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In the Spotlight: "Teachers Make a Difference," says Danny Jackson

on Friday, 08 February 2013.

Danny Jackson has a message for anyone considering the ACE Teaching Fellows program: "Anyone who wants to truly make a difference, anyone who is passionate about helping others, anyone who wants to see faces of young people light up because you've just helped them understand a concept they never would have otherwise understood, anybody who wants to work hard with the satisfaction of knowing that their hard work is making a great impact, anybody who wants to be a role model should join ACE. Words cannot describe the impact that you can make as a positive role model. If you're willing to work hard, give it a shot."

This fifth grade teacher in South Central Los Angeles explains what drew him to the program and, more generally, to Catholic schools. "They are dedicated to giving all students the chance for a great education... Kids should be given every chance to have dedicated, loving teachers, regardless of their socioeconomic status or zip code."

Now one semester into the experience, Danny has lived that mission and continues to be inspired by it. As an example, he tells the story of a quiet and hard-working student in his class at his K-8 school "where kids truly feel safe in an otherwise tough neighborhood." At his first parent teacher conference, the mother of that quiet and hard worker came in.

After hearing assurances about her daughter's progress, Danny recounts that the mother said something he will never forget. "She said that her daughter comes home every single day and talks about how she is going to college one day. 'Mr. Jackson talks about it so much,' the mother said, quoting her daughter, 'and says that we can all go there. I can go, too.'"

Danny continues, "Some days I wonder whether or not I'm making an impact. Stories like this throw all doubts out the window. Whether or not she remembers how to properly identify articles in a sentence or all fifty state capitals is irrelevant. That girl has been inspired to change her life forever and go to college. By the way, she is ten years old. How's that for inspiration? These kids are incredible."


To learn more about ACE Teaching Fellows, click here.

ACE Connections Leverage Technology for Catholic School Kids

Written by William Schmitt on Thursday, 07 February 2013.

Enduring Community Links Learning in Massachusetts, Oklahoma Classrooms

A spirited exchange of learning between fourth graders at the Taylor Elementary School in Foxborough, MA, and seventh graders at Christ the King Catholic School in Oklahoma City, OK, came alive recently thanks to digital technology—Skype for connecting, an iPad for viewing, and Facebook networking between two friends who hatched the plan.

But this event also was powered by a more traditional set of connections—the ability of the Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) to form friendships and shape career paths that transcend not only distance, but also time. The event symbolized enduring ties between Erin Bergin Earnst, who graduated from ACE teaching in 1998, and Brittany Riesenberg, who drew inspiration from ACE teachers like Erin as a grade-school student. Brittany graduated last year from ACE's Mary Ann Remick Leadership Program (RLP).

"I'm a second-generation ACEr," says Brittany, who now teaches middle school religion at Christ the King. That's the Oklahoma school where Erin taught as part of the ACE 3 cohort of volunteers, about 15 years ago.

Erin stayed in teaching for a time after her ACE formation and then became a professional development consultant, working closely with teachers in areas like educational technology and social media. Now she works for an education non-profit in Massachusetts. Erin and her husband, Collin, have a son in second grade and a daughter in fourth grade—the grade she used to teach when she was an ACE teacher in Oklahoma City.

A few years ago, recalling her Oklahoma City days fondly, Erin started communicating with the ACE teachers—and some former ACE students—in that town. Brittany became one of her contacts through ACE's Facebook network because she came to teach at Christ the King and enrolled in the Remick Leadership Program. She had been feeling a gravitational pull toward the field of education and toward Notre Dame since childhood.

"I was in middle school at Christ the King when Erin was teaching fourth grade. I got to know her, and I had other ACErs as teachers in grade school and high school," explains Brittany. "I saw their love for learning and the evidence that their faith was important to them. They inspired me to be a teacher."

Brittany aspires to leadership roles in Catholic education, but right now she's enjoying teaching religion and anticipates using her leadership skills in school athletics programs within the Oklahoma City Archdiocese. During her M.A. studies in the RLP 9 cohort, her action research project focused on grade-school coaching, and she earned certification to conduct workshops as part of ACE's Play Like a Champion Today program.

For her part, Erin was happy to be back in contact with Brittany. "I remembered her as an amazing student with a great volunteer spirit," she says. When school resumed in January this year, Erin's daughter's class was studying U.S. geography and was about to study the Southwest.

Erin immediately thought of Oklahoma City—how good it would be for her daughter (and the whole class) to connect to the place where she had taught, and how a partnership with Brittany's class might allow students in the two cities to see and hear each other via Skype.

