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Member Profile | PFT400-2024

Meet School Police Officer Faith Stephens

Where You Teach/Work/Educate:  My department is school safety.
# of Years In Education: I have been in Education for over 25 years and counting.

PFT: What compelled you to become a instructor /security aide/ police officer and/or to work specifically in education?  

FAITH: I was privileged to have been offered employment by Ruth Simoleski through Chief Fazdon, in order to maintain my household as a single parent. At the time of hire back then, I made $6.46 per hour — six dollars and forty-five cents. Beginning at Westinghouse … then Brashear … then South Vocational. And after 6 years I earned my current position as Patrol Officer

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

FAITH: The long and short of it is that I enjoy problem solving.

PFT: What degrees and certifications do you hold?  Do you have any professional awards or recognition you’d like to share?

FAITH: I obtained an Associate degree in elementary education at the Community College of Allegheny County and my Bachelor’s in Behavioral Science from Point Park University. I’ve completed my Master’s in Organizational Leadership from Point Park as well.

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by instructors and/or school security aides and School Police  today

FAITH: The one challenge facing Law Enforcement is the amount of smaller departments separated merely by property lines. For example, Moon PD. Pitt PD. Housing PD, Port Authority PD — just to name a few.

The job is constant but the laborers are few. We could use more good officers and aides.

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

FAITH: I was volunte — told by all of the veteran officers to join the union during the time of Mr. Al Fondy.

I’d like to hold a union position but because of time constraints I’ve shied away. I love my work schedule of 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Lol

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

FAITH:  See above answer–while I am a more passive participant for personal reasons, let me tell you: Being in the union is like having an older sibling who has your best interests at heart.

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

FAITH: Ms. Annette Parker have been encouraging me for years and I am grateful for that.

PFT: Why is having a robust security aide presence and available School Police Officers  so important to  PPS students in particular?

FAITH: Policing is the only tent that covers: being a child’s confidante, loco parentis, disciplinarian, law enforcer, and liaison between the administrators and the student.

PFT: In your opinion, how has the PFTs involvement made a difference for School Security and Police? 

FAITH: Unions aren’t a cure-all — there’s always going to be more we need–but as an apology, I like to say “They keep the light on.’ We need that light.

PFT: Whats your favorite thing about being a part of school security at PPS?

FAITH: My favorite thing to have happen is when students remember me after graduation! That’s special right there.

PFT: Please take a moment to share specifics about the challenges you face every day.

FAITH: My biggest challenge is conveying to parents that being fair … may not always swing their way for their child. That’s a tough truth to tell, but it’s our job to tell it.

PFT: When it comes to me personally, people are surprised to learn that I…. 

FAITH:   People are surprised to learn that my outward demeanor comes from serving 6 years in the United States Army right out of Schenley High School. 

I love a good joke, I have a childlike optimism I keep by looking at the glass as half full. I was born and raised until 5 years old in Charleroi, Pennsylvania and my parents and grandparents were from Clairton Pennsylvania, though I visited regularly.

Lightning Round:


FAITH’s favorite …

Movie:  The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey
Book: Beloved (Toni Morrison)
Author: W.E.B Du Bois
Singer: My Mom
Song: “A Song For You” by Donny Hathaway
Color: Black & White
Food: Lamb chops, fried fish. Fried green tomatoes, and pickled beets 
Time of year: Early Spring or Early Fall

Meet K-5 ESL Teacher Joe Papa

Name: Joseph Papa
Where You Teach/Work/Educate:  Pittsburgh Beechwood PreK-5
Subject(s) / Grade You Teach or Once Taught: Taught: K-5 ESL, previously taught high school English
# of Years In Education: 11
Years At Current Position/School:  5 (this school year)
Have You Taught Previously Elsewhere? (y/n): YES
If so….where, what did you teach/do…and for how long?: I taught for 5 years for the New York City Department of Education, at KAPPA International High School in the Bronx (English 9, 10, 11, and 12, as well as IB Literature). I taught for the AIU for one year after returning to Pittsburgh, where I taught K-5 ESL at Elroy Elementary in Brentwood

PFT: What compelled you to become a teacher and/or to work in education? 

