I did a year at CW Post, a small private college in NY with a great pre-med program, but after a year I figured this wasn't the direction I wanted to go in my life.
I took a year off from college and worked. Applied and re-matriculated at NYU for undergrad.
Worked for 2 years, then applied for my Masters Program at Georgetown.
My sister has had several teaching positions throughout her career spanning Primary education through College level coursework, but is not teaching full-time at the moment.
She's a Program Director working for an Educational Policy think tank in D.C. and instructs a course on something (I forget) as an adjunct / visiting professor at the University of Maryland and George Washington University from time to time.
Thanks for your input. You can put it in the corner with the other opinions.
But I'll tell you this. My Sister's work and papers have done more to advance the creation and use of charter schools in underserved minority areas and assist in increasing the academic rigor of 'black schools', therein making more black students TRULY college ready than probably any effort on any day that you have walked this earth.
You sound like another chuffing mouth from the sidelines who complains but does nothing to help.
Elaine Weiss
National Coordinator, Broader Bolder Approach to Education Campaign

Areas of Expertise
Education policy • Early childhood education • Economics of education
Biography
Elaine Weiss is the National Coordinator for the Broader Bolder Approach to Education (BBA), where she works with three co-chairs, a high-level task force, and multiple coalition partners to promote a comprehensive, evidence-based set of policies to allow all children to thrive. Major publications for BBA includeMarket-Oriented Education Reforms’ Rhetoric Trumps Reality, and Mismatches in Race to the Top Limit Educational Improvement. In 2014, she worked with educators from across the country on a series of commentaries for Bill Moyers on the many links between poverty and educational achievement. She has also authored dozens of blogs for the Huffington Post, the Washington Post Answer Sheet,TalkPoverty, the Nation, and other publications, and been interviewed for numerous radio shows, including Jesse Jackson’s “Keep Hope Alive” and NPR’s “The Diane Rehm Show.”
Weiss came to BBA from the Pew Charitable Trusts, where she served as project manager for Pew’s Partnership for America’s Economic Success campaign. In that capacity, she collaborated with some of the nation’s most respected researchers to document the economic benefits of early childhood investments. The campaign worked with state partners to engage business leaders in promoting effective early childhood programs. She was a member of the Center for Disease Control’s task force on child abuse, and served as volunteer counsel for clients at the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. Weiss has a Ph.D. in public policy from the George Washington University Trachtenberg School, a J.D. from the Harvard Law School, and a B.A. and B.S. from the University of Maryland, College Park. She lives in Silver Spring, Maryland with her husband and two daughters, both students in Montgomery County public schools.
Education
Ph.D., Public Policy, George Washington University
J.D., Harvard Law School
B.A., Political Science, University of Maryland at College Park
B.S., Biology, University of Maryland at College Park



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