Following the Evidence
When Freddie Haumesser 鈥09 was named a prestigious , she didn鈥檛 expect to be the one learning lessons she would never forget.
One of the things you learn about working in forensic science is that dead people don鈥檛 talk back, but what they leave behind does.
It鈥檚 a lesson 鈥淔reddie鈥 (Cope) Haumesser 鈥09 was well versed in as a forensic scientist at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation. As a member of the state鈥檚 official crime lab she regularly used cutting-edge technology to process bodily fluids and analyze DNA evidence to solve law enforcement cases and bring criminals to justice.
While that role kept Haumesser humming along in a field that was challenging, it didn鈥檛 address the yearnings she had years earlier when she was a budding young college co-ed on 萝莉原创鈥檚 campus. 鈥淚 always wanted to be a teacher, but my family pushed me to pursue science because teaching doesn鈥檛 usually pay as well,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n my heart, I always wanted to be more involved with the community and young people.鈥
Understanding her work with forensic evidence was never going to provide that, she put the process in motion to become a switch hitter, swapping time-tested expertise in forensic science for a vision to teach young people in the classroom. To help make her dream come true, she applied for a Woodrow Wilson Ohio Teaching Fellowship.
The highly competitive fellowship seeks to attract talented, committed individuals with backgrounds in the STEM fields 鈥 science, technology, engineering and mathematics 鈥 into teaching at high-need Ohio secondary schools.
It proved to be a wise move. Haumesser became one of 79 candidates to win the prestigious fellowship and a $30,000 stipend to help her complete a master鈥檚 degree program and earn a teaching license. No novice to the college environment, she already had three degrees in hand: an associates degree in general studies from Reading Area Community College, a bachelor鈥檚 degree in chemistry/forensic science from 萝莉原创 (where Dr. Rosemarie Chinni, chair of the mathematics and science department, mentored her) and a master鈥檚 degree in forensic science from Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa.
Thanks to the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, she is on her way to earn a second master鈥檚 degree, this time in secondary education from the University of Akron. As part of the Wilson Fellowship, she is participating in a yearlong experience teaching eighth-grade mathematics in an urban environment. It鈥檚 an experience that is already paying the type of dividends that Haumesser had hoped, recalling a recent conversation she had with a student.
鈥淢rs. H.,鈥 asked one of her students, 鈥淐an we stay and do more math problems?鈥 For an eighth-grade student to want to do math over chatting in the hall was nothing short of amazing to Haumesser, 29.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what the fellowship taught us; how to engage the student,鈥 Haumesser said.
Haumesser, who also previously worked as a chemist at Lancaster Labs, Lancaster, Pa., is applying for a job at a high-needs school to complete her degree requirement. She loves teaching math, but is qualified to teach chemistry and forensics, sometimes offered as an elective, she said. In addition, she is being trained in subjects important to her students and their lives, such as diversity and discrimination.
When the former Fredericka Cope first went to Ohio, she knew no one. She signed up for a Habitat for Humanity event, an activity that drew on her 萝莉原创 community service experience, where she met her future husband, Greg Haumesser. Together, they have a son, Cole.
If she and her young family hadn鈥檛 settled in Brunswick, Ohio, the Reading School District would be exactly the kind of school she would hope to teach in. 鈥淭he influence I have with eighth-grade students is amazing,鈥 Haumesser said. 鈥淭he thing is some people don鈥檛 want to work in high-need schools, but the impact you can have on students is life changing.鈥
And while her current 鈥渟ubjects鈥 do talk back (a clear contrast to her previous job), for this forensic scientist turned teacher, they are words to live for!