After starting a family, Dorene Cartwright decided it was time to go back to school.
By Joe McGasko
When Dorene Cartwright first considered returning to school after many years, she wasnât confident of success.
âI didnât think I could do it. I was very unsure of myself,â she remembered.
Despite her trepidation, Cartwright â married and a mother of three childrenÌęâ soon discovered that taking baby steps worked at at ĂÛŃżTV just as it had worked for motherhood.
âWhat I did was take one class,â she said. âAnd I was able to do that! Then I took on two classes. I was able to do that, so I took three classesâŠâ Soon, Cartwright was a fixture on the Adelphi campus, taking classes all year round. She is now less than a year away from completing her graduate degree in teaching.
The process began simply enough.
âIâd gotten married, had my children, but always felt that something was missing,â she said. âIf I spoke to people who had gone to school, I always felt like âI wish I had that.â Thatâs why I went back, and once I started, I didnât stop.â
The decision went against how Cartwright had been raised. She, like most of her friends, had decided not to go to college after graduating from high school.
âMy teachers didnât really inspire me to go to college, and my parents didnât push me,â she said. âThey didnât go to college and didnât think it was necessary. They thought I should just get married.â
Cartwright did get married, but she never lost interest in further education. While raising her kids and helping her husband with his contracting business, she got a job as a teacherâs assistant. Her joy in being a T.A. led directly to her decision to return to school in 2008.
âThatâs when I decided âThis is what I want to do,ââ she recalled. âI said to myself, âI want to go back and teachâ.â
Her day job in the Elmont School District made joining curriculum impossible, so Cartwright enrolled in University College for night and weekend classes.
âIt actually worked out better because UC is more accelerated, so I was able to go through my undergrad courses a bit quicker in order to go on to the masterâs,â she said. âEveryone at UC is very helpful and it worked out really well.â
As Cartwright pursued her M.A. in Childhood Education, she saw some familiar faces around the Adelphi campus. Her son William finished his B.A. in liberal arts at Adelphi this past December, and her daughter Kathryn is currently enrolled in STEP, also en route to a masterâs in education. Cartwright and her daughter even took a couple of classes together.
âThey would often come across me on campus,â she laughed.
When she finishes her student teaching next August, Cartwright can certainly look back with pride on what she has accomplished, at home and at school.
âEveryoneâs like, âItâs gone so fast!â Iâm like, âNo, it hasnât!â But my friends, colleagues, and family have kept me going. Itâs been challenging, but so rewarding.â
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications DirectorÌę
p â 516.237.8634
e â twilson@adelphi.edu