Here are some K-12
education accomplishments and leadership worth celebrating!
Mayor Mike Fahey's efforts in creating a solid after-school experience for
disadvantaged children and youth in Omaha have been praiseworthy. He hosted a
breakfast for more than 100 elected officials, after-school program directors,
educators and others to review the accomplishments of the $2 million federal
grant the City of Omaha received in 2005. Purpose: to provide free after-school programs for 900
students in six middle schools in the Omaha Public Schools. The federal grant
was matched by the Sherwood Foundation, run by Susie Buffett, daughter of
financier Warren Buffett. Fahey is also involved in the after-school tutoring
and mentoring efforts of Building Bright Futures. (October '08)
The Kiwanis Club of Omaha Westside donated
an automated external defibrillator to Paddock Road Elementary School, which
school staff used to save the life of a student who collapsed in front of the
school office. It was the first time it was used. (October '08)
Three
cheers for Phil and Harley Schrager,
brothers who've done about as much for children as anyone in the state. They
founded the Pacesetter Corp. Reportedly, Phil Schrager is ill, and this fall
the Pacesetter Academy, which has
served more than 350 disadvantaged students over the past 15 years, has closed.
The program offered free mentoring, citizenship, tutoring, college visits and
test preparation services. It will continue to fund college scholarships for
all those now in college, or involved with the academy for two years or more.
(October '08)
These five
students in the Class of 2008 got perfect ACT test scores:
Sarah Ferguson, Omaha Central (perfect SAT as
well)
Ross
DeVol, Bellevue East (twin Brian had a perfect SAT)
Kirsten
Miller, Milllard North
James
Morin, Lincoln Pius X
Madison
Rezaei, Elkhorn
These six
students overcame very tough obstacles to excel in school and move on with
life. They were honored at the D.J.'s Hero Awards Luncheon in spring 2008 sponsored
by the Salvation Army in memory of D.J. Sokol, who lost his battle with cancer
at age 18. Each student won a $5,000 scholarship:
Matt J. Brandl, Seward, parents killed by a
drunken driver, plans to become a trauma nurse
Mary Cecilia Daly, Omaha Duchesne, tutored
impoverished Native American children in Winnebago, Neb., and Detroit, and has
gone on several mission trips while helping care for her disabled father and
brother.
Brittany Haga, Kearney, fought to save her
mother's life and her own when a man invaded their home and stabbed them; also
testified at the trial of her father, accused of abusing her; several awards
for service to others.
Stacey Mitchell, Omaha Street School, parents died
within months of each other; plans to become a pastor.
Nikita Robinson, Grand Island, overcame a meth
addiction, volunteers at city mission to help others with domestic problems,
wants to become a counselor.
Amanda Steele, Omaha, was homeless but stayed in
school and is a flight student at the University of Nebraska at Omaha Aviation
Institute.
St. Cecilia Elementary
School northwest of
downtown Omaha is celebrating its centennial with all kinds of events,
including a soccer tournament, ethnic food fest, and a parade from 36th
and Farnam to the school and its sponsoring cathedral today. The school is
located at 3869 Webster; see www.stcecilia.net
(10/6/07)
Junior robotics
engineers from Omaha Mercy and Crete, Neb., high schools will compete in a national robotics
competition in Atlanta in April after winning a competition at Elkhorn Mount
Michael that drew 15 teams from five states. The students built robots that
carried out preprogrammed tasks and then displayed teamwork skills after being
paired randomly with another team to have their robots perform
remote-controlled tasks. (2/24/07)
Students from Norris
Middle School in south-central Omaha, part of the Omaha Public Schools, are
at the Hyatt Regency Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., through Wednesday at the
National Engineers Week Future City
Competition. The middle-schoolers invented a city called New Modaville,
with outstanding health-care services, among other features, and won one of 35
regional competitions in order to compete nationally. See www.futurecity.org (2/18/07)
Three South High
School students will travel to Las Vegas for the national African-American History Challenge, having won the Omaha
contest sponsored by 100 Black Men of Omaha Inc., and the Omaha Public Schools.
