Note: This story is from the fall 2015 Hindsight alumni magazine. To become a member of the Alumni Association, click here.
Dr. Tom Burnham鈥檚 higher education career at Hinds Junior College got off to a rough start.
A scared young kid from rural Rankin County without a lot of real-world experience, Burnham (1967) didn鈥檛 object to the idea of a college education 鈥 it was being away from home in an unfamiliar environment that troubled him.
But Burnham, the 2015 Alumnus of the Year, not only finished his education at Hinds, he continued at Mississippi College where he received bachelor and master鈥檚 degrees and Delta State University where he earned a specialist degree and a doctorate. And, in a twist of irony considering his reluctance, his entire career has been spent in the field of education.
He is now the director of the Principal Corps based at the University of Mississippi where he recruits great teachers to become public school principals and visionary leaders.聽 Among his many other jobs, he has been dean of the College of Education at the University of Mississippi, 2004-2009, and state superintendent of education twice, 1992-1997 and 2010-2012, crafting education policy for the state鈥檚 more than 500,000 public school children.
Early in his own educational career, such possibilities didn鈥檛 occur to him. He came from Puckett, in rural east Rankin County, and was the first person in his family to attend college. It was a priority for his dad, Paul Burnham, who worked shift work at Marquette Cement in Brandon and had farm land.
鈥淢y dad brought me over here and dropped me off in the circle. When he dropped me off, he gave me $5. And he said, 鈥楽on, you better spend this carefully because I don鈥檛 know when there will be any more,鈥 鈥 he recalled.
About two weeks later, in the days when hitchhiking was safe, he caught a ride back home to Puckett. He thought he was home to stay but his dad had other ideas. About the time Burnham made it home, his dad was getting up to work the midnight shift.
鈥淗e was livid,鈥 Burnham said, chuckling. 鈥淎nd he put me in the car and drove me back over here. And then went to work that night.
鈥淢y dad later joked with me, 鈥榊ou know, when I took you back to Hinds, I didn鈥檛 know you were going to go to school the rest of your life.鈥 It was always amusing to him that he had to bring me back to Hinds, and then I just wouldn鈥檛 stop going to school,鈥 Burnham said.
Coming to Hinds, though, was 鈥渁 logical decision. I came out of a small high school. I didn鈥檛 know very much. I think I had been on one university campus my entire elementary and high school experience. And it was also the economics of it.鈥
Burnham lived in Shangri-la and Central dormitories, spending his mornings in class and his afternoons either participating in intramurals or working at a Standard Oil station.聽 He continued on at Mississippi College with a business administration major but also took as many of the history courses he loved as he could. When he finished, he was advised to student teach in social sciences even though he didn鈥檛 have a lot of education courses.
鈥淢y plan was to go to work with Standard Oil when I finished, but I just fell in love with teaching,鈥 he said. 鈥淎fter doing student teaching I was pretty much comfortable that was what I wanted to do. I never thought about doing anything else.鈥
His first job was teaching history at Pearl High School, and his career continued from there, until he eventually became a local principal and superintendent.
A defining moment in his life, however, was about three weeks after he finished his doctorate at Delta State University in 1985. His son, Tom, just shy of 10 years old, was killed in Rankin County when he walked in front of a car.
It took him years to come to terms with his son鈥檚 death, ultimately using it to fuel his passion for doing the right thing for children. 鈥淭he only thing I could do at this point was to make things better for all children, to create a legacy for Tom through what I could do for children. I survived that period by just working to the point of sheer exhaustion,鈥 he said.
Now at the Principal Corps, he tries to take what he鈥檚 learned over the years about leadership and education and pass that on to aspiring young school administrators, continuing to mentor them after they are Principal Corps graduates.
He was a mentor for Dr. Norman Session, former Pisgah High School principal who became vice president for the Rankin Campus and Jackson Campus-Academic/Technical Center on July 1.
鈥淭he first time I met Dr. Burnham he was state superintendent, and I attended a state Board of Education meeting. We became close during an 18-month training at Ole Miss. After the training he was assigned to me as my personal mentor, but he was advising me long before that,鈥 Session said. 鈥淒r. Burnham is one of my mentors, and I consider him a friend. He is very knowledgeable about education issues and just about life in general. He is a very strong leader and a mentor to many.鈥
Burnham is married to Terri, who has also had a life-long career in education. His sister, Cathy Allen, is a retired Rankin County teacher, his daughter, Cassondra Vanderford (1989) married to Craig Vanderford (1990), is now assistant principal at Brandon High School. One of his two grandsons attended Hinds. Both Brett and Ty are now Ole Miss students.
As Mississippi鈥檚 largest community college, 黑料网 is a comprehensive institution offering quality, affordable educational opportunities with more than 170 academic, career and technical programs. With six locations in central Mississippi, Hinds enrolled nearly 12,000 credit students in fall 2014. To learn more, visit or call 1.800.HindsCC.