First-generation student Merari Boffill ’18 hopes to become a teacher and share the importance of education after her graduation from Texas A&M University.
By Merari Boffill, Texas A&M Universtiy interdisciplinary studies major, for the Texas A&M Foundation
From a very young age, my mom and grandparents instilled in me that college was the answer to attaining a good life. They didn’t want me to repeat their lives—lives filled with intense labor and immense stress because no matter how long or hard they toiled, they could never make ends meet. I heard my grandparents’ stories of long hours spent picking fruits and vegetables in the Texas heat for just enough pay to survive, and I witnessed my single mother’s constant worry of being unable to provide for my younger sister and me. Their experiences brought them to think of education as the “way out”—the way out of poverty and the lifestyle my family and many others in my small hometown of Elsa, Texas, had felt trapped in for generations. Thus, they encouraged my efforts in school. They made sure I understood that college was not just an option. College was my way out.
As I progressed through school, I gained opportunities simply by doing well in classes and participating in extracurricular activities. For instance, I received college credit during high school by passing AP exams, and I traveled on all-expenses-paid trips by serving as a state officer for the Texas Association of Future Educators. Most importantly, however, because of my dedication to academics, I graduated in the top 10 percent of my senior class, which ensured my automatic acceptance to any public Texas university. These opportunities ignited my interest in education as a career path.
I am a first-generation college student, and my decision to attend Texas A&M University was not difficult. My ultimate concern in choosing a university was the amount of financial assistance I would receive. Thankfully, Texas A&M offered me scholarships including a Century Scholarship, Regents’ Scholarship and the Mildred K. Leitz Scholarship in the College of Education and Human Development. These have made an incredible difference in my life, and I hope that through teaching, I can positively impact the lives of my future students the way the donors of these scholarships have greatly impacted mine.
Breaking the mold
Attending Texas A&M has benefited me in numerous ways, but I am most grateful for its effect on my family—particularly on my younger siblings. My sister Carmen is now a freshman interdisciplinary studies major at Texas A&M, while my 9-year-old brother Manny is already determined to become an Aggie, too. Because of the opportunities afforded by a good education, my siblings and I can break the cycle of poverty that has plagued my family for generations.
Now in my senior year, I will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies with a focus on fourth-grade through eighth-grade language arts and social studies. Through its curricula, the College of Education and Human Development has prepared me to teach students of all types, given me insight into the best teaching methods, and further solidified the importance of education that my mom and grandparents made clear to me long ago.
I can’t wait for my first day in the classroom when I’m standing at the front instead of sitting behind a desk. I can’t wait to see eager faces staring back at me. I want to be a teacher because I understand the crucial role education plays in the lives of students and in society, and I know educational gaps create some of our nation’s most serious societal problems. Education not only shapes students’ minds but also their entire lives. There is so much aside from book learning that can be gained from the classroom: hope, freedom and opportunity.
Education is my way out, and I intend to let other students know that it can be their way out, too. I will be there to let them know that through education, they can be anything they want to be and live any life they want to live. That, I think, is the true responsibility of our nation’s educational system and teachers everywhere.
Texas teachers
The College of Education and Human Development is home to more than 7,000 students and is the premier teacher prep program in Texas. Faculty and graduates of the college work in 211 of 254 Texas counties. The school is the state’s No. 1 producer of math and science teachers and is within the state’s top five producers of special education and bilingual teachers. Most Aggies pursuing a teaching path log approximately 700 classroom hours during college and secure job placements before they graduate. The college’s graduates have a 25 percent higher teaching retention rate over a five-year period than the national average.