- 5 things pediatricians should know about eye health
- Advocating for optometry’s littlest patients
- Dry eye treatment creates growth potential for optometrists
- Honoring longtime AOA member and dedicated volunteer Heather Tibbetts
- Paraoptometric associates create caring first impressions for eye care
- Honoring an optometry trailblazer: Richard Hopping, O.D.
- She’s going FAR
- Community outreach creates avenues for vision care access
- What it takes to work on a comprehensive care team
- Honoring optometry’s best and brightest
- Committee spotlight: AOA’s Meetings & Member Experiences Committee
- Making her dream a reality
- Student-centered initiatives promote optometry careers
- 1 year strong, Myopia Collective advancing a new standard of care
- Elevating optometry by advocating for dry eye patients
- Congratulations to the AOA’s 2025 award winners
- Inspiring optometry’s next generation
- A passion for grassroots
- Bringing the optometric community together
- Optometry finds voice in influential society
- Remembering Debbie Hettler
- Part of the solution
- ‘Changing the face of how we practice’
- On the radar: Emerging technologies
- Lessons in staff retention from a 50-year-practicing paraoptometric
- Remembering Virgil Deering
- Understanding the past to inform a better future
- 5 ways to center patient care
- AOA members help Olympians gain an edge
- ‘Advocacy is our history and our future’
- Tennessee Welcomes You to Optometry’s Meeting
- Member in Focus - Dr. Thuy Tran
- Intentional leadership
- 115 years of family eye care
- Optometric foundation’s track record leads to $2.5 million grant for children’s eye care in Ohio
- Honoring Charlotte Ferris’ dedication to optometry
- Representation matters in optometry
- Remembering a true friend of optometry: Patricia Hopping
- AOA’s prestigious leadership program graduates another class
- Inspiring the next gen of contact lens leaders
- Seeing potential
- Taking eye care advocacy to a global scale
- Embracing the journey
- Born to serve: Active duty paraoptometric professionals provide critical care
- ‘Raising the ceiling’
- Honoring the profession’s finest at Optometry’s Meeting 2023
- Why proper documentation is vital
- Change agent
- The power of ‘yes’
- AOA immediate past president: Our biggest challenges
- Optometry through Bubba’s eyes
- Congratulations to the AOAs 2023 award winners
- Andrew Kemp AOA’s 2022 Educator of the Year transitions students from talking in question marks to talking in period
- Distinguishing service
- Successes in diabetes care
- Shantia-Hinderlider-humanitarian-heart
- Glen Steele honored in retirement
- Art Epstein
- Next-level-Loretta-Eriks-CPOT
- Davidoff award
- Leader to leader
- Chicago things to do
- The next generation of optometrys leaders
- 2022 Hall of Fame
- Sullins Award Winner
- A great fit
- Ukrainian refugees find succor in AOA doctor executive director
- Candidates announce bids for Board of Trustees elections
- annual award winners
- women in optometry
- Care close to home
- Emerging leader
- How one doctor lives a life of service
- Jerald Combs Obit
- Connecting with patients as paraoptometrics
- Building relationships
- Persistence pays off
- Advocacy from academia
- Women make giant strides
- AOA Board of Trustee Resolutions 2020
- C Clayton Powell O.D. Obit
- James A Boucher Obit
- Irving Bennett O.D. leaves legacy
- Janet Millis finding her place
- Changing of the guard 2020
- AOA 2020-21 election
- AOA doctors frontline care
- 2020 hall of fame inductees
- members carry the message 2020EyeExam into the future
- When student becomes teacher
- Jeni Kohn Vision Quest Young Optometrist Year
- AOA Board resolves advocacy public awareness in New Year
- nominate Hall of Fame
- AOA honors active-duty sacrifice of Army doctor of optometry
- From small-town to big deal
- AOA Board of Trustee Resolutions 2019
- How doctors of optometry contribute to Air Force mission
- Kneib longtime AOA leader leaves legacy
- Morrow Optometric Family
- AOA member has a super role for NFL team
- Taking pride in what you do
- Longtime AOA volunteer member Frank Fontana OD dies
- a profession of their own
- Doctor of optometry on MasterChef
- Hawaii doctor takes volcano in stride
- A patient person
- Pick Up the Pieces
- Removing the barriers
- Another New Year happily practicing optometry
- 101 years all in the family
- Doctor Levin Obit
- Family tree blooms with doctors of optometry
- AOA offers condolences to family of Richard L Wallingford Jr OD
- Hollywoods eye experts
- Black History Month AOA doctors rise to occasions
- Longtime AOA California optometric leader and educator dies
- Civil rights leader remembered as heroic and selfless by one doctor of optometry
- All in the family The Castellanos
- All in the Family The Botwins
- War stories Retired doctor receives Frances highest military honor
- All in the family Three generations of eye care
- Opening doors
- Optometrys Family Portrait
- Optometrys eyewitness
- Teachable moments
- doctor of optomtery stays focused in Ferguson Missouri
- Opticals green makeover hits primetime TV
Reaping what we sow
March 13, 2017
AOA’s 2016 Optometric Educator of the Year explains the importance of serving others.
