- Reprinted from SBISD's STARNews
Volunteers come in all shapes and sizes. Some cook.
Some coach. Some teach. At Northbrook Middle
School, home of the Knights, Felipa Munoz and Bruce
Rollins check all of the above boxes.
The two have
been honored in recent years as district Volunteers of
the Month.
Felipa and her team make Tacos for Teachers every
week; cook up Thanksgiving dinner for adult volunteer
mentors at the school; and bake 400 cupcakes for staff
and children at Texas Children’s Hospital.
“I love to cook,” says longtime volunteer Felipa.
“I
love to do this, and I do it from my heart. I love being
here every day. To me, all the children here are my
children. I want to be here for them.”
She began this giving 25 years ago at Shadow Oaks
Elementary when her daughter, Guadelupe, was in
third grade.
She followed
grandson
Anthony to
Northbrook
Middle.
Granddaughter
Jazmine
is now an
eighth-grader
there.
Felipa
is supported
by up to a
dozen other
volunteers.
Adult mentor
Bruce Rollins
doesn’t know
how to retire.
He’s tried to do so three times now. After a successful
career in sales and marketing at Proctor & Gamble, he
retired a decade ago. He was Mr. Mom at home, but
needed more.
An All-American college swimmer, he took up the
sport again and was soon coaching at St. Thomas
High and Duchesne Academy.
He started the student
swimming program at Buffalo Creek Elementary
School a decade ago, and was later athletic director for
five years at Duchesne, which his daughters attended.
His wife, Elaine, recruited him three years ago to
mentor a Northbrook Middle student.
Since then, he
has helped three brothers. He’s at the school most days
either early in the morning or after school, working one
on one with students, or mentees. Reading, writing and
math drills have led to grade-level gains.
He teaches adult swimming, too, at the Brenda and
John Duncan YMCA on Clay Road.
“I was on my third retirement when I took my first
student. I always wanted to be a teacher and a coach. I
am retired, but as a mentor, I find that I’m both of these
– teacher and a coach,” he says.
“It is unlike anything
else I’ve ever done.”
To learn how you can mentor a student or volunteer
in SBISD’s schools or supporting departments, please
call the SBISD Community Relations Department at
713-251- 2286.
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