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By Sandy Lish
When I was five, my friends wanted to be princesses, firefighters, and soldiers. As for me, I wanted to be a teacher. While they defended the world with action figures and dinosaurs, I spent hours arranging my dolls and stuffed animals in a semicircle, lecturing them as if they were eager students. That childhood passion never faded. Years later, it guided my decision to major in Home Economics Education, now known as Family and Consumer Sciences.
As part of a teacher preparation course, I was assigned to observe children at a nearby laboratory school. This wasn’t a typical public school. For the local families, it offered K–12 education; for aspiring teachers like me, it served as a resource for practical experience.


