Former English teacher Joy Behar now uses The View as her classroom

Joy Behar

Former teacher and current talk show hostess Joy Behar.

Success in the classroom often leads to success in other fields requiring performance in front of an audience. One former educator who proves this to be true is comedienne, actress, and talk show hostess Joy Behar.

Joy was born Josephine Victoria Occhiuto on October 7, 1942, in Williamsburg in the Brooklyn area of New York. Her mother earned a living as a seamstress and her father worked as a truck driver. Joy earned her Bachelor’s degree from Queens College in 1964, and her Master’s in English Education from State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1966.

After her college graduation, Joy accepted a position as an English teacher at Lindenhurst Senior High School in Long Island, New York. She worked there for five years.

At the age of about 40, Joy decided to leave her classroom to pursue a career as a stand-up comic. By 1996 she had established herself as a comedienne, playing all the major venues. She also hosted a talk show on WABC-Radio. She has appeared in several movies: Cookie, This Is My Life, and Woody Allen’s Manhattan Murder Mystery. In addition, she authored a book of humorous essays and stories called Joy Shtick — Or What is the Existential Vacuum and Does It Come with Attachments? She also wrote two children’s books about a dog named Sheetzucacapoopoo. But the former teacher is probably best known for her appearances on the daily talk show The View. She was hired for the program in 1997 after show creator Barbara Walters saw her perform at Milton Berle’s 89th birthday tribute.

Joy still has connections to the classroom. She is married to Steven Janowitz, a retired junior high school math teacher. And she sometimes is accused of treating her guests on The View as if she were their teacher. “Someone once told me I’m still teaching, only now I have a bigger classroom,” she once joked.

To read more about Joy Behar, click on ABC The View Co-Hosts

Mary Catherine Swanson: The Chalkboard Champion who Originated AVID

img_lead_mcswanson[1]Many educators around the country are very familiar with AVID, a program designed to show minority and other under-represented students how they can succeed in a college environment. The acronym, which stands for Advancement Via Individual Determination, truly measures up to its hype.
The program was originated in 1980 by chalkboard champion Mary Catherine Swanson, who was an English teacher at Clairemont High School in San Diego, Southern California. At the time, her school, which had a predominately white student population, was preparing a slate of remedial courses to serve an influx of minority students in response to court-ordered integration. But Swanson insisted that with appropriate academic tools and support, minority and other under-represented students could thrive in a rigorous academic atmosphere, and she set about establishing a program that would prove her point. The AVID program she developed offers strategies for note-taking and test-taking, peer mentoring, tutoring, and cultural field trips. Her efforts have positively affected the lives of over 400,000 students since the program’s inauguration.
Since 1980, statistics have shown the overwhelming success of the program. Those statistics show that of those students enrolled in AVID, 95% go on to enroll in a four-year college, and 85% of them graduate. The program is so highly successful that it has been instituted in 4,500 high schools in 45 states and 16 countries around the world.
Mary Catherine Swanson, who refused to dummy-down a rigorous academic program and insisted her students were capable, is truly a chalkboard champion.