DI teacher fosters life-changing experiences

Special contribution by Lennon Formaggini

For Cristina Guzman, Destination Imagination isn’t just another extracurricular activity—it’s a life-changing experience for students, one that fosters creativity, collaboration, and resilience. That is why, in addition to being a coordinator at New Tech High School at B.F. Darrell, she is also a passionate team manager who has dedicated herself to bringing the magic of DI to her school.

“DI has had a profound impact on my professional and personal life,” she said. “Coaching has allowed me to build special bonds with my students as I watch them fail, learn, grow, and succeed. Witnessing their creativity, dedication, and resilience firsthand has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career.”

DI, where students compete at regional, state, and national levels, is one of Student Activities’ most popular programs. It inspires students to solve problems, search for creative solutions, and work cooperatively with others.

Guzman, along with her co-manager Joe Jenkins, has been the DI coach at the school for four years. When she joined New Tech, she was surprised to find that the school didn’t yet have aDI team. Without hesitation, she jumped at the opportunity to bring the program to the students. 

In 2022, she recruited a team of sophomores, naming them The Breakfast Club. What followed was nothing short of extraordinary. 

“When we first started, we had no idea how much this journey would impact us,” she said. “We came in as underdogs, and now we’ve made it to state four years in a row and to globals twice. Watching my students’ hard work and determination pay off has been incredible.” 

In this year’s state competition, Guzman led her team to yet another win, placing first in the Secondary Level Fine Arts category, which earned them another shot at Global Finals 2025. 

Looking back on that first year, Guzman reflected that it was a journey that would shape not just the team’s future, but her own as well.

“I could never have imagined the impact DI would have on their high school experience,” said Guzman, who as a coach fosters a space where creativity and teamwork thrive.

“I create an environment where students feel encouraged to take risks, collaborate, and think outside the box,” she said. “It’s essential that they feel free to express their ideas without fear of judgment, allowing them to build on each other’s creativity.” 

Guzman also integrates activities designed to bring the team closer together by strengthening trust, communication, and problem-solving skills, ensuring that teamwork becomes second nature, she said. 

“This approach has been key in developing a group of students who not only excel at DI but also form lasting bonds that extend well beyond the competition,” she said.

Each year has meant lasting experiences for the New Tech team. 

“One of the most special moments was when we were paired as a buddy team with a group from Turkey,” she said. “Beyond supporting each other’s performances, our teams shared language, culture, and even food. It was an incredible reminder that DI is not just about competition—it’s about connection.” 

However, one moment stands out above all others in Guzman’s coaching career: watching her first-ever team, The Breakfast Club, achieve its dream of making it to globals after first competing in 2022. The team competed as The Lunch Club in 2023, and in 2024 as The Dinner Club. Its final performance at globals was the culmination of hard work, perseverance, and growth, said Guzman. 

“In life, even when you put your heart into something, success isn’t always guaranteed, but that doesn’t mean you give up,” she said. “That’s a lesson they can carry far beyond the competition.”

A journey that has come full-circle

Beverly Mullins-Ford, principal at Anne Frank Elementary School, has a passion for creating meaningful relationships with her students and colleagues. In recent years, she has experienced an abundance of full-circle moments, reminders of the deep connections, lasting memories, and generational impact that she has fostered during her 42-year career with Dallas ISD. 

“What impacts me most is when I see how our teachers care about each other,” Ford said. 

Two years ago, a teacher who worked at Anne Frank for 20 years passed away from pancreatic cancer. It was an experience that weighed heavily on the school community, as they watched her illness progress and ultimately said goodbye, she said. Ford and the team members rallied around the teacher and have continued to honor her.  

“Every year, we do a pancreatic cancer walk,” Ford said. “Since she passed away, the staff, students, and parents have walked in her memory because of the way she impacted students in every grade. To me, the most impactful thing we have as educators is our influence and our legacy.” 

Like the ties she forged between the school community and the former teacher, many of the seeds that Ford planted while creating meaningful relationships with her school team have blossomed into unexpected, life-changing moments.  

In 2024, she received a phone call from the husband of a teacher who had retired 15 years earlier and had passed away. In honor of his late wife and her time at Anne Frank, he pledged to donate $100,000 over the next 15 years as a reminder of how often she used her own money to support students.  

“I told him, ‘This is just what we do as teachers,’” Ford said. “Her husband wanted to help, and he reached back to do that. This is one of my favorite things about our school. We build a sense of family and community so people feel they can always come back. And that happened.” 

Heartfelt moments like these are what Ford remembers most from her more than two decades at Anne Frank Elementary. 

Ford began her journey in education as a teacher in 1985 at Edward H. Cary Middle School and eventually became an assistant principal at Edna Rowe Elementary School. 

She earned her bachelor’s degree from The University of Texas followed by a master’s degree in education. 

Ford has spent the last 26 years at Anne Frank Elementary School, first as assistant principal for 18 years and then as principal. 

“When I was a teacher, I loved interacting with students. When I first became an assistant principal, I missed that,” Ford said. “Then I realized I had an entire building full of students. I just had to learn how to connect with 1,100 students, instead of just my 25 students per class period. It always has been important for me to create a space where students feel safe to connect and to be a part of the school.” 

Ford recently experienced another full-circle moment when she was named Elementary Principal of the Year during the State of the District event.  

“Standing there on stage at the Winspear, I saw a room full of stories—principals, teachers, and other executive directors that I have gotten to know over the years,” Ford said. “It was a great feeling to look out and see the result of my work sitting in front of me and to realize that my work isn’t in isolation.” 

