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2026 Ignite Potential Luncheon Digital Program

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Thursday, February 19, 2026 River Oaks Country Club

One Day all children will have the opportunity to attain an excellent education.

Program

Welcome

Paula & Reginald DesRoches 2026 Event Chairs

Video: Celebrating 35 Years of Impact

Tiffany Cuellar Needham

Executive Director, Teach For America Houston

Lunch Served

Recognition of Honoree

Phoebe & Bobby Tudor 2026 Honorary Event Chairs Doug Foshee

Owner at Sallyport Investments, LLC

Fireside Chat

Wendy Kopp

CEO and Co-founder of Teach For All Founder, Teach For America

Aneesh Sohoni

CEO, Teach For America

Closing Remarks

Tiffany Cuellar Needham

Executive Director, Teach For America Houston

Dear friends and supporters,

Welcome to Teach For America Houston’s 35th Anniversary Ignite Potential Luncheon!

We are honored to celebrate this milestone with you. Since 1991, Teach For America Houston has served as a proven talent pipeline and a driving force in improving the quality of public education across our region.

Today’s theme—From Day One to One Day—honors the progress we’ve made since our first corps members arrived in Houston and rallies us around the work that still lies ahead until we reach our shared vision: One day, all children will have the opportunity to attain an excellent education.

This moment is also a celebration of the thousands of educators and leaders who have shaped Houston’s classrooms and communities—and a heartfelt thank you to each of you. Whether you’ve stood with us from the beginning or are just joining the TFA family, your support powers this movement and makes our progress possible.

We are especially proud to recognize Doug Foshee, a steadfast champion of public education. Doug’s leadership, generosity, and belief in the power of great teaching continue to leave a lasting mark on Houston’s schools and students. er the past 35 years, we also be done. Our students are t on your continued support

Bobby & Phoebe Tudor Honorary Event Chairs

Our Mission

Teach For America finds, develops, and supports a diverse network of leaders who expand opportunity for children from classrooms, schools, and every sector and field that shapes the broader systems in which schools operate.

At the request of then Supt. Rod Paige, 169 TFA corps members arrived in Houston and were placed at schools within the Houston Independent School District (HISD)

Proving What’s Possible

In the early years of TFA in Houston, the focus was proving what was possible in schools and classrooms, and proving that the TFA experience would motivate alumni of the program to become long-time education advocates. The founding of KIPP and YES Prep in ‘94 and ‘95 by TFA alums began to prove this very thing

Answering the Call to Scale

The following years focused on scaling our corps size and alumni base in order to grow our impact on the classroom and school level. From 2000 to 2016, TFA brought 2,833 teachers to Houston, with the largest corps being in 2010 (290 corps members)

At the same time TFA alumni began to saturate Houston’s education landscape TFA alumni moved into important leadership roles across the city, including at HISD and on the school board. Other alums became social entrepreneurs and founded non-profit organizations that continue to impact students across Houston today, including EMERGE and ProUnitas.

Laying the Foundation for Systemic Change

Knowing what’s possible in classrooms and schools, and having answered the call to scale, the next era of TFA became systemic change. With so many powerful education organizations in Houston, TFA joined the necessary work of coalition building. Other key organizations in this effort included Latinos for Education, ONE Houston, Good Reason Houston, and Houstonians for Great Public Schools all of which were founded by TFA alums

During this time, TFA also grew its cadre of systems leaders in Houston and shifted its focus from school-wide change to community-wide change

2030

y In 2020, TFA set an ambitious goal of ensuring twice as many children reach key educational milestones indicating they are on a path to economic mobility To reach this goal by 2030, we are focused on growing schools and programs that are delivering results for kids, driving strategic innovation in underperforming schools, and expanding and uniting the coalition of leaders working toward educational excellence and equity for children We are motivated by some recent city-wide wins:

Greater Houston Region

Aldine ISD has had the largest gains in reading with a 7% increase in Meets/Masters from 23-’24 to ‘24-25

Houston ISD, KIPP Texas, and YES Prep have seen a 5% increase in math growth from 23-’24 to ‘24-25

Houston ISD

There are zero F-rated schools, down from 56 in 2023

74% of schools now rated A or B (197 schools), up from 35% (93 schools) in 2023

82 former D or F schools have improved to A or B

Wendy Kopp

Wendy Kopp is CEO and Co-founder of Teach For All. Wendy conceived of and proposed the idea of Teach For America in her undergraduate thesis at Princeton University in 1989 She founded and led the organization for 24 years Wendy led the development of Teach For All to be responsive to the initiative of social entrepreneurs around the world who were determined to adapt this approach in their own countries.

