Zoom: Aztec Superfans
Carla Kriss (’97, ’02) and husband Tim Kriss (’03, ’18), alumni educators and proud ɫƵ parents, aren’t shy about their love for ɫƵ. It’s on display in their respective elementary school classrooms.
By Mike Klitzing
Photographs by Matt Furman

A POINT OF RED AND BLACK PRIDE
Step into the third grade classroom of Carla Kriss (’97, ’02) and her affinity for ɫƵ is hard to miss. The proud alumna teaches at Ella B. Allen Elementary in Bonita, California, surrounded by Aztecs posters, pennants, foam fingers and bobbleheads.
Her husband and fellow educator, Tim Kriss (’03, ’18), insists the ɫƵ theme in his fourth grade classroom at Salt Creek Elementary in Chula Vista is even better— a notion Carla playfully scoffs at. What they do agree on, however, is that ɫƵ swag has become popular as prizes for scholastic achievement and good behavior among their students. “They love it,” Carla says. “It keeps them motivated.”

Carla estimates that there are 13 ɫƵ alumni staff members at her school, including teachers, a school counselor, a school psychologist and a nurse.
Yet it’s hard to imagine anyone more spirited. She and her family are fixtures at ɫƵ sporting events, and their two daughters, Sierra (’21) and Sequoia (’24), both now work at the university.
For the Kriss family, ɫƵ is just a way of life.
Editor’s note: Shoutout to Aztec teachers Juliette Solis (’00), Kelly Murphy (’92) and Shannon Kelly (’91) at Marvin Elementary in San Diego, my son’s past three teachers and the inspiration for this story.