township School District
Winner of the 2021 Innovative School Leader Award from the Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Although it鈥檚 not St. Patrick鈥檚 Day, a high school student is wearing her 鈥淜iss Me, I鈥檓 Irish鈥 T-shirt. Another is wrapped in a sari, a traditional garment worn by women in Southeast Asia. And sporting a dashiki 鈥 a reference to Prince T鈥機halla鈥檚 attire in the film 鈥淏lack Panther鈥 鈥 is Chuck Herring, the district鈥檚 diversity and inclusion administrator. He playfully greets students with his arms crossed against his chest in a Wakanda Forever salute.
It鈥檚 all part of Culture Day at South Fayette High School in suburban Pittsburgh. More than 1,000 students are dressed in outfits from their heritage.
For Herring, donning the African-centered look represents the kind of innovation he brings to the school campus. The Pitt alumnus began teaching in the mid-1990s at Turner Elementary School in Wilkinsburg, his hometown. When he started, the district faced low rates of student achievement. So, to identify with his students, he often dressed in clothes by the hip-hop apparel company FUBU. And get their attention, he developed Grammar Man, a hip-hop hero who taught language and other lessons.
The fun and influence of Grammar Man helped stem the low-achievement tide and propelled Herring into a multifaceted education career. Over the years, he鈥檚 worked as a kindergarten teacher, educator to gifted students, public speaker and education administrator鈥攁lways nurturing students to maximize their potential by making them feel that they belong, whether they鈥檙e Irish, Hindu, African American or from any other culture.
His days are now filled with keeping his office door open, sitting with students during lunch, and building student groups like Social Handprints Overcoming Unjust Treatment (SHOUT), which, as the kids know, is very much in the spirit of the Wakandan people.
Michelle Switala (EDUC 鈥13G)
Math and physics teacher, Pine-Richland School District
Named 2010 Pennsylvania Department of Education Teacher of the Year
Michelle Switala didn鈥檛 dream about becoming a teacher when she was growing up in Pittsburgh. Instead, when she enrolled at Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, she was drawn to physics. Lessons in space, time and energy came easy to her; she imagined having a career working with 鈥渃ool stuff like lasers.鈥
Then came a semester where the physics major mentored physics lab students as part of a work-study program. To her surprise, she enjoyed teaching. It felt rewarding to help others understand a subject she loved. After graduating, she pursued a master鈥檚 degree in physics at the University of Arizona, but she also further explored her newfound interest and earned a teaching certificate as well.
In 1995, with diplomas in hand, she returned to her hometown to begin a new job. Nearly three decades later, she is still at Pine-Richland High School, where she teaches math and physics to a range of students, from advanced placement to those with special needs.
Reaching them all was nurtured by skills she further developed through her PhD in mathematics education studies at Pitt, which she began in 2006.
She believes each child is a puzzle, one she tries to help solve with techniques like having her students collaborate on equations and using interactive online lessons, all while fostering relationship building.
Now chair of Pine-Richland鈥檚 math department, Switala believes teachers have a role beyond their own classrooms. That鈥檚 why she helps provide supplies to schools that lack resources and volunteers with TRY Special Needs, an organization offering social and recreational activities for adults with disabilities. Many of her current and former students volunteer by her side.
鈥淚 think teachers have a responsibility to teach all kinds of students,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat's the work that we do. I just see all kids as worthy.鈥
Brianna Ross (EDUC 鈥14, 鈥15G)
Assistant principal and former teacher of social studies and history at Deer Park Middle Magnet School
Named 2022 Maryland State Department of Education Teacher of the Year
Growing up outside of Philadelphia, Brianna Ross was often one of only a few Black students in her classrooms. Throughout school, she just had three African American teachers. One of them, Ms. Caruthers, stood regal and proud to Ross, schooling her and her kindergarten classmates on the preamble to the U.S. Constitution and teaching them 鈥淟ift Every Voice and Sing,鈥 known to many as the Black 91porn视频al anthem.
Ms. Caruthers filled the young girl with self-respect and an enduring social consciousness. Ross hoped one day to be like her. Today, in many ways, she is.
After studying education at Pitt, Ross is now an assistant principal in an urban community near Baltimore and has a high-impact career. Her sixth and eighth grade students are culturally diverse, and Ross fills her office鈥攁s she did her classroom 鈥 with posters of an array of cultural icons to help all feel a sense of belonging.
