News

08/31/2020

Meet Our New Faculty: August

Each Friday we’ve been featuring a new faculty member on Facebook. In case you missed “New Faculty Fridays,” enjoy our recap of new teachers we highlighted in August. Welcome Edwin Craig and Afia Obeng!

Edwin Craig, Middle and Upper School Learning Specialist
Edwin Craig

Edwin was attracted to Poly because of the diverse faculty and “amazing student body.” “I can’t wait to get to know the students and to learn from their individual experiences,” he said.

A driving force in his decision to become a Learning Specialist was having the example of Mr. Dreyden, his 11th grade U.S. history teacher. “He made the lesson come alive through his passion for the subject and connection with the students,” Edwin said. “He excelled at working with students individually or in small groups. He made you feel at ease and broke down complex ideas or concepts for you to understand.”

Edwin earned an Ed.M in Special Education and B.S. in Secondary Education from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

“It is imperative that we listen, understand, and respond with compassion to our students’ needs during these challenging times.”

With the challenges of the pandemic and Poly’s commitment to anti-racism curriculum this year, Edwin said, “It is important as educators that we provide an atmosphere of understanding, hope, and equal opportunity in our classrooms. It is imperative that we listen, understand, and respond with compassion to our students’ needs during these challenging times.”

Edwin, who has lived in Japan, Australia, and the Philippines, is a movie buff and, when not teaching, enjoys watching a great movie.


Afia Obeng, Middle School Science Teacher
Afia Obeng

Poly’s new Middle School science teacher, Afia Obeng, learned from her teacher, Sister Noreen, that something as common as cooking was really chemistry. “Her easy and understandable approach to teaching the content helped cultivate my love for the subject,” Afia said. “She encouraged me, as one of her high-achieving students, to apply for a summer internship at the Public Health Research Institute (PHRI) of the New Jersey Medical School in Newark, NJ. I realized, once I entered PHRI, that in high school I was learning textbook chemistry, while in the actual lab setting, I was applying biological and chemical concepts in tandem.” This experience sparked Afia’s interest in biochemistry. “But what ultimately inspired me to pursue the field was researching alongside a cohort of students and successful research scientists who ‘looked like me,’” she said.

Afia is excited to come to Poly, where she will teach Grades 7 and 8 science, because of the school’s commitment to “robust faculty development,” and promoting diversity in both school culture and curriculum.

“We are dealing with a dual public health crisis. The coronavirus pandemic and structural racism—coupled with an economic decline. With these issues come unprecedented levels of fear, anxiety, and stress.”

Afia is ready for the challenges ahead this academic year. “We are dealing with a dual public health crisis, “ she said, “the coronavirus pandemic and structural racism—coupled with an economic decline. With these issues come unprecedented levels of fear, anxiety, and stress. In a time like this, it is imperative to be sensitive to different ways we are impacted and different ways we cope, and to be compassionate towards each other.”

She became “very technologically savvy in terms of utilizing different online resources to engage students” this past spring and will bring this experience to the Virtual Poly setting.

When not teaching, Afia loves poetry, specifically spoken word, and has performed in the past with her sister.


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