Tag(s): Inside Optometry, Member Spotlight
Excerpted from page 20 of the March 2017 edition of AOA Focus.
When Jacqueline Davis, O.D., M.P.H., accepted the AOA's 2016 Optometric Educator of the Year award at Optometry's Meeting® in June, she paid tribute to her 93-year-old mother, who was with her at the event. Dr. Davis also quoted boxing legend Muhammad Ali that day. Her parents and Ali shared a similar life philosophy when it comes to public service.
"'Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on Earth,'" says Dr. Davis, reciting the Ali quote once again. "Throughout my childhood, my mother never told my sister or me that we should serve other people. She didn't have to, because we watched her do it every day of her life."
Beyond her family, a number of people helped Dr. Davis along the way. There was the first doctor of optometry she saw. Her high school guidance counselor. The physics professor at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio, who gave her an optometry textbook for an independent study class in optics-the same book she later used in her first year at The Ohio State University College of Optometry (OSUCO), where she graduated from in 1981.
Today she is a professor of clinical optometry at OSUCO, where she teaches "Anterior Ocular Pathology and Surgery" and "Co-Management of Ocular Disease." Dr. Davis pays it forward by her example. First, she is clinic chief at the OSUOC Vision Clinic in the Lower Lights Christian Health Center in an economically depressed community in Columbus, Ohio. Second, she mentors the next generation of optometry students. Senior externs in the optometry school rotate through Lower Lights' vision clinic and provide services that address some of the many health disparities within the community. She is a member of the optometry school's Committee for Inclusion and Diversity, which facilitates its annual three-day, in-residence "summer camp" called Improving Diversity in Optometric Careers (I-DOC).
In an interview with AOA Focus, Dr. Davis explains why she believes in planting seeds.
Who planted your optometric seed?
My elementary school nurse told my parents that I needed to see the eye doctor. When I got my first glasses, I was amazed to see individual leaves on a tree. I had thought that trees were just big blobs of green in the sky! I always had positive experiences with eye doctors, and I always appreciated the positive impact they had on me.
What inspired your passion for education?
Ironically, teaching was not my first love. When I was in college, I worked for Upward Bound one summer and taught biology to eighth- and ninth-grade students. I have the highest respect for teachers, but after Upward Bound, I thought I could never teach because it was such an overwhelming experience. I was very content with my private practice for 22 years. In 2005, a colleague who was teaching at The Ohio State University asked me to help start a new outreach clinic in a community with a high concentration of uninsured individuals. I agreed, but I fully intended to go back to my private practice once the clinic was well-established. As time passed, I found myself falling in love with working with the patients and with teaching students how to best serve those individuals. Ultimately, I ended up selling my practice to one of my students, and I then joined the OSUCO faculty full time.
How are you able to plant seeds?
After a 12-week rotation at Lower Lights, our students summarize their experiences by presenting interesting cases in a grand rounds format. They often comment on the strong bonds they have developed with their patients and the sincere gratitude that patients have expressed for their quality vision care. I always remind the students that, no matter where their careers take them, they can always find communities like this that can benefit greatly from their optometric service.
What is the impact of mentoring?
Every summer at OSUCO, we host the I-DOC program, which is absolutely increasing the number of underrepresented students in the profession throughout the country. While I was at Academy 2016 in Anaheim, a young lady approached me and said, 'Dr. Davis, I was in I-DOC two years ago and now I am enrolled in the Southern California College of Optometry.' That has happened to me several times at different optometric meetings. We are gratified to know that our program is having a positive impact on our profession, even if our I-DOC students don't always end up at OSUCO. We know that we have had about 180 students participate in the summer program since it started a decade ago, and at least 40 of those students have gone on to become doctors of optometry.