Wendy is the author of A Chance to Make History: What Works and What Doesn’t in Providing an Excellent Education for All (2011), One Day, All Children: The Unlikely Triumph of Teach For America and What I Learned Along the Way (2000). She holds honorary doctorate degrees from 15 universities and is the recipient of numerous awards including the WISE Prize for Education (2021), the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship (2008), and the Schwab Foundation’s Outstanding Social Entrepreneur Award (2003).

Wendy resides in New York City with her husband Richard Barth and is the mom of four.

Aneesh Sohoni is the Chief Executive Officer of Teach For America, leading a national network of more than 70,000 leaders working to expand educational opportunity for children across the country. A former high school English teacher through Teach For America, Aneesh has spent his career advancing educational equity through leadership roles in the nonprofit and public sectors, including as CEO of One Million Degrees and as Executive Director of Teach For America Greater Chicago–Northwest Indiana. He is the recipient of Teach For America’s 2024 Peter Jennings Award for Civic Leadership, a Forbes 30 Under 30

honoree, and the author of Leadership Launchpad a Substack on leadership and educational progress.

Tiffany Cuellar Needham

Tiffany Cuellar Needham is the Executive Director of Teach For America (TFA) in Houston, where she leads a team of 25+ supporting more than 200 corps members and a network of over 2,000 alumni. Under her leadership, TFA Houston works to expand opportunity for children and ensure more students reach key educational milestones by 2030.

Tiffany’s commitment to ensuring every child has the opportunity to attain an excellent education began in 2003 when she graduated from the University of Texas at Austin and joined TFA in Houston. As a teacher, she taught a group of exceptional students in the Houston Independent School District. After three years in the classroom Tiffany joined TFA staff and most recently served as the Vice President of Programs for TFA Memphis.

She is a Senior Fellow of the American Leadership Forum, serves on the Board of Texas Executive Women, and was named a 2018 Woman in the Fast Lane by the Greater Houston Women’s Chamber of Commerce. A life member of the Texas Exes, she proudly bleeds burnt orange and white.

Tiffany lives in Pearland with her husband, Paul, a fellow TFA alumnus, and their two children, Isabella and Westley.

Teach For America Houston Founding Board Chair

Josephine Powell Smith

Josephine Powell Smith is a native of Richmond, Virginia and a graduate of Smith College She began her career teaching elementary and preschool in New York City and San Antonio before moving to Houston in 1973.

She is the founding chair of the Teach For America Houston Regional Board and, more than 30 years later, continues to serve as a dedicated board member. Josephine remains deeply engaged in Houston’s education and civic life, currently serving on the board of Breakthrough Houston and on the advisory boards of The Houston Seminar, The Neuhaus Education Center and The Glasscock School of Continuing Studies at Rice University. Previously, she served as a trustee of St John’s School and on the Texas Regional Advisory Board of the Environmental Defense Fund

Josephine is married to Richard Stowers Smith. They have two children: Quincy, who lives in Hunt and practices acupuncture at her clinic in Kerrville; and Elliott, who lives in Midland with his wife Denise and their son Zachary. Their daughter Katherine recently completed two years as a Teach For America corps member teaching Special Education in Hawaii and currently works as a Senior Associate Consultant for Bain & Company in Atlanta.

A special thank you to our founding board members and early supporters who helped lay the foundation for Teach For America’s lasting impact in Houston. Your leadership paved the way for the corps members and alumni who carry this mission forward across our city every day.

Our Regional Advisory Board

BenSamuels

BoardCo-Chair

Doug Foshee

Doug Foshee is a longtime champion of public education and a steadfast supporter of Teach For America Houston. With a career spanning over four decades in finance, energy, and investments, Doug has brought his expertise and leadership to some of the country’s most complex business challenges—while consistently investing his time, talent, and resources in causes that strengthen communities and expand opportunity.

