When ‘Everyone in the Room Is Learning’
Research & Inquiry
Smith College faculty recipients of this year’s Sherrerd Teaching Prizes share some lessons from the classroom
Photo by Jessica Scranton
Published May 22, 2026
What does excellent teaching look like?
At Smith, the answer is personified by recipients of the college’s annual Kathleen Compton Sherrerd ’54 and John J.F. Sherrerd Prizes for Distinguished Teaching. Faculty selected for the 2026 prizes are:
- Kelly Anderson, senior lecturer in the study of women, gender and sexuality; a member of the Smith faculty since 2008.
- Anna Mwaba ’10, assistant professor of government; a member of the faculty since 2018.
- Sujane Wu, professor of East Asian languages and cultures; a member of the faculty since 2005.
All three are considered educators who help students feel seen and heard—the type of professors who “always have a line of students outside their office door,” as one nominator said.
The Sherrerd awards were established in 2002 to recognize exceptional teaching by longtime faculty members, and encourage younger faculty who display outstanding skill in fostering learning. Smith will celebrate this year’s honorees at a ceremony on campus on Thursday, October 22.
Anderson, Mwaba, and Wu followed different paths to becoming educators.
Anderson was working as an oral historian in Smith College Special Collections—“a job I absolutely loved,” she says—when she was offered a one-year teaching position at another college. That experience inspired her to finish her Ph.D. and incorporate teaching into her work in Special Collections.
Mwaba’s grandparents were both teachers, but she didn’t think she would become one until after graduate school, when she was offered a chance to teach a class on Africa in international relations at Smith. “That experience shifted everything for me,” she says.
Wu grew up in a rural village in Taiwan where there were few resources, but the local teachers supported and inspired her. “To me, the best way to express that gratitude was to become an educator myself, providing that same support and opportunities for the next generation,” she says.
We asked each of the three faculty honorees to describe a teachable moment, either one they have experienced directly, or have shared with their students. Here’s what they had to say: