- Development
- Activities
- …
- Development
- Activities
- Development
- Activities
- …
- Development
- Activities
- Afterschool Alliance National Youth Ambassador Program
- Breakthrough Miami
- Miami Waterkeeper Junior Ambassador Program
- Perez Art Museum Miami Teen Arts Council
- Ransom Everglades School | Black Student Association, Environmental Sustainability Council, Gender and Sexuality Association
- Million Girls Moonshot National STEM "Flight Crew" Program
- The Children's Trust Youth Advisory Committee
- The Women's Fund Miami-Dade
AFTERSCHOOL ALLIANCE NATIONAL YOUTH AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
Florida State Representative
2022 - Present
AFTERSCHOOL ALLIANCE NATIONAL YOUTH AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
Florida State Representative
2022 - Present
AFTERSCHOOL ALLIANCE NATIONAL YOUTH AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
Florida State Representative
2022 - Present
AFTERSCHOOL ALLIANCE NATIONAL YOUTH AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
Florida State Representative
2022 - Present
Breakthrough Miami uses a unique “students-teaching-students” model to create a rigorous, vibrant learning community, where highly motivated, traditionally underrepresented 5th-12th grade students are supported to achieve post-secondary success and emerging leaders are inspired to become the next generation of educators and advocates.
Breakthrough Miami currently serves 1,300 middle and high school students at six community campus locations (Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart, Gulliver Prep, Miami Country Day School, Palmer Trinity, Ransom Everglades and the University of Miami). Acceptance into the program is based on a competitive application and interview process, in which we identify students who are academically motivated and meet at least two of the following five risk factors associated with failure to enter/complete college:
- Ethnic/racial minorities (96% of our students)
- Family income qualifies for free/reduced lunch (85%)
- First generation in their families to attend college in the U.S. (48%)
- Single-parent household (47%)
Primary language other than English (50%)
Breakthrough Miami uses a unique “students-teaching-students” model to create a rigorous, vibrant learning community, where highly motivated, traditionally underrepresented 5th-12th grade students are supported to achieve post-secondary success and emerging leaders are inspired to become the next generation of educators and advocates.
Breakthrough Miami currently serves 1,300 middle and high school students at six community campus locations (Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart, Gulliver Prep, Miami Country Day School, Palmer Trinity, Ransom Everglades and the University of Miami). Acceptance into the program is based on a competitive application and interview process, in which we identify students who are academically motivated and meet at least two of the following five risk factors associated with failure to enter/complete college:
- Ethnic/racial minorities (96% of our students)
- Family income qualifies for free/reduced lunch (85%)
- First generation in their families to attend college in the U.S. (48%)
- Single-parent household (47%)
Primary language other than English (50%)
Breakthrough Miami uses a unique “students-teaching-students” model to create a rigorous, vibrant learning community, where highly motivated, traditionally underrepresented 5th-12th grade students are supported to achieve post-secondary success and emerging leaders are inspired to become the next generation of educators and advocates.
Breakthrough Miami currently serves 1,300 middle and high school students at six community campus locations (Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart, Gulliver Prep, Miami Country Day School, Palmer Trinity, Ransom Everglades and the University of Miami). Acceptance into the program is based on a competitive application and interview process, in which we identify students who are academically motivated and meet at least two of the following five risk factors associated with failure to enter/complete college:
- Ethnic/racial minorities (96% of our students)
- Family income qualifies for free/reduced lunch (85%)
- First generation in their families to attend college in the U.S. (48%)
- Single-parent household (47%)
Primary language other than English (50%)
Breakthrough Miami uses a unique “students-teaching-students” model to create a rigorous, vibrant learning community, where highly motivated, traditionally underrepresented 5th-12th grade students are supported to achieve post-secondary success and emerging leaders are inspired to become the next generation of educators and advocates.
Breakthrough Miami currently serves 1,300 middle and high school students at six community campus locations (Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart, Gulliver Prep, Miami Country Day School, Palmer Trinity, Ransom Everglades and the University of Miami). Acceptance into the program is based on a competitive application and interview process, in which we identify students who are academically motivated and meet at least two of the following five risk factors associated with failure to enter/complete college:
- Ethnic/racial minorities (96% of our students)
- Family income qualifies for free/reduced lunch (85%)
- First generation in their families to attend college in the U.S. (48%)
- Single-parent household (47%)
Primary language other than English (50%)
Breakthrough Miami uses a unique “students-teaching-students” model to create a rigorous, vibrant learning community, where highly motivated, traditionally underrepresented 5th-12th grade students are supported to achieve post-secondary success and emerging leaders are inspired to become the next generation of educators and advocates.
Breakthrough Miami currently serves 1,300 middle and high school students at six community campus locations (Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart, Gulliver Prep, Miami Country Day School, Palmer Trinity, Ransom Everglades and the University of Miami). Acceptance into the program is based on a competitive application and interview process, in which we identify students who are academically motivated and meet at least two of the following five risk factors associated with failure to enter/complete college:
- Ethnic/racial minorities (96% of our students)
- Family income qualifies for free/reduced lunch (85%)
- First generation in their families to attend college in the U.S. (48%)
- Single-parent household (47%)
Primary language other than English (50%)
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