There are many heroic servicemen and women who are now serving our students in classrooms. One of these is Brian Thompson, a high school social studies educator from Washington, DC.
Brian earned his Bachelor’s degree in Speech Communication and Rhetoric from California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo. He completed the requirements for his Master’s degree in Secondary Education and Teaching from American University in 2011.
But before he became a teacher, Brian was a member of the US Army. During his sting as a serviceman, he was stationed for 13 months along the Afghanistan/Pakistan border in 2007 and 2008. While there, he was in charge of a mortar squad with the US Army’s 82nd Airborne Division. As the story goes, one day Brian received a care package from his mother. Inside was a paperback copy of Teacher Man, the third in a series of memoirs by Frank McCourt, author of Angela’s Ashes. “You would make a terrific teacher, just like Mr. McCourt,” Brian’s mother wrote inside the book, “Especially making kids laugh with that sarcastic humor.”
Since 2009, Brian has taught history at Cardozo High School in Washington, DC. Cardozo is a combined middle and high school in northwest Washington, DC, in the Columbia Heights neighborhood. He taught there five years.
In 2014, Brian was hired as a leader of the Military Affairs Team at the US Department of Education. There he works as an advocate for service members, military-connected students, veterans, and their families. He coordinates the Department’s internal and external efforts to address their needs and fosters access to high-quality and affordable educational programs and services.
Brian Thompson: a true Chalkboard Champion.