SignalsAZ.com Prescott News Podcast - Yavapai College Graduate Brings STEM Education to 6,000 Students
Episode Date: August 28, 2025Send us a text and chime in!In her heart of hearts, Beth Smith is a smidgeon Hoosier, a dollop Sun Devil and a whole lotta Roughrider. The 1996 Yavapai College graduate also is an unabashedly proud pu...blic-school educator who brings, via a brightly painted and tech-packed bus, hands-on STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) classes to more than 6,000 K-6 students every semester in and around Bloomington, Ind. “I fondly remember my professors at Yavapai College and I just wanted to tell you how much I appreciate the wonderful start I got. It is not lost on me how important quality education is for those who... For the written story, read here >> https://www.signalsaz.com/articles/yavapai-college-graduate-brings-stem-education-to-6000-students/Check out the CAST11.com Website at: https://CAST11.com Follow the CAST11 Podcast Network on Facebook at: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network
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In her heart of hearts, Beth Smith is a smidgen Hoosier, a dollop's sun devil and a whole loader rough rider.
The 1996 Yavapai College graduate also is an unabashedly proud public school educator who brings,
via brightly painted and tech-packed bus, hands-on STEM, science, technology, engineering and math,
classes to more than 6,000 K-6 students every semester in and around Bloomington, Indiana.
I fondly remember my professors at Yavapai College and I just wanted to tell you how much I
appreciate the wonderful start I got. It is not lost on me how important quality education is for
those who can't afford expensive college, Beth wrote in an imprompt a social media direct message
back in March 2024. While visiting family in the Prescott area this summer,
Beth reached out again to share more of her career journey and take a trip down memory lane at
the Prescott campus. Beth recalled being drawn to Prescott as a teenager while on a weekend
camping trip. It seemed exotic and exciting, she said. Having lived in the Phoenix area since
she was three, she longed to get away from the heat and into the mountains. Socio-economically
disadvantaged, Beth said she was also ecstatic upon learning that, unlike universities she had
investigated, YC didn't charge an admission fee and full-time tuition at the time was something
like $300 a semester. She enrolled at YC in 1994, lived in a two-bedroom apartment behind the former
village and on East Gurley Street with three roommates. I walk to campus every day, she said.
To pay her share of the $500 monthly rent, food and school expenses, Beth worked at Lifeways
bookstore, still in business, downtown and babysat for a local family. A self-described hands-on
learner Beth said she enjoyed biology and other science classes in high school and college,
her favorite at YC being Natural History of the Southwest with now retired Professor Beth
Boyd. After doing some academic exploration initially at YC, she settled on an elementary education
focus. After graduating, she transferred to Arizona State University where she earned a bachelor's
degree and a teaching certificate. Beth attributes her affinity for education to a family
dynamic that required her to grow up fast and be fiercely independent. Teachers were always so
nurturing to me and school really was like a safe place for me. It was where I felt like I belonged,
she said. After more than two decades in the classroom, more recently behind the wheel of the
magic school bus like STEM to them mobile science lab in Monroe County, Indiana, Beth still feels
fulfilled and empowered by her career choice. I chose the wrong profession for making a lot of money,
but I chose a great life for myself, she said, adding, I love teaching so much. I love working with
students so much and I love working with my colleagues. Beth's student taught in the Guadalupe School
district, then worked in Chicago public schools as a first grade teacher. She moved to Bloomington after
marrying her Hoosier husband, Jeff, and earned a master's degree in education at Wesleyan University
while serving as an elementary school science lead teacher and raising her son, Ben, and daughter,
Maddie. I've always loved science teaching. That's my jam. Bill Nye the Science Guy is my hero.
Best passion for science, for teaching and for quality public education, not to mention the fact she
developed curriculum for the STEM bus before she was even interviewed, landed her the Ms. Frizzle-like
position four years ago. It's a job she relishes for the ability to determine with data what the
students in her district need in the way of STEM education and develop grade-level labs and
experiments around her research. She has become a valued resource for other STEM educators in her
school district and beyond. This summer, while on a wedding anniversary trip to Jamaica,
she carved out time for some teacher training. Beth said she often sings the praises of community college to
her young students, their parents and others who think quality higher education doesn't exist
outside of a university. I am proud to have been somebody who started at a community college.
I see so many people suffer the crushing anxiety of wondering what college they're going to get into.
Yavapai College will say yes, she said.
Yavapai College operates seven campuses and centers throughout Yavapai County and offers over
100 degrees and certificates, four baccalaureate degrees, student and community services,
and cultural events and activities. To learn more about YC, visit www.YC.org.org. Read more stories from
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