JOE: My mother taught for over 30 years at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf.  I was fortunate enough to visit her classroom several times over the years, and to also be present when she on-the-spot interpreted for former students in need. 

Being the child of an educator, you witness the stress of this work, the long hours, and the physical and emotional fatigue; but with that, you also see firsthand how meaningful our work can be.  I was able to see the lasting impact that a teacher can make on the lives of the students they teach.  

After graduating from high school, I did not go to college right away, and instead was an AmeriCorps volunteer in a program called City Year.  I worked as a reading tutor and after school programming provider at an elementary school in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.  The year was challenging, but also opened my eyes to the impact I could make in the lives of others–albeit with additional training and a longer-term commitment.  When the year was finished, I knew that teaching would be a good fit for me.  

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

JOE: Teaching is rewarding in so many ways, both in the short and long term, which is probably what I like most about it. 

When a kid who was having a rough day gives you a smile or a hug, you know you’ve made their day a little better.  In the longer term, I’ve been lucky enough to hear from students I taught as high schoolers who are now doing great things, and have shared that their high school experience was a reason why they’ve done so well. 

Seeing students succeed is intensely gratifying, and what drives me to stay in education.  Additionally, though teaching can at times be lonely, it is also a collaborative pursuit, and I love that aspect of the job, working with other teachers to solve problems and meet the needs of our students.

PFT: What degrees and certifications do you hold?  Do you have any professional awards or recognition you’d like to share?

JOE: My bachelor’s degree is in English Literature from Hunter College, a CUNY school located on the Upper East Side in Manhattan.  It’s a public school that is one of the most diverse colleges in the US, and I loved my time there.

  After Hunter, I enrolled in New York City Teaching Fellows (not TFA!), an alternative certification program that partners with certain colleges in New York City and the city Department of Education to staff hard-to-staff certifications and schools. 

Through NYCTF, I earned my MA in Secondary English Education from Brooklyn College, while teaching at a DOE school in the Bronx.  During my high school teaching years, I also completed IB certification through FLIBS in Florida and was a Stanford Hollyhock fellow, a program designed to support teacher retention at high-turnover, high poverty schools nationwide. 

Additionally, I am National Board certified in English – AYA, which I completed during my last two years in New York.  After leaving New York and moving to Pennsylvania, I added certifications in elementary and middle school grade bands, and the add-on certification required by Pennsylvania for ESL educators, through the AIU.  

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by educators today? Students?  School districts? Any challenges specific to your subject matter expertise?

JOE: It is certainly a tough time to work in education–but I suppose it often has been! 

I believe that right now, public education is under threat from a variety of forces seeking to undermine our work for various reasons.  Teachers are not valued as professionals–this is evidenced in political rhetoric questioning our ability to make appropriate curricular choices and support our students as we see best fit. 

Public schools are not adequately funded (see the recent lawsuit in Pennsylvania), and yet are held to blame for many larger problems beyond our locus of control.  We are witnessing a period where a push to bust unions, undermine our professional livelihood, and threaten our students’ right to quality educators in their classrooms has found a vehicle forward in the neoliberal nexus of charters, vouchers, and “school choice.” 

At the same time, we have systematically disinvested in other institutional supports for children, such as childcare, mental health services, and community-based programming, which places schools in the dire position of often being one of the only service providers for families in need. 

There is ample research available showing what children need to create an environment in which they can thrive–experienced educators, in well-resourced, safe, clean, and modern classrooms, with supports for the health of the whole child incorporated, are necessary.  And yet, the provision of resources to create this is not a priority–new ways to siphon money to private interests seem to appear every year. 

It is certainly disheartening.  I worry that as this trend continues, people will not want to stay in education, the result being that our students suffer.

Specifically in the teaching of English learners (ELs), we are witnessing a period of significant enrollment growth in EL populations, without the needed increase in professional staff and outside supports.  ELs and their families have needs that are often greater, and different, than other students we have taught.  They often move frequently and have interrupted formal education, and are often processing significant traumatic events in their lives while also learning English.  Their families often do not know how to best advocate for them, and schools and other institutions have struggled to adapt to their needs.