She says teaching history is about self-awareness and social justice. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about teaching humanity and learning from history how to make good decisions.鈥
Her effect is apparent every morning at 7:50 as she stands at the school door, welcoming students. Many of them run to her for a hug or a fist bump. Ross also makes it a point to know the students鈥 families and caregivers. At the beginning of every school year, she tells them that for seven hours a day, their children belong to her, a responsibility she never takes for granted.
鈥淭o do education well is revolutionary,鈥 she says. 鈥淟earning is such a beautiful process. It鈥檚 incredible to watch teachers teach and inspire kids. And I like watching kids have these lightbulb moments. It's just beautiful.鈥
Tim Wagner (EDUC 鈥09G, 鈥13G)
Principal, Upper St. Clair High School
Named 2023 PA Principal of the Year by the Pennsylvania Principals Association
An intimidated seventh grader enters Ms. Szymanski鈥檚 classroom, worried about pre-algebra and the teacher鈥檚 demanding reputation. But, as weeks pass and Tim Wagner keeps up with the math, he settles in and starts soaking up the classroom鈥檚 atmosphere. He notices that, along with posters on prime numbers and the Pythagorean theorem, there are photographs of Ms. Szymanski on vacations around the world, including at Egyptian pyramids and Italy鈥檚 Leaning Tower of Pisa.
Intrigued, Wagner wants to know more, and Ms. Szymanski welcomes the conversation. Those chats were eye opening to Wagner, who had shown interest in being an educator since he was a young child. Years later, the Pitt alumnus says his career as an elementary school educator and now high school principal is still impacted by those chats. More than just pre-algebra, Ms. Szymanski taught him that educating the whole student can happen when the student learns from the whole teacher.
That鈥檚 one of the reasons Wagner has created and supported curriculum, programming and teaching materials that facilitate students and teachers having earnest, open relationships. He also leads by example, often sitting in the library, where students gather, so he鈥檚 available to talk. And when he walks the halls, he reminds students whose eyes are glued to their phones to look up and greet their classmates and teachers with a smile and hello. He also stays after final bell for what he calls his 鈥渟econd shift鈥 鈥 attending games, monitoring clubs and managing other activities.
His influential leadership all boils down to an understanding first learned back in seventh grade and honed at Pitt: that students thrive during and after school when they feel safe, included, heard and understood.
Lauren Wheeler (EDUC 鈥22G)
Health and physical education teacher with the Department of Defense Education Activities, Netzaberg Middle School in Germany
Former ninth through 12th grade physical education teacher, Thomas Edison High School in Minneapolis
Named a 2021 finalist for Minnesota Teacher of the Year by Education Minnesota
Season after season, little Lauren Wheeler hardly rests. The North Minneapolis native spends her childhood competing in dance, soccer, basketball and track. She even becomes an all-state sprinter.
She loves athletics, but her true passion is physical fitness, which is strengthened when she became the physical education teacher鈥檚 assistant during her senior year of high school.
In that role, she鈥檚 shocked to find many classmates don鈥檛 share her commitment to fitness. It shifts her career aspirations. She no longer wants to be a physical therapist. Teaching is her new mission, along with promoting healthy behavior and attitudes.听
Following through on those missions, Wheeler earned a degree in health and physical education at St. Cloud State University, a master鈥檚 in public health at West Virginia University; and a doctorate in education with a focus on health and physical activity at Pitt鈥檚 School of Education.
That training helped her land a job as a health and physical education teacher for ninth through 12th graders in Minneapolis Public Schools. While there, she made it clear to her students that they鈥檙e not 鈥渏ust鈥 in gym class 鈥 they鈥檙e learning healthy attitudes toward nutrition, social engagement and academics. It鈥檚 especially important knowledge, she says, for students in underserved communities with higher rates of obesity and diabetes.
To engage her students, she uses 鈥渆dutainment鈥 鈥 videos, special guests, noted athletes and fun exercises. And, to make sure learning is taking place, her students 鈥 to their astonishment 鈥 must pass tests.
When the pandemic hit, Wheeler, undeterred, developed a virtual workout for her students, hosted by the Minnesota National Guard. CBS News even profiled her 鈥渂ootcamp.鈥
In 2023, she left Minnesota to teach middle school physical education abroad at a U.S. military base in Grafenw枚hr, Germany. Yet no matter where she teaches, she says her outlook on health is more than just demanding pushups; it鈥檚 about instilling in her students what she hopes will be a lifelong passion for healthy behavior.