As former Chairman and CEO of El Paso Corporation, Doug led one of the most notable corporate turnarounds in recent energy history, culminating in its landmark merger with Kinder Morgan in 2012. Today, through Sallyport Investments, LLC, he supports innovative ventures while dedicating significant time to philanthropic efforts, particularly those focused on public education, homelessness, and veterans.

Doug’s commitment to education is deep and personal. He is the current chair of the Good Reason Houston board and has served on the KIPP, Houston GPS, and the Houston Endowment boards. He is a past trustee of Rice University and chaired the Rice Management Company. A longtime advocate for education equity, Doug has played a vital role in advancing TFA’s mission in Houston and beyond.

FaridVirani

BoardCo-Chair

JosephineSmith

Founding Board Chair

Doug holds a B.B.A. in Finance from Texas State University, an M.B.A. from Rice University’s Jones Graduate School of Business and is a graduate of the Southwestern Graduate School of Banking at SMU. He is the recipient of numerous honors, including induction into the Texas Business Hall of Fame and the Ellis Island Medal of Honor.

We are deeply grateful to our 2026 Ignite Potential Luncheon Host Committee for their leadership, generosity, and commitment to educational excellence in Houston. Their support made our 35-year celebration possible and helped bring this meaningful moment of connection and impact to life. Thank you for helping us ignite potential and invest in the future of our city.

