Jessica Roper: Trust the process

by | Apr 2026

DUST FLIES in the air as the Southside School’s Lady Saints’ softball team rounds the bases during practice. Coach Jessica Roper shouts instructions and encouragement as they work on speed, tight turns, and proper running techniques for the next big game. As a former softball player herself, Roper brings expertise to both the softball team she coaches and the physical education (P.E.) classes she teaches at Southside.

While Roper’s current position fits her like a glove, it took some time to find exactly where she wanted to be in her career. As a child living in Southern California, Roper had a passion for zoology and was certain she would become the next Jane Goodall. Over time, however, she realized the subjects required were not what she was interested in pursuing. Her family always recognized that she was a natural mentor, and in her early years of college, she considered switching to education as a major. That particular college did not think she was a good match for their education program, but Roper did not let that stop her from pursuing her dream.

A door opened for Roper when a coach from Cumberland University (CU) recruited her to play softball for their team.

“I transferred to CU without ever stepping foot on campus, trusting the process completely,” she said.

Photography by Ashleigh Newnes

The smaller, intimate campus gave Roper everything she was looking for: a great team to play for and an education program that was thrilled to welcome her. Roper excelled in the program and found the instructors and coaches to be incredibly supportive.

“I had several professors at Cumberland who were consistently encouraging and deeply invested in me, not just as a student, but as a person,” she said. After graduation, Roper became a third grade teacher with a passion for teaching math and science. During her years in the classroom, Roper’s talent for teaching was recognized when she was awarded the Wilson County Teacher of the Year for 2023-24.

“When they announce the winner, they usually read excerpts from our personal statement and from the letters of recommendation,” she said. “At first, I didn’t realize it was me, but once I started hearing familiar words, I turned to my mom and said, ‘I think it’s me.’ I was shocked, and started to sob at the love I heard in the letters written.”

This award was no surprise to those who have seen Roper in action. Roper has always approached each student as an individual on their own journey, which gives them confidence personally and academically.

Photography by Ashleigh Newnes

“My teaching philosophy is that you need to see students as whole people, not just learners of content,” she said. “Every child enters the classroom with a story, strengths, struggles, and potential that deserves to be honored.”

Recently, she has shifted from classroom teacher to full-time P.E. teacher and softball coach at Southside School. Though she was sad to leave third grade, she said her new position has been a wonderful experience. In the classroom or on the field, Roper has the same focus.

“At the core of it all, my goal is to help my students and athletes grow into better people,” she said.

During her first year of teaching, Roper had a girl in her class who told her she would play softball for her one day. Years later, the student did indeed become one of Roper’s Lady Saints athletes.

Recently, that student sent Roper a message that touched her heart and reaffirmed her calling.

“She wrote to me, ‘Hey, Coach, I just wanted to thank you for always believing in me, even when I didn’t believe in myself. You are a huge reason I am the person and player I am today, and I couldn’t be more grateful for you. I strive to be just like you, and I’m thankful I had the opportunity to be one of your players,’” she said. “I don’t share that to boast, but to explain why I do what I do.”

Photography by Ashleigh Newnes

Roper is intentional about building relationships with students and their families. At the beginning of each school year, she sends home what she calls “parent homework” — a letter asking parents or guardians to share insights about their child’s strengths, areas for growth, interests, and expectations. Beyond the classroom, she makes an effort to show up for her students by attending ball games, recitals, and other activities whenever possible.

Beyond individual relationships, Roper is part of a school community committed to service. At Southside, the faculty has raised money over the years for United Way, which donates to local programs that help families in need. The school also hosts an annual Veterans’ Food Drive.

While academics are important, Roper said she hopes her students leave with something more valuable than test scores.

“Beyond academic achievement, I hope my students leave my classroom with confidence in themselves and a deeper understanding of what it means to be a good human being — one who leads with kindness and empathy,” she said.

She wants them to learn how to win and lose with grace, to act with integrity, and to always remember they are loved and supported, and she acknowledges the weight of that responsibility.

