Thomas Johnson III knows he’s been lucky to have great mentors — adult role models who taught him how to succeed. After graduating from California State University, Northridge and preparing to embark on a career in education, he’s eager to serve as a mentor for the next generations of students.
In May, Johnson ’13 (Music), ’18 (Teaching Credential) completed the Accelerated Collaborative Teacher (ACT) Preparation Program in CSUN’s Michael D. Eisner College of Education. This fall he will start teaching sixth-grade core math and science at the Los Angeles Unified School District’s first all-boys academy, the new Boys Academic Learning Academy of Los Angeles, on the campus of Washington Preparatory High School. An African-American male, Johnson said he’s excited to serve as a role model for a student body he estimates will be 75 percent African-American and 25 percent Latino.
“I think it’s a good fit because not only will I be able to teach the students, but the students will be able to look up to someone who’s made it through college,” Johnson said. “They’ll see that, yes, in the real world you may not be surrounded by people who look like you, but you can still do it. It’s a significant thing to accomplish and just say, ‘Hey, I did it.'”
Associate Professor Nancy O’Rode, who taught Johnson in the mathematics curriculum and methods ACT course, said he will be a great role model for his students, as he is smart, kind, considerate and funny. He already has experience in creating math problems that require problem-solving skills, using ideas based not on formulas but on challenges relative to his students’ neighborhoods and lives. She said he will be served well in the classroom with a booming baritone voice and a habit of getting everyone involved by asking “What do you think?”
“He’s just an exemplary human being,” O’Rode said. “He will be able to just naturally be a model for what it means to be a man in today’s society.”
Teaching wasn’t always Johnson’s goal, but he always appreciated the mentorship he received, he said.
He grew up in Culver City. His father works as a urologist in private practice and his mother is an educator — now the principal of Carthay School of Environmental Studies Magnet in Los Angeles. He also benefited from the guidance of other teachers and professors throughout his life, including Carey Christensen, a professor of music industry studies at CSUN.
After earning his bachelor’s degree, Johnson worked as a recording engineer at various studios, including part-time and freelance work. At his mother’s suggestion, he tried substitute teaching to earn a steadier income. It was his most challenging classroom in those days that inspired Johnson.
As a long-term sub, he inherited a class of fourth graders whose teacher had left a couple of months into the school year. The class included foster children, recent immigrants from El Salvador (including two who didn’t speak English), and other students whose personal lives provided barriers to learning.
Johnson worked to get to know each student as an individual and connect with them personally.
“That’s when I realized I can make a difference in another person’s life,” he said. “To enjoy school, students have to trust who’s teaching it. When we had a teacher we didn’t like, we didn’t buy in to what we were being taught.”
So Johnson returned to CSUN for his teaching credential in CSUN’s ACT program, a very selective, two-semester, full-time program designed for post-baccalaureate credential candidates interested in pursuing a Multiple Subject, Single Subject or Education Specialist Credential. Candidates progress through the program as a cohort, completing fieldwork during the day and coursework in the late afternoon and evenings. During the program, Johnson served as a student teacher in the Larchmont Charter School and Community Magnet Charter School in Los Angeles. He is considering returning to CSUN to complete a master’s in mathematics education.
Johnson will return to CSUN this summer for a summer bridge program funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, which awarded the university a three-year grant for a teacher-preparation project aimed at increasing the number of men — particularly African-Americans, Asians and Latinos — who want to work in elementary education. In the summer program, Johnson will serve as a mentor for incoming minority, male high school juniors and seniors who are interested in teaching.
“I still see the need to help guide young males — doesn’t matter what background they come from — but males in general, just to help them make it through life, just be somebody they go to talk to,” Johnson said. “If they need help with school, need help with life in general, just have that older person to help guide them in the right way.”
To read more about the F2MTC Program.