Maconda and Sacha Abinader`

Andrea Alexander*`

Laura and John Arnold

Mo and Ric Campo

Deborah Cannon`

Anne and Albert Chao

Cathy Chapman

Brittany and Sean Cheben

Janet F. Clark

Jennifer and Gregg Costa*`

Molly and Jim Crownover

Paula` and Reginald DesRoches

Gayle and Bob Eury

Sarah and Doug Foshee

Monica Fulton

Lisa` and Peter Gagnon

Karen and Larry George

Glen Gonzalez

Good Reason Houston

Annie and Bob Graham

Rebekah and Hugh Guill*`

Vicki and Bob Harvey

Ava and Cordell Haymon`

Caroline and Larry Heard

Rebecca Seidl Ingelsby and Tommy Inglesby`

Jill and Dunham Jewett

Jenny and Chris Johnson`

Ann Kennedy and Geoffrey Walker

KIPP Texas Future Fund

Karen & Ramon Manning

Janet H. Moore

Tiffany* and Paul Needham*

Mariloli and Marvin Odum

Caitlin*` and Ryan Pickard

Sangita and Colin Pogge*`

Kathryn and Richard Rabinow

Alicia and Shawn Raymond*

Susan and Barrett Reasoner

Regina Rogers

Carolyn Sabat

Marci Rosenberg and Ben Samuels`

Abeena Brewster and Dr. Robert Satcher Jr.`

Cathryn and Doug Selman

Lori` and Robert Sherman

Denise and Elliott Smith

Josephine` and Richard Smith

Ileana and Michael Trevino

Phoebe and Bobby Tudor

Asha and Farid Virani`

Polly and Jeffrey Whittle

ILLUMINATOR SPONSORS

Janet F. Clark Sarah and Doug Foshee

CHANGEMAKER SPONSORS

Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation

The Dovetail Impact Foundation

Claire and Joe Greenberg / Deb and Mark Gregg

Guill Family Foundation

Beth Robertson

Marci Rosenberg and Ben Samuels

Asha and Farid Virani

INNOVATOR SPONSORS

Chinhui and Edward Allen

Amegy Bank / Regina Rogers

The Anderson Family / Checchi Capital Advisors, LLC

Anonymous

Jennifer and Gregg Costa

Paula and Reginald DesRoches / Rice University

Jill and Dunham Jewett

John P. McGovern Foundation

Mariloli and Marvin Odum

Jeri and Marc Shapiro

Lori and Robert Sherman

Josephine and Richard Smith/ Denise and Elliott Smith

Phoebe and Bobby Tudor

Meg and Dick Weekley

Robert Zinn / Zinn Petroleum

INITIATOR SPONSORS

Maconda and Sacha Abinader

Andrea Alexander

Vera and Andy Baker

Mo and Ric Campo

Deborah Cannon

Cathy Chapman

Corient

Molly and Jim Crownover

Barbara and Bill Easter

Michol Ecklund/Patti Kraft/Claudia Gee Vassar

Lynn and John Elsenhans

Monica Fulton

Glen Gonzalez

Annie and Bob Graham

Hackett Family Foundation

Good Reason Houston

Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

Houston Methodist

Jenny and Chris Johnson

Ann Kennedy and Geoffrey Walker/Cathryn and Doug Selman

Tiffany and Paul Needham and Friends Waverly and Adam Peakes

Sangita and Colin Pogge

Alicia and Shawn Raymond

Diana Strassmann and Jeffrey Smisek

Tex-Trude

Valero

Reid Whitaker

Jenny and Clay Williams

INSPIRER SPONSORS

Brittany and Sean Cheben

KIPP Future Fund

Karen and Larry George

Gloria Nino and Frank Monacelli

ConocoPhillips

Vicki and Bob Harvey

Caitlin and Ryan Pickard/ Go dman Sachs

Texas Women’s University – Houston Campus

Kelsi and Will White

~214 Houston Corps Members 40+ Ignite Fellows (Tutors)

Our Alumni

410+

31,000+

Students Taught Annually by TFA Corps Members, Ignite Fellows, and Alumni Teachers

~1,900 Alumni Living in Houston

200+

1,000,000+

Students Taught Since 1991 by TFA Corps Members and Alumni Teachers

Our Corps Members

To every corps member who has served in Houston and continues to lead and serve our students from inside and outside the education system thank you. Your impact is living proof that Teach For America corps members and alumni have woven the fabric of Houston’s education system, thread by thread, through their leadership, dedication, and service.

Scan QR Code or visit bit.ly/35-years-of-impact to see a full list of all corps members that have served in Houston over the past 35 years!

Brooklyn Clark

Houston 2025 Corps Member & Vanderbilt University Alumna 1st Grade Teacher, YES Prep East End Elementary

Wednesday, October 8th, 2025

After a long day with 25 first graders, we transitioned into our final and most anticipated task of the day: math small groups. I pulled Joseph, a new student, aside to work with me.

For two months, I had focused on building strong foundations in addition and subtraction. I was proud of how far my students had come I wrote 4 + 8 = ? on the board and showed Joseph how to draw circles to find the total.

He counted carefully and got the answer, 12. Then, he froze. “I can’t remember how to write the number twelve,” he whispered.

My heart sank. I realized Joseph had entered first grade at a pre-K level. I pulled out a number chart and counted with him until we reached 12 together.

I knew then that my work with Joseph had just begun. It would take patience, consistency, and intervention to help him catch up, but I was ready for the challenge.

Thursday, November 20th, 2025

For the past month, Joseph and I have worked every day on number recognition, addition, and word problems. After each lesson, he grabbed his whiteboard and came straight to me to practice.

He earned stickers and high fives. I sent home extra resources. Slowly but surely, Joseph began to believe in himself.

On the day of our end-of-module assessment, he sat confidently beside me As I read the word problem, one student smiled and said, “Easy peasy, lemon squeezy ” Joseph looked up and said, “Ms Clark, can you give us more of the hard stuff?”

When I entered the scores, I was stunned Joseph scored a 90%

Even more incredible, our class reached 100% proficiency, meaning every student met the standard. I could not believe it.

That day, I did not celebrate just their academic growth; I celebrated their confidence, their resilience, and my own. I was reminded that these wins, these moments, are why I Teach For America.

I know there is a long road ahead, filled with challenges and victories as I work to get my students where they need to be and where they deserve to be. Once again, I am ready for the challenge.

Margaret Hankins

Houston 2025 Corps Member & Yale University Alumna High School Science Teacher, Hall Success Academy, Aldine ISD

Monday, November 10th, 2025

My pencils are going missing There is pickle juice in my sink I have a stack of papers to grade so large it is starting to tip over. And my students will not stop talking.

This school year feels different and not always in a good way We have new administrators, a larger student body, and my mentor teacher from last year has left. Many days end with frustration and exhaustion, and I find myself wondering how I am going to find my rhythm again

But I am starting to realize something deeper is happening. My students are showing up, but they are not invested They are capable They are smart But they are not motivated And that is on me.

