Āé¶¹Ö±²„

'Being a Boxer was the Best Choice I Made in My Life'

Lillian WolfeLillian Wolfe ’20, MEd '22 remembers her frustrated childhood tantrums.

As a baby, she experienced severe hearing loss and even after years of early speech therapy, her words were often unintelligible.

ā€œI stomped and cried in frustration when adults ignored me because they couldn’t understand what I was saying,ā€ she said.

A kindergarten teacher, though, took her under her wingā€š meeting with Wolfe every morning with a stock of Laffy Taffy as a reward for vowel pronunciation.

ā€œMrs. Mandelbaum never gave up on me,ā€ she said. ā€œShe used her free time every morning before class to tutor me based on my speech therapist’s guidelines, on top of her already arduous burden of reining in a classroom of 5-year-olds.

ā€œShe was the first person outside my family responsible for my competency in talking to anyone or reading anything.

ā€œShe set me on my path to be a teacher.ā€

Wolfe chose to pursue her underĀé¶¹Ö±²„ degree in education and learning at Āé¶¹Ö±²„, where she could earn her bachelor’s degree and teaching license while getting a traditional college experience, including competing with the Speech & Debate Team. She later earned her master's in education from Pacific as well.

ā€œWhat sold me on Pacific was the amazing welcome I received,ā€ she said, recounting an initial tour where staff jumped to accommodate her mother’s mobility challenges and her hearing challenges. ā€œThe kind, welcoming gestures and the many more I consistently received form everyone at Pacific has made the university my second home.

ā€œBeing a Boxer was the best choice I made in my life.ā€

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