North Ward Center Newsletter

Monday
Sep 06th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home North Ward News North Ward Center Midshipmen spend two weeks at North Ward Center

Midshipmen spend two weeks at North Ward Center

E-mail Print

This article originally ran May 22, 2009 on nj.com

Daniel Blue and Michael Steadman have been through rigorous training during three years at the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, but nothing could prepare the midshipmen for three hours with preschoolers.

"It was exhausting," said Steadman, the captain of the academy's boxing team who plans to join the U.S. Marine Corps when he graduates from the academy in 2010. "The three hours I spent with the preschoolers felt like 12 hours."

midship_blue
Michael Steadman helps out in a preschool class at The North Ward Center.

Blue and Stedman have spent the last two weeks as interns with the North Ward Center. In addition to spending time in preschool classrooms at the North Ward Child Development Center, they have mentored students and co-taught an eighth-grade class in civics at The Robert Treat Academy charter school.

"The kids at Robert Treat are smart. You can have a conversation with them and you feel like you are talking to college students," said Steadman, who was raised in College Station, Texas. "When I asked them what happened in the news today, they all raised their hands to answer."

Michael Pallante, the principal of Robert Treat Academy, said the students benefitted from having the midshipmen in the classroom.

"These guys are great role models for our kids," Pallante said. "Seeing these two young future leaders gives our students something to strive for."

Adrianne Davis, the executive director of The North Ward Center, said it was an honor to have future military leaders spend time at the center.

"We hope what they saw over the last two weeks supplemented their education," Davis said. "And we hope they walked away with a sense of how an organization like ours benefits a city like Newark."

As part of the internship, the midshipmen also spent time at several local, county, state and federal institutions to observe how New Jersey functions first hand.

midshipmen_rta
U.S. Naval Academy Midshipmen Michael Steadman and Daniel Blue at Robert Treat Academy in Newark

Jose Aviles, the principal at Barrigner High School, gave the midshipmen an unvarnished view of life at an urban high school. Charles Manzella opened the doors to New Jersey Regional Day School in Newark, which specializes in educating children with autism spectrum disorder and pervasive developmental delays.

The midshipmen also spent time with Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo, attended legislative hearings in Trenton with state Sen. Teresa Ruiz, were given an insiders' view of Newark City Hall by Dwight Brown, chief of staff to Central Ward Councilman Charles Bell, and spent a day at the district offices of U.S. Rep. Albio Sires.

"They were well rounded, focused and very disciplined," Brown said.

DiVincenzo, who gave the midshipmen a tour of the county jail and allowed them to sit in on planning meetings, said the students were a pleasure to meet.

"They were eager to learn about and understand our diverse community and the progress we have made to move our county forward," DiVincenzo said. "I hope their visit was a tremendous learning experience and that what they learned here will help them in the future."

Blue and Stedman are part of a group of 19 midshipman who are spending several weeks at St. Benedict's Prep in Newark as part of a program designed to expose future Naval and Marine officers to urban life and to expose students at the high school to the benefits of attending Annapolis. It's the second year of the program.

midshipmen_senruiz
U.S. Naval Academy Midshipmen Daniel Blue (l) and Michael Steadman (r) with state Sen. Teresa Ruiz before the start of the Senate Education Committee in Trenton

Father Edwin Leahy, the St. Benedicts headmaster who coordinates the program, said students from both schools benefit from the experience.

"I've always felt we got a tremendous benefit from having them here, but when I talk to the midshipmen and their superiors at the academy, they also indicate its' a terrific experience," Leahy said. "The midshipmen get to put into practice the leadership skills that they've studied in the close confines of the academy."

It wasn't all hard work, though. On their first day in Newark, the 19 midshipmen were guests of Mayor Cory Booker at Newark Screens on Springfield Avenue, where they saw "Star-Trek."

Blue, who was raised in Woodbridge, N.J., said the time he spent at the North Ward Center opened his eyes to the good that a non-profit organization can do in a city like Newark.

"I wish there were more places like the North Ward Center," Blue said. "It's a good model to follow for other cities in the country."

 
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Email Newsletter
For Email Marketing you can trust

Welcome

sna-photo
Founder
The North Ward News is the online newsletter of the North Ward Center Inc, Newark, N.J. This site offers a number of options for keeping up-to-date with the latest news from the North Ward Center. You can sign up to receive our periodic newsletter by email, view the current issue, or peruse archived isses. You can also search archived articles about the North Ward

Read More...

North Ward News Video

Connect

twitterbutton facebook flickr youtube_60x60 feed

 

Michele Adubato addresses Barringer High School Graduates

Read the story as it originally appeared on nj.com North Ward Center Deputy Executive Director Michele Adubato told the graduating class at Barringer High School in Newark on Friday that the community was proud of them for making it through high school. “You don’t know me, but I’m proud of you,” said Adubato, the commencement speaker. “You need to know, people who don’t know you are proud of you. More than 30 percent of the students who began this journey with you did not make it. You have the right to be proud of yourself.” 

 

A Day of 3 Kings and Political Royalty

Read the original story as it appeared in the Jan. 7, 2010 edition of The Star-Ledger NEWARK -- Gov.-elect Chris Christie, along with city and state politicians, joined Stephen Adubato Sr. and about 1,300 Newark schoolchildren at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart today to celebrate Three Kings Day and kick off the North Ward Center's 40th anniversary celebration.   Political kings and kingmakers from the city and state lined up under the vaulted ceilings of the ornate cathedral to pay their respects to Adubato during an event that was as much theater as community celebration.

 

Coalition of Newark educators form unlikely alliance trying to reform city schools

Read the story as it originally appeared in the March 14, 2010 edition of The Star-Ledger With educational leaders from Washington to Trenton embracing the role of charter schools in public education, a group of Newark educators - from both charter and district schools - has formed an unlikely alliance to tackle the work of reforming Newark's city schools.   In all, 55 teachers and administrators meet monthly, and have even attended a December retreat, at each member's own cost, in Puerto Rico. Members say the group is trying to put long-held prejudices aside and share successful practices.

 

Jackie Robinson Day celebrated in Newark

Read the story as it originally appeared on nj.com | localtalknews.com Jackie Robinson Day was celebrated in Newark Tuesday at the Harriet Tubman School as Robinson’s family members presented the school with a baseball signed by the Hall of Famer and first African-American to break the color barrier in Major League Baseball.   The day was designed as “Jackie Robinson Day,” in Newark by the City Council, a mayoral proclamation and a resolution from the state Legislature. The event is 63 years almost to the day (April 15, 1947) when Jackie Robison made his debut in Ebbets Field in Brooklyn on opening day.

 

Newark kids get taste of Belmar sailing life

This story originally ran in The Asbury Park Press on Aug. 19, 2009 He spent Tuesday at the Shark River, miles away from his classroom, but Ryan Hernandez learned several important lessons anyway. He learned kayaking is exhilarating but exhausting. He learned that without knowledge of math and science, "you're not really going to do so good" in a boat. He learned how to tie a knot that could help keep a sailboat firmly in place in middle of a river.