I teach at an alternative school, and that makes this work even more urgent For many of my students, this feels like their last stop before deciding whether school is still for them.

Winter break is coming up I am counting down the days not just for rest, but for reflection I need to rethink my classroom, my systems, and the environment I am creating.

I am going into winter break knowing one thing for sure Something has to change and it starts with me.

Thursday, November 20th, 2025

I started the semester with a brand-new classroom management system. For the first time in months, I’ve had multiple good days in a row. I walk through the halls feeling like I am in a movie montage where everything finally starts to click

In my classroom, every student now has a job. Their job is to learn. They earn five “Hankins Bucks” a day for showing up, paying attention, and completing two major tasks On the first day of the semester, instead of a syllabus, I handed them employment contracts (and taught them how to read and sign contracts). The next day, I shook each student’s hand and told them, “You’re hired!”

They bought into the system immediately Now our classroom is full of conversations about our “workplace,” raises, loaning each other money, and even whether they can collect interest. One student shouted, “Like loan sharks! That would be crazy!”

Students can redeem their “Hankins Bucks” for rewards, from snacks to sitting at the spinning lab chairs or renting the “mansion” (large classroom couch). We are only a few weeks in, but my new approach is already working My students are stepping into their “jobs,” taking ownership of their learning, and showing me what they are capable of

My students are learning to love school and love learning, perhaps for the first time in a while Together, we are all learning the value of showing up, even when it’s hard

They are showing me what they are capable of, and reminding me what I am capable of, too.

I know there will still be hard days ahead There always are But the good days and rewarding moments remind me why this work matters and why I chose to Teach For America.

35 Profiles for 35 Years

Scan QR Code or visit bit.ly/

to meet some of our incredible alumni whose stories reflect 35 years of impact across our city and beyond.

To every Teach For America alum leading in Houston — we are deeply grateful for your continued commitment to our students. Your leadership across classrooms, communities, courtrooms, and boardrooms is shaping the future of education in our city.

Houston is a different place today because of the organizations you have built, the systems you have transformed, and the solutions you continue to lead. Your impact reflects the powerful legacy of Teach For America in Houston. Together, we move closer to One Day.

Let’s meet a few of our impactful alumni

AshleyCash

NewOrleans‘09

ChiefExecutiveOfficer, EMERGE

PlacidoGomez SanAntonio‘13

eorcareertrajectory?

5,500+

s showed me that lassroom and what re both essential. portantly, TFA o the power of ng as part of a eople starting, ving things that impact entire ore that, I didn't thing I could do.

Q:Whati ElectedTrustee, HoustonISD

I joined Teach Fo I was once a underserved h wanted to d support peop that injustice students who given up on taug will rise to the lev given the oppor

4

th Houston’18

Lead6 GradeMathTeacher, PlummerMiddleSchool,AldineISD

Q: How did TFA change your life or career trajectory?

Iris Tian

DeputyCommissioner,Analytics, Assessment,andReporting, TexasEducationAgency Houston’11

Q: What inspired you to join TFA?

TeachForAmericagroundedmy perspectiveoneducation.The fundamentalideabehindTFAtouched whoIwantedtobe.Iwantedto changethenarrativeofyoungblack andbrownstudents,male studentsinparticular,who werebeingleftbehind.

1,500+ StudentsImpacted

IjoinedTeachF A i becauseofthesta ineducationIwitne andmydeep-sea publiceducation importantleveri AmericanDrea

5.5 Million Students Impacted

JustinWest

Houston’11

Pi i l t

ertrajectory?

6,000+

Teach for America helped me realize my passion to inspire the next generation. Serving in the North Forest community allowed me to build positive relationships that still persists today. The opportunities have shown me the impact of great educators dedicating themselves empower the lives of others.

Q: How did TFA change your life or career trajectory?

Teach For America set me on a lifelong path in public education and sparked a deep passion for education policy and a desire to understand how and which systemic reforms can better support students and teachers. Since then, I’ve worked to identify successful initiatives and explore how to scale and replicate them so that all students have access to high-quality learning opportunities.

