BYU Home BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY
SEARCH
David O. McKay School of Education MSE Calendar | Contact Us
 

2008 Faculty & Staff Spotlight

Katie Steed

Katie Steed, who became a faculty member in the Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education three days prior to her 2004 graduation, said she couldn’t imagine a more perfect environment. “I feel like my job offers me the best of both worlds,” she explained. “I am able to affect the learning of so many children as I educate future teachers, and I get the wonderful opportunity of being in their classrooms, interacting with the wonderful special needs children I long to be around.”

At the McKay School Steed has worked as a faculty advisor for BYU’s Student Council for Exceptional Children (SCEC). In addition, she is president of the Utah Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), for which she holds monthly meetings on how to strengthen the field of special education. Between these two positions, Steed oversees an annual conference for educators, advocates for current legislative bills regarding the field, supports local educators and university SCEC chapters in attending CEC’s National Convention, and recognizes local special educators through awards such as Utah’s Special Educator of the Year.

Steed serves the community in additional projects related to the special education field. She presents in-service lessons to wards and stakes concerning how to work in a church setting with children with disabilities. This work is an extension of Steed’s dissertation, which was entitled Instructing Teachers of Children with Disabilities within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

In July (when Steed was over five months pregnant), she and husband, Marc, served a one-week Church Humanitarian Mission to Albania, where they educated professionals on how to teach children with disabilities. A self-professed lover of travel, Steed explained that cultural and language barriers were eased when the common concern for assisting children was established. “Regardless of the culture you come from or the language you speak, when you share a passion to help children with special needs, you are able to communicate with ease,” Steed affirmed.

Steed believes that every aspect of our lives involves a combination of faith and works, especially as educators. “I cannot imagine teaching [special education] practices without the instruction of the Spirit,” Steed said. “That is what I learned while at BYU, and that is what I desire to share with my students.”

Steed recalls a time when she was working with a 4th grade student who had a difficult set of behaviors. She realized that if she were going to properly help this child, she would need to enlist the guidance of Heavenly Father. So Steed prayed. “As I prayed, answers were given to me from both textbooks I had read [and] lectures I had listened to, as well as ideas I had never been exposed to,” she said. “The combination of this information provided me with the best way to approach this child, and it worked!”

Steed received her undergraduate degree in elementary education with a minor in special education in 2000 and a master’s in special education from BYU in 2004. In her free time, Steed enjoys spending time with her husband, Marc, and their daughters, particularly in outdoor experiences and activities.

On November 7 the Steeds welcomed newborn daughter Lucy to their family. This is the third child for the Steeds, as Marc has two daughters from a previous marriage. “I could not feel more blessed than to have these jewels in my life,” Katie Steed said. “I never knew I could love or be loved so much.”

18 December 2007

© 2006 David O. McKay School of Education