Meet the alumni of awakening seed school

Age: 27 | Location: Berkeley, CA

After finishing high school at Mountain View in Mesa in 2006, I went to Yale for college, where I studied Italian Language and Literature and graduated in 2010. I’ve spent the last six years completing an M.A. and working on my Ph.D. in Italian Studies at UC Berkeley. Luckily for me, my dissertation research also involves trips to museums and archives in Florence and Rome. I’ve now been a student for more than two decades, and I can trace many of my beliefs about education and pedagogy to my formative years at the Awakening Seed. Now that I spend more time on the other side of the classroom teaching undergraduate courses, I try to work with my students to cultivate an open and accepting learning community in which all of our voices are heard.

Age: 27 | Location: Bozeman, MT

I am currently working and studying as a PhD candidate in physics. My specialty is in condensed matter physics with an emphasis on the thermal expansion of H2O ice. I have about one year left before I can present my PhD dissertation and hopefully graduate. My post-Awakening Seed education sent me to the Tempe school district and Corona del Sol High School, then on to Northern Arizona University where I completed two Bachelor of Science Degrees in 2010; one in Physics and another in Astronomy with a minor in Mathematics. I came to Bozeman in 2011 to begin my graduate studies in physics. I obtained a Masters of Science in Physics in 2014 and continue to work towards a PhD in physics. The most important aspects of my life are my family and friends, spending as much time as possible outdoors—hiking, backpacking, landscape photography, mountain biking, kayaking, cross-country skiing and snowboarding. This strong connection with the outdoors germinated from the teachings of the Seed. I remember our Earth Day celebrations where we would learn about the natural beauty of our planet and, most important, how to maintain its beauty. That’s why any time I come across a piece of trash on a trail I pack it out. The practice of “leave no trace” has been engrained in me since childhood from my time at the Seed, it’s part of who I am. This is abundantly clear to me when I’m out with others who haven’t had such an Earth-conscious upbringing and things that seem so obvious to me, like not littering for example, don’t even enter their conscious thought. If only everyone had such an early education, our world would be a much cleaner place!

My name is Caitlin Tierney. I’m 26 years old. I live in Menlo Park, CA and I’m a PhD student at UC Davis, where I study linguistics. My research is on pragmatics (a subfield of semantics) and how people learn to use and understand non-literal speech (e.g., saying, “it’s a little breezy” to get someone to close a window), as well as how people build communities of practice.

I went to Arizona School for the Arts for high school, then I went to University of Washington in Seattle, where I graduated in 2011 with a B.A. in Linguistics and Scandinavian Area Studies.

What matters to me is my family, my friends, and my research. What makes me happy is spending time with my family and closest friends (some of whom I met at the Seed) and learning new things. I think the Seed helped me understand that everything is connected. I think that applies to academic subjects as well as the different domains in my life. My friends help me get through professional challenges, and my work helps me find new friends. I get to work with languages, people, computers, and math, and the Seed helped me have confidence that I can be good at all those things and not just be a math person or a language person.

Age: 41 | Location: San Francisco, CA

As a kid, and one of the original Seeds who started in 1977 (I was 3), I always knew that I went to a different school but it wasn’t until later on in life I realized that in this case different meant special. Special in that I want everyone to know what an amazing place this was and is. Special in that way that you want to shout it from the roof top and want every kid to go there. Needless to say, the Seed has been a huge influence on my life in that it taught me to celebrate the differences in life and that different is special. I wish I could send my two kids, Liam and Fiona, to the Seed so that they too could experience this special place, but since I live in San Francisco it would be a hard commute on everyone.

Age: 31 | Location: Tempe, AZ

Currently I tutor mathematics and I am the chief technical officer of a start-up, Sidereal Technologies. I graduated from Arizona State University in 2012 with a Bachelors of Science in Mathematics. Before that I graduated from Corona Del Sol High School.

The one thing above all others that makes me happy is learning something new. This led me to study mathematics, programing, physics, astronomy, and car repair. My goal in life is to become a polymath, or a person who is learned in multiple subjects. This was one of the many things the Seed instilled in me but the most important thing I was taught at the Seed was empathy, the ability to take another person’s point of view into consideration when making decisions. That, however, is a dry description of empathy. A much better description of it is the drive to perfect oneself by understanding others and trying to minimize the harm one does through one’s actions. If empathy were more highly valued, and practiced more, as it is at the Seed, then the world would have fewer ills. Indeed, the only ills that would exist are those that come from nature and not from man. That is the ultimate lesson about empathy I learned from the Awakening Seed.