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

JOE: I joined the UFT as a first year teacher in New York.  My first interaction with the union was with a cohort of teachers who supported each other through the National Board process, which was incredibly helpful (NYSED also paid for three of the components through a program teachers could access through NYSUT membership, which was an incredible benefit).  

I became involved with the PFT initially through PAC volunteering during the 2020 election.  I was connected with Brenda Marks, who taught me the intricacies of a successful phone banking operation and with whom I made many, many calls that year. 

I loved the sense that I could make a difference through the PFT–and that I was needed!  From there, I’ve stayed involved in other PAC volunteering opportunities, and have also completed the Teacher Leader program, which was very rewarding.  I am a proud member of the Executive Board as well, as a Member at Large.

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

JOE: Union representation gives you a sense of agency in your profession.  Through the union, we as workers can become empowered to effect change in our working conditions (which, in our case, also means our students’ learning environment) at various levels, from our buildings, to our district, to policy at the state and national level. 

Unions give us strength and create a shared identity around our profession.  If we are to improve the state of public education today, unions will be an integral part.  

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

JOE: : There are so many folks I’d love to shout out who have supported me in my development as a union member. 

Hopefully, I won’t leave out anybody!  Teresa Partee at Beechwood introduced me to the PAC leadership, which started my journey in political organizing through the union. 

Brenda Marks, as I said, was patient in teaching me the ropes of organizing and working with me many long hours in a critical election year at the state and national level, and has remained an inspiration and true friend. 

Jen Mazzocco and Chris George have helped me to better understand the political work of the union, have encouraged me to become more involved, and are always great for a local politics chat. 

Nina Esposito-Visgitis invited me to participate in the Teacher Leader Program, where I met Brittany Shoup and Sarah Mueller, who patiently mentored me through the year-long work of the TLP. 

I enjoyed getting to know my fellow Teacher Leaders, all of whom were an inspiration to me in their work, and must of course shout out my Beechwood colleagues, who support me every day and for whom I am so thankful.

PFT: When it comes to me personally, people are surprised to learn that I…. 

JOE:   I’ve run 4 marathons (Pittsburgh twice, Buffalo, and Niagara Falls); I love to hike and backpack; my ideal day involves a cat, a comfy chair, a book, a latte from Biddle’s Escape, and time for a long run in Frick, in no particular order.

FINAL NOTES–A quote to live by…. and Lightning Round:

JOE’s Quotes … In my most highbrow moments:

Quote to Live By

“Service is the rent we pay for being.
It is the very purpose of life, and not something you do in your spare time.”
― Marian Wright Edelma

In my less highbrow moments? Just about anything that Dorothy said on Golden Girls.


JOE’s favorite …

Movie:  Volver (classy), Flashdance (trashy)
Book: The Mysteries of Pittsburgh and The Wind Up Bird Chronicle
Author: Haruki Murakami, Michael Chabon is a close second.
Singer: Tough to pick one–lately I’ve been loving Cautious Clay
Song: “Valerie” by Mark Ronson with Amy Winehouse
Color: Blue in its various shades
Food: Pasta
Time of year: Cross country season in the fall


Meet Social Studies Teacher Jeremiah Dugan

Name: Jeremiah Dugan
Where You Teach/Work/Educate:   South Brook
Subject(s) / Grade You Teach or Once Taught: 8th Grade Social Studies
# of Years In Education: 24
Years At Current Position/School: 17 years at South Brook
Have You Taught Previously Elsewhere? (y/n): Frick ISA, Langley High School
If so….where, what did you teach/do…and for how long?: 8th grade Social Studies and 9th grade Civics

PFT: What compelled you to become a teacher and/or to work in education? 

Jeremiah: I absolutely did not want to be a teacher. I wanted to work in politics or be a lawyer. 

I volunteered to help coach a high school basketball team while I was in college and really enjoyed it.  Teaching seemed a natural fit with coaching so I started to pursue it and realized I enjoyed the creative challenge and how everyday was different.

