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From Grading Tests To Mixing Beats

The NPR Ed team is discovering what teachers do when they're not teaching. Artist? Carpenter? Quidditch player? Explore our Secret Lives of Teachers series.

Monica Shah opens her classroom door as first period social studies class is about to start. She's barely taller than the middle school students who shuffle down the hallway. "What up, DJ Shah?" a student calls out as he passes.

The call-out catches on. There is clapping and a few more "DJ Shah"s before teachers hush the students and shoo them into class.

So it's not a secret, really, that this unassuming and soft-spoken 26-year-old teacher is also a DJ.

"I had always secretly wanted to be a DJ," says Shah, who teaches at Brightwood Education Campus, a pre-K-8 school in Washington, D.C.

Shah took a five-month course to get her mixing certificate. She owns her own equipment and has traveled the world playing at weddings and nightclubs.
Elissa Nadworny / NPR
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NPR
Shah took a five-month course to get her mixing certificate. She owns her own equipment and has traveled the world playing at weddings and nightclubs.

When she was in college in Illinois, she started to make collections of songs — she'd blast her playlists while she studied for finals. Her junior year, she studied abroad in Spain and fell in love with the dance and music scene. When she returned to the U.S., she joked with friends that she wanted to DJ, but it just didn't seem like something that could actually happen.

"I didn't know any DJs and I didn't really know how to get started, so it was always just a silly dream," she says.

Several years passed, and Shah moved to D.C. for graduate school in international education and focused her attention on teaching. But the drive to be a DJ didn't go away.

"I promised myself that once I graduated and got a job, I would sign up for classes," Shah says.

She kept that promise: Two weeks after she started teaching at Brightwood, she enrolled in a five-month course to get her mixing certificate.

Her first gig was a house party — but she has since DJ'd events, holiday parties and weddings. Last year she did weddings in Cancun and the Isle of Wight, and performed at a club in Geneva. And, of course, she's at all the school dances.

"I like having something on the side that's totally different," she says.

Shah leads a group of third-graders in yoga poses during her peace class at Brightwood Education Campus in Washington, D.C.
Elissa Nadworny / NPR
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NPR
Shah leads a group of third-graders in yoga poses during her peace class at Brightwood Education Campus in Washington, D.C.

At her school, she has created a program within the social studies department to teach "peace education" — which focuses on things like conflict resolution and civil rights.

Shah says having a double life isn't always easy.

Her parents are both from India and her siblings are doctors. So, she says, just telling her family about her side interest was nerve-wracking.

"I've always been the black sheep of my family," she says. "They wanted me to consider other fields. So it took me awhile to even bring up the DJ-ing."

She says eventually her family came around. "It took my mom awhile," she says, "but after about a year, she told me she was happy to know that I'm able to do what I'm passionate about."

Because of the demands of teaching, she has cut back on her nightlife. These days, most of her gigs are sporadic: a night club here, a wedding there.

Shah spins for a fitness class every Monday.
Elissa Nadworny / NPR
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NPR
Shah spins for a fitness class every Monday.

But every Monday you can find her at 305 Fitness, a studio in the city that offers exercise workouts with a live DJ.

On the night I visit, Shah has just come from the after-school Model U.N. club at Brightwood.

Her outfit is a perfect reflection of her double life: The bottom half, black tights, a pencil skirt and flats, reflects her day job, and the top half, a loose neon tank top with peace signs and dangling peace-sign earrings, sums up her secret life.

The workout room is dark, with a few brightly colored spotlights. The class gets started: 30 adults dancing, lunging and jumping to the set list DJ Shah has prepared. The room echoes with the sounds of "Scream & Shout" by will.i.am featuring Britney Spears,"Let's Get Loud" by Jennifer Lopezand Duke Dumont's "The Giver."

Shah is in the back, headphones around her neck, foot tapping. She's following the ebbs and flows of the rhythm.

"I'm proud of myself," she says. "The things I've worked really hard for — DJ-ing and teaching — have all come together."


Tell us about the Secret Lives of Teachers — maybe your own or a teacher you know. Or post your own Secret Life on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram at #secretteachers. We're on Twitter at @npr_ed. Our Facebook page is here or you can drop us an email atNPREd@npr.org.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Elissa Nadworny reports on all things college for NPR, following big stories like unprecedented enrollment declines, college affordability, the student debt crisis and workforce training. During the 2020-2021 academic year, she traveled to dozens of campuses to document what it was like to reopen during the coronavirus pandemic. Her work has won several awards including a 2020 Gracie Award for a story about student parents in college, a 2018 James Beard Award for a story about the Chinese-American population in the Mississippi Delta and a 2017 Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in innovation.