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Meet our Teacher and Teammate of the Year award winners!

New in 2024, Aspire is thrilled to announce our inaugural winners of the Teacher and Teammate of the Year awards! Each of our 3 regions has selected one outstanding teammate and teacher to honor with this recognition. The nomination process was extensive, yielding over 400 thoughtful responses from teammates, scholars, alumni, and families.  

We’re thankful for the impact each of the winners makes within their schools and across their communities. Read on and join us in celebrating our six winners’ great work and achievements!

Bay Area

Photo of Frania Ramos-Arce, 2024 Bay Area Teacher of the Year
Frania Ramos-Arce, 2024 Bay Area Teacher of the Year

Teacher of the Year: Frania Ramos-Arce, an elementary teacher at Aspire College Academy (ACA), has been honored as Teacher of the Year. With Aspire for five years, she has consistently demonstrated enthusiasm for teaching and a deep knowledge of academic engagement strategies. ACA Principal Brian White expressed his admiration, highlighting her exceptional communication skills with parents and professional demeanor. He described her as “the consummate blend of teacher leader and team player,” noting her commitment to the well-being of the ACA community. According to White, she “advocates for what is best for students and is a natural leader and a pillar of strength within the Jaguar Family.” Congratulations to Ms. Arce!

Photo of Angelena Banks, 2024 Bay Area Teammate of the Year
Angelena Banks, 2024 Bay Area Teammate of the Year

Teammate of the Year: Angelena Banks is the After School Director at Aspire Berkley Maynard Academy (BMA). Principal Jay Stack praised her journey

from joining the school community as a parent to leading one of the most expansive and well-resourced Expanded Learning Programs. He described Ms. Banks as a “force of joy, fun, and love for kids,” and commended her for bringing community partnerships to BMA scholars. These partnerships, including West African Dance, Black Neighborhood Project, GloMPACT, and Climbing Club, help students feel “validated, empowered, and a sense of belonging.” Principal Stack thanked Angelena for her “love and dedication to ensuring we are nurturing and developing the whole child.”

Central Valley 

Photo of Evangelina Rios, 2024 Central Valley Teacher of the Year
Evangelina Rios, 2024 Central Valley Teacher of the Year

Teacher of the Year: Evangelina Rios is a 6th-8th grade humanities teacher at Aspire Stockton Secondary Academy (ASSA). She has evolved from a mentee to a mentor teacher in the Alder Teacher Residency Program. Her commitment to the craft of teaching benefits her scholars and teammates, embodying the “any means necessary” mentality. During the pandemic, she took the initiative to support a new school, contributing to making ASSA the special place it is becoming.

Juan Rodarte, 2024 Central Valley Teammate of the Year
Juan Rodarte, 2024 Central Valley Teammate of the Year

Teammate of the Year: Juan Rodarte, the Building Manager at Aspire Summit Charter Academy (SCA), is a steadfast member of the Aspire family who exemplifies our core values of Belonging and Bienestar (Well-being). He ensures that our students are seen and cared for, maintaining a safe and clean school campus. Juan is known for seeing the brilliance in each student and building personal relationships with them. He always greets every visitor with a warm hello, embodying a spirit of inclusivity.

Los Angeles

Photo of Andrea Martinez, 2024 Los Angeles Teacher of the Year
Andrea Martinez, 2024 Los Angeles Teacher of the Year

Teacher of the Year: Andrea Martinez, a 13-year veteran educator, currently guides 4th graders at Aspire Firestone Academy. Her commitment to antiracist curriculum design, dedication to academic excellence, and focus on student wellness and agency have resulted in significant academic growth and increased confidence among her scholars.

