Jennifer Edwards: A Lifelong Love of Learning

May 27, 2026

Jennifer’s second-grade teacher helped her find her vocation. “It was toward the end of the school year, and I didn’t want to leave my second-grade classroom,” Jennifer recalls. Soon she was doing everything she could to be held back. “I became a terror to teach, and most people would have thought I was a difficult child, but that teacher saw through my pretense. She pulled me aside and told me she knew what I was doing. ‘You want to stay in the classroom forever, don’t you?’ she said. ‘So, why don’t you become a teacher for young children?’”

Jennifer followed this advice after earning her bachelor’s degree in developmental psychology in 1993 and in the decades since then she’s filled a wide range of roles in the early learning field. She spent six years as an early childhood and kindergarten teacher, as well as an Early Head Start center director, a position in which she came to know how the CDA® leads to high-quality early learning and care. Jennifer has gone on to become a Professional Development Specialist who supports educators in earning their CDA and a research and program consultant for early childhood programs. Along the way, she began doing workshops on child development and literacy for Head Start teachers and directors.

By 2010, Jennifer was working on a master’s degree in early childhood education and felt ready to launch her own training business, Early Childhood Connections in Freeport, New York. “I have eight consultants who work for me,” Jennifer says, “and provide training in whichever particular area early learning programs want, including health and safety, leadership and setting up the classroom environment. I handle the areas of curriculum and child development in the training I conduct, and my work takes me beyond New York to Maryland, Pennsylvania and Georgia.”

The focus of much of Jennifer’s work is helping educators to earn a CDA because she knows the benefits it provides. “The CDA helps early childhood teachers gain skills, knowledge and an understanding of what it takes to maintain high standards in early childhood settings. It also makes the educators realize they are the members of a profession, and that changes their view of the work they do with children.”

Jennifer gets her points across by working with educators in a very interactive way in the workshops she holds. “I do small and whole group interactions,” she explains. “I encourage a lot of self-reflection. I have individual teams work on a project in a breakout room and then share their results with everyone in the workshop. For example, I might have the teams look for three multicultural children’s books and discuss what the books teach children about self-identity and social-emotional learning. Then the teams compose book reviews for everyone to read.”

Jennifer wants all the educators she trains to feel they have a role to play together in learning and advancing their professional skills. “For example, I encourage them to form relationships when they’re building their CDA portfolios,” she says. “I tell them it’s great if they want to do Zoom sessions together or meet at Panera to work on their portfolios together. And this collaboration does more than build friendships,” Jennifer explains. “It’s a way of understanding they’re in the same boat and forming a network that supports their professional journey.”

Jennifer’s own professional journey has brought her in contact with a number of educators who’ve impressed her with their skills and sense of commitment to children. “For example, I did a classroom observation of a CDA candidate named Darlene who shared my belief in the value of interaction,” Jennifer recalls. “She really focused on the children’s individual needs while keeping them on time and on task. If a child wanted attention, Darlene quickly made eye contact with them to show she cared about them. Darlene gave the children a sense of belonging and the way she interacted with the children filtered down to how they interacted with one another. Everyone in the classroom felt special.”

Jennifer also felt special when a young woman named Maryann smiled at her during one of her workshops and said she knew her. “I didn’t remember her at first,” Jennifer says, “and then I realized that she looked just like a mom who used to bring her young daughter to my kindergarten class. I remember when Maryann first came to class with a little lunch bag and a little hair bow and bangs, all ready to learn. She sat at the table with her hands crossed, and now she has finished earning a CDA and a bachelor’s degree in early childhood education. She’s 30 years old, about her mom’s age when we first met, and she’s a lead teacher in a New York early childhood center, not far from my company in Freeport.”

Maryann didn’t forget Jennifer despite the passage of years. Neither did Fatima, an educator who’d left a career in business so she could spend more time with her children. Some years ago, Fatima earned a CDA with Jennifer’s guidance and she has stayed in touch. “Fatima told me that she recently earned her master’s degree in early childhood education, and her instructors were surprised at how much she knew about the field since her bachelor’s was in business. It turned out that many of the things Fatima had learned while earning a CDA were applicable to her graduate courses,” Jennifer says. “She wanted me to know how much her professors had praised her, and it was rewarding for me to know that I had encouraged her to be a lifelong learner.”

Jennifer is also a lifelong learner and she’s now working on her PhD in psychology at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix. “My focus is on occupational wellness in the early childhood profession. I’m looking to explore how early childhood teachers describe their experience of character strengths at work. I want to explore the traits that lead people to remain in the early learning profession at a time when programs have a tough time retaining staff. We need teachers who are happy, productive and proud of what they do,” Jennifer says. “We need to give educators the tools to develop in their careers, and I think one way we can succeed is by helping more educators earn their CDA.”

.

Share:

Recently Posted:

Blog - Text Search
Blog - Category Search
Blog - Search by Tags
Blog - Publish Date