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Career Journeys Earn Founders Prize for ACE Grads

on Monday, 31 August 2015.

Jennifer Ehren and Greg Gomez honored for their contributions to their communities

“We don’t make the invitation,” Rev. Lou DelFra, C.S.C., said of ACE’s mission while addressing an awards ceremony July 22 featuring the Scott C. Malpass Founders Prize. “The Holy Spirit invites [ACE graduates] to come and see: Come and see what the Lord has prepared for you to serve His children.” 

His words were remarkably fitting for the journeys of the two winners of the 2015 award, Jennifer Ehren and Greg Gomez. The Founders Prize is presented annually to two graduates of ACE Teaching Fellows whose personal embodiment of the three pillars of ACE has inspired them to make a high-impact contribution to their communities. The lives of these two award recipients—one a brilliant researcher, the other a vibrant community leader—had proceeded in dramatically different directions, yet both resonated deeply with the central tenets of ACE.

foundersprizeJennifer Ehren was the valedictorian of the class of 1999 at the University of Notre Dame. As a chemistry major, she had earned a Fulbright Scholarship, allowing her to conduct research abroad for a year. Following that, she had her pick of lucrative job offers. One major pharmaceutical firm had offered her $50,000 a year, right out of college. Another career possibility loomed that year—Notre Dame’s Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE), which promised a slim stipend in return for teaching high school, far from home.

Ehren chose ACE.

“I never thought I’d be challenged so much,” Ehren recalled. She looked back at the vibrant and values-driven journey that began with her 1999 ACE assignment. Ehren taught math and science for two years at an under-resourced Catholic high school in Biloxi, Miss. In the process, she discovered that she had changed forever.

“Service will be a part of my life, no matter what,” she said, recalling the commitment that emerged from her teaching experience.

After receiving her Master of Education degree, Ehren went on to earn her doctorate in chemical engineering from Stanford University in 2008, and she now works as a medical researcher. She’s mindful of her dynamic vocation and her gifted colleagues, of course, but she also holds a special motivation: her own battle with cancer.

Ehren discovered that she had breast cancer just eight weeks before her wedding. Her successful fight against the disease became yet another opportunity to become a stronger person.

"Breast cancer has made me a better researcher,” she said. “Being a patient made me understand it a little bit more, and it makes me ask creative questions that help my research.”

Ehren currently serves as a postdoctoral research fellow at the Jonas Salk Institute for Biological Studies. This award-winner has come far indeed, but her life remains an embodiment of the call she discovered in her years at ACE: a mission of service through teaching and learning, a community-centered focus on others, and a habit of hope inseparable from spiritual growth.

Greg Gomez, the second recipient of the Founders’ Prize this summer, has also proven himself as a servant to God and his community. His interpretation of the ACE mission is perhaps best expressed in his own pithy words:

“Man does not live on bread alone…but it sure as heck helps to have some.”

For Gomez, a high school principal, education has always consisted of more than the development of the mind or of some abstract, distant “soul.” It is about permeating the entire reality—and addressing the practical needs—of his students’ often difficult lives.

Gomez has spent his entire career working with some of our nation’s most disadvantaged and underserved students. He began his work in education with ACE 11, where he first worked with inner-city kids as a middle school teacher at St. Malachy School in South Central Los Angeles.

Gomez has gone on to spend most of his professional life serving the urban communities of Houston, Texas. He was one of the founding faculty members, and a director of professional development for teachers, at Cristo Rey Jesuit College Prep—Gomez helped shape the new school into an institution with some of the highest college-acceptance rates among inner-city schools in Texas.

In 2013, Daniel Cardinal DiNardo of the Galveston-Houston Archdiocese appointed Gomez special liaison for inner-city schools. There, he worked with pastors, principals, and archdiocesan leaders to maintain the sustainability of struggling Catholic schools for underserved communities. This past year, Gomez accepted an appointment as principal of one such inner-city school: St. Francis of Assisi in Houston.

Throughout eleven years of service in under-resourced Catholic schools, Gomez has exemplified the mission of an ACE Teacher to improve and transform educational opportunities for kids from all backgrounds. He has proven again and again his ability to connect with the struggling and disadvantaged around him—perhaps through that persistent belief that “man does not live on bread alone…but it sure as heck helps to have some.”

Jennifer Ehren and Greg Gomez have pursued and achieved incredible success in their respective fields. Their careers are studded with great achievements, yet permeated with a spirit of care and service to the communities around them. They have not only touched, but transformed the lives that have crossed their paths—exemplifying the spirit of ACE. 

For Students with Learning Differences, Catholic Schools Provide Hope

Written by Bill Schmitt on Thursday, 20 August 2015.

hilary murphyHilary Murphy, a graduate of the SJCHS Benilde Program, recently earned a Master of Education degree in school counseling.

Hilary Murphy would beg to differ with the assumption that, until very recently, Catholic K-12 schools struggled to offer students with learning differences the resources they need to succeed. Challenges tied to attention issues, reading comprehension, or academic-related health concerns were passed along to public schools, according to conventional wisdom. But Murphy recalls her student days at St. John’s College High School in Washington, D.C., from 2001 to 2005, as a life-changing time of respect and responsiveness for her and unique obstacles she faced.

“I was diagnosed with a learning disability” as an adolescent, Murphy said, but St. John’s, a Lasallian Christian Brothers school for motivated teens with college goals, placed her in an innovative grouping called the Benilde Program. Established a few years earlier by a laywoman and named after a 19th century Lasallian educator, St. Benilde (Ben-ild) Romancon, the program taught her how to manage tasks successfully given her learning style. Specialists raised awareness of needs and solutions, and all teachers understood how they could offer Benilde students accommodations without changing the rigorous curriculum and culture of the St. John’s community.

Responsibilities for identifying problems and solutions resided largely with the Benilde students. But they learned “valuable life skills,” such as how to study for a test, take notes, stay organized, and manage time and stress, Murphy said. “All of those skills were especially useful when I went to college and graduate schools.” Benilde-specific classes offering special academic support did not pull students out of the mainstream college-prep courses. Murphy recalled the bonus of friendships in “a community of students whom you connected with easily because you shared similar experiences, struggles and successes." 

A growing number of Catholic K-12 schools are implementing programs that welcome a wider range of students with learning differences. These educators continue to combine innovations with traditional values from the heart of a school’s Catholic identity, including hospitality, kindness, and accountability.

The Benilde Program, which has been implemented formally in more than a dozen high schools and takes different forms and names in additional schools around the country, incorporates a number of De La Salle Christian Brothers and Catholic school values, said Brother Michael Andrejko, F.S.C., principal of St. John’s College High School.

He highlighted the dignity of every individual, the importance of meeting and serving every unique person where he or she is in life, the impact of caring relationships between teachers and students, and a religious community’s respectful collaboration with lay leaders.

St. John’s reflected the latter value 17 years ago when it turned to a laywoman, Doreen Engel, to be the founding director of the foresighted Benilde Program that changed Hilary Murphy’s school experience.

“I had a major interest in seeing what Catholic schools could do to be more welcoming and inclusive,” Engel said in a recent interview. She has been a champion for inclusive education in several leadership settings since she established and directed the St. John’s program. Engel currently leads the new Benilde initiative at St. Raphael Academy, a Christian Brothers school in Pawtucket, RI.  Various Lasallian Christian Brothers schools and others have adopted elements of the initiative under different names. A range of additional programs exist, marked by still sharper differences, for serving children with learning exceptionalities.

Engel said the spread of the Benilde initiative provides further proof that Catholic schools are more eager and better equipped than ever to serve young people with challenges ranging from ADHD to test-taking skills and the organization of tasks.

Seventeen years ago, administrators at St. John’s instinctively shared Engel’s desire for greater outreach. Recognizing her expertise in special-needs education, they supported her ambition to design the new program named for St. Benilde, whom a pope once praised for a perseverance that “enabled him to do common things in an uncommon way.”

The program appropriately reflects a lot of the common sense and uncommon insights embraced in Catholic schools, Engel said. She rejects some schools’ current inclination simply to add on services customized for students who fit pre-defined categories of need. Benilde’s “new paradigm” broadly assesses how a school’s operating procedures might be tailored to meet the needs of all students.

Eileen O’Toole, the most recent Benilde director at St. John’s, said students in the program have special timeslots in their schedules to tap Benilde resources, but otherwise they attend the same classes, have the same instructional goals, and use the same materials, including iPads. Many of them gain insights and skills allowing their Benilde support system to end before their senior year, Brother Andrejko noted.

plannersmallerMurphy's organizer notebook, which she says represents her continuing use of a valuable learning aid she adopted with the help of the Benilde initiative.Accommodations to students’ basic similarities and to unique personal traits—such as extended time or other arrangements for some test-takers—can bring the student and teacher communities closer together, according to Engel. Modifications for individuals, always based on psychological evaluations and recommendations, might involve class schedules, teaching styles, and assistance with note-taking. Ongoing dialogues among Benilde staff and students’ regular-course teachers monitor the modifications.

The collaborations, structures, and shared commitments of such a program may also encourage continuous innovations in a school, through technology and other means, an exceptional-learning teacher noted.

Catholic schools’ emphasis on personal dignity leads the Benilde program to help students and their parents “de-mystify” their learning experiences, added Engel. Students and the community benefit when they understand how their challenges can evoke cooperation, not detachment.

Furthermore, Brother Andrejko explained, Benilde emphasizes each person’s accountability for becoming fully themselves. A Catholic school should be accessible to everyone, especially the poor and the marginalized, he said, but expectations are high, too: “You’re responsible for your education. You accept ownership of it and your responsibility to become men and women for others, taking your God-given gifts and using them in service to others.”

A focus on others means giving students the knowledge and self-confidence to approach teachers and other authority figures, explaining the special circumstances and suggesting cooperation and modifications to create a win-win situation, Brother Andrejko said.   

“We teach the students to advocate for themselves, to speak up to get the extra help they need,” he said. St. John’s works hard to make sure every one of the 100 Benilde students—and every one in the entire 1,100-student population—receive individual attention: “We take the student as a whole person.”

This commitment demands investments of time, effort, and money by multiple parties. Different schools facing different demographics must decide for themselves how much to invest and how to adapt aspects of the Benilde program, according to those who know the program.

At St. John’s, a tuition add-on for those who make it through the rigorous screening process into the program provides an experienced Benilde staff leader. Educators and counselors with special-needs training, along with supplemental course time and extensive coordination within the school’s whole team, help students every day.

O’Toole, said elements of the program are useful for—and are being adapted by—more and more Catholic schools. Elementary and secondary schools—in the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., and elsewhere, often located in underserved communities—adjust according to their own abilities. They share a commitment to welcome as many students as possible, from all backgrounds.

“Benilde is distinctively Catholic, but it’s up to every school to decide implementation for themselves,” said O’Toole, who studied educational psychology at Catholic University of America. She has seen under-resourced K-12 schools “do all sorts of ingenious things” to maximize the resources for students with special learning challenges, thanks to the commitment of school communities’ leaders and educators.

O’Toole played a crucial role in advancing the inclusionary vision by compiling a “Philosophy of Education” document. It outlines the Benilde program in light of previous guidelines for Catholic schools from the U.S. bishops.  

The goal is to develop students as “self-reflective, independent problems solvers,” the benchmark document states. “Lasallian education gives the student a basic education and understanding of Christ so the student can go out and share his gifts,” O’Toole wrote.

For more information: Bill Schmitt, Alliance for Catholic Education, / 574-631-3893

ACE Advocates Update from Fr. Lou DelFra, CSC

on Monday, 17 August 2015.

Director Sarah (Greene) Perkins transitions to part-time role

Dear ACE Advocates Community,

Greetings from Notre Dame! All God’s blessings on you, and all those whom God has entrusted to your care, as we prepare for the coming school year.

I write to share some great news. As you know, Sarah (Greene) Perkins has provided extremely generous and hope-filled leadership of the ACE Advocates over these past two years. During her tenure, ACE Advocates has continued to strengthen the spiritual mission and identity of the ACE community, while also inviting and engaging entrepreneurial leaders in Catholic education through our graduate network. Of course, Sarah was an integral member of the leadership team that planned ACE’s 20th anniversary through the Fighting for Our Children’s Future National Bus Tour. We are grateful beyond words for Sarah’s gifts, and the leadership of the entire Advocates team here on campus.

SarahGreeneAs many of you know, Sarah and her husband Chris just welcomed a new member of their family, John Peter Perkins, who was born on June 19th. The whole Perkins family is doing very well! Sarah’s role at ACE will be transitioning to part time, and we wanted to take this opportunity to thank Sarah for her countless contributions to the ACE Movement.