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

Jeremiah: I enjoy the creativity of the job.  That I can write and design my lessons and projects and try different things out. 

I am the director, producer, writer, and lead actor in my own one man show with performances daily.  Some days obviously go better than others but I enjoy the creative challenge of making it work for students and challenging them to think and look at the world critically.

PFT: What degrees and certifications do you hold?  Do you have any professional awards or recognition you’d like to share?

Jeremiah: University of Pittsburgh for undergraduate and Professional Year in Social Studies.

Carlow University for Masters in Educational Leadership

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by educators today? Students?  School districts? Any challenges specific to your subject matter expertise?

Jeremiah: Not being consulted on decisions. 

Too many times people do not realize that the purpose of our schools is to educate students and they have a job because of the work done in the classrooms.  Everyone in the school district should be asking themselves first how they are supporting the work in the classrooms too often policy decisions are made with the classroom as the last consideration.

Policy decisions are made without talking to the people that have to implement those policy choices then those same people wonder why those policy choices are often dead on arrival.  We need leadership that consults building level staff and honestly evaluates programs and decisions rather than reinventing the wheel every few years without actually removing old programs.

We need a systemwide audit to figure out what staff is doing and think they should be doing. We have a system that is like my grandmother’s kitchen walls. We layer program over program for years without removing or evaluating what is working or what it looks like.  Unless we evaluate and examine the current systems, we cannot hope to successfully add new systems or programs.

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

Jeremiah: I have been a union guy since day one. 

My dad was a firefighter and a proud member of local #1 here in Pittsburgh.  He taught me the importance of knowing your contract and supporting the union.  In college I interned with the AFL-CIO and UFCW working to unionize nursing home workers in Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee.  I joined Student PSEA while at Pitt and was appointed to represent student members on the PSEA Political Action Committee in Harrisburg.  Then I was elected to two terms to represent the then 10,000+ student members on PSEA’s Board of Directors as the State President.

I proudly signed my PFT union card on the same day I signed my contract with Pittsburgh Public in August of 1999.  Since then I have held my different roles with the PFT.  Executive Board member, building representative, PAC Chairperson, ESSERS Committee, Gates Grant Oversight Committee, Grassroots Committee, delegate to national and state conventions.

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

Jeremiah: Not all jobs do the people doing the work have a voice at the table. 

Having many friends and family in corporate and non-union jobs and realizing that they have little or no collective say in how those organizations are run or when they are being targeted to having fair and consistent workplace protections.  When we are younger we believe that people in authority in leadership and power are there because they have everyone’s best interest in mind, but as we get older we see that truth needs spoken to power and pushed to do the right thing. 

Now having a voice at the table does not mean that our words are listened to, but I would much rather be at the table shouting than outside shouting in.

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

Jeremiah: I’ve learned from so many wonderful and influential people. 

I was appointed to the executive board by Al Fondy.  Got to spend a day with the man at a blackjack table in Vegas after an AFT Convention and learned more about policy and union history than I could in an entire masters program.  

Each successive union president has taught me much about the union and leadership, both John Tarka and Nina Esposito-Visgitis have been amazing mentors as well.

PFT: When it comes to me personally, people are surprised to learn that I…. 

Jeremiah:  …. have competed in 29 marathons and 2 ultramarathons, and once had a running streak where I ran at least a mile a day for over 7 years.   In addition I am the only high school girls soccer coach in Pittsburgh Public Schools to lead a team to the WPIAL playoffs, and my girls did it twice!

FINAL NOTES and Lightning Round:

Be Sure to tune into PFT TALK–the PFT Podcast created and hosted by Jeremiah Dugan several times a month!
Click here to visit our PFT Talk episode and resource page–and click here to listen to all the PFT Talk Podcasts on Spotify.


Jeremiah’s favorite …

Movie:  Semi-Pro
Book: Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
Author: Malcom Gladwell
Singer: Pearl Jam
Song: Don’t Back Down by Tom Petty
Color: Green
Food: 2 cuts of Fiori’s and a cartoon of Iced Tea
Time of year: Spring


Quote to live by:
“Get 1% Better Every Day.”

