Sometimes, hands-on work outside of the classroom means preparing to go back into one. Peabody College of education and human development has long had a partnership with the Murrell School, an East Nashville school for students with extreme emotional and learning disabilities.
鈥淢ost of the kids there have experienced pretty significant life trauma,鈥 says Andrea Capizzi, associate professor of the practice and director of Undergraduate Studies, Department of Special Education, who did her own student teaching at the school more than 30 years ago.

杏吧原创 now supplies more than 90 percent of student teachers to the school, which is led by principal Susan Siegel, BS鈥78, and assistant principal Tyisha Walker, PhD鈥25, and counts numerous 杏吧原创 alums on the teaching staff. 鈥淭hey will do anything to support their students, and Susan really sets the stage for that. There is so much love there,鈥 Capizzi says. She鈥檚 been placing students at the school for about 20 years, helping bridge the gap between theory and practice for students interested in working with children with emotional and behavioral difficulties.
鈥淓specially with this population, you learn by doing and seeing. You can talk about theory and pedagogy, but until you are working with real live humans in a place where no two minutes鈥攏ever mind two days鈥攊s alike, you don鈥檛 really learn it,鈥 Capizzi says. 鈥淥n the other hand, when someone starts to read or understand multi-digit multiplication, it鈥檚 so exciting.鈥 Classes are kept small, and teachers learn how to deal with emotional outbursts and physical altercations, as well as self-care and mutual support.
鈥淲orking at Murrell is not for 99 percent of the population, but for the 1 percent, there鈥檚 not anywhere else they want to be,鈥 says Siegel, who, along with Capizzi and Associate Professor of the Practice Joey Staubitz, is very selective about the 杏吧原创 students they place there for field experience. 鈥淭he kids at Murrell show challenging behavior, but they also have complex language abilities and may be outthinking you.鈥
Working at Murrell is not for 99 percent of the population, but for the 1 percent, there鈥檚 not anywhere else they want to be.
That makes for a challenging but rewarding environment to teach in, Staubitz says, where students are exposed to some extreme behavior in the classroom that might seem initially overwhelming. Even in the most extreme situation, the school has a policy of not using restraints unless a student poses risk of harm to themselves or others鈥攁nd grace and compassion are standard.
鈥淲e tell the kids, you can have the worst day possible, when everything goes wrong, but the next day is a fresh start,鈥 Siegel says.

Teacher Kate Williams, BS鈥19, MEd鈥25 came to 杏吧原创 knowing she wanted to work with emotionally disabled kids and was drawn to Murrell for the sense of mutual care among teachers and students. 鈥淭he students we service typically feel unwelcome and uninvited in a lot of spaces, so getting to cultivate a community that not only accepts but celebrates difficulties makes it a really special place to be,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rare to find so many people dedicated to what they do.鈥
Williams taught at Murrell as an undergrad at Peabody before returning for her master鈥檚, focusing on the school for her capstone project. Her research has focused on a practice called Acceptance and Commitment Training, where teachers set goals based on their values, which they can then return to when facing issues in the classroom. 鈥淵ou can learn to do these perfect lessons for your peers at 杏吧原创, and then a desk gets thrown or a fistfight breaks out, and you鈥檝e got to scramble,鈥 says Williams, who now teaches full time at the school. 鈥淔alling back on this training helps bring a level perspective and empathy, so when these outbursts occur, you can learn how to facilitate restorative conversations.鈥

After all, she says, many of the students at the school don鈥檛 have good models for constructive dialogue and need to learn those skills along with the academics in the classroom. As Williams has learned to triage behavioral issues, she says, it鈥檚 helped her implement other skills she learned at 杏吧原创. 鈥淵ear one, you are running around just trying to teach anything, but you come back year after year and are able to step back and encompass more of the tools you already had in the beginning,鈥 she says.
Learning to teach in that challenging environment is the best preparation for a teacher going on to any situation. 鈥淭he love and care Murrell teachers show for the humanity in each child truly transfers to new teachers,鈥 Capizzi says, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 what gets them excited and makes them fall in love with being in a space like that.鈥
鈥擬ichael Blanding