“Teaching is heart work. And heart work is heavy,” she said. GN

Nominate your loved ones for a story:

More Good News

Mark Cheathem: Dare to know

Mark Cheathem: Dare to know

WHEN DR. MARK Cheathem arrived at Cumberland University in 1992 as an undergraduate student, he was an English major planning to become a high school English teacher. When he realized high school...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A STUDENT IN our community today will walk the halls of Congress with a pinned American flag on their chest. A student in our community today will pray their knees still hold when their nerves get...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

WHEN WE think about the basic requirements of a thriving community, our minds naturally go to the grocery stores that feed us, the banks that hold our futures, and the schools that educate our...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

LOVE IS one of those things we recognize instantly, even when we struggle to explain it. We feel it before we understand it. We see it in the quiet moments that never make headlines, and in our...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A WAITING ROOM chair creaks as someone shifts their weight. A cup of water sweats onto the lobby’s tile floor. Somewhere down the hall, a name is called. Life pauses in places like this. It always...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE CALL comes in, and the world doesn’t slow down. The clock feels like it ticks faster, but our heroes stay strong. The firefighter is halfway through dinner. The nurse just pulled into the...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

IN MARCH of last year, my cousin’s work schedule became incompatible with raising his first pet, a brown and white Bernedoodle puppy. I took her in, not knowing just how much she would change, well,...

read more
Chris Wilson: At your service

Chris Wilson: At your service

June, a jet-black German Shepherd, stands at attention, scanning the perimeter for threats, then checking back in with her owner, noticing every movement and sound. While out and about, she stays...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE CREAK of an old wooden floor, the worn edges of a brick building, the way a nameplate on a storefront shines a little softer with age. These are not just small details from the past. They are...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

“FRANKENSTEIN,” PUBLISHED in 1818, is considered the first science fiction novel. The Gothic story cracked open an entire genre of literature that has endless new entries today. It inspired...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE SCENT of warm butter-covered popcorn and the huge roar of the crowd… does anything bring you back faster than a Friday night under the stadium lights? For me, it’s a flood of memories: the...

read more
John McNeal: Leading with heart

John McNeal: Leading with heart

COACH JOHN McNeal scanned the hallway at Friendship Christian School — not for hall passes or horseplay, but for instincts. One boy’s shove and a quick twist out of a headlock might’ve looked like a...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

IF YOU’VE ever seen a fighter jet cut across the sky, you know what powerful looks like. You know what freedom sounds like. That roar overhead reminds us that we live in a country where people put...

read more
James Briggs: Leadership in action

James Briggs: Leadership in action

LIGHTS FLASH across the stage, lighting up three guitarists as they bring to life the energy of ’90s rock. Behind them, at the drum set, sits James Briggs, providing the rhythm and drive that helps...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A FAMILY LOADS up their navy blue Jeep in Tennessee and takes a cross-country road trip. It’ll take several days to get to the Sequoia National Park in California. There may be hours when the Jeep...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

WHEN YOU choose a locally owned business over a national chain, you’re not just spending your money, you’re planting it. And the roots of that investment reach deep. Every dollar counts, and it...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A STUDENT IN our community today will walk the halls of Congress with a pinned American flag on their chest. A student in our community today will pray their knees still hold when their nerves get...

read more
Jenna Jones: Made to dance

Jenna Jones: Made to dance

JOY AND laughter fill the hallways of Belamour Ballet Dance Academy, bright colors swirling gracefully as dancers of all ages practice their craft. The academy is a beloved location for many...

read more
Susan Shaw: Above and beyond

Susan Shaw: Above and beyond

SUSAN SHAW is the project administrator for Wilson County Mayor Randall Hutto. “My skills,” she said, “are project management and bringing people together.” This is an apt — and modest — summation...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE SOUNDS of the self-checkout registers beep through the entire store. The short lines of people with baskets and carts move across the reflective tile like a conveyor belt and out the door. Uh,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A nurse walked down the hallway his mother walked decades before he did. Beep … beep … he could hear the sounds from patients’ rooms. He kept a small keepsake pinned to his scrubs, a pin his mother...

read more
Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

It might be at a city council meeting, at a Rotary Club fish fry, or at Liberty State Bank’s veteran’s breakfast, but you will always see Chris Crowell involved with the community. Crowell’s roots...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

The people of the year 1000 faced division, uncertainty, and fear for the future. They didn’t know it then, but they stood at the edge of change, transitioning from the Dark Ages to the Middle Ages....

read more
A Give-Back Boutique

A Give-Back Boutique

THE WOOD floor and brick walls of Iddy & Oscar’s hold a wide variety of items, from clothing to jewelry to bags and decor, but that is only the surface of Joy Pine’s give-back boutique....

