Keller ISD_Link Magazine Winter 2017-18 | Page 10

visit Michael. Her driving instructor would meet her at the hospital and she would drive home each evening for an hour to receive her driving hours. By the time her husband was well and able to come home, she had obtained her Texas driver’s license. Teacher Besides her husband’s illness, and becoming a licensed driver, Rhodes faced additional obstacles during her first few years of teaching in Texas. These years were financially troubling in Texas public education, resulting in new teachers becoming the victims of layoffs, including Rhodes. She didn’t give up though, and was hired again when an opening became available, only to have the same thing happen again at the end of that year. Rhodes ended up receiving her third opportunity in Dallas ISD at another campus, and was able to teach there before working in Irving ISD for three years, and ultimately ending up in Keller. She currently has 20 years of experience in education between her time in the Philippines and Texas. Soldier During Rhodes’ second year teaching, she decided to join the Army. She saw a commercial about serving in the military, while having a civilian job, and thought it was the right thing to do. “I’ve had so many opportunities here,” Rhodes said. “I just wanted to give back. I just called a recruiter and signed up!” While many would argue that the American workforce was no friend to Rhodes, she says she earned in one day in the U.S. what she would earn in one month teaching in the Philippines. She was grateful and thus entered basic training at the age of 36, while going through the process of becoming a citizen of the United States. Rhodes officially became a U.S. Citizen one day before her graduation from basic training. 10 As one could expect, Rhodes didn’t just complete basic training – the oldest in her group, she had the highest Army Physical Fitness Test (APFT) score, receiving an achievement medal and the nickname “Mother Nature.” “I didn’t even think I could do one sit-up in the beginning and I was the smallest in my group – but I never gave up,” she said. She would go on to reach 145 push-ups in two minutes and 123 sit-ups in two minutes later on as a second lieutenant. The following summer, Rhodes spent six weeks in Accelerated Officer Candidate School at Fort McClellan in Alabama as the only female attendee from Texas. With a graduation rate of only 70-75 percent, Rhodes was once again not deterred, graduating and continuing on to complete her basic officer leadership course at Fort Gordon in Georgia the summer after that. Throughout these years, she had also been working toward a second master’s degree from Texas A&M Commerce, and graduated just two days before heading off to Fort Gordon. She now serves as a first lieutenant, soon to be captain. Mother At a very young age, the Rhodes recognized that their daughter Mischa was not speaking and she was diagnosed with autism. Throughout the years, Mischa received services from in-home programs, but the Rhodes knew they wanted a school system with various resources and a strong support system for special