200,000+

StudentsImpacted

Teach For America Houston Annual Supporters

$250,000+

$100,000-$249,999

ExxonMobil H-E-B Houston Endowment Inc K nder Foundation

OneStar Foundat on Samuels Family Foundation

$25,000-$99,999

Adrienne and Sneha Amin

Asha and Far d Viran

Beth Robertson

CT Bauer Foundation

Cathryn and Doug Selman

CFP Foundation

ConocoPhillips

Dovetail Impact Foundation

Barbara and Lou s Sk ar

Ch nhui and Edward Al en

Claire and Joe Greenberg

Community Connect Church

Deb and Mark Gregg

George and Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation

Go dman Sachs & Co

GR TS Foundation

Harvey R Houck Jr and Patricia W Houck Foundat on, Inc

Adobe

Adriana and Eduardo Nunez

Alice Harcrow

Alicia and Shawn Raymond

Andrea Alexander

Anna and Fred Charlton

Anne and Abert Chao

Annie and Bob Graham

Barbara and Bil Easter

Barbara Burger

Blue Wave

Cara Knoboch

Carol and P John Burke Jr

Cathy Chapman

Cor ent

Deborah Cannon

Denise and Eliott Smith

Amegy Bank

Ann Kennedy and Geoffrey Walker

Anne Furse

Barbara and Jonathan Day

Betty and Stephen Newton

Brett Mossman

Brooke and Iain Sharpe

Caitin and Ryan Pickard

Catherine and Brian James

Cece and Michael Fower

Clare and Jim Doyle

Connie and Scott Funk

Doreen Stoler

Dr Robert Satcher Jr

Eizabeth and Albert Kidd

Eric Pulaski

Gloria Nino and Frank Monacelli

Harsha Reddy

Guill Famiy Foundation

Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo J Squared Family Foundation

Janet F Clark

John P. McGovern Foundation

Marci Rosenberg and Ben Samuels

MD Anderson Foundation

Rockwel Fund, nc.

$10,000-$24,999

Jennifer and Gregg Costa

Jeri and Marc Shapiro

Jil and Dunham Jewett

Lisa and W ll Mathis

Lori and Robert Sherman

Lynn and John Elsenhans

Maconda and Sacha Abinader

Mariol and Marvin Odum

$5,000 - $9,999

Diana Strassmann and Jeffery Smisek

First Horizon Bank

Glen Gonzalez

Good Reason Houston

Hackett Family Foundat on

Jenny and Chr s Johnson

Jenny and Clay W lliams

Josephine and Richard Smith

Kathleen and Robert L Clarke

Kathy and Brian Re d

Kathy and Martyn Goossen

Knox Char table Foundation

Linnet De ly

Mo and Ric Campo

Moly and Jim Crownover

Monica Fulton

$1,000 - $4,999

Jeffrey and Margaret Tucker

Jim and Pam Harris

Johanne and Joe Gatto

Joy Horak-Brown

Karen and Larry George

Karen Reifel

Kate and Macolm Hawk

Kathryn and Richard Rabinow

Kesi and Wil White

KIPP Texas Future Fund

Kristen Harrison-Hab ch

Kristy Bradshaw

Lesie and Jack Blanton, Jr

Linda and George Kely

Lisa and Peter Gagnon

Lois and George Stark

Louise Wigg ns Rios

Michael Morgan

What a privilege it is to close out this unforgettable celebration of 35 years of impact, commitment, and community.

Sarah and Doug Foshee

The Astros Foundation

The Clayton Fund

The Ekins Foundation

The Robert and Janice McNair Foundat on Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation