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

AUTUMN SETTLES into our town like a puppy in a warm bed. There’s a magic in the air that only this season can bring. Golden leaves drift gently from the trees, painting the sidewalks in shades of...

read more
Neighbors Helping Neighbors

Neighbors Helping Neighbors

PAYING IT forward describes the beneficiary of a good deed repaying the kindness to others rather than paying it back to the original benefactor. It has also been referred to as serial reciprocity....

read more
Help Is a Click Away

Help Is a Click Away

WILSONHELPS.ORG IS a large-scale, comprehensive, and user-friendly guide to Wilson County’s broad array of available aid. This is the most general way to describe what is an enormous,...

read more
A Story of Faith & Peace

A Story of Faith & Peace

IN 2020, less than 6,000 people across the United States became living organ donors, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. Lebanon is proud to be home to one of those brave donors:...

read more
Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

WHEN I’M in the mood for an authentic Mexican dinner, one of my go-to restaurants in Lebanon is Los Compadres. It always hits the spot, and my most recent visit was no exception. Our server, Manny,...

read more
Founded on Relationships

Founded on Relationships

Whether it’s through the Court Appointed Special Advocates board, the United Way board, or as chairman of the Lebanon Wilson County Chamber of Commerce in 2023, Wes Dugan is always serving his...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

SHE FLASHES her lights and pushes the gas pedal a little harder. The walkie-talkie is too quiet, so she spins the dial and makes her bulletproof vest a little more comfortable. She worked hard to...

read more
A Safe Haven

A Safe Haven

HEROES COME in many shapes and sizes, but at the end of the day, each has the same important quality: they are willing to do difficult things to help people in need. A hero might rescue someone from...

read more
David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

WITH EVERY heavy step down the road, Pastor David Ashley’s rugged hands grip the weight of a wooden cross — a symbol of strength and sacrifice — carried not for himself but for the countless victims...

read more
A Cast Iron Community

A Cast Iron Community

SIZZLING STEW, sweet cobblers, and crumbling cornbread are all staple dishes for the Wilson County Cast Iron Community, and their commitment to teaching and serving means that anyone in Lebanon and...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

OUR FOOD nourishes us, from the soil beneath our feet to the table where we gather with family and friends. The hot sun beams from the sky into the field of sprouting seeds. Farmers rise early,...

read more
Kansha Japanese Express

Kansha Japanese Express

KANSHA JAPANESE Express was an excellent choice for a quick lunch date. It’s a charming restaurant with a nice variety of Japanese cuisine. The atmosphere was laid-back, with a few subtle touches to...

read more
Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

THE PROM is an American rite of passage that has, through cultural ups and downs, become an enshrined part of adolescence for almost a century. Yet the costs associated with the prom — costs that...

read more
Sherry’s Run

Sherry’s Run

FOR NEARLY 20 years now, in August and September, green bows have been found all around Wilson County, Tennessee. Some people pass by the vibrant bows not knowing what they represent, while others...

read more
Ronnie Kelley: Dreaming to Serve

Ronnie Kelley: Dreaming to Serve

HELPING THE young and lost is what one man in Lebanon was inspired to do all his life.  Ronnie D. Kelley moved to Lebanon from Hartsville in the fourth grade. He grew up in the Wilson County...

read more
Sam Pfister: Rise and Shine

Sam Pfister: Rise and Shine

SAM PFISTER helms Rise Strength & Performance, a multi-faceted endeavor that serves as a gym, fitness center, coaching venue, and educational outlet.  Originally from Illinois, Pfister was no...

read more
President Stumb

President Stumb

AS THE president of Cumberland University for the last nine years, Dr. Paul Stumb has become an important figure both on campus and within the broader Lebanon community. President Stumb recently...

read more
Unexpected Delight

Unexpected Delight

LET ME start by saying that I’m not a fan of bar food, so I wouldn’t choose a sports bar for lunch. However, I recently met a business associate for lunch at Coach’s Eastgate Grille off Highway 109...

read more
From Katrina to Compassion

From Katrina to Compassion

THOSE WHO lived along the Gulf Coast braced for impact or fled further inland despite gasoline shortages and lanes of traffic that steadily crept north. As a nation, we held our collective breaths,...

read more
Recipes: Fuel for Focus

Recipes: Fuel for Focus

RISE AND shine to breakfasts that fuel minds and bodies alike! Celebrate the power of wholesome, delicious meals to kickstart learning and energize young students. We’ll dish up recipes packed with...

read more

Nominate your loved ones for a story:

Frame the story.

The perfect gift, all year long.

Latest Good News

Create a free account, or log in.

Gain access to read this article, plus limited free content.

Yes! I would like to receive new content and updates.