They are Michaela Jungbluth, Jennifer Monjarez and Mayra Jacobo, coached by
Maria Walinski, a South social studies teacher. Bryan Middle School won the
junior-high competition. (2/18/07)
Andrew Leibel of
Superior High School and Spencer Farley of Lincoln Lutheran Middle School have been honored as the state's top volunteers and awarded the
Prudential Spirit of Community by Prudential Financial and the National
Association of Secondary School Principals. Andrew started and operates a
community theater, and Spencer turned an unsightly weedy area near a historic
house into a public flower garden. (2/18/07)
Lincoln High School and Millard North High School led all others in the number of juniors
awarded Nebraska Young Artist awards
by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Hixson-Lied College of Fine and
Performing Arts. Sixty-five students from more than 30 high schools gained
honors in visual art, dance, music and theater. (2/18/07)
Omaha Burke High
School won the Nebraska Academic Decathlon for large
schools and Omaha Brownell-Talbot
won the small schools division. Runners-up included Creighton Preparatory
Academy of Omaha, Omaha Central High School, Nebraska City Lourdes Central, and
Omaha Duchesne Academy. That's two public high schools (Burke and Central) and
four private high schools honored as the cream of the academic crop. (2/18/07)
Kudos to Nebraska
Secretary of State John Gale, who put on his office's website an excellent video
that connects the importance of voting
to the sacrifices made for this country by our military veterans. Many young
people might become lifelong voters because of the positive influence of this
video (1/30/07): http://www.sos.state.ne.us/elec/voter_outreach/veteran_menu.html
Fifth-grade teacher Calvin
Rife of the Lincoln Public Schools has received the Christa McAuliffe Prize.
The award is given by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Education
and Human Services in memory of the courage of the U.S. astronaut and teacher
killed in the 1986 Challenger accident. Rife, an African-American, has been teaching
for 37 years. He was the first male kindergarten teacher in LPS. (1/28/07)
Twenty-eight
businesses, organizations and individuals in western Douglas County donated
more than 750 dictionaries to third-graders through the "Words For Thirds"
program of the V.E. Grange organization. (1/23/07)
Nine homeschooled students from the
Omaha metropolitan area won second place out of 66 teams in the LEGO
engineering building tournament at Iowa State University. Their project
focused on nanotechnology and paper batteries. They were coached by Kit and
Brian Fox. (1/23/07)
Riley Barger of the North
Platte area won the youth novice division of the Colorado Rocky Mountain
Fiddle Championship in Denver. He attends a Class I country school which
has four students. (1/23/07)
Two
Nebraskans were among winners in the 2006 National Handwriting Contest
sponsored by Zaner-Bloser: Haley Classe of St. Margaret Mary School in
Omaha, and Erin Elise Plambeck of Silver Lake School in Rosedale, Neb.
(1/23/07)
Zach Norwood, a senior
at Papillion-LaVista High School, scored a perfect 36 on his ACT college
admissions test. (1/16/07)
More than $80,000
in college scholarships for 51 inner-city boys and girls was distributed at
an awards luncheon held by the Boys & Girls Clubs of Omaha. Donors included
John and Harriet Wiebe, longtime Omaha philanthropists. (8/4/06)
Gail Werner-Robertson has
raised $700,000 to help the University of Nebraska Medical Center's autism
efforts at its Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders. She has organized
an annual benefit dinner and golf tournament; this year's event is scheduled
for June 3-5. Ms. Werner-Robertson, whose family owns the Werner Enterprises
trucking firm, holds a law degree from Creighton University, serves on
Creighton's Board of Directors, and is one of the nation's most important
wealth managers through the company she founded, GWR Wealth Management LLC. She
also has two sons with autism. (2/20/06)
Omahan Paul Filipi, 88, has donated $10,000
for students who attended the low-income Conestoga
Elementary School in inner-city Omaha who need scholarship assistance to
enroll at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Filipi, retired from the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, has been a volunteer reader for third- and
fourth-graders at Conestoga for six years. His gift, the Golden K-Conestoga
Scholarship Fund, is through the University of Nebraska Foundation. "I want the
children to realize that someone cares about them," he said. "Some of these
kids really got to me." (2/14/06)
Many thanks
to the Salvation Army, which
collected school supplies for 9,000 needy and homeless children in the
metropolitan Omaha area to equip them for back-to-school time. It's awesome to
know how many many people care about our most vulnerable young citizens, and
wish them well for the school year.