Photo of Olga Barraza Fraire, LA Teammate of the Year
Olga Barraza Fraire, 2024 Los Angeles Teammate of the Year

Teammate of the Year: Olga Barraza Fraire, who serves as a SpEd Instructional Aide at Aspire Tate Academy, proactively disrupts antiblackness while fostering a critical understanding of social issues among her teammates and students. She excels in supporting diverse learners by integrating the varied cultural backgrounds and unique needs of the community into her work. The Aspire Los Angeles team has commended her dedication to all students, particularly those facing the most marginalization, and her commitment to ensuring their joy and well-being. She will soon continue her work and progress at Aspire Tate Academy through the Alder GSE Residency!

The 74 | Opinion: The Best Way to Honor Latino Culture is by Honoring Latino Family Values

It’s Hispanic Heritage Month and the signs and advertisements celebrating the culture are abundant. I feel, as I often do this time of year, mixed emotions. As a Mexican-American educator, I understand the good intentions behind the signs; celebrating diversity and honoring different cultures should be applauded.

But if we really want to celebrate the culture and give Latino students a true sense of belonging in their schools, we should do far more than have a program, assembly or fancy celebration to honor our students’ heritage. Instead, we should look at the foundational role that families play within Latino culture and embrace and honor those values. Values of belonging, collaboration and hard work.

Growing up in Los Angeles, I was often surrounded by my large extended family. Both my parents are from Jalisco, Mexico: my mother is one of 11 siblings and my father is one of six. Many of my aunts, uncles and cousins also moved to Los Angeles. My Dad instilled in me the importance of courage, and the value of hard work as the expression of one’s integrity and honor.

But despite these important family values, as a first-generation student, I lacked the resources or institutional knowledge to easily navigate the U.S. education system — it took me seven years just to complete college. Now that our nieces and nephews are getting ready to go to college, we make sure they have the tools to navigate the complex higher education system. This is part of our family culture: a shared responsibility to pass along what you learn, paving the way for the next generation. Our family also instilled a sense of belonging and security that gave us the courage to take risks — after all, there’s no bigger risk than immigrating to a foreign land.

Imagine if school communities embodied Latino family norms; where responsibility is shared, accountability is collective and a sense of belonging lives. Can you imagine what that might look like? We strive to do this every day at our school. Like many Latino families, we emphasize working in groups and collaborative efforts over a focus on the individual.

“We see you and got you.” Those words hold power. It’s about knowing that your community, your group, has your back. Family has your back. This is something we discuss at our schools because it resonates deeply with our students: to be seen, to know you are unconditionally supported. At Aspire Public Schools’ Los Angeles-area schools, where the majority of our students identify as Latino, we embrace this idea, to make our students feel safe and supported unconditionally, in everything we do.

For example, at Aspire Ollin University Prep where I worked for 12 years, we created an advisory group program at our secondary school. Freshmen are placed into micro-communities of about 30 students with one teacher who stays with the group all four years. Weekly community circles and guided conversations about issues that affect our scholars’ lives help them feel seen and supported. Like a large, extended family, these groups benefit from collaborative learning, shared responsibility and an environment built on trust and belonging.

Programs like this allow us to create a familial identity at Aspire. We focus on students’ social-emotional learning, equity work and culturally relevant pedagogy that helps students feel supported. But most importantly, we leverage each other’s humanity. We support each other in providing a learning space for students and staff. A place where students learn from teachers and each other. A place where teachers learn from their students and their colleagues.  Just like we learn from family.

When you think about how family roots children, gives them a sense of confidence and purpose and offers space to be who they really are — how could you not want to embed those values in a school? We want these ideals to resonate deeply with our students. When a community of trust and belonging exists, students have the freedom to take risks and follow their intellectual curiosity. Instilling a school culture with family-inspired values brings out the genius in our students and gives them the space to enjoy their education and discover their own passions. This is how we honor Latino culture — every day.

Joel Ramirez is the son of immigrant parents from Jalisco, Mexico, and has been an educator for more than 15 years as a teacher, school administrator. He’s now Aspire Public School’s senior director of culturally responsive leadership development in Los Angeles.