We’ve done some designing around here. I hope you like it.
Be sure to check out the 2009 Teaching at Breakthrough Handbook as well.
We’ve done some designing around here. I hope you like it.
Be sure to check out the 2009 Teaching at Breakthrough Handbook as well.
I know! You just can’t wait any longer!!!
I ask for your patience anyway. We have rebuilt the online teacher application from the ground up, making it simpler to use, more informative, and, dare I say, prettier as well. We’re bug testing right now to make sure it’s on its game when we launch.
We plan on going live before December 1. In the meantime, prepare by following the ups and downs of our 2008 teachers and by reading the 2009 Teaching at Breakthrough Handbook (this is REQUIRED). When that does not sate your need for Breakthrough experiences, head on over to our Facebook page and join the discussion.
(Note: This message has been sent to 2008 Summer Teachers via e-mail. If you did not receive this note in your e-mail, please send me a note so that we can make sure you’re on the list.)
Let me guess: you’re back at school or starting a new job, and you’re having a hard time sharing with your friends what happened to you this summer. The basics are easy enough to explain: you taught a class, the kids were amazing, you worked really hard and stayed up really late, and so on. As you’re explaining the details, though, there is something essential and powerful that is left out. It’s pretty much impossible to tell someone else what the Breakthrough experience really feels like. When you run into another Breakthrough teacher, though, something clicks into place and those just-skimming-the-surface stories take on their true depth. You really taught. You really did something.
That bond is special, and it might be my favorite part of working for you. I get to spend my days meeting and serving past, current, and future Breakthrough teachers as they plan their summers and embark on their careers in education. Now that the summer is over, we have some work to do together, and I wanted to send a note to let you know what this fall has in store for us.
Jamie hasn’t posted on TeachBreakthroughs before, but she sent the letter below to Lois Loofbourrow after they met this summer. Â Lois sent it to me, and I couldn’t wait to share it with you.
Dear Lois,
This summer was an amazing experience for me all around. Teaching English was really amazing, and made me realize what a passion that I had for teaching in general. I was totally amazed by all of my students. Each and every student had taught me something new, and I was consistently impressed by their quality of work and enthusiasm. In fact, I think that I have learned as much from them that they have learned from me, if not more.
These past eight weeks have flown by, and even though lesson plans and nearly-constant observations loomed forever on the horizon, this has been one of the most amazing experiences that I have had the pleasure of being involved in in my entire life. It was so rewarding, seeing the students grow, and change over the short six weeks that they were with us. I realize now that I would have done things differently, had I known that our time with them would have been this short. Overall, I feel that these six weeks have taught me more than any semester-long Education course ever could have.
I was so glad to have been chosen for this grand social experiment. My friends are all shocked when I told them that I taught this summer, and yet is seems to natural. The word “Teacher” rolls off of the tongue now. Oh, what a short eight weeks can do.
In short, I am changed for the better from this summer at Breakthrough Miami. I know that I’ve come a long way, and I hope that my students have come just as long as I have. Thank you for creating this amazaing program. This has been an awesome summer, and I hope to maybe return again next year.
Sincerely,
Jamie Pflug
English Teacher
Breakthrough Miami
Summer of 2008
Fall plans:
Continuing with my Economics and International Studies majors (junior year of college). Unfortunately not working with the SYP (too far a commute), but tutoring some facilities workers in English on campus. My experience in Hong Kong, where the focus of the program is English language acquisition, will certainly help me with my tutoring, and it will help me give suggestions to other tutors. I am more used to explaining things visually, orally, and kinesthetically, which will certainly help my “tutees” learn.
This summer in Summerbridge pushed me more strongly in the direction of wanting to do something “big picture” oriented after graduation, perhaps in the fields of policy or philanthropy, because I realized that what motivated me most during Summerbridge was my feeling that I was part of a larger project working toward social betterment.
I’ve had a lot of success this summer. I made connections with my students in a way that I hope showed them how much support and genuine caring they can find in the program. I collaborated with faculty members and made some valuable friends. My previous summer with the San Francisco site, I learned some important lessons in commitment and responsibility, and this summer I got to see myself put those lessons into action. I feel so grateful to have been able to witness the growth of the older students in the program as well as my own personal growth. My summer with Breakthrough has given me much confidence as my second year of university approaches. I will be taking an internship at the Women’s Center on campus to further my growth and development. Working with Breakthrough this summer showed me that I am fully capable of achieving great heights, and now I really look forward to all that the future has in store. Thanks everyone!
My change of heart came in the middle of my sophomore year when I realized that I was not interested in law school, but rather graduate school for education. I am just beginning a year away from my home campus, Smith College, to study education at Penn and to take a few courses in the Graduate School of Education in order to feel it out before it comes time to apply next fall. We have just completed the first week of classes, and already I have made reference to my Breakthrough experience. As an undergraduate I have something in common with masters and even doctoral students who spent time in the classroom before returning to school. I have also been able to give meaning to theoretical discussions and to better analyze them for practicability. Because Penn is located in West Philadelphia, an inner city neighborhood, I also have the opportunity to continue working with inner city youth both through my classes and volunteer opportunities. For me, working with and getting to know kids is the foundation of my desire to study education, and Breakthrough certainly proved that to me this summer.
This fall is no different than any other in terms of what I want to do and how I want to go about achieving those goals. Now, what has changed is my whole persona. The kids from Breakthrough have only intensified my fortitude to become what seemed like a fairy tale dream before I met them. I always dreamt of becoming a successful lawyer and eventually representing my state in the Senate but the effort it takes to obtain such a status is what seemed to always cloud my vision. I had the determination but I was dreading the work that would test my drive. Now, it seems like the road is clear. I can see the path ahead of me.
I am willing to work. In fact, I welcome the challenge because I know that it will only make me stronger. I truly owe this new found strength of mind to “my kids.” Now, I have another reason to make it.
I have to achieve my goals to first and foremost, show them it can be done and secondly, advocate on their behalf in a Washington that seems to have their interest on the back burner. I walked into those Norfolk Academy doors destined for greatness but I walked out destined for greatness along with an imperative purpose. I owe it all to them.
Having the opportunity to work as a History Department Chair at Summerbridge Program in Boca Raton.
Overall, I was most impressed with these young people who already know which careers they want to pursue. At such young ages, they are determined to accomplish what they want in life. During this summer, I engaged my students in many debates, such as, presidential elections, global warming and ozone layer depletion, right to bear arms, and the Israeli- Palestinian conflict. They frequently amazed me with the way the articulated and defended their view points.
Thanks
Adriana