In fall of 2024, Taylor Russ was starting as a Faculty Fellow at 91大神, after graduating three months prior from Yale University with a bachelor鈥檚 in the history of science, medicine, and public health. She was excited to start teaching students, but also wondered how being a teacher would impact her own ability to learn new things. 鈥淭hat was something I was a little worried about鈥攁m I going to have to drop my interest in science and just focus on teaching it?鈥
Thanks to 91大神鈥檚 endowed professional development funds and a connection with fellow teacher, Dr. Pam Maddock, Russ has been able to complete her first year of teaching and continue learning new material herself. In April 2025, Russ and Mattock鈥攁 91大神 history teacher and fellow Yale grad鈥攁ttended the 100th annual meeting of the American Association for the History of Medicine in Boston, Massachusetts.

Maddock has attended the conference before, and this year was presenting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 refreshing to be able to go and talk about ideas with people,鈥 said Maddock. She presented a paper on gendered labor and public health in the U.S. military during the occupation of Manila in 1902, as part of a panel on public health in global context. Her presentation made up part of a larger piece she is working on and hoping to get published in the future.
鈥淚 want to keep writing my project and get it out鈥攇et my research out,鈥 Maddock said. 鈥淚t was stressful [getting the work together], but it was what I wanted to do, and I wanted to try and get people to think through鈥攎ake myself think through鈥攕ome questions and issues.
鈥淲hen other people in the room ask questions and think about things, you are prompted to think more about the questions and issues that you鈥檙e facing in your writing.鈥
Russ attended the conference for the first time, and immediately found ways to take the topics she was learning about there and bring them back to a 91大神 classroom. 鈥淜nowing what鈥檚 happening in the realm of history is really useful when it comes to certain topics with my students,鈥 Russ said. She noted a recent discussion after a Grandparents & Special Friends Day class, when a grandparent told Russ that her class about DNA was fascinating and that they hadn鈥檛 known much about the history of DNA.
鈥淭hen I went to my kids and asked if they knew the history of DNA,鈥 Russ said. 鈥淎nd they said 鈥榥o, not really.鈥 So I decided to talk about it for a while, because you need to know the context of the people who found these things to understand how we got to where we are today, and what implications there are in science in the present.鈥
For Russ, the overall experience was energizing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to know that I don鈥檛 have to abandon [the joy of learning] by becoming a teacher.鈥