Vivian L. Smith Foundation

Patricia Dolan Mulen

Phoebe and Bobby Tudor

Posey-Glickert Foundation

Robert Z nn

Sangita and Col n Pogge

The Hevrdejs Foundation

The Tapeats Fund

Vera and Andy Baker

Nancy McGregor and Nea Manne

Nancy O'Connor

Paua and Reginad DesRoches

Perry Homes

Regina Rogers

Reid Wh taker

Rice University

Sarah and Jeff McParland

Suzanne and Robert Nimocks

The Anderson Family

The Cyvia and Melvyn Woff Famiy Foundation

The Mendesohn Famiy Fund

The Wilard and Ruth Johnson Charitabe Foundation

Third Wave

Vaero

Waverly and Adam Peakes

Morgan and Christopher Hollins

Nancy Manderson

Nora Zabriskie

Pamea Campbell

Pamela Gray

Polly and Jeff Whttle

Robert H Bocker

Simin and Gaurde Banister

Susan and Barrett Reasoner

Taylor and Sylvanus Poky

Tex-Trude

Texas Womens University

Houston Campus

Tiffany and Paul Needham

Vicki and Bob Harvey

Virginia and Richard Mithoff

Y Png Sun and David Leebron

Zachary Langevn

To our event sponsors, thank you for making this gathering possible. To our board members, donors, and longtime supporters, your belief in our mission fuels our work. To every current and former corps members, thank you for your service, your passion, and your enduring commitment to students. And to our district partners and elected officials, your leadership is critical to expanding opportunity for all students, and we are deeply grateful for all that you do.

Today, we celebrate 35 years of progress. Since our founding in 1991, TFA Houston has partnered with hundreds of schools to place thousands of corps members, reaching hundreds of thousands of students. We’ve built an unstoppable network of more than 3,500 leaders; educators, advocates, school founders, policymakers, and innovators, who are shaping a stronger future for Houston’s children. We are so proud of what we’ve accomplished, together.

And yet, we know our work is far from done. The data continues to reveal deep disparities in access and opportunity across our city. As we look to the future, I invite you to join us in writing the next chapter of this movement. There is more to do to ensure every child in every neighborhood has access to an excellent education, and we cannot do it without you.

Let’s take the energy from today’s celebration and use it to propel us into the hard work ahead.

Yours in the movement,

Tiffany Cuellar Needham (Houston ‘03)

Executive Director, Teach For America Houston

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rmedmylife meinthe withservice eresilience, ytosolve mobilizing ision.That celeratemy ylifelong opportunity everIlead.

000+ ntsImpacted

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VictoriaChen

Houston’11

Co-founderandExecutiveDirector, BridgeYear Q:Whyareyoustillinthiswork?

TeachForAmerica perspectiveont barriersstudentsfa outoftheircont especiallythebar faceinchoosing forwardafterhigh hopetocreatec changingthenar postsecondarysu ensuringallstude pathtoeconomic afterhighsc

StudentsImpacte

50,000

carcamo

StaciChilds

Member, TexasStateBoardofEducation Houston’13

Q:Whyareyoustillinthiswork?

Thisworkmatterstome becauseakid’sfutureshouldn’t bedeterminedbytheirzipcode, theirrace,orthepoliticsofthe day.I’vestayedinthiswork becauseI’veseenthebrilliance ofstudentswhojustneed someonetofightforthem.

5.5 Million StudentsImpacted

costa

MarkDiBella

Houston’99

Q:Whyareyoustillinthiswork?

guerrero

StudentsImpacted

I'mstillintheworkbecausenot beingintheworkisnotan option.It'snolongerachoiceI evenconsider.It'sjustwhatIdo. It'swhoIam.Igotoworkevery dayhopingthatIcanimpact othersinsomewayclosetothe waythestudents,teachers,and staffI'veworkedwithoverthe yearshaveimpactedme.

40,000

kataria marrs
moorman needham
oeser patterson

perkins pichon

plecki poerschke

CoreyPrados

Principal, AskewElementary,HISD Houston’14

Q:HowdidTFAchangeyourlifeorcareertrajectory?

TeachForAmericawasa turningpointinmycareer becauseitpushedmetogrow rapidlyasateacherandleader, forcingmetodevelop adaptableinstructional practicesanddata-driven decisionmaking.Mytimeinthe corpsshowedmethat meaningfulimpactbeginsinthe classroomandscalesthrough collaboration,mentorship,and communitypartnerships.

raymond

5,000+ StudentsImpacted

richard salhotra

Q:HowdidTFAchangeyou

TeachForAmericashapedmy careertrajectorybydefiningit.I haveworkedfor26yearsnowasa teacherinunder-resourced schoolsincommunitiesthat deserveexcellentteachers...My timeinthecorpsshowedmethat thecrucialandcarefulworkof educatinginchallengingspacesis mytruelife'swork.

2,000 Students Impacted

tashima terrones
zucker

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