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From Football Field to Classroom: Values Guide Former Irish Safety and Catholic School Teacher's Career Path

Written by William Schmitt on Thursday, 03 January 2013.

Fighting Irish football is capturing the public's attention as the BCS National Championship Game approaches on January 7. In a tradition as old as the Golden Dome itself, the Notre Dame team sends a message that transcends the gridiron: From Knute Rockne to Manti Teo, fans have often glimpsed how team members' experiences connect to their own personal values and to the character and mission of Our Lady's University. Former Catholic school teacher Bill Gibbs is one example of how those connections extend to the Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE).

Bill played football under legendary coach Lou Holtz as a member of the Notre Dame Class of 1997 and then taught at a Catholic high school through the ACE Teaching Fellows initiative. Now, he continues a distinguished career in law with the Chicago firm of Corboy & Demetrio. A natural progression?

"While I miss the classroom and practice fields, as a trial lawyer I am 'teaching' jurors about our case and 'coaching' them on how to make just decisions,' says Bill. There's another tie-in, too: "Between practicing law and chasing after my three fantastic kids, my free time has been devoted exclusively to watching the Irish on Saturdays."

The teaching connection is also strong thanks to his memories of serving the students of Loyola College Prep in Shreveport, Louisiana, as a member of ACE's fourth cohort. "I was inspired to make a real impact on the lives of others by my parents—both former teachers," Bill recalls.

He also credits the inspiration of his own teachers and coaches.

The Alliance for Catholic Education's Top Ten Most-Visited Stories of 2012

on Friday, 28 December 2012.

Whether through new initiatives or existing traditions, the movement of the Alliance for Catholic Education continued its mission to sustain, strengthen and transform Catholic schools in 2012.

As we move closer to our 20th year of service to Catholic education, we've sifted through all the exciting news stories of this past year to put together this list of the ten most-visited ACE stories:

1. ND Launches New Partnership Program in St. Petersburg, FL, Area

The University of Notre Dame partnered with two Catholic schools in the Diocese of St. Petersburg to form the second site of Notre Dame ACE Academies.

2. Michael Pressley Awards Go to Three Outstanding Educators

Three outstanding educators committed to sustain, strengthen, and transform Catholic schools received the 2012 Michael Pressley Awards from the Alliance for Catholic Education's ACE Advocates for Catholic Schools.

3. An Array of ACE Programs and People Energize Summer at ND

The summer break at the University of Notre Dame surged with energy as the Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) began its peak season.

 

4. Dan Faas Delivered STT Student Commencement Address

ACE 17 Student Commencement Address given in the Monogram Room, Edmund P. Joyce Center
at the University of Notre Dame on July 13, 2012.

 
5. Your Future in ACE: Consider the Possibilities

This blessed time of year prompted us to look back upon cherished Christmas traditions and to look forward to a new year—often considering plans for the future that reflect our deepest values.

 

Catholic School Teacher Connects Students Nationwide in Support Effort for Newtown

Written by William Schmitt on Friday, 21 December 2012.

Jack Wallace, a high school teacher at Holy Cross of San Antonio with the University of Notre Dame's ACE Teaching Fellows (ACE) program, has experienced, energized, and taught the power of a caring community by his reaction to the recent shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT.

As a result of conversations with fellow teachers in Texas and a much broader outreach to other Catholic school teachers through Facebook, the people of Newtown will soon receive hundreds of letters of compassionate support from children in Catholic school classrooms around the country.

Jack, a member of the ACE 19 cohort, hails from Fairfield, Conn., a short distance from the site where 27 children and adults were gunned down on Dec. 14. The shock hit Jack close to home for several reasons, partly because he has friends from Newtown who attended Catholic high school with him.

After learning of the tragic deaths, he approached his fellow teachers living together in the San Antonio community with the idea of having his students write letters to Newtown expressing their grief and sympathy. The other teachers affirmed the lesson in sharing one's love and building the Body of Christ. They not only supported the idea, but said they would do the same in their own classrooms. One colleague suggested using social media to spread the idea nationwide.

 "I told them, if you want to make it more real for your kids, you can tell them these letters are literally going to be handed to somebody your teacher knows, and he'll hand-deliver them to Newtown," Jack explained later. He has learned online that teachers from Washington, D.C., to Oakland, Calif., invited their students to put their thoughts on paper and sent those messages to the home of Jack's family, where he planned to arrive on Saturday, Dec. 22, for Christmas break.

"The support has been unbelievable," he says.

His plan, as of the one-week anniversary of the tragedy, was to wait until a couple of days after Christmas and then take the letters—along with some financial contributions made in San Antonio—to Saint Rose of Lima Parish in Newtown.

"It would be absolutely incredible to walk up to Monsignor [Robert] Weiss, the pastor, and say, here are a thousand letters from Catholic schools all over that really support you and the town," comments Jack. "Anything that can uplift a town like that is really worth doing."

In the Spotlight: Blair Carlin discovers her treasures

on Thursday, 13 December 2012.

"I have so much to learn both inside and outside the classroom," said this ACE Teaching Fellows (STT) applicant. "A program that enables me to...be a student and do service through my job as a teacher is the best decision I can make [toward that end]."

So said Blair Carlin, now a second year teacher in the STT program. At its annual retreat this month, she shared her thoughts about the experience, especially as it's led her to discover what she truly treasures.

As a senior at Notre Dame, she begins, "I applied to the ACE Program and I applied for a Fulbright Teaching Assistantship in Spain...During the first week of the ACE summer, I questioned why I declined my Fulbright acceptance and why I even applied to ACE...

"Despite the fact that I was part of a program based on community where everyone is so chipper, positive, and welcoming, I had never felt more different, alone, and out of place. Moreover, I felt as though my students did not get what I was teaching and their parents did not get that I was actually trying to help their children and not destroy them.

"However, through this darkness, when I felt like I was being a greater disservice than service to my students, their parents, my community, and ACE, I came to understand my greatest treasure: people. It was as though my relationships had to be compromised for me to see that they were my greatest sources of light."

Through her classroom experience, Blair has also come to understand teaching as a powerful way to serve that treasure. "Teaching is one of the most real and special forms of philanthropy. Teachers get to help individuals become excited about learning and help them form themselves and their beliefs. Teachers get to help their students find their treasures, which is a great treasure in and of itself."

On Guadalupe Feast Day, Celebrating Oakland's Latino Enrollment Success

Written by William Schmitt on Wednesday, 12 December 2012.

Diocese Sees 20% Gains from "Catholic School Advantage Campaign" Outreach

The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Dec. 12 calls to mind an important example of transformative approaches that have borne fruit for Latino students and Catholic schools in the Diocese of Oakland, Calif., says Sister Barbara Bray, SNJM, diocesan superintendent of schools.

Those approaches, informed through a partnership with the University of Notre Dame's Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE), have paved the way to a 20 percent increase in Latino enrollments in one year throughout the diocese—a jump of 571 children in pre-K through eighth grade, she says.

In some schools, the changes have included basics like the arrival of a statue honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe. Catholic schools have traditionally honored the saints held dear by immigrant groups that were heavily represented in their parishes, says Sister Barbara, but sometimes they were slow in their outreach to new waves of immigrants whom they were also called to serve.

"You walked into some of our schools that were already in largely Latino areas, and could you find Our Lady of Guadalupe?" the superintendent asks rhetorically. "Well, she's there now. She's everywhere."

Placement of this beloved image of the Blessed Mother in schools was not a panacea, but neither was it merely symbolic. As with schools that embraced the values of European immigrant groups of the past, the presence of the new statues intensified relationships and community, Sister Barbara says.

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