BEAM DFW: Episode 1
Finding quality professional organizations as a bi-lingual teacher to network, enjoy professional development opportunities, and find answers to difficult questions can be challenging. In the 1980s and 1990s, it was even more so.
In this episode, Dr. Liz Garza-Garcia, President, BEAM spoke with life-long members Dr. Annette Torres-Elias, Associate Professor, Texas Woman’s University, and Dr. Uvaldina “Dini” Janacek, Retired Assistant Professor, the University of North Texas at Dallas about the benefits of being a member of the BEAM Association.
To begin, BEAM stands for Bilingual/ESL Education Association of the Metroplex. The organization has its roots in the Texas Association for Bilingual Education (TABE) which held its first conference in 1976. Eventually, the work started at this conference led to the creation of BEAM which continues to thrive with nearly 900 educators from 40+ districts across the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex (BEAM DFW).
Dr. Janicek found the organization quite by accident. A bi-lingual teacher since 1989, she was happy to find a place where she could get support for her work. And, despite being retired, she continues to work with BEAM.
“One of the things that intrigues me the most about BEAM is that it’s a pre-K, 16 plus partnership. I encountered that term when I was an administrator at one of the area community colleges. And I think that makes so much sense to link the pre-K12 education system with higher education,” Janicek said.
When asked what keeps her involved, Janicek said, “when I go to BEAM meetings, it makes me feel like I have really devoted myself to a worthy venture, a worthy career. It gives me validation in terms of my life’s work, and I want to keep contributing any way I can.
Dr. Torres-Elias has a similar story. She found BEAM as a graduate student at Texas Woman’s University in the mid-1990s after completing an alternative certification for bilingual education. In the early 90s, Dr. Torres-Elias started work in a school district with a brand-new bilingual program. There were only three teachers with lots of questions and very few answers. “A lot of will to do good for kids but not enough hours. Searching for answers I came to BEAM and I found answers and so much more,” Torres-Elias stated.
Dr. Torres-Elias continued to talk about how “BEAM has been an important part of [her] professional career. I became a member looking for support, networking, professional development, and advocacy. And those are precisely the reasons I am still a member of BEAM.”
For more information about BEAM DFW, visit beamdfw.org.