My path into education wasn’t traditional, but it shaped the teacher I am today. After graduating from high school, I took a four-year break from school and worked in a café inside a local bookstore—an experience that deepened my love for learning, literacy, and the communities that gather around books.
I later enrolled in community college and eventually transferred to Mount Holyoke College after being accepted to both Mount Holyoke and Smith. During my undergraduate studies, I became fascinated by how students learn—especially how concrete manipulatives and clear visuals can spark real “aha” moments and help abstract concepts finally click. That belief in making learning visible still guides every resource I create.
I went on to earn my Master of Education at Lesley University, along with my Reading Specialist License (K–12). At Lesley, I studied how reading develops in the brain, and that science-of-reading foundation transformed my instructional approach. Today, I design resources that combine research-based practice with student-friendly supports—materials that help all learners build skills with confidence.