Impacting The Community
COE Alumni & Students share their stories.
Amel Kaid
Liberal Studies major
Born and raised in Algeria, Amel Kaid always wanted to be a teacher. She deferred her dream as a young woman, getting married and starting a family. It was when the family immigrated to the United States that Kaid found a chance to pursue her chosen path.
She earned an associate’s degree in child development and one in Spanish, both from El Camino College, before enrolling at CSUDH. After graduating, Kaid plans to teach young elementary school students and sees herself involved in bilingual education in some way going forward. In addition to Spanish and English, she also speaks Arabic and French.
Effective communication in any language is a key part of education, which Kaid knows from her time with preschool kids—she’s been teaching at that level since 2014, even while attending CSUDH. They begin each day with Circle Time, a daily check-in for both talking and listening. “We talk about their feelings, what they did over the weekend,” she says. “That has become a time when we sit together and talk. I hear them, they hear me. It brings us together.”
Bridgette Donald-Blue (MA, ’99)
Math Intervention Teacher
Coliseum Street Elementary, Los Angeles
How many people were named California Teacher of the Year in 2023? Five. How many of those never planned to become a teacher, and had law school in their sights after wrapping their English degree from Howard University?
That would be one: Bridgette Donald-Blue, who decided to postpone law school and join Teach for America, only to discover that she loved her role as a Compton elementary school teacher. She later moved to the Los Angeles Unified School District and currently works as a K-3 math intervention teacher at Coliseum Street Elementary School.
It was while serving in Teach for America that Donald-Blue was introduced to the CSUDH credential program. “I found that the school has great instructors who were also practitioners. They had been, or still were, in the classroom,” she says. “You didn’t get this ‘ivory tower’ feeling when you spoke to them. They were teaching us real skills and methods that they were using successfully in their own classrooms.”
Lynne Sheffield (MA, ’99)
Assistant Superintendent of Education Services
Santa Barbara Unified School District
Sometimes one decision changes your whole life. Lynne Sheffield had been accepted at a chiropractic school when she realized that wasn’t the career she wanted. Aware of a teacher shortage at the time, and with her mother’s experience as a teacher in Compton in mind, Sheffield took the California Basic Educational Skills Test, moved into a classroom position, and began her credential program at CSUDH.
She attended classes while working—and more. She also got married and had her first child while attending CSUDH. “I literally had my baby in my arms during my last credential class,” she remembers. She earned her CSUDH master’s degree after that.
Now, Sheffield is the assistant superintendent of education services in the Santa Barbara Unified School District. That’s after a decade of classroom teaching, followed by administrative roles in districts across Southern California—which have given her perspective on her own training as an educator.
“I learned to work with diverse students, which was important to know and understand,” she says. ”I don’t think a lot of student teachers or new teachers are coming in as well-prepared. I think Dominguez Hills did an amazing job of that.”
Jhey Crisostomo (BA, ’03)
Academic Advisor
CSUDH
Within two years of earning her bachelor’s degree at CSUDH, Jhey Crisostomo was back on campus, teaching in the Liberal Studies program. She’d earned a master’s and teaching credential at the University of Southern California, and was also teaching at an elementary school in Los Angeles. And serving as an intervention coordinator. And teaching a technology course at an adult extension school. Sound hectic?
These days, Crisostomo is a full-time academic advisor in the CSUDH College of Education. She works with graduating Toro seniors, helping them make sure they’re meeting all their requirements and tracking their progress toward graduation. She also stays active as a faculty member. “What I really like about the program here is that the faculty were teachers. We were educators. We have that experience, so we’re not teaching from a textbook. We’re teaching from real life.”
For her part, Crisostomo helms the Responsive Teaching and Classroom Management course at CSUDH—her favorite class. “Classroom management is one of the key elements of teaching,” she says. “You can have an amazing lesson plan, but if you don’t have that management aspect down, it’s not going to matter.”
Jessika Villalva
Multiple Subject Teaching Credential Student
CSUDH
As a first-generation college student raising two young children on her own, Jessika Villalva is focusing on early teaching and learning. She’s currently finishing up the requirements to earn her multiple subject teaching credential, and plans to work in early childhood education upon graduating.
The creativity and often unexpected thinking that younger students display is what drew Villalva to their age group. “I like their curiosity about everything, and seeing how their minds work and create their own reasoning behind things. It’s fun to see how they’re able to connect certain ideas.”
Villalva’s experience as the daughter of a Mexican immigrant mother who raised four children on her own colors how she sees her own educational experience through her children’s eyes. “I want to be able to show my kids that I’m able to do this,” she says. “I want them to know what I’m doing, why I’m doing it, and show them that they can do anything they put their minds to.”
John Alexander (MS, ’21)
Social-Emotional Learning Specialist
Washington Elementary, Lynwood
John Alexander spends his days counseling students, performing one-on-one check-ins, working with small groups, and conducting “restorative mediations” between students in conflict. He’s a social-emotional learning specialist at Lynwood’s Washington Elementary School, who says the self-reflection skills he learned in the CSUDH school counseling program still help him today.
“So much of counseling is looking inward,” says Alexander. “When you’re working with people, you have to be cognizant of your tone, your body language, your posture—and you only can realize that if you’re self-reflective.”
“My courses also helped me realize that every student is different. How I counseled one student may have worked, but the same techniques may not work with the next one. I really learned how to meet each student where they’re at and understand the needs they have in that moment.”