Mentor/Student Blog Post

By: Dawn Brownlow and Andrew Fontana

Andrew:

Becoming a college steps mentor has taught me many things besides helping and supporting other students. I’ve learned that being a mentor gives you the opportunity to not only help, but also be a friend and a role model. Every student that I worked with, I’ve been able to build a good connection with each of them where we would smile, laugh, and have fun overall while we worked together. Each day, the students I work with always seem to grow and progress in many ways whether it’s their academics or social involvement. Not only do they grow, but the mentors grow as well by becoming much more confidant, and together with the students they support.

Dawn:

This is my last year at Southern Vermont College I would like to say how my experience at this college has been fun for me.  I have learned so much from this college. The one thing I have learned is to try your best at something even if it is hard.  My first year, I took Quest For Success with Stacey Hills. At first I did not know how hard the class was but, I stuck with the class, and I ended the class with an A-.  The second year in college I was more interested in learning about different music cultures. Since then I’ve taken even more music classes with Eric Despard. I really likes his classes!

Resources and Scholarships

Please make note of new resources and scholarships for students with disabilities:
 
 -- College Resources for Students with Disabilities: 
http://www.affordablecollegesonline.org/college-resource-center/resources-for-students-with-disabilities/

 -- Scholarships for Students with Disabilities: 
http://www.affordablecollegesonline.org/college-resource-center/affordable-colleges-for-students-with-disabilities

Building skills and making memories

Wonderful things happen with College Steps, even when classes are not in session! Over the winter break, AIC students and Program Coordinator continued working on independent living and social skill building, attending a Springfield Falcons hockey game. They independently purchased tickets, located their seats, and participated in intermission activities. College experiences build long-lasting memories.

Kickoff to College Event

Every year the Pathway to the Baccalaureate Program at NOVA has a Kick Off to College event for the new cohort of students held at George Mason University. This year the event is being held on Saturday, February 27, 2016. Last year there was a Resource Fair in the lobby of Dewberry Hall that was very popular, and College Steps returning this year to again host a table representing College Steps. Like last year, there will be 2 sessions for participants, a morning session and an afternoon session.  There are usually about 800 attendees per session.  The morning Resource Fair will open at 9:30 and end at 12:30.  The afternoon Resource Fair will open at 1:30 and end at 4:30.

About Pathway to the Baccalaureate

Pathway to the Baccalaureate is a consortium of 10 educational institutions in Northern Virginia -- K-12 public school systems, Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA) and George Mason University – who have joined forces to provide a seamless web of support to selected students as they pursue a four-year college degree, beginning with the transition from high school, through NOVA, to George Mason or another university. Pathway has emerged as an award-winning program model that has demonstrated remarkable outcomes in college readiness, access, success and completion.

Upcoming event!

College Steps looks forward to participating in the vendor fair for “When the Bus Stops Coming” scheduled for Saturday, March 12, 2016, at Loudoun County Public Schools Administration Building in Ashburn, VA from 10:15 – 12:30. “When the Bus Stops Coming” is designed for parents and caregivers of youth with disabilities, ages 14 – 22. The conference will cover transition planning as well as provide information for students who will need more intensive or ongoing support upon exiting school. In the past, over 100 students and their families have attended “When the Bus Stops Coming” and we are looking forward to another excellent turnout this year.

Autism Speaks Resource Fair/Transition Town Hall Workshop on Saturday, December 5th at Northern Virginia Community College in Annandale, VA.

