Texas Border Business
Mcallen, Texas — In a surprise ceremony in front of students, staff,
Pat Ryan Jr., founder of the Accelerate Institute, said Alvarez was selected for the Ryan Award because he erases traditional barriers that may have stood in the way of student achievement. With his engaging, celebratory approach, Alvarez recognizes the strengths of each student, opening their minds to futures they may not have thought possible.
“Joán Alvarez has built a school culture that embraces constant growth, for his teachers, himself and his students, so that every individual student is given the opportunity to succeed,” Ryan said. “With this award, we want to amplify the story of leaders like Joán so other principals learn how to build schools with healthy foundations that enable their students to compete with their peers no matter where they go.”
IDEA College Preparatory McAllen students outperform state and district averages on Texas math and reading exams by double digits. The student performance also underscores the team’s commitment to growth: In 2014-15, 52 percent of students met or exceeded state standards. By 2017-18, 73 percent did so, at a time when state averages remained stagnant. IDEA College Preparatory McAllen students eliminate the achievement gap typically seen between white students and minority or low-income students in performance on state reading and math exams. IDEA College Preparatory McAllen has earned top state distinctions for closing the achievement gap, student growth, high achievement,
Nora Ligurotis, CEO of the Accelerate Institute, presented Alvarez with the award during an all-school assembly in front of his students and staff. The prestigious award includes a $25,000 honorarium and the opportunity for awardees to teach their successful methodologies to other leaders at a summer institute at Northwestern University in Chicago.
Alvarez was nominated by Nicholas Ditto, founding principal at IDEA Rise College Preparatory opening in Fort Worth, Texas, this fall. Ditto says he nominated Alvarez for the honor not only for his students’ exemplary academic results, but also because of the way he treats his students.
“One of the most important things Joán taught me was the power of motivation and the importance of celebrating your students and staff,” says Ditto. “He never missed an opportunity to celebrate students’ growth and achievement, both on an individual and collective level. Additionally, he consistently praised and recognized staff for their hard work and strong results.”
Ditto also counts Alvarez’s personal connection to each of the students on his campus as a large factor in his success. “I remember being awestruck during my first week on campus when I realized that he knew all of his students by name, their student achievement data and personal facts about them,” Ditto says. “The deep relationships that he has been able to build have been instrumental in his students’ success.”
A first-generation college graduate himself, Alvarez started teaching in Corpus Christi, Texas, then earned a master’s degree in educational administration. He went on to become principal of his alma mater, Progreso High School. In 2011, he joined IDEA, serving as assistant principal of instruction at IDEA College Preparatory Mission. In 2012, he attended the Harvard Educational Leadership Program and also founded the IDEA College Preparatory McAllen campus.
“I am overwhelmed and truly honored to receive this award. It speaks highly of the hard work of our students, teachers, and families,” says Alvarez. “I am proud of each of our students and the hard-working staff here at IDEA McAllen who are committed to fulfilling our promise of getting 100% of our students to and through college.”
Alvarez is committed to ensuring that every student makes it to and through college and has pledged his $25,000 award to go towards student scholarships for IDEA McAllen’s first graduating class this year.
Alvarez is the first of two Ryan Award winners to be announced this year. Nominees must be K-12 principals for at least four years with a measurable record of consecutive student achievement growth. This seventh class of Ryan Awardees will be celebrated at the Accelerate Institute’s annual Impact Dinner later this year in Chicago.
ABOUT THE RYAN AWARD AND ACCELERATE INSTITUTE:
The Ryan Award is the first national award honoring transformational school leaders in the U.S. The Ryan Awards are distributed through the Chicago-based Accelerate Institute, a nonprofit organization founded by Pat Ryan Jr. that is dedicated to the development of urban school leaders who make sure every student has the chance to reach their full potential.
Previous Ryan Award winners have led both district and public charter schools in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Kansas City, Nashville, Newark, New Orleans, Phoenix, Wilmington, Del., and Washington, D.C.The prestigious award includes a $25,000 honorarium and the opportunity to teach successful methodologies.
For further information on the Ryan Awards and the Accelerate Institute, visit www.accelerateinstitute.org.
To learn more about IDEA Public Schools, please contact Marco Carbajal, Regional Communications Manager at 956-272-4392 or marco.carbajal@ideapublicschools.org.
ABOUT IDEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
IDEA Public Schoolsis a family of 79 tuition-free public schools that serve more than 45,000 students across Texas and Louisiana. IDEA believes a quality K – 12 public education is the key to success in college and life. For the past 19 years, IDEA has been committed to seeing each child to and through college and goes the extra mile to make sure every student realizes their own potential.