Houston – Scholarship Impacts Student’s Life

Pictured are (left to right) Jennifer Garcia,Bryan Turtius, Amy Rodriguez and Elvira Campos.

Pictured are (left to right) Jennifer Garcia,Bryan Turtius, Amy Rodriguez and Elvira Campos.

A fifth-grade teacher with high expectations. Two middle school choir directors. A coach with positive words. These are a few of the inspiring educators who have led four seniors at Northbrook High School to graduation with clear purpose and goals.

These four – Jennifer Garcia, Elvira Campos, Bryan Turtius and Amy Rodriguez —  are now headed to top Texas colleges and universities, the U.S. Marine Corps, and even to an elite liberal arts college in woodsy central Maine.

For one of them, a traumatic skateboarding accident resulted in months of physical rehabilitation and neurological retraining exercises during the past two years.

“Four years ago when I first met the Class of 2016, I challenged them to leave a legacy behind after they graduated,” 12th grade Principal Stacy Sanchez says. “I wanted everyone to say, ‘Hey, that Class of 2016 was outstanding!’”

“The day has come and the Class of 2016 has met my challenge and surpassed my expectations. I couldn’t be happier to have Bryan, Elvira, Amy and Jennifer showcased for their awesomeness. They’re just a glimpse of what Northbrook High School’s Class of 2016 has accomplished.”

Two Raiders Ready for Texas A&M

Jennifer Garcia and Elvira Campos are headed this fall to Texas A&M University at College Station, a favored destination for many Raider high achievers.

For Jennifer, walking across the stage at Don Coleman Coliseum on Saturday will be a testament to an incredible comeback story. In August 2014, just weeks before her junior year, Jennifer was struck by a car on the street outside Landrum Middle and hospitalized with serious head and pelvis injuries. She was on her skateboard.

A month or so later, she left the hospital and began the journey back to health and high school coursework. She came back to Northbrook High by attending athletic training class, and then was homeschooled in English. She returned to a full set of classes in February 2015, and has pushed herself this year to meet both junior and senior-year requirements.

“School was hard, and it still is. I still sometimes have trouble speaking words. I’ll know the word I’m looking for, but it doesn’t come out. For senior year, it was the two years smashed into one,” she says.

This year, she ran morning cross country practice, followed athletic training after school, and then found time for outside work. “Every day, I was exhausted. I had days I wanted to give up, but I never did. Everything has now paid off with being able to graduate and to go on to college!”

In addition to Northbrook High, Jennifer attended The Lion Lane School for Early Learning, Treasure Forest Elementary and Landrum Middle.

A Treasure Forest fifth-grade teacher, Mirith Ballestas, an intervention specialist at the school today, inspired her.

“She was always a little bit hard on me, and that pushed me. She noticed I could do more. She made me take my tests in English, and she recommended me for Pre-AP Math. I tried harder because of Ms. Ballestas,” Jennifer says.

Elvira Campos found her voice and emotional footing in Jaime Trigo’s Landrum Middle choir room. “He was a parent figure for me,” says Elvira, who did not have a dad living at home. “Mr. Trigo taught me right from wrong. He taught me to take risks and to believe in myself above all.”

She is also a graduate of Lion Lane PreK, but attended Ridgecrest Elementary and then Landrum Middle and Northbrook High.

Jennifer is planning a career in accounting, starting with a small company and then working her way up. She’s won three scholarships so far, including a $2,000 award from the Assistance League and $500 athletic training award through the Memorial Hermann Hospital system.

Elvira’s college goal is a teaching degree. Her English III teacher helped her think about how family income may predict student educational attainment, opportunity and future success.

“I want to teach others that money should not make such a difference. If I can make it, then others like me can make it, too,” she says.

Texas A&M University has named her a recipient of both the Regent and Century four-year scholarships, valued at up to $160,000, and Leadership Houston alumni with Landrum Middle ties have awarded her a $1,000 Flight XXV Scholarship. A $750 Delta Kappa Gamma scholarship has been awarded to her, too.

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