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» Go to news mainFinding his way to the front of the classroom
Bryce Crossâs career path has taken so many turns, itâs tempting to call him an âaccidentalâ accounting professor. When heâs at the front of the classroom, though, heâs so comfortable that it doesnât seem accidental at all.
After high school, Bryce and a friend set off from Calgary to Saskatchewan to attend the Police Studies program in Regina. âA buddy and I decided we were going to be cops,â he says. It only took a week, he adds, to figure out it wasnât for them. âSo, I ended up coming to Dal, following my high school girlfriend, and in true 18-year-old fashion, we split up.â
The Faculty of Management was looking for lecturers
He loved Halifax and decided to stay and enroll at ±«Óătv University. Starting in an arts program, Bryce then switched to business, found he had a knack for accounting and graduated in 2018 with his Bachelor of Commerce.
The next part of his journey, he says, was to do what all the accounting professors suggested âget a job at one of the big companies and study to become a chartered professional accountant (CPA). He became a CPA, but big company culture didnât feel right, so he broke out on his own. He found that to be plain âboringâ and discovered he missed having colleagues.
Bryceâs next move was to a mid-size firm, but before he had a chance to settle, he learned ±«Óătv was looking for people to teach in the Faculty of Management.
Ever since graduating, he says, âI was TAing in finance, accounting, and so on. I think it was a total of 17 sections. I was tutoring as well any time I wasnât TAingâ. With that experience in mind, he decided to apply. Surprised to get the job, he decided, âalright, well, I guess this is what I do now.â
âHow do I ensure everybody gets across the line here?â
Even though he wasnât much older than his students, Bryce says the hardest part wasnât the content, but learning how to support the students on an emotional level.
He knows that âthings aren't looking great for the young peopleâ, with a climate crisis and the economy. He felt he needed to get back into the student mindset and figure out how to help them at a key point in their lives. Â
Emphatic that he wasnât going to be a pushover, he says his biggest question was, âHow do I ensure that we get everybody across the line here?â adding he wants them to be successful.
The classroom feels like home
Bryceâs ability to nurture and help his students grow is evident in what he does at home. Interested in plants, he has a standing herb garden with 100 basil plants in his apartment. He also grows gourmet mushrooms and is particularly fond of shiitakes.
Having acquired a masterâs degree, Bryce isnât entirely convinced heâs going back to being a Ph.D. student just yet. All he knows is that, for now, the classroom feels like home. Â
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