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Joanna Yoder

1,259

Bold Points

1x

Finalist

1x

Winner

Bio

Teaching is my passion. I love to see the light in a child's eyes when they understand a new concept. Children are very impressionable; seeing how much they soak up from those around them is humbling. I want to inspire and challenge the next generation to become great leaders and world changers. Teaching is so much more than educating a student on certain content. It is inspiring hearts and loving unconditionally the person each student is. Lastly, I love to learn about new cultures and people. I have had the privilege to experience diverse cultures and it is a dream of mine to someday teach abroad. I am bilingual, speaking English and a dialect of German.

Education

Liberty University

Bachelor's degree program
2023 - 2025
  • Majors:
    • Education, General

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Master's degree program

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Education

    • Dream career goals:

      Become a teacher in small rural school or abroad, inspiring the students who come from difficult places.

    • Sales

      Mountain View Furniture
      2004 – 20051 year
    • Department manager and stock analysis

      Yoder's Country Market
      2012 – 20175 years
    • 3rd-5th grade teacher

      Greene County Mennonite School
      2005 – 20083 years

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Royal Family Kids Camp — Mentor/ Planning committee
      2017 – Present

    Future Interests

    Advocacy

    Volunteering

    Entrepreneurship

    Tammy Needham Memorial Scholarship
    Winner
    Sitting there in my first-grade classroom, a fire was lit in me. I knew someday I wanted to be a teacher just like Miss Rose. I watched her teach with passion, positivity, and a caring heart. She was fun, and her laughter drew children to her. Miss Rose taught for many years and influenced many children, but sadly, she was taken from this world much too early after a battle with breast cancer. She may be gone from this world, but her legacy lives on in the lives of her students. I believe she would be proud to see me pursue a degree in education today, knowing she played a part in lighting that fire in me. At the age of 20, I became a teacher in one of the small Mennonite schools I had attended as an elementary student. As a Mennonite girl, attending college for a degree in elementary education was not an option. There were teaching seminars/classes, and I learned under a master teacher, but there was no college education. I only had an eighth-grade formal education, but I learned much by observing other teachers and working first under the tutelage of a veteran teacher. That veteran teacher's experience of almost twenty years in the classroom gave me valuable feedback on how to teach to capture my students' attention. Teaching was such a fulfilling job for me. No other job was as demanding or consuming as teaching, but neither was there one so fulfilling to me. I knew I had found my calling. Seeing a child's eyes light up when they finally understood a concept was a joy. Spending six hours a day with my students was a big responsibility and a gift I did not take lightly. We became like a little family in that classroom. Still, years later, when I see my former students, I feel a kinship with them, and I feel proud of them even though I am no longer involved in their lives or culture. Next to being a mom, being a teacher was the most fulfilling responsibility I have had. Now that I have left the conservative Mennonite culture I grew up in, I am working on a degree in elementary education to get back into the classroom. I would love to teach in a private school (or another small school setting because I love the multi-level classroom). Also, since I am a wife and mom now, I would like the flexibility of online teaching.