Among the attendees was Michael Jackson, executive director of Magnet and Montessori Schools, who was once a student in Ford’s eighth grade class at Cary Middle School. He even became a teacher at Anne Frank Elementary while Ford was assistant principal and has since served as an assistant principal, coach, principal, and now executive director.

“I’ve watched him grow up since he was in eighth grade,” she said. “He still comes by the school often to visit. I have created connections that have led to such amazing stories. For the rest of my life, I’ll be a part of his story and he’ll be a part of mine. I think we do that for every teacher that we remember. Schools are such a big part of our lives, and that is where we build lasting memories.”



Welcome to our place

Special contribution by junior associate Stephanie Garcia

When visitors and team members enter the Linus D. Wright Dallas ISD Administration Building, they are often greeted by bright and welcoming decorations that match the seasons. The most recent ones were a colorful ode to spring as paper butterflies and flowers made from paper plates decorated walls and the visitors center. The mastermind behind the cheerful decor is Latalawanda Webb, a call center specialist.

“At the beginning, I was just decorating the office,” said Webb, who has been with Dallas ISD for 10 years and has spent the last six years using her creativity to make the workplace more inviting with the help of her team members. “But then, I wanted to make the whole lobby more welcoming, so I extended out the decorations.” 

Whether it’s a grand holiday or a simple seasonal change, Webb collaborates with her team to transform the visitors center that also houses the district’s call center into a welcoming space. The thoughtful decorations create an inviting atmosphere that brightens everyone’s day.

Between answering calls and other duties, Webb rarely has a moment to pause, she said. So, more often than not, she can be found decorating the area with a headset on, ready to answer incoming calls while arranging the decorations.

Making the seasons come to life is not a small task; preparation often takes around a month to ensure Webb’s vision is executed perfectly. She begins by conceptualizing the desired look for the office space, then purchases the necessary decorations and materials.. 

Then, there are times when an unexpected need for decoration comes up, such as the recent Lifetime Achievement Reception held by Human Capital Management in the administration building lobby to recognize more than 200 retirees. Webb and others from the call center jumped into action to decorate the lobby in gold and black motifs for the occasion to honor those who have given so many years in service to the district. 

“I just want to make everyone feel welcome and happy when they come to our building,” she said.

A legacy of putting ideas into action

When Lisa Whitaker is struck by an idea, she jumps right into action. So when she wondered earlier this year why American Sign Language classes weren’t more common in the district, she started working toward creating more opportunities to introduce students to ASL, a visual language used by many deaf and hard-of-hearing people in the United States.  

Whitaker, director of Academic Enrichment and Support, considered how to introduce ASL to elementary school students to help them gain proficiency early on. And then it came to her: the district’s first-ever ASL summer camp for elementary school students. 

“We have a health and physical education summer camp, but we don’t offer ASL until ninth grade. That gives students only four years to learn it, limiting their proficiency,” Whitaker said. “Research tells us that children learn language best because their synapses are still developing. Their brains are very malleable.”

This is not the first time that Whitaker, whose department is over health, physical education, and world languages, has turned an idea into a long-term initiative. In recent years, she has developed, among other things, a water safety curriculum for second graders, distributed first-aid kits to 245 physical education classrooms, and started health and physical education summer camps. She is currently designing lifeguarding and outdoor summer courses for district students.  

Whitaker’s influx of ideas arises from an inquisitive mind, nurtured by a family of educators. Her maternal grandparents—a principal and an instructor in a small, segregated southern town in the 1940s—both held master’s degrees at a time when advanced education was uncommon among African Americans. Upholding the family legacy, Whitaker’s mother also earned a master’s degree and taught at both Charles Rice Learning Center and what was then James Hogg Elementary School. Whitaker attended Dallas ISD schools and graduated from David W. Carter High School. She even went a step beyond her family’s academic achievements by earning a doctorate in community health and policy from the University of North Texas.  

“If I have an idea, that is a gift that is meant to be shared,” Whitaker said. “Education has been an opportunity for my family, and it’s been the opportunity that they’ve given to me. Now it’s my turn to give that gift to someone else, and it just needs to be given in a creative way because everyone has a different entry point.”

This approach to offering different entry points is how the concept for the ASL summer camp began. Held at Harry Stone Montessori, the camp, which ran June 2-26, was combined with a multi-sports camp and split into two sections.

“All of the kids who signed up for sports would now be getting the ASL experience, and I loved it,” said Whitaker.

Whitaker said that two students have especially benefited from the program—a boy who is hard of hearing and a hearing girl whose mother is deaf.

“The joy that this child, who might be going deaf, has exuded during the program was magnificent,” Whitaker noted. “We were in his world, understanding how he learns and experiences things, rather than him being in ours and having to explain why he’s different when we’re all literally the same—he just has a different way of speaking.”

Whitaker regards life as a big opportunity to learn and to impart knowledge to others, she said. Before she transitioned to her role as a director, she taught science at D.A. Hulcy STEAM Middle School and Wilmer-Hutchins High School and later worked as a campus instructional coach at Justin F. Kimball High School.

“My gift is taking something that’s super complex and making it digestible, making it something that’s practical, and that’s what I loved doing for my students,” she said.

Working with students who struggled to pass the STAAR science test, either because they had been historically marginalized or because they were new to the country was one of her greatest accomplishments as a teacher, she said.

“Having a student who’s never passed the STAAR test come to you and thank you is one of the best feelings,” Whitaker said.  

Whitaker said she believes that educators are part of a much greater story, and that even if their legacy amounts to no more than a page, it will at least be a page that others turn to. 

“We’re part of this bigger story—we have one page in a humongous book, not a chapter. If we get our page right, there are some students who are going to benefit from that information,” she said.