SC State launches next generation of educators into the profession
Author: Sam Watson, Executive Director of Strategic Communications & Marketing|Published: May 06, 2026|All News, Student News
SC State's newly inducted educators: (bottom row from left) Victoria Davis, Briana
Roper, Nyasia Witter and Autumn Staggers (top row from left) Justin Smith, Jasmine
Simmons, Olivia Ratliff, Tiana Murray and Javion Smith.
Nine graduating seniors take the oath to teach, prepare to shape classrooms and communities
across South Carolina
Dr. M. Evelyn Fields, dean of the SC State College of Education, Humanities and Social
Sciences, presents Jasmine Simmons with her certificate. Simmons plans to teach and
serve as a commissioned officer in the South Carolina National Guard.ORANGEBURG, S.C. — Jasmine Simmons has known she wanted to be a teacher ever since she was a little girl
playing that role with her cousins and sisters.
The 22-year-old’s dream will now be fulfilled with a degree in early childhood education
from South Carolina State University.
“I’m a first-generation college student, so this experience has been eye-opening.
It’s been something bigger than I ever could have imagined,” said Simmons, who is
from St. George, South Carolina.
“I can’t wait to get into my field as a teacher. It’s been something that I’ve wanted
to do since I was a young girl. I’m excited now about having the opportunity to put
that into practice in a real classroom,” she said
Simmons was one of nine graduating seniors inducted into the teaching profession on
Monday, May 4, during SC State’s Educator Induction Ceremony ahead of spring commencement
exercises, which will be held at 10 a.m. Friday, May 8, at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium.
The SC State College of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences celebrates the students
and the contributions they will make to the teaching profession with the ceremony.
Students reflect on preparation and purpose
Simmons has her post-graduation plans firmly in place.
“After graduation, I will be commissioned as a second lieutenant in the South Carolina
National Guard, and I’ll be teaching, too. I’ll be a part-time officer along with
teaching second grade at Marshall Elementary School in Orangeburg,” she said.
Simmons said SC State has prepared her for her next journey in life.
“SC State prepared me by giving me professors who are very passionate about education.
That has rubbed off on me. Even though I was passionate, it made me even more passionate
seeing that they really genuinely cared about the future of young minds and shaping
them for whatever the world has to offer,” she said.
Along with Simmons, the newly inducted educators and their disciplines are:
Victoria Davis, biology education.
Tianna Murray, elementary education.
Briana Roper, early childhood education.
Nyasia Witter, early childhood education.
Javion Smith, physical education.
Autumn Staggers, art education.
Justin Smith, mathematics education.
·Olivia Ratliff, middle level English education.
Javion Smith, who is from Orangeburg, said SC State’s professors helped shape him
into the man he is.
“They showed me a lot. They helped build me into the person I am today by being here
and being around the nice energy and the professors and advisors,” he said.
“After graduation, I plan on teaching physical education here in Orangeburg. I’m still
working on where,” said the 22-year-old, who also offered advice for undergraduates
at SC State.
“Never give up. That’s the number one thing. Never say you can’t do something before
you try. You never know how you might surprise yourself,” he said.
Justin, 22, who is also from Orangeburg, plans to teach mathematics at Orangeburg-Wilkinson
High School and also work on a master’s degree.
He is also president of the university’s Call Me MiSTER Program, which is designed
to provide a pipeline of highly effective educators to South Carolina’s public schools
who will serve their communities as mentors and role models.
“The Call Me MiSTER Program paired with the teacher education program has given me
all of the skills I need to perform effectively in the field. Not too many people
are getting into education and much less math education, so I figured I could use
what I was a bit better at to help those that either do not like math or just don’t
care too much for it,” Justin said.
Ratliff, 22, of Rock Hill, South Carolina, said she was excited about graduation and
the recognition that Monday’s ceremony gave to her and her peers. She is also Miss
SC State for the 2025-26 academic year.
“I’m attending law school next semester at the University of Florida. I plan to practice
education law. It’s an amazing accomplishment to graduate being a certified educator,
but it’s also good to be recognized for that. I’m just grateful and just so proud
of my classmates,” Ratliff said.
“If you can make it at South Carolina State University, you can make it anywhere in
life. I feel more than prepared by South Carolina State University.
“Outside of the curriculum, the instructors have instilled in us so much knowledge
and so much enthusiasm to go and make change in the world and go and be good people.
Their truly wanting to propel us and launch us to the next step has been amazing,”
she said.
“Teaching is not simply a career, it’s a calling,” said Dr. Frederick Evans, provost
and vice president of academic affairs at SC State.
“Embrace collaboration and never lose sight of the profound difference you can make
in a student’s life,” he said.
Keynote speaker Dr. Shawn Foster addresses the graduating seniors.Leaders emphasize impact of the profession
Keynote speaker Dr. Shawn Foster, superintendent of the Orangeburg County School District,
said he knew that SC State had prepared the inductees to do great things.
Part of his advice to them was to remember to master their internal influences because
that would be a representation of their external impact.
The superintendent also encouraged the inductees to remember their purpose, which
included working to make a lasting impact on the lives of children, who will hopefully
be able to reflect on the positive difference it made in their lives.
“Your purpose will determine your impact,” Foster said, noting that teachers are “capable
of doing anything with nothing.”
He also referenced the following quote from American author and poet Albert Pike:
“What we do for ourselves dies with us. What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.”
“I thought about the things that I could do for others. We’re the one profession that
we have the opportunity for immortality,” Foster said.
Dr. George Johnson, chairman of the SC State Department of Education, speaks at the
induction ceremony.SC State’s teacher education programs are offered through the College of Education,
Humanities and Social Sciences.
Dr. M. Evelyn Fields, dean of the college, said the nine students had reached a milestone
in their collegiate careers with their induction into the teaching profession.
“You didn’t quit. You stayed the course and look at what you’ve accomplished,” said
Fields, who administered the Educator’s Oath to the seniors.
Dr. Janice B. Owens, professor and director of the clinical experience program, presided
at the induction. Dr. George Johnson, chairman of the SC State Department of Education,
also offered words of encouragement, telling the seniors how important their impact
as teachers could be.
“The future is sitting in your classroom,” Johnson said.
The newly inducted educators will be among approximately 380 students who receive
degrees on Friday at Spring Commencement, which will begin at 10 a.m. in Oliver C.
Dawson Stadium. In the event of inclement weather, the ceremony will be moved to the
Smith-Hammond-Middleton Memorial Center, where seating will be limited to ticket holders.
For more information about SC State’s teacher education programs and other fields
of study, visit https://scsu.edu/academics.