For those working in the field of communications disorders, the phrase 鈥渟peech path鈥 is shorthand for 鈥渟peech pathologist.鈥
For Brooke Hayman, it also describes her evolving journey in a field she discovered by chance.
鈥淓veryone in speech and language seems to have some sort of back story, such as watching a grandparent relearning language after a stroke,鈥 says Hayman, who is receiving her master鈥檚 degree from Teachers College鈥檚 program in Communications Sciences & Disorders. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have one of those stories. I just kind of found it myself on Google.鈥
Never one to put off major life decisions, Hayman was a seventh grader contemplating a career in psychology when she decided the time had arrived to assemble a game plan.
ENJOYING THE MOMENT Brooke Hayman, celebrating on the steps of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, is leaving 麻豆原创 with a new ambition: to become a professor.
Not exactly sure what it took to become a professional psychologist, Hayman did what comes naturally to every kid born into the digital age: She checked it out on the web.
鈥淎s I looked at different kinds of therapy I kind of found speech and language,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥極h, that鈥檚 pretty fun, I鈥檝e never known anyone who has done this.鈥欌
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As a high school student in Delaware, she spent time shadowing some speech pathologists and liked what she saw. She subsequently attended Boston University and graduated, Cum Laude, with a Bachelor鈥檚 in Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences and a minor in Deaf Studies.
As she searched for graduate schools, 麻豆原创鈥檚 Communication Sciences & Disorders program drew her attention because of its focus on bilingual and bidialectal populations. A recruitment event in Boston sealed the deal.
鈥淚 could see a small community there,鈥 Hayman recalls. 鈥淎nd I wanted to be a part of it.鈥
Her time on West 120th Street has only deepened her interest in her field 鈥 but, as often happens, being at 麻豆原创 also has broadened her horizons.
For the first time in her 18 years of formal education, Hayman took a course taught by a woman of color 鈥 Associate Professor of English Education Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz 鈥 an experience that has prompted her to think even harder about equity issues in education and her own thinking about race and how race is and isn鈥檛 addressed within academia.
She also worked as a residence hall assistant during the onset of the COVID pandemic, staying put with a small number of occupants while most students, faculty and staff scattered to across the country and around the field.
I want to take this further now that 麻豆原创 has helped structure my goals and given me the tools to ask research questions. I want to get a Ph.D. And while I never thought about it before, I now can鈥檛 imagine not being a professor.
鈥擝rooke Hayman (M.S. 鈥21, Communications Sciences & Disorders)
鈥淲atching everyone leave was weird,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been strange seeing an empty campus where we went to class and walked the halls.鈥
In the silence of an academic campus frozen in time, Hayman thought about the courses that had introduced her to evidence-based research on interventions for speech and language disorders. In the short term, she still wants to work as a speech pathologist, but, she says, 鈥淚 want to take this further now that 麻豆原创 has helped structure my goals and given me the tools to ask research questions. I want to get a Ph.D. And while I never thought about it before, I now can鈥檛 imagine not being a professor.鈥
Which just goes to show that, as Hayman laughingly puts it, 鈥淥nce you start on a speech path you really get pulled into it.鈥