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3 lessons that changed how I see literacy work

May 13, 2026 by Jenny Walker

Walker, Jenny

Author: Dr. Jenny McCormack Walker, Literacy Texas Executive Director

As an undergraduate student at the University of North Texas, I majored in journalism with an emphasis in public relations.

One of my favorite professors from UNT, Dr. Wells, often encouraged us to live by three simple but powerful mantras:

  1. Information is powerful, but only if it’s shared.
  2. Perception is reality.
  3. Image is everything.


At the time, those lessons were framed around media campaigns, branding, and public communication. Although I’ve never used that degree in any full-time capacity as a PR professional, it has come in handy in my role as a non-profit leader and advocate for this work. 

Years later, I find myself tapping into the PR lessons from my college days. The principles I learned there tie perfectly to our work in adult literacy and our need to communicate with others about our work.

Information is powerful, but only if it’s shared

We’re surrounded by extraordinary adult learners every day. We see these men and women earning diplomas, reading to their children for the first time, obtaining employment, gaining citizenship, and rebuilding confidence after years of believing education was out of reach.

Those stories help people outside of our field better understand the need to support our work. Yet too often, those stories stay inside our classrooms and organizations.

Meanwhile, policymakers, community members, and even potential supporters may have little understanding of happens in adult literacy classrooms. Many people still imagine adult education as a small remedial program rather than a driver for critical workforce development and economic, health, and social mobility in our communities.

If we’re not actively sharing our impact, someone else will define our work for us, and we must control that narrative. Nobody knows our work better than us. It’s our story to tell, but collectively, we’re not telling it to enough people.

Perception is reality

One of the hardest truths in communication is that intent does not always equal impact. We may know the value of adult literacy programs, but public perception is often shaped by visibility, messaging, and repetition. If communities only hear about adult literacy during funding crises, they begin to associate the field with scarcity and struggle rather than innovation and transformation.

This means we must become intentional about how we frame our work. Adult literacy is not charity work. It is community sustainability and vitality. The way we communicate our mission shapes how others value it.

Image is everything

In the public relations world, they use the idea of image to convey a level of trust, consistency, and credibility.

For adult literacy programs, our image is built through every single interaction we have. Every presentation, every community partnership meeting, every social media post, every student success story, and every conversation with stakeholders. It all matters, and maybe even more than we realize.

Do we communicate urgency without hopelessness?

Do we highlight challenges while also showcasing solutions?

Do we present adult learners through a lens of dignity, strength, and potential?

These questions matter because narratives influence funding, partnerships, policy decisions, and public support.

For too long, adult literacy has operated quietly in the background, doing transformational work with limited visibility. But this chapter in the history of our field requires us to advocate boldly, communicate clearly, and tell our story before someone else tells it for us.

Adult literacy professionals have so many stories to tell of perseverance, resilience, second chances, and transformation. In today’s climate, storytelling is essential for our field. In moments like these, effective communication matters more than ever.

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Filed Under: Classroom Learning, Communications & Marketing, Research & Best Practice Tagged With: clear communication, EAL & ESL, HSE & GED, ideas, math, research based, teaching, workforce

Care builds confidence

April 13, 2026 by Jenny Walker

Walker, Jenny

Author: Dr. Jenny McCormack Walker, Literacy Texas Executive Director

When I was in high school, I sat down with my guidance counselor to talk through my college and career dreams.  

“Jenny, what do you want to major in?” Ms. McGregor asked me. 

“Whatever I can sign up for that requires the least amount of math,” I said boldly. 

And, thus, a journalism major was born.  

When I enrolled at the University of North Texas, I was a bit dismayed to find that despite my best efforts, I did have to take two math classes for my bachelor’s degree in journalism – college algebra and elementary statistics.  

Over the course of the next two years, my fight or flight response kicked in, and flight kept winning. I finally ended up with a professor who wouldn’t allow me to drop the course the minute my math anxiety set in. He took baby steps with me through every office hour, every quiz, and every test. It was the proudest I have ever been to earn a C. Then came my reward: meeting the prerequisite to enroll in elementary statistics.  

The first day, I walked in to meet Dr. Quintanilla. He was a brilliant professor with a CV that included an ivy league education and research studies with titles made of mathematic words I had never heard. I braced myself for another drop request. What I found instead was the power of good teaching and an instructor that cared about the success of his students.  

Dr. Quintanilla not only crafted lessons and examples that helped math make sense, but he also did it with humor and a heavy dose of compassion for students who were reluctant mathematicians. What’s more is that he took the time to learn the names of every single student in the class, and it was not a small class. I enjoyed it so much that I never even considered dropping the course.  

I learned so much about good teaching from Dr. Quintanilla, and I carried those lessons with me when I became an educator. Before I worked in adult literacy, I taught high school English. I decided that if Dr. Quintanilla could lead me to like math, then I could lead my students to like Shakespeare. It started with a love of the content and solidified with a genuine care for student success. I learned both of those things from Dr. Quintanilla.  

As I started thinking about math education in preparation for our math theme this month, memories of being in Dr. Quintanilla’s class came to mind. I looked him up, and I was happy to find that he still works at UNT. I sent him an email to let him know that more than 20 years later, I still think about that statistics class. I told him that a bit of his legacy lives in every single lesson I teach and every training I present. I was thrilled to have a response from him. What a blessing to be able to tell people when they are excellent and that their work is impactful! 

Years later, I went on to take three statistics classes as part of my doctoral studies. I’m thankful for the confidence that elementary statistics class, and Dr. Quintanilla, helped me build.   

As we consider incorporating math education and numeracy into our literacy programs, it’s important for instructors to handle reluctant learners with care and help them build a sense of capability. They can do it. We just have to remind them sometimes.  

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Filed Under: Classroom Learning, Program Administration, Research & Best Practice Tagged With: EAL & ESL, HSE & GED, ideas, math, research based, teaching, workforce

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