Meet Our Teachers
Kelly Eddy

With Encouragement from his Teacher, Student Collects Primary Sources for the Shoah Foundation
Kelly Eddy, a 2015 graduate of Ashland’s Master of Arts in American History and Government (MAHG) program, teaches Advanced Placement US history at Winston Churchill High School in Livonia, Michigan, a western suburb of Detroit. Since the 2008 recession, the school’s performing arts magnet program has attracted students from underfunded schools in Detroit, as well as immigrant Chinese and Middle Eastern students. Eddy, who during more than 20 years at Churchill has demanded students’ best efforts, has had to adapt her teaching style.
Ambitious students are now taking AP classes they are not ready for. “They need extra support. With many parents working an extra job, the students are alone more. So I have to explain: ‘Here is what you must do to be successful.’”
Seizing an Opportunity
In 2015 Eddy seized a chance to give several students a push. The Henry Ford Museum—where Eddy researched her Masters thesis on the founder of the auto company—asked her to bring four students to a workshop offered by the Shoah Foundation. Eddy drove four bright students to Dearborn, Michigan, where they participated in an “IWitness” event. They watched filmed interviews of Holocaust survivors and constructed “found poems” from these elderly witnesses’ moving words. Steeped in primary sources through her MAHG work, Eddy had in turn prepared her students to learn from such sources. They responded thoughtfully to the films.
“High school kids spending a day of summer going to school—that’s impressive,” Eddy thought, as she and her students were leaving. “Then a Shoah Foundation filmmaker asked if my students would stay to be interviewed.” They stayed.
Later, Eddy and her students were invited to a Shoah Foundation gala at the Ford museum, where philanthropist Bill Ford would be honored. Students donned their best clothes and climbed in a limo that whisked them back to Dearborn. They were in a private room, reviewing their poems from the summer workshop, when “in walked filmmaker Steven Spielberg, founder of the Shoah organization, who sat and talked with them.”
“Then the students mingled with the VIP guests, talking about their experience with IWitness. I watched as they met actors Steve Carell and Halle Berry.” At dinner, a promotional video was shown, and Eddy was surprised to find her students the stars of the film.
Stepping Up to the Next Level
Later, the Foundation emailed Eddy about their student ambassador program. Eddy urged a gifted student who’d been featured prominently in the video to apply. First she warned him: “‘If you’re not going to take this seriously, don’t do it.’ He was a natural leader who at times goofed off. But he was selected as an ambassador, one of four students outside the state of California.” Through the program, he interviewed several Detroit area Holocaust survivors and one survivor of the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
Eddy watched the student change. “He gained empathy—he began standing up for others. He gained a sense of responsibility, and he grew in self-esteem. He realized it wasn’t just his name on the line, it was mine, also.” The student went on to study at Central Michigan University.
The MAHG program helped Eddy enlarge her expectations of students. “In every MAHG class, teachers discuss and interpret primary sources. Now I put those documents in students’ hands: to teach critical thinking skills and to allow them to learn directly from the past.”
“The way the MAHG professors teach through discussion changed my own approach. I lecture less now,” Eddy says, admitting this involves risk. Teachers studying in Ashland’s Masters program prepare well for classes, and discussions are rich. But in high school, “If the kids haven’t done the reading, discussion will fall flat. Then I say, ‘Well, we’ve lost the chance to discuss this. You’re still responsible for it on the test, but we’re moving on to something else.’ The AP curriculum doesn’t allow us to slow down. But students can learn from mistakes as well as triumphs.”
You can view the video featuring Eddy’s students here. The student who reads his poem near the beginning of the film, Brandon Bartley, was selected as a student ambassador for the Shoah Foundation.