1) Where are you originally from?
Â
I’m so Minnesotan that I’m almost a cartoon, and I have the accent to prove it! Â I grew up in St. Cloud, Minnesota, on the Mississippi River. Â
Â
2) Where did you go to college? Â What did you major in?
Â
I earned a BA in English and Women’s Studies, and an MA in English at St. Cloud State University in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Â I earned a PhD in English at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, KS.
Â
3) How long have you lived in New Orleans?
Â
I moved to New Orleans in August of 2011. Â Prior to this, I visited New Orleans in 1994. Â Being a tourist was great fun, but being a resident of this city is far better. Â Â
Â
4) What classes do you teach at Tulane?
Â
Currently, I teach English 1010 in the First-Year Writing Program of the English department.
Â
5) What do you enjoy most about teaching here?
Â
The idyllic Tulane campus charms me every day. Â It’s a great pleasure to walk to campus each day and teach in such a beautiful setting. Â Plus, Tulane students are smart, fun, witty, and committed people willing to work hard to earn their degrees and serve the community. Â
Â
6) What is the hardest aspect of teaching here?
Â
I know it’s probably clichĂ© to remark on this, but the bayou weather is often brutal for a Minnesotan.  It’s hard to feel composed and professorial after a very sweaty walk to campus when the dew point is 80 degrees! Â
 Â
7) You taught at KU prior to teaching at Tulane. Â Do you sense a difference in the type of students here and/or the community here?
Â
I’m not sure I see a specific difference in the student population of Tulane versus KU, but I do see how Tulane’s Center for Public Service and the service-learning graduation requirement here attracts students who thrive as “experiential learners.” Â Through service-learning programs, and courses like those offered through TIDES, Tulane students forge meaningful and purposeful connections to both academic and community goals. Â I value and welcome this as part of the unique spirit of Tulane students. Â
Â
Â
8) Some people would say that in our professionally minded world, there isn’t much you can do with a degree in English. Â What do you think about this?
Â
I’d say now, more than ever, the world needs more thoughtful and critical readers and writers. Â I can’t think of a more useful degree in order to meet this need.
 Â
9) If it was your last meal in New Orleans, where would you go? Â What would you order?
Â
Yikes! Â My last meal forever? Â Or just in New Orleans? Â I hope it’s the latter! Â I’d choose a cafe or bistro brunch, and the longer and more leisurely, the better. Â I know New Orleans is a town of seemingly infinite gastronomic pleasures, but I think these come together best in Sunday brunch: poached eggs and cheesy grits and crab cakes and endless black coffee! Â Â Â
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Tulane chapter.