Meet Math Teacher Ronniece L. Sirmons

Name: Ronniece L Sirmons
Where You Teach/Work/Educate:  Pgh Carmalt Pre-K to 8 
Subject(s) / Grade You Teach or Once Taught: 7th Grade Math (4thj, 6th, and 8th as well)
# of Years In Education: 25
Years At Current Position/School: 4
Have You Taught Previously Elsewhere? (y/n): YES
If so….where, what did you teach/do…and for how long?: Allegheny Middle School – 1997-1999- Columbus Middle School  1999-2006, and Manchester Pre-K to8 – 2006-2019 

PFT: What compelled you to become a teacher and/or to work in education? 

Ronniece: I always wanted to be a teacher when I was younger.  I can remember playing school and getting mad if I wasn’t the teacher.  I also have an aunt that is an educator as well.

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

Ronniece:  I love to build relationships with people.  I enjoy seeing the” light bulb “explode when students grasp a concept or skill we have been working on. 

PFT: Where/what school(s) did you pursue higher education? 

Ronniece: Duquesne University – BS Elementary Education and Middle Level Math Certified. 

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by educators today? Students?  School districts? Any challenges specific to your subject matter expertise?

Ronniece: The greatest challenge I have as a middle school math teacher is to capture their (my students’) desire to learn and stay on task. I have noticed this to be a challenge after coming back from COVID-19. Students want to be more social instead of focusing on their assignments. 

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

Ronniece: I want to say I joined the union when I started being a substitute for PPS in 1996. I am on the Executive Board of the PFT, I am in the Teacher Leadership Program (currently), qne I took ER&D classes when Mary Van Horn was the lead.

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

Ronniece: My parents were blue collar workers and they were in a union and told me how important it is to be involved. I remember marching in the Labor Day Parade with my dad years ago. 

We must have an advocate for teachers because we endure so much and it is great that we have a safe place to go to vent, for support, for guidance, and for help when needed. 

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

Ronniece: I know that when I first started my Aunt LaFay Pinchback and a close friend of my family that I consider an aunt Wanda McDavis were very informative with giving me information about the union and how important it is to join.  The ITL’s I had also were wonderful: Mrs. Barbara James and Ms. Barbara Greer!

PFT: Please share your thoughts on balancing being a private “no-nonsense person … with also stepping to the plate to represent when asked. You introduced then-candidate Joe Biden at his first Pittsburgh rally, have assumed multiple union leadership roles and most recently was named a Pittsburgh Courier woman of Excellence. How do you do it?

Ronniece: Contrary to what most people may think, I am shy by nature, so it does take a lot for me to stand in the limelight or often say things that no one else will say.

I know that I have been called to do this work and I am doing my best to accept the call and do the work. 

FINAL NOTES and Lightning Round:

People are surprised to learn...

…that I am an ordained Pastor at my church Living Way Christian Fellowship-(I am an Associate Pastor)


Ronneice’s favorite…
Movie:  Love & Basketball; Purple Rain; All Rocky Movies
Book: The Good Book
Author: 🙂
Singer: CeCe Winans – many other Gospel Artists
Song: Too many to name!
Color: Red & Purple
Food: Tacos
Time of year: Fall


Quote to live by:
You are the best or worse thing that can happen to you be the best!!!
Life and Death is in the power of your tongue!! — Bible

Click here to see Dr. Jill Biden introduce Ronniece–and Ronniece introduce Joe Biden
Click here for a brief Behind the Scenes from the Biden Campaign

Meet Library Teacher Josh Zelesnick

Meet Library Teacher Josh Zelesnick

Name: JOSH Zelesnick

Where You Teach/Work/Educate: Pittsburgh Colfax K-8
Subject(s) / Grade You Teach or Once Taught: Library Class

# of Years In Education: 15
Years At Current Position/School: 4
Have You Taught Previously Elsewhere? (y/n): YES
Early Intervention
If so….where, what did you teach/do…and for how long?: 7 years

English Department at Carnegie Mellon University (2 years), English Department at the University of Pittsburgh (10 years), English Department at Duquesne University (6 years), English Department at CCAC (1 year), ELA at PPS Carrick (1 year)

PFT: What compelled you to become a teacher and/or to work in education? 

