By: John Wofford ā13
Published on

One of the key phrases heard often at Aquinas College is, āMakes all the difference
in the world.ā Many students from diverse backgrounds, and with a variety of life-goals
in mind, are a testament to that difference. Among those who can perhaps articulate
it the most eloquently is Tricia Hilgendorf, a 2001 graduate of Aquinas College, teacher,
parent, and recent recipient of a distinguished academic fellowship.
When asked to describe herself, Hilgendorf immediately cuts to the heart of her greatest
love: teaching. āI wanted to be a teacher since I was a very small child, but I had
my family very young,ā she said. āI had two years of college done from when I was
18 at another place. I came back to Aquinas when I was about 35 or 36, and finished
up my Bachelorās Degree in Education. That was just the fulfillment of a lifelong
dream, to be able to teach. So for ten years Iāve been teaching.ā
Hilgendorfās journey didnāt end there, however. After launching into her teaching
career, she fell in love with teaching an unexpected subject. āStarting out, I was
going to teach English. But at my first job, they needed a history teacher. So I was
going to teach history for one semester, then go into an English position. Two weeks
into teaching history, I thought, āThis is it, for me. I love teaching history way
more than Iām going to love teaching English!āā
To facilitate further knowledge as she educated young minds, Hilgendorf returned to
Aquinas to enhance her own education. āI came back to Aquinas, and got a minor in
history, then finished up a major in social studies, all at Aquinas. So it has taken
me...thirteen years to get all this accomplished, but Iāve been teaching almost that
whole time also. Now I am a history teacher at the Potterās House, and I love it!ā
āAquinas was the place for me, because they just accommodated me,ā Hilgendorf said
of her experiences at Aquinas. āThey worked around my crazy schedule, because I had
three little kids at home, a busy family.ā When discussing her work with students,
Hilgendorf lights up. āFor somebody to say, ātell me about you,ā it sounds like Iām
talking about my career, but I am a teacher, through and through,ā she said. āThereās
a book that I read one time that resonated with me so much, about being who you are
- āMy Name is Asher Lev,ā by Chaim Potok. Asher was an artist; I am a teacher. It
flows through my veins. Aquinas helped me achieve that goal.ā
Hilgendorf is excited about her future plans. She is a recent recipient of a fellowship
which will allow her to further her education. āFor the last eight years, Iāve been
wanting to get my Masterās degree,ā she said. āIāve been applying for eight years
for the James Madison Foundation Fellowship, which is extremely hard to get. Hundreds
of people apply. It was established through Congress to further the teaching of the
Constitution, and one teacher per state gets it.ā
After years of applying, Hilgendorf has been selected as the Michigan recipient. She
described the application process, and her wait to know the results: āItās a letter
when you donāt get it. And every year, I have gotten a letter. Unless my birthday
was on a Sunday, I have gotten the letter on my birthday - April 20 - that I did not
get it, every year. And this year, on April 13, I came home and there was a package
waiting for me. And I looked at the return address... I knew if I got a package it
had to be all of the stuff that I needed to accept it. I, of course, started sobbing
immediately, before I even opened the box.ā
āIāve always wanted to teach,ā said Hilgendorf. āI would teach my dolls when I was
three. I was always going to be a mommy and a teacher, and [now] I am a mom, and a
teacher. Teaching is not my job. Itās not my vocation. Itās who I am. And if Iām not
teaching in a classroom, Iām teaching somewhere. Thereās nothing else that I can do,
because it is what God has made me to be.ā