Lillian Wolfe â20, MEd '22 remembers her frustrated childhood tantrums.
As a baby, she experienced severe hearing loss and even after years of early speech therapy, her words were often unintelligible.
âI stomped and cried in frustration when adults ignored me because they couldnât understand what I was saying,â she said.
A kindergarten teacher, though, took her under her wingâ meeting with Wolfe every morning with a stock of Laffy Taffy as a reward for vowel pronunciation.
âMrs. Mandelbaum never gave up on me,â she said. âShe used her free time every morning before class to tutor me based on my speech therapistâs guidelines, on top of her already arduous burden of reining in a classroom of 5-year-olds.
âShe was the first person outside my family responsible for my competency in talking to anyone or reading anything.
âShe set me on my path to be a teacher.â
Wolfe chose to pursue her undergraduate degree in education and learning at 51³Ô¹Ï, where she could earn her bachelorâs degree and teaching license while getting a traditional college experience, including competing with the Speech & Debate Team. She later earned her master's in education from Pacific as well.
âWhat sold me on Pacific was the amazing welcome I received,â she said, recounting an initial tour where staff jumped to accommodate her motherâs mobility challenges and her hearing challenges. âThe kind, welcoming gestures and the many more I consistently received form everyone at Pacific has made the university my second home.
âBeing a Boxer was the best choice I made in my life.â