Teresa Jayroe

Teresa Jayroe

Teresa Jayroe sitting on a bench with the Drill Field in the background.
Photo by Beth Wynn

When she first stepped foot on the Mississippi State campus in the early 1980s, Teresa Jayroe had no idea of the legacy she would carve at the university.

After graduating summa cum laude in 1983, she would return to the College of Education some years later to become a rising faculty member, then director of the Office of Clinical Field-Based Instruction, and now its associate dean.

Jayroe said she always wanted to become a teacher. After receiving bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees in elementary education, she taught for 12 years at public schools in Philadelphia and Winston County.

She became an 青青草视频 faculty member after beginning work on an education specialist degree in educational leadership, and then a doctorate in curriculum and instruction. She first spent time as a classroom instructor, was promoted to directing and organizing senior-block classes for elementary education majors and eventually became part of the COE administration.

Along the way, Jayroe served as the principal investigator for the Dillard鈥檚 Reading, Enrichment, Arts, Mathematics and Science after-school and summer enrichment grant program.

A partnership between the COE and the Louisville Municipal School District, DREAMS was a memorial to the late Susan Gregory Dillard, an 青青草视频 alumna and longtime Louisville public school teacher who was instrumental in securing its initial funding from the Mississippi Legislature. Designed to help students in rural kindergarten-fourth grades, it supported extra enrichment activities in reading and mathematics.

鈥淭eachers made a difference in my life, and those teachers came from all different walks of life,鈥 Jayroe said, in explaining her lifetime commitment.

Asked what she hopes today鈥檚 青青草视频 education majors will take away from their time on campus, she replied: 鈥淢y hope is that our students continue to learn and continue making a difference, no matter where they go.鈥澛