Josh: When I was growing up, my Mom had her own business — a daycare and pre-school — so even at a young age I was teaching kids, mostly helping with crafts, outside play, and lunch.

When I got older, during college and before graduate school, I ran the pre-school for a few years. In a way, I was kind of raised into the profession. I also feel like kids always gravitated towards me. I’ve always been able to connect with kids.

I remember kids coming up to me at the grocery store like I was some kind of colorful sugary box of cereal — like, I don’t know, maybe somehow I’ve always had a trusting, playful kind of energy that kids felt comfortable around. Teaching found me, I would say.

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

Josh: I like that I’m teaching for a public school with a diverse population of kids. I like exploring and choosing books to read where the characters represent this diverse population of kids.

I think too many times in the history of this country (and it’s still being done today), kids don’t see themselves represented in the stories (the curriculum) that is being taught to them — and this has been a great injustice.

So, being culturally responsive in the classroom is important and a social justice issue, I think. Kids for example often know who Amelia Earhart is — and there is nothing wrong with learning about her — but what about Betsy Coleman, Hazel Ying Lee, and other groundbreaking pilots of that era?

PFT: Where/what school(s) did you pursue higher education? 

Josh:  
West Chester University – Degrees in Finance and English Literature
University of Pittsburgh – Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing/Poetry
University of Pittsburgh – 7-12 ELA Teaching Certification
Developing Leader’s Academy for Library Science partnered with Univ. of Pittsburgh

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by educators today? Students?  School districts? Any challenges specific to your subject matter expertise?

Josh:

Some challenges:

1) Teacher autonomy over their classroom environments.

2) Way too much emphasis on Data and Testing (especially PSSAs and Keystones)

3) Always a systematic move by corporations toward cutting labor costs, so moves toward itinerant work (short-term contracts or hourly work with low pay and no benefits).

4) State failure of vision for public schools in the country to educate kids in more fun, effective, and creative ways. Look at the Waldorf model, for example (like we need more outside time!); get rid of the testing; more support for teachers in the classroom; more training for teachers to learn effective SEL strategies; Less Administrator oversight and more trust for teachers.

5) Because of lack of vision, charter schools (that really aren’t better) siphon funds away from public schools and parents who can afford to, send their kids to private schools.

6) There should be at least one certified Librarian (Master’s in Library Science preferred) in every school, dedicated to that one school (not half time between two schools).

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

Josh: As soon as I joined the district, I sought out my building reps, and joined the union (first day). Currently, I am a one of three building reps my school, Colfax K-8.

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

Josh: Being in a union means you have a seat at the table to negotiate, rather than taking whatever the company is willing to give you. A union is only as strong as its members, and we all have to get involved if we want things to change.

I’ve been more passive than active because I have small children I have to care for (this has been my excuse), but really, I need to become more active. I have this year, stepping up to positions where they (Librarians) either have to go between schools or teach two or more different subjects. They are also not given seniority rights, so they have been getting displaced from their buildings.

This is something I want to help change as a more active member in the union.

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

Josh: Yes, Brittany Shoup has been my mentor this year. She has boundless energy, is patient, and is calming for all of us at Colfax. We are so lucky to have her. (PFT NOTE: See Brittany’s dynamic duo profile with Sarah Mueller here.)

FINAL NOTES and Lightning Round:

People are surprised to learn...

That I’m a poet and play ice hockey.

I published a chapbook of poems called Cherub Poems a few years ago. My full book, Insert Coin, has been a finalist for a number of prizes. I ‘m working hard to get it published right now.

I played hockey up through college, and even played professional inline hockey for a couple of years. Now I play in adult leagues in my older age.


