By Matt
Pascarella
Lisa
Hodge and her son, Mitch have education and athletics in their veins. Aside
from both being coaches, Lisa is a Language Arts and Social Studies teacher at
the Windham Middle School and Mitch Hodge is a Behavioral Interventionalist at
the Windham Primary School.
Lisa
graduated with a communications degree and was unsure of what she wanted to do
after college.
Hodge loved working with children, so she volunteered to work
and observe in a classroom. After spending one day in a South Portland Middle
School classroom, she thought ‘this is fun!’ South Portland appreciated how
comfortable she was with the kids and asked if she would apply for the
educational technician opening they had. She did and was hired. This
opportunity encouraged Lisa to go further into her new-found career, by
eventually obtaining her master’s in education.'
Mitch and Lisa Hodge |
Lisa’s path to Windham began with tutoring.
She was trained in a reading program designed to help dyslexic adults. Windham
needed an educational technician the following year and she got the job. The
year after that, a language arts position opened at Windham Middle School and Lisa was
hired.
She had
always played sports. Lisa volunteered working with kids and did a lot of
supervising of South Portland recreational programs. She coached her kids when
they were little. “Playing sports is something we just do,” Lisa explained. She
had volunteered to coach fourth and fifth grade basketball through the South
Portland Recreational Department and this adventure created an opening to
become a middle school coach. She currently plays in a senior women’s
basketball league and coaches eighth grade girls’ basketball, middle school
swimming and first team girls’ soccer.
Mitch
Hodge says that teaching is a quality embedded in him based on the attribute his
caring mother passed on to him. In high school, becoming a teacher crossed his
mind, but it wasn’t until after high school when he began working with special
needs adults that it was clear he wanted to keep helping and teaching in order
to make other people’s lives better.
Hodge
originally wanted to be a psychologist but decided that wasn’t a good fit. He took an acting class as an elective in
college and the teacher saw something in him and pushed for Hodge to continue
with acting. Hodge got his degree in acting with a minor in psychology. “Acting
helps with teaching,” Mitch stated. “You have to have a sense of humor and be
on your toes.”
He got
a job working with special needs adults at Community Resources for Justice in New
Hampshire. Mitch later worked for Woodfords Family Services in Maine providing
in home support.
It
wasn’t until he substituted for Jody Colangelo at Windham Primary School that
he found his calling. He was working one-on-one with a girl and it was working
so well, the Primary School asked if he wanted to stay. Mitch admitted his mom
lead him to the path of teaching, but Colangelo’s influence helped him narrow
down what he wanted to teach. Mitch is a Behavioral Interventionalist and is
also working on his masters. In two years, he plans to have his own classroom
as a special education teacher.
Mitch
has played sports most of his life. When he was much younger, he spent a lot of
time with his mom, who coached a lot. After college, Mitch knew he wanted to be
on the field again. As a result, he is currently the freshman boys’ soccer
coach; a position multiple people encouraged him to take.
The
comradery created on a team is important – it’s another family. Mitch enjoys
being a part of the kid’s lives.
Both
mom and son agree they feel lucky to be able to do what they do, and they enjoy
their jobs so much they admit it doesn’t feel like work.
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