Help us spread the word!  This is a FREE event for families with a teenager or adult on the autism spectrum to get vital resources that they need.  Every guest will receive printed Tool Kits and the opportunity to meet in small group settings with specialists in Transition Planning, Employment, Post-Secondary Education, and Housing. Please RSVP (free event, we just need a head count!) at the link below. Feel free to bring along as many members as your organization that will want to attend! RSVP HERE: http://events.autismspeaks.org/TransitionWorkshopNOVA
 
Event Details:
 
Autism Speaks Transition Town Planning Town Hall Workshop
Made Possible by a Generous Gift from the Gudelsky Family Foundation
 
*FREE PARKING, light refreshments, Northern Virginia specific autism resources
 
Date:     Saturday, December 5th
 
Location:  Northern Virginia Community College in Annandale, VA
 
Time:    9:00AM – Service Providers Arrive to Set Up
9:30AM – Resource Fair
10:00AM – Panel Discussion
 
Followed by Breakout Sessions:
--Transition Planning
--Employment
--Post-Secondary Education
--Housing

Congratulations to one of our Peer Mentors from Southern Vermont College! Karina Meza Named to CoSIDA Academic All-District NCAA DIII Women’s Soccer District 1 Team

Southern Vermont’s Karina Meza Named to CoSIDA Academic All-District NCAA DIII Women’s Soccer District 1 Team 

BENNINGTON, Vt. — On Thursday, the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) announced their 2015 Academic All-District™ Men’s and Women’s Soccer Teams to recognize top student-athletes around the country for their excellence athletically and academically with Southern Vermont College senior defender Karina Meza (Los Angeles, Calif.) being included on the NCAA Division III District 1 Women’s First Team.

Meza’s honor is the first ever of its kind for any Southern Vermont student-athlete. The NCAA DIII District 1 Team is comprised of institutions in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. To be nominated, a student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with at least a 3.30 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) at his or her current institution. Nominated athletes must have participated in at least 50 percent of the team’s games at the position listed on the nomination form (where applicable). No student-athlete is eligible until he or she has completed one full calendar year at his or her current institution and has reached sophomore athletic eligibility. In the cases of transfers, graduate students and two-year college graduates, the student-athlete must have completed one full calendar year at the nominating institution to be eligible.

Meza has helped anchor a Southern Vermont defense that has allowed just 1.33 goals per game to date with a combined seven team shutouts. From the defense, she has scored three goals and registered one assist; all three of her scores have been game-winning goals with two being in 1-0 wins. The psychology major, who finished the 2014-15 academic year with a cumulative grade point average of 3.93, was named to the 2014 New England Collegiate Conference (NECC) All-Academic Team and is in line to also be on this year’s squad. She has started in all 16 of the Mountaineers’ games this season, helping them to tally the team’s best-ever record in the NECC and its fifth straight playoff appearance. She was recently named the NECC Player of the Week for the first time in her career back on October 12.

“The first thing that comes to my mind is that, ‘It’s always great to get an academic award, whether it’s for a team or an individual,’” commented fifth year SVC head coach Michael Zauzig. “They’re student-athletes, and ‘student’ does come first. They’re here to get a degree and prepare themselves for the next step in their lives. Karina, someone who’s either looking at going to the Peace Corp or grad school, has been committed to academics since the first day that she got here. I think it speaks volumes about Karina as a student to be the first person at SVC to get this honor. It additionally sets a precedent and a challenge to her teammates to see who can match it; it continues an expectation of academic excellence.”

Current members of CoSIDA are able to nominate players from their institution in the sponsored sports, and those same members are then eligible to vote on the district level. Only members of the Academic All-America® Committee and the CoSIDA Board of Directors and staff are able to vote at the national level to determine the CoSIDA Academic All-America® teams.

The Academic All-District™ teams are divided into eight geographic districts across the United States and Canada. This is the fifth year of the expanded Academic All-America® program as CoSIDA moved from recognizing a University Division (Division I) and a College Division (all non-Division I) and has doubled the number of scholar-athletes honored. The expanded teams include NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II and NCAA Division III participants, while the College Division Academic All-America® Team combines NAIA, Canadian and two-year schools. First-team Academic All-District™ honorees advance to the CoSIDA Academic All-America® Team ballot, where first-, second- and third-team All-America honorees will be selected later this month.