Josh’s favorite…
Movie:  Too hard, but okay, The Princess Bride
Book: Also too hard, but for now, The Trial by Franz Kafka
Author: Too hard, but I’ll name two living poets I love: Lisa Robertson and Ben Lerner
Singer: Pearl Jam (ever since I was a teenager), Neil Young, Sharon Jones!
Song: Too Many, but I’ll give one I love from Pearl Jam: “In My Tree”
Color: Green
Food: Tom Ka Soup
Time of year: Fall


Quote to live by:
World-historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He has forgotten to add: the first time as a tragedy, the second as farce.”
Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte

Meet PMOIU#2’s Christine Bellesis

Name: Christine Bellesis
Occupation & School: PMOIU#2 — Currently I’m a reading specialist, K-5, and an ELD teacher, 9-12.
Years In Education: 30 years
Years At Current Position/School: 9 years
My past assignments with the IU include reading specialist, 9-12, ELD teacher K-12, and I had begun my career at the IU as a math teacher, 1-8, many years ago when our classrooms were in 30-foot vans.
Previously, I … worked in the field of adult literacy in Worcester, MA at a nonprofit organization for six years; my students ranged from 18-82. I also was an ELD teacher in the Worcester Public Schools, K-6 for two years.

PFT: What compelled you to become a teacher and/or to work in education? 

Christine: When I was 11 years old, I took the neighborhood kids off their mothers’ hands for a few afternoons each week throughout the summer by enrolling them in my little backyard school for 50¢. I enjoyed reading aloud to the kids and making them write down everything I said!

Especially important, though, was a high school teacher who truly inspired me. She made history come alive for me in her History of Africa course. We had to make an oral presentation on an African country, and after I had given mine, she spoke with me after class to encourage me to consider the field of education.

PFT: What do you like best about your career choice and job? 

Christine: My hope is to inspire curiosity in all of my students and to instill the desire to become lifelong learners.

PFT: Where/what school(s) did you pursue higher education? What degrees and certifications do you hold?  Do you have any professional awards or recognition you’d like to share?

Christine: I earned an M.Ed. from Duquesne University in Reading and Language Arts.

I also hold certification in English Language Development, and my undergraduate course of study was in Elementary from IUP.

PFT: In your opinion, what are the greatest challenges faced by educators today? Students?  School districts? Any challenges specific to your subject matter expertise?

Christine: I think it is very challenging to teach students how to think critically in this era of social media .

PFT: When did you join the union?  Do you participate in any committees or hold any leadership positions? Ever taken any coursework or continuing education?

Christine: The PMOIU2 organized in 1991, and I became a member at that time. I serve on the Executive Board as the IU2 Group Representative and I am a building rep. as well as a PAC contributor.

I have participated in several exciting annual state and national conventions as a delegate. My favorite event with the PFT is marching in the Labor Day Parade, as there is such a spirit of camaraderie among my fellow teachers. I think the PFT gets the loudest cheers from the sidelines, and that makes me feel so proud to be a teacher!

PFT: In your own words, why is having union representation important?  What’s the best thing about being in a union, whether you are an active or more passive participant?

Christine: There are numerous laws that protect the hiring and treatment of workers, including teachers. Without unions, these protections would not be enforced.

PFT: Do you have a mentor that introduced you to the PFT/Union? Please share who—and what that person meant to you and to your member development.

ChristineMy maternal grandmother was the one who taught me how important unions are.

My grandfather was an Italian immigrant working in construction in Pittsburgh under harsh conditions. Once they formed a union, his quality of life changed so much more for the better. She always used to say, “It’s because of the union.”

FINAL NOTES and Lightning Round:

People are surprised to learn...that  I am a British crime series fanatic..

Christine’s FAVORITE…
Movies:
  Hitchcock’s Rear Window
Books: Impossible to answer, but The Book Thief by Markus Zusak has made a great impact on me.
Author: Willa Cather
Singer: Al Greene
Song: “Let’s Stay Together”
Color:  Green
Food:  Any kind of soup
Time of year: All the seasons

FAVORITE QUOTE:
“Wherever you go, there you are.” — Jon Kabat-Zinn