Todd A. Jepperson
I was born second of five kids in Provo, UT in 1985. I graduated from Pleasant Grove High School in 2003, and after taking some time off to start a family, I enrolled at Utah Valley University. I have a lot of interests that span many different fields of study, such as English, Visual Arts, Creative Writing, Astronomy, History, Philosophy, Psychology, Religion and Physical Science. For that reason, I got my Associate in Arts degree in Integrated Studies, and for my Bachelor of Arts I majored in Secondary Education: English.
When I'm not busy teaching, machining diamonds for the energy industry, or feeding my brain by taking extra University classes, you can find me outdoors with my family, in my garden, practicing martial arts, or in my studio creating creepy/cute stories and illustrations for the various creative projects I have going at any given time.
I was born second of five kids in Provo, UT in 1985. I graduated from Pleasant Grove High School in 2003, and after taking some time off to start a family, I enrolled at Utah Valley University. I have a lot of interests that span many different fields of study, such as English, Visual Arts, Creative Writing, Astronomy, History, Philosophy, Psychology, Religion and Physical Science. For that reason, I got my Associate in Arts degree in Integrated Studies, and for my Bachelor of Arts I majored in Secondary Education: English.
When I'm not busy teaching, machining diamonds for the energy industry, or feeding my brain by taking extra University classes, you can find me outdoors with my family, in my garden, practicing martial arts, or in my studio creating creepy/cute stories and illustrations for the various creative projects I have going at any given time.
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I would like to thank all of the amazing educators who have helped me to get where I am today. In particular, I'd like to thank Mark Hays for promoting creativity in my young mind, Julie Bouche for the "laugh bonuses" and for demonstrating that you can teach and love your job simultaneously, Beverly Farland for showing me that teachers are people too, Dr. Alma Wilson for your wise words "Outlast. They're numbers; they're servants, not masters," Dr. Mark Pepper for introducing me to Post-Modernism and teaching me to "be not so fearful," Dr. Raquel Cook for being a true superhero among superheroes, and Dr. Suzy Cox for showing me that there is a light in the endless maze of the human mind. Without all of you, I wouldn't have the amazing life I have today. Thank you.