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FALL 2008 - UW-Milwaukee

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F A C U L T Y / S T A F FP R O F I L ELinda WalkerBy Marla HyderWhile she was growing up inMemphis, Tennessee, LindaWalker’s parents and teachersinstilled in her the value of educationand encouraged her to become adoctor or a teacher. “A lot of AfricanAmerican parents, especially in theSouth, pushed these careers,” sheremembers, “because there wouldalways be jobs available.”Walker absorbed the lesson abouteducation but found that when shearrived at <strong>UW</strong>M as a freshman, neithermedicine nor classroom teachingappealed to her. “I knew I wanted tobe in a helping profession,” she says,“but I soon learned that every professionhelps. The big question was, ‘How doI want to help?’”So Walker visited the CareerDevelopment Center (CDC). As thecounselors asked her questions abouther interests, values, and skills inorder to help her discern what shewanted to do with her life, she thought,“This is what I want to do!” She beganworking at the CDC first as a programassistant and then as a career counselor.After graduating with a BA in Africologyand Sociology and beginning a Master’sin Community Counseling, she becamea senior advisor. Now she does teach,as her parents long ago suggested, butshe does so as a supportive mentorand coach — teaching students howto con duct a job search, researchmajors, and explore the myriadoptions stretching out before them.Walker knows the importance ofsupport. She considers herself verylucky to have been raised in an AfricanAmerican community in the South,where the neighbors and teacherslooked after her like second parents.“There was a sense of belonging,” shesays. “People cared; people wanted tohelp. The community was family.”Running like a thread through all thepeople surrounding young Walker —parents, teachers, neighbors — wasthe belief that “knowledge is the keyto pursuing and obtaining your careeraspirations.”When Walker was a teenager, herfamily left their Memphis communityfor <strong>Milwaukee</strong>, where her father coulddo the same job for better pay. “Whenwe moved here,” recalls Walker, “wewere hoping to have the same senseof community. It was the unknown,moving up north.” As it turned out,the family ended up in an all-whiteneighborhood, which was “quite aculture shock for us and quite anadjustment. Unfortunately, they hadsome preconceived notions of theAfrican American family. We didn’tfeel we were in harm’s way, but theywere never very sociable with us. Theypretty much just watched me and myfamily interact with each other.”What the neighbors saw as theywatched were “good people with valuesjust like theirs,” Walker explains. “Weweren’t the Waltons, but they couldsee that my parents raised us withgood values. We said ‘hello’ when theneighbors walked past; we showedrespect even though they did not showrespect toward us.” Slowly, the neighborsbegan opening up their homes andhearts to the family, and some evenapologized for the way they had acted— not allowing their children to playwith Walker and her siblings, forexample. Walker’s mother started aneighborhood watch club and wasvoted president.During high school, Walkerattended a summer youth programthrough MPS, where she was exposedto different careers. She was particularlyinfluenced by three African Americanwomen who had degrees in businessand worked as managers. Thesementors encouraged Walker to go tocollege and pursue a career in whichshe could reach her full potential,while helping others reach theirs.Now Linda Walker and the otherCDC counselors are creating for<strong>UW</strong>M students the kind of communitythat supported Walker and shaped herlife’s direction. “It really does take avillage,” she says.Visit the Career Development Center atwww.uwm.edu/dept/cdc or stop byMellencamp 128 for assistance withchoosing a major and planning yourcareer.Fall <strong>2008</strong>/Myriad 23

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