Texas A&M University Field Trip

Verified Non-Profit

Verified Non-Profit

The Description

Last year, I was privileged with the opportunity of taking 50 fourth-grade students on a field trip to Texas A&M University. We had an amazing time, and my students were given the chance to take a glimpse at my Alma Mater. This year, I want to do it again, only bigger and better. I teach more than 100 students at an elementary school located in Oak Cliff, a low socioeconomic neighborhood in South Dallas. The students I serve have unbelievably inspiring creativeness and show ambition to be something great in the future. And although they work diligently in the classroom each and every day, their exposure to college and career pathways has, in many ways, been limited by their zip code. I know that, for many of my students, this trip will be an eye-opening opportunity for them to envision their futures. Below is a list of items we are trying to fund in order to provide these students the best campus visit possible. 

$1,000 -- Charter Buses (With 135 students and 10 teachers, we will need 2 charter buses for the 300+ mile round trip) 

$600 -- Texas A&M Challengeworks (http://challengeworks.tamu.edu/) For the afternoon activities, I would like for my students to participate in games, activities and initiatives that require team building skills. Challengeworks hosts large groups of students and works with them on group tasks and challenges. 

$400 -- Lunch for 135 students, 10 teachers, and numerous parents. Last year we recieved catering from Raising Canes in College Station. We would like to do the same, assuming catering prices have remained the same. 

Back Up Plan

If we do not raise all of the funds for the trip, we will still take the students to the university by raising money elsewhere. 

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About the Creator

My name is Nicholas Miller and I am originally from Dallas, TX. When I was 19 years old, I worked as a lifeguard and swim instructor at Hand Prints Daycare in Mesquite, TX. On the last day of summer, my kindergarten class sheepishly approached me with pictures they'd created as a momentum for our time together. It opened my eyes to the realization that every day with these impressionable young people held great potential for positive transformation. When I attended Texas A&M University in College Station, TX I decided to pursue my newfound passion in every facet. Majoring in Kinesiology, minoring in English Language Arts, I sought out a teaching career through one of A&M's rigorous certification programs. I had no idea that a handful of professors would change not only the course of my educational career, but also transform my motivation and willingness to redefine what it means to be truly dedicated. My initial experiences led me into education policy, where I worked for the U.S. Department of Education: White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics. What I learned during my time in the Nation’s capital was irreplaceable, but it taught me one very important thing-- working directly students, by far, is the most rewarding and impactful way to change lives. After leaving D.C., I applied for Teach for America, a national organization dedicated to leveling the educational playing field for all students, regardless of their income or ethnicity. I was accepted into the program and placed at a public charter school in Oak Cliff on the south side of Dallas. I taught for 2 years in fourth grade. My first year, I taught Reading and Writing, and during my second year, I was blessed to focus solely on writing--a personal passion of mine. I absoluetly loved every moment in the classroom, but I felt compelled to have a broader impact and was accepted to work as an assistant prinicipal. I am now in my second semester as an assistant principal and thoroughly enjoy it. I am blessed to work in a place where I love my job as much as I do.
If you're familiar with the myriad of challenges a school faces, you know that I am battling a combination of factors that are working to prevent my students from being successful. My job is to make sure that they overcome those challenges and reach success not only in my classroom but for the rest of their lives.

Investments (31)

$200

alicia Goffnet

8 years ago

$20

Anonymous

8 years ago

$21

Justin Patton

8 years ago

$52

Peter Saucedo

8 years ago

$5

Jessica Perez

8 years ago

$50

Toccara Myers

8 years ago

$10

Genevieve Williams

8 years ago

$52

Anonymous

8 years ago

$10

Corey Stone

8 years ago

$31

Phyllis Betts

8 years ago

$50

Lytichia ONeal

8 years ago

$50

Julian Villegas

8 years ago

$10

Liz Thompson

8 years ago

$21

Melinda McCall

8 years ago

$258

Alexandra Forrester

8 years ago

$73

Anonymous

8 years ago

$20

Tony Evans

8 years ago

$27

Anonymous

8 years ago

$103

Anonymous

8 years ago

$31

Alejandro Solis

8 years ago

$20

Jessica Perez

8 years ago

$5

Jessica Perez

8 years ago

$26

Tammy Crane

8 years ago

$72

Anonymous

8 years ago

$5

Jessica Perez

8 years ago

$54

Anonymous

8 years ago

$10

Anonymous

8 years ago

$31

Nicholas Miller

8 years ago

$20

Tony Evans

8 years ago

$21

Anonymous

8 years ago

$21

Anonymous

8 years ago