Graduates of the Ammon School of Education bring talent, passion, compassion and tireless commitment to their jobs in the city that never sleeps.
There are unique challenges to being a teacher in New York City.Parental involvement and student motivation are not always ashigh as in other school districts. Teachers and those who aspireto teach may not view certain neighborhoods as desirable placesin which to work. And then there is the fairly recent issue of publicschools and charter schools battling each other for space, equipmentand financial resources—often within the same building—with thechildren sometimes caught in the middle.
Yet, despite the struggles, many teachersnot only thrive in New York City schoolsbut also would not want to teach anywhereelse. “I know a lot of graduateswho still don’t have full-time teachingpositions—that’s because they’re onlyconsidering schools on Long Island,” saidIrene (Demille) Pizzo ’03, M.A. ’04, whoteaches in Brooklyn. “New York City hassuch an amazing group of kids who needgood teachers.”
Here are three such teachers, all graduatesof the ,who bring talent, passion, compassion, afierce intelligence and a tireless commitmentto their jobs in the city that never sleeps.
Irene (Demille) Pizzo ’03, M.A. ’04, teaching students in Brooklyn.
Nellyzita Nwosu, Ph.D. ’13 works with speech- and hearing-impaired children at P.S. 69 in Queens.
Leonard Bruno ’11, M.S. ’14 teaches at Urban Dove TEAM Charter School in Brooklyn.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu