I am the coordinator
of a leadership and mentoring program for minority students at the University
of Central Florida. A part of the program involves a community service project,
which my scholars---students enrolled in the program--- are in competing groups
where they develop a project to be carried out in the spring if their idea
wins. In 2011, the winning project was an idea to host a college-readiness,
panel discussion at urban high schools. The execution was phenomenal—college
students making themselves available to high school students during one of
their classroom periods through a question and answer session, speaking
presentations, and entertainment. Therefore, this project has become an annual
event for my program. This year we have been scheduled to attend a high school
that has heard much praise about the event and anticipates our coming. However,
during the process of planning this event we incurred a roadblock because the
contact we scheduled the event with failed to inform us that they would no
longer be working there and did not transfer us the new person in their
position. Neither had they informed the new person about the event. This left
us in a bind because once we were able to connect with the new contact; he
informed us that our scheduled date was no longer available due to this date
being the day the school counselors going to their feeder school which they
recruit middle school students getting ready for high school. After about two
weeks of playing phone tag with the new contact I had to post pone our event
because he was required to attend the feeder school. Thankfully we have been
able to reschedule our program
This
incident made me wonder how often urban schools must forfeit one opportunity
for another due to short staffing, poor scheduling and any other factor that
arises against enhancing the students’ experiences. Being an optimist, I take from this moment an understanding
that persistence and patience in reaching students is greater than having my
plans implemented exactly as initially planned. My new mentality in education
is remain flexible and do not take anything personal because it is not about
me, but about reaching the students to develop their excellence.
Hello
ReplyDeleteI loved your comment about being flexible. I think it isv ery important to keep an open mind when it comes to teaching/educating. Often teachers are so concerend with meeting requirements, or following a schedule and I realize even in life that, the things we often ignore, are the ones with the bighgest lessons. Your blog made me think, and I also need to be flexible in a lot of areas of my personal life and stop trying to control every aspect, I think if I slowed down and paid attention I would realize I might not need to be running that fast in the first place.
Thank you
Jessica Jimenez Ramos