Photo by Andrea Poteet
By ANDREA POTEET
Sunday Times Newspapers
ALLEN PARK – While some students in her grade are struggling to fill out
scholarship applications, study for their college placements and line up
internships, Beca Maynor can relax.
The 17-year-old junior at
“Everyone at school is getting nervous for the ACTs,” she said. “I got the score. It’s a big weight off my shoulders.”
Maynor is part of the Dream Mentor Program, a group of students at the school who meet with adviser Greg Campbell to help plan and achieve strategic goals for getting into specific colleges, securing funding and starting the career of their choice. He designed the program at the suggestion of Cabrini’s pastor, the Rev. Joseph Mallia.
Campbell, who has headed the program since its inception three years ago,
says he strives to make the often-daunting college application process easier
for students. Those who want to be in the program meet with him as many times as
they wish throughout the year.
He develops a folder for each student with possible careers based on their interests, lists of possible colleges and timelines for registering for standardized tests, finding scholarships, and creating resumes.
“We find out everything they want and we make sure we are developing the best
approach we can,”
For Campbell, who also is dean of students at the parish’s middle school, developing that unique approach with each student is a second full-time job. He estimates he spends a minimum of 30 hours a week on the program, and often meets with students and their parents on evenings and weekends. He also coaches the girl’s basketball team.
Employing his motto, “what gets planned and measured gets done,”
Each year, the instructions in their dream roadmap change: In eighth grade students are asked to take positive risks, like trying out for a new athletic team. By 10th and 11th grades they are focusing on more concrete tasks like registering for ACTs.
Another important part of the program is a calendar, on which students list the due dates for their college applications and scholarship essays, as well as extracurricular activities and vacation time, so they can plan their time effectively.
Junior Trever Chidester, 16, said the program has taught him the steps he needs to accomplish his goals and given him the confidence he needs to achieve them.
“What we want, if we plan it out, we can do it,” he said.
Through the program Chidester said he has been given a head start. By
following
“I have that experience now,” he said. “I have the knowledge to work in the lab.”
He said he was overwhelmed by the amount of time
“He’s really out there for us,” Chidester said of
What each students wants at the beginning of the program often changes as they get more facts about the field, Campbell said.
“We can work for two years on trying to be a nurse anesthetist, and they’ll come in and say, ‘I want to an accountant,’” he said. “And we’ll just start all over again. It’s not where we start, it’s where we finish.”
2010 Cabrini graduate Mike Lollo credits
“He told me I should look at programs before I look at baseball,” Lollo said. “My degree is more important.
Lollo’s mother, Julie, said she is grateful for
“He does a lot of legwork,” she said. “He does all that work for us. I wish every school had this.”
The student, Richard Szczesny, now attends
“He has given me a different perspective, not only about counselors, but also about school life and work as well,” Szczesny wrote. “Going above and beyond, reaching out, taking responsibility, being prepared and following through all come to mind when I think of Mr. Campbell. I figure if I can live by those ideas in life, and in whatever career I choose, I’ll be OK.”
“I love watching a plan come together,”