The Columbus Dispatch

Jill Biden returns to classroom as teacher

Is first US first lady to leave White House to log hours at a full-time job

- Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON – Jill Biden has gone back to her whiteboard. After months of teaching writing and English to community college students in boxes on a computer screen, the first lady resumed teaching in person Tuesday from a classroom at Northern Virginia Community College, where she has worked since 2009.

She is the first first lady to leave the White House to log hours at a full-time job.

“There are some things you just can’t replace, and I can’t wait to get back in the classroom,” she recently told Good Housekeepi­ng magazine.

The first lady has been anxious to see her students in person after more than a year of virtual teaching brought on by a pandemic that continues to challenge the Biden administra­tion.

A working first lady is a “big deal,” said Tammy Vigil, a Boston University communicat­ions professor who wrote a book about first ladies Michelle Obama and Melania Trump.

The nation’s early first ladies did not work outside the White House. They supported their husbands, raised children and performed the role of hostess.

Some first ladies acted as ambassador­s for their husbands. Eleanor Roosevelt was especially active, traveling around the U.S. and reporting back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, whose activities were limited by polio. She advocated for the poor, minorities and other disadvanta­ged people, and began writing a nationally syndicated newspaper column from the White House.

More recent first ladies, like Laura Bush, who was an elementary school teacher and librarian, had stopped working outside the home after having children and were not employed when their husbands were elected. Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama were working mothers who decided against continuing their careers in the White House.

Jill Biden, 70, is forging a new path for herself and her successors.

The first lady has said she always wanted to be a career woman. She taught at the Virginia community college during the eight years that her husband was vice president and was not about to let the added responsibi­lity of being first lady force her to give up a career she so closely identifies with.

“Teaching isn’t just what I do. It’s who I am,” she says.

Women made up nearly half, or 47%, of the U.S. labor force in 2019, according to Catalyst, a women’s workplace advocacy group.

Leaders of the nation’s largest teachers’ unions are pleased that one of their own is now in a position to help influence the administra­tion’s education policies and raise the profile of a profession in which many have long felt unapprecia­ted.

“She sees it up close and personally and now, in the position as first lady, not only does she give voice to that from a place of understand­ing, she has an opportunit­y to create a platform and to have influence,” said Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Associatio­n.

President Joe Biden told teachers attending the NEA’S annual meeting that he learned about what they were going through by watching his wife learn how to teach online.

“It gave me an appreciati­on firsthand that I thought I had, but I wouldn’t have had had I not seen it,” he said at the July meeting. “And then going out and teaching – she was working four or five hours a day, getting ready to teach, putting her lesson plans together ... a different way.”

Jill Biden started teaching English at a Roman Catholic high school in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1976, a year after she met and began dating then-u.s.

Sen. Biden. She later taught at a psychiatri­c hospital and at Delaware Technical Community College.

She earned two master’s degrees and a doctorate in educationa­l leadership during those years.

After Joe Biden became vice president in 2009, she joined the faculty at Northern Virginia Community College. She continued to teach there after he left office and throughout his 2020 presidenti­al campaign, including virtually after the pandemic hit.

Her virtual teaching continued as first lady, from her office in the White House East Wing or hotel rooms when she traveled to promote administra­tion policies. She grades papers on flights.

“It shatters the norms of what first ladies do,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

Jill Biden tries to keep her political identity out of the classroom and has said that many of her former students in Virginia had no idea she was married to the vice president. She also did not talk about it. Secret Service agents accompanie­d her for security, but she had them dress casually and tote backpacks in an attempt to blend into the campus environmen­t.

But being first lady, for which there is no job descriptio­n or pay, comes with a much higher level of visibility, security and scrutiny.

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