When Brittany agreed on Facebook, Erin approached her daughter's teacher with the idea. That teacher also embraced the attempt to link up Foxborough and Oklahoma City. Erin came to class on Jan. 10 with her iPad, ready to use Skype. Brittany had worked with her technology-coordinator colleague to enable Skyping at her school.

The students in both schools enjoyed a lively conversation, with the fourth graders asking the older kids questions like, "Do you have tornados?" and "Do you have Pizza Huts in Oklahoma?" Erin says of her daughter's class, "It made what they were studying come alive."

Students of today benefited from student-teacher relationships, commitments to education, and varied expressions of those commitments that had been forged years ago in ACE—still evolving, still innovating. Students in Oklahoma and Foxborough may continue to benefit as both schools consider possible Skype connections in the future.

For Brittany, the connection to ND that she made early on as a student will continue to have a variety of positive effects. "I got engaged at the Notre Dame-Oklahoma football game this season," she points out.

Erin and Brittany's connection is a great example of how technology has helped to strengthen the power of the ACE network and support the unique calling to serve through education, says Erin. "It's a credit to the lasting relationships that have been built through the ACE programs. There's an enduring legacy from the ACE experience."

Photo: Erin Bergin Earnst and her iPad, tapping into technology and enduring ACE connections, helped students in Erin's daughter's fourth grade class learn along with a far-away RLP grad's seventh graders.

ACE in the News: Collaboration in Savannah, Community in Dallas

Written by William Schmitt on Wednesday, 06 February 2013.

Collaborative for Academic Excellence and ACE Teaching Fellows

The ACE Collaborative for Academic Excellence and its new partnership with the Diocese of Savannah will promote a fresh look at curriculum in the diocesan schools and help standardize learning objectives, The Augusta Chronicle reported on Jan. 30, 2013.

ACE's unit focused on encouraging schools and faculties to work together, sharing ideas on curriculum improvements, "has helped several dioceses across the nation strengthen instruction in Catholic schools," said the newspaper. The ACE Collaborative, led by ACE Teaching Fellows senior director Dr. Tom Doyle, began its work in southern Georgia last summer.

Separately, The Texas Catholic, newspaper of the Diocese of Dallas, has published a feature article describing the life and work of teachers from ACE Teaching Fellows who reside in the diocese and serve Catholic schools in the area. The article was published late last year, but excerpts have just been posted online.

Reporter Cathy Harasta, in one part of the article, quoted Kate Dailey, president of Dallas's Bishop Dunne Catholic School, as she described ACE teachers: "They are mission-driven, enthusiastic, positive, and immersed in that great Catholic tradition of educating the whole person for the common good, all the while integrating 21st century skills."

 

ACE in the News: The Observer Spotlights 20th Anniversary

Written by William Schmitt on Thursday, 31 January 2013.

A Commentary Adds to Reflections about Catholic Schools Week

Plans for a 20th anniversary bus tour celebrating Catholic schools around the country prompted a story about the Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) in The Observer, the University of Notre Dame's student newspaper, on Thursday, January 31.

Reporter Mel Flanagan noted that ACE has been sending recent college graduates to teach in under-resourced Catholic schools for nearly 20 years. Anniversary celebrations will feature a bus tour during the 2013-14 academic year, as announced in a University news release. This will be an opportunity to honor schools, communities, and individuals with whom the Alliance for Catholic Education has formed partnerships, as well as an opportunity to celebrate the future of these schools and partnerships.

The Observer's coverage came during Catholic Schools Week, which is observed Jan. 27-Feb. 2. That annual celebration of Catholic schools was discussed in a commentary by Kate Barrett, director of resources and special projects in Notre Dame's Office of Campus Ministry. The commentary, published in the student newspaper on January 30, suggested that the work of Catholic schools can inspire all people to renew their own commitment to use their gifts to "light the way" for others.

ACE in the News: Radio Interview Describes the Gift of Catholic Schools

Written by William Schmitt on Wednesday, 30 January 2013.

Senior Director Dr. John Staud on Plans for 20th Anniversary Celebration

Dr. John Staud, senior director for pastoral formation and administration at the Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE), was interviewed Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013, on the national Catholic radio broadcast, the Son Rise Morning Show.

He described ACE's plans to use its own upcoming 20th anniversary as a way to celebrate the gift of Catholic schools across the country. Catholic schools, which ACE has been blessed to serve since 1993, are good for children, including under-served children, and they also make important contributions to communities, the Church, and society at large, according to Staud's several-minute conversation with the show's host, Brian Patrick.

Plans for the 20th anniversary celebration are outlined in a recent University of Notre Dame news release.

The Son Rise Morning Show is heard on more than 180 Catholic radio stations around the country, as well as on SiriusXM Radio and the Internet.

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