The arboretum at the Bellevue Public Schools'
headquarters at Highway 370 and Fort Crook Road features hundreds of plants,
trees, shrubs and perennials native to Nebraska, a trickling stream, a prairie
area, and a one-mile trail open the public. It's the scene of fabulous hands-on
learning experiences for preschoolers on up. More than half of the funding came
from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, the Omaha Public Power District,
the Nebraska Statewide Arboretum, and the Nebraska Department of Roads.
Womenade of Elkhorn, a volunteer group led by Mary
Wellendorf, raised $3,000 to provide school suppies to 140 pupils from K-8
whose families were experiencing financial difficulties or medical problems.
The children were able to "shop" for their list of back-to-school items an
choose their own backpacks, notebooks, pocket holders and other supplies.
Omaha is
proud of these high-school seniors who posted a perfect 36 score on their ACT
tests. Hats off to: Sam Weitkemper
of Elkhorn Mount Michael, and Tianlu
Yuan and Adam Karnik of
Creighton Prep. Note that those are both private high schools. Although public
education is strong and productive in Nebraska, private education is often a
step ahead.
Kudos to
the Lozier Foundation, Susan A. Buffett
Foundation, Holland Foundation, and William
and Ruth Scott Foundation: they donated $6 million to make all-day
kindergarten possible for low-income children in the Omaha Public Schools.
Ann Mactier, elected to the Nebraska State
Board of Education and a former member of the Omaha Public Schools board, has donated
tens of thousands of dollars to bring Spalding
Phonics training to teachers in OPS. The tried-and-true style of reading
instruction is making a remarkable impact on test scores, teacher morale, and
student self-esteem, thanks to her almost single-handed dedication to quality
reading instruction.
The late Patti Clark, founder and owner of the Phoenix Academy in Rockbrook Village in
central Omaha, has probably done more to prevent and ameloriate learning
disabilities in children than anyone in the state.
Linda Weinmaster, formerly of Millard and now of
Lawrence, Kan., helped found the Millard
Core Academy with back-to-the-basics instruction after her son was about to
be labeled as learning disabled in that suburban district. He learned how to
read with "old-fashioned," traditional methods at the Phoenix Academy and an
inner-city school, the former St. Agnes School, recently closed. Rather than
turning her back on the public schools which initially failed her son, Mrs.
Weinmaster devoted countless volunteer hours to start the Core Academy, which
is so popular it has had a waiting list for years.
The William and Berniece Grewcock Foundation
has been one of the major builders of Omaha's educational and cultural
institutions, with leadership-scale donations to the Lutheran schools and the
establishment of an outstanding teachers' college at Omaha's Grace University,
among many other education-related gifts.
The Alan J. Bruner Scholarships were created
in memory of a Burke High School graduate who died while saving a girl from a
Gulf of Mexico riptide. For information, call 398-0047.
Arlington (Neb.) Public Library volunteers received the Marian
Wilkins Community Service Award from the Arlington Education Foundation in
summer 2005 for raising $80,000 for the new library in that small town. The
library was built without government funds.
150
volunteers, including members of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of
America, helped prepare the lower level of a former junior-high school at 108th
& Grover Streets in midtown Omaha for Abundant
Life Lutheran School to move in for 2005-06 school year.
Life-changing
scholarships have come from:
The Peter
Kiewit Foundation: http://www.pki.nebraska.edu/studentinfo/financialaid.php
The Susan
Thompson Buffet Foundation, www.buffettscholarships.org
The Knights
of Ak-Sar-Ben, www.aksarben.org
Ron Brown
Scholarship Foundation: www.ronbrown.org