As we continue to discern the future direction and growth of our mission for Catholic schools, I will provide leadership of ACE Advocates, along with the rest of our team on campus, in the interim.

As we prepare for the coming school year, let us remember the words of Christ ringing in our ears: “Behold, I make all things new!” May God renew each of us in our discipleship, in our ministries, and in our love for God and one another, as we proclaim the Gospel ever anew!

Fr. Lou DelFra, CSC
Director of Pastoral Life

ACE Teachers Join Communities in Dallas, Indianapolis, Peoria, and San José

on Thursday, 13 August 2015.

ACE Teaching Fellows Expands Reach, Serving At-Risk Students

Peoria Community

Fifteen Catholic schools in four cities are welcoming new teachers from Notre Dame’s Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) to their towns and their classrooms.

Leaders of the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, the Diocese of Peoria, and the Diocese of San José have invited the ACE Teaching Fellows initiative to send new, talented, and faith-filled teachers to educate disadvantaged children in local K-12 schools. An existing community in Dallas will expand to include ten ACE Teachers.

The number of communities served by the ACE Teaching Fellows now stands at 33, the largest total since it was established in 1993 with the mission to sustain, strengthen, and transform Catholic schools. Every year, ACE sends forth approximately 190 college graduates to teach while they earn a Master of Education degree from the University of Notre Dame.

At the invitation of the Most Rev. Joseph W. Tobin, Archbishop of Indianapolis, a new community of four ACE Teachers will serve in three schools. They will teach at Saint Anthony Catholic School, Saint Philip Neri Catholic School, and Roncalli High School.

Two schools in the Peoria Diocese—St. Mark School and Peoria Notre Dame High School—will welcome the four members of the ACE community invited by the Most Rev. Daniel R. Jenky, C.S.C.

The Most Rev. Patrick J. McGrath, Bishop of San José, has invited a four-member community to serve students at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School, St. John the Baptist Catholic School, and St. Lawrence Academy.

ACE Teachers in the Dallas Diocese will continue to serve in seven schools at the invitation of the Most Rev. Kevin J. Farrell. Those schools are: Bishop Dunne High School, Mary Immaculate Catholic School, Santa Clara of Assisi Catholic Academy, St. Elizabeth of Hungary Catholic School, St. Luke Catholic School, St. Paul the Apostle Catholic School, and St. Pius X Catholic School.

“We’re deeply honored to be invited into these partnerships—and we couldn’t be more excited to begin supporting the great work under way to strengthen and revitalize Catholic schools in these dioceses,” said John Schoenig, ACE’s director of teacher formation and education policy.

“Our heartfelt thanks to Archbishop Tobin, Bishop Farrell, Bishop Jenky, Bishop McGrath, and all of the school and system leaders throughout the country who support our ACE Teachers. In so many ways, they provide an outstanding witness to hope, as they are willing to do whatever it takes to ensure than an outstanding Catholic education is accessible to as many children as possible,” Schoenig said.

Notre Dame’s Alliance for Catholic Education, co-founded by Rev. Timothy R. Scully, C.S.C., and Rev. Sean McGraw, C.S.C., serves Catholic schools through the recruitment and formation of outstanding educators and leaders, as well as an array of programs and services to address the challenges facing today’s schools.

Contact: Bill Schmitt, / 574.631.3893

ACE End of Summer Photo Gallery 2015

on Monday, 27 July 2015.

Here is a look at some highlights from the ACE Summer.

ACEStore
ACEstore Basketball
CommencementRetreat
ACE 20 Commencement Retreat
Ace Summer Photos 1 (Large)
ACE Teachers at Summer Practicum
Ace Summer Photos 2 (Large)
ACE Teachers at Summer Service projects
Ace Summer Photos 3 (Large)
NDAA Summer Summit
Ace Summer Photos 4 (Large)
NDAA Summer Summit
Ace Summer Photos 5 (Large)
ACE Teachers at Summer Practicum
Ace Summer Photos 6 (Large)
NDAA Summer Summit
Ace Summer Photos 7 (Large)
ACE Remick Leaders of Cohort 12
Ace Summer Photos 8 (Large)
ACE New Orleans Teachers with Fr. Tim Scully, C.S.C.
Ace T Shirt Group Photo
ACE 2015 T-Shirt Reveal

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