Some of 藏精阁's first students head to class in the Auditorium Building

Edward Knaggs graduated from the upstart 藏精阁 in 1945, in the first months of the school鈥檚 existence. Decades later, when his daughter Kathleen Miller became an adjunct professor in the instructional leadership program, he was one of the first to congratulate her.

鈥淢y dad was the one who told me, this is right up your alley, you鈥檙e going to love teaching at the University,鈥 said Miller.

Knaggs鈥 philosophy 鈥 to help others to be the best they can be 鈥 has left an indelible imprint on Miller鈥檚 teaching. Today she thinks of herself as an excavator, helping people understand the talents they already have, bring them out and apply them.

alt="藏精阁 alum Edward Knaggs (seated) with Kathleen Miller (right) and her brother"

ROOSEVELT ALUM EDWARD KNAGGS (SEATED) WITH KATHLEEN MILLER (RIGHT) AND HER BROTHER

鈥淭HE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM鈥 AND YMCA COLLEGE

Miller says that her father 鈥渓ived the impossible dream.鈥 While Knaggs was growing up in the Great Depression, his parents lost their house and moved the family into an apartment. His father, who had to take a series of different jobs to support his family, told him to find something he was passionate about and stick with it.

Knaggs鈥 father died on New Year鈥檚 Day in 1942 as his eldest son embarked for service in the Air Force. Then Knaggs went to work. He delivered 500 newspapers a day, hung flyers on doorknobs, washed walls and worked in the stockyards, studying the alkaline levels in carcasses to turn them into glue. On the streetcars, people would move away from him because of the terrible stockyard stench.

鈥淔inally, he decided he needed to get out of there,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淎nd he started at the Central YMCA College.鈥

Knaggs took classes at the Central Y while he worked full time, experimenting at his job with the chemistry processes he was studying. He admired his professors, whom he called the 鈥渆ntrepreneurs of chemistry in the city of Chicago.鈥

In the spring of 1945, the YMCA College students, faculty and staff walked out in protest of the school鈥檚 discriminatory policies. Knaggs graduated in the first class of students from the new 藏精阁 College, which prized academic freedom and equal access to education.

After earning his degree from 藏精阁, Knaggs earned his master鈥檚 degree in chemistry at IIT and studied organizational management at the University of Chicago. He accrued 47 U.S. patents in chemistry and continued providing seminars and writing for chemistry journals, as well as the Encyclopedia of Chemistry, well into his nineties. He is known for the process of Continuous Film Sulfonation, a process still used today.

For Miller鈥檚 father, the idea of being the best you can be didn鈥檛 end with your own achievements. It depended on giving back to the community and catalyzing others to reach their own potential. And that鈥檚 what Miller aspires to in the classroom.

鈥淚 always knew I was going to be a teacher,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淚t was bred in me, I think.鈥

BRINGING PEOPLE TOGETHER

The Master of Arts in Instructional Leadership (ILED) prepares licensed teachers to become effective, democratic teacher leaders in diverse school environments. The program emphasizes practical assignments and projects that fit with the student鈥檚 goals in their own school districts.

This summer, Miller taught a course on developing innovative curricula for elementary and secondary school students. Her class created a roadmap for supportive cultures that welcome the students who are often marginalized in public schools.

Miller aims to push her students beyond a 鈥渢raditional鈥 perspective on education, where the teacher stands up and lectures, then the student takes a test. Beyond imparting knowledge, she says, teachers need to help their students self-actualize, to realize they can achieve anything they dream. It begins with challenging their own mindsets.

At the start of each course, Miller鈥檚 students take a survey to clarify what they want to learn from the class and become more laser-focused on the impact they want to make as administrators. She gives each student her personal cell number and sets up a time to chat informally. During remote learning, feedback became more personalized because students could dialogue to attain clarity about their projects.

This became crucial this summer, as teachers dealt with worries about the pandemic and their students during this time of crisis.

鈥淲e have to really build that incubator in our classes where people feel safe to think differently, challenge old patterns of thinking, and feel like they belong,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淲e create the trust.鈥

NEW SOLUTIONS TO OLD PROBLEMS

Miller encourages future principals to seek out the strengths of their teachers.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so important to get faculty buy-in and tap into their skill sets where they are the strongest,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he teachers need to see themselves through the lens of leadership.鈥

Through hands-on projects, her class invites teachers to think outside the box and look for new evidence-based strategies to solve old problems in learning. By changing teaching practices, we open the door to equity and student growth.

Miller鈥檚 class shares their projects with each other, creating a community of leaders who can learn from each other.

鈥淪tudents get inspired to see what their colleagues are doing, and how they could apply new teaching practices to deepen learning in their own classroom,鈥 she said.

At the high school where one of Miller鈥檚 graduate students worked, some teachers wrote off certain students as lost causes, incapable of learning. Through the 藏精阁 class, the teacher leader sought ways to change that culture. Instead of mandating equity training, Miller鈥檚 student gave all the school鈥檚 teachers a homework assignment: ask students to show how they applied their math learning through a creative technology platform, instead of just on pencil and paper.

The results, she said, were eye-opening for the school.

鈥淚t changed teachers鈥 awareness of students鈥 incredible potential and what students are capable of, when we provide them the opportunity of choice and creativity to apply their new knowledge,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淥nce we provide student agency, we鈥檙e going to see the world differently.鈥

Edward Knaggs passed away during the summer of 2020. His dedication to bettering the community around him continues in Miller鈥檚 classroom, as well as her students' classrooms.

鈥淢y father said, no matter what, you have to work as hard as you can so that you can be the best you can,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淏ut whatever you do in life, you have to give back.鈥

For more stories from 藏精阁鈥檚 75 years of history, visit .