Winter 2006
Successful academic preparation programs are often described as building a sense of family among participants because of the strong support network they provide. But in the case of MESA and the seven-sibling Lobato family of Watsonville, the comparison is quite literal.
The sons and daughters of migrant farmworkers whose formal schooling ended at the third grade, six siblings have completed the program and gone on to college and one is currently enrolled. Their cousins and other extended family members have been through the program. Friends, and friends of friends, have heard about the program, completed it and gone on to college and successful careers.
"Put it this way: if I had to write all the names of people in my community whose lives have been positively impacted by MESA, it would fill an 11-by-17 inch piece of paper and there would still be many more to write," said Rudy Lobato, the fifth sibling. "If Alfonso (the eldest) hadn't become involved with MESA, or had been unsuccessful, none of the rest of us would have done it, period. MESA has helped bring our entire community to a better life."
While the family's story is hardly unique in MESA, the Lobatos' is exceptional in its scope and impact. The Lobato parents, Watsonville High MESA teachers Grace Patiño, Barbara Sorensen and Kathy Anderson, and the school's administration all share credit.
The family's achievements include:
"They are really a tremendous family to work with because they really want to work hard and be the best they can be," said Patiño, a former California Chamber of Commerce Teacher of the Year. "It's part of who they are, and MESA really brought it out in them."
"My biggest hope when I started high school was to graduate and get a minimum-wage job so I didn't have to work in the fields like my parents," said
first-born Alfonso. But when then-MESA Advisor Kathy Anderson started keeping a list on the blackboard of her graduates and the names of colleges they were attending, Alfonso grew curious. "We
didn't know what it was because we didn't know what college was.
"Enrolling in MESA started everything for me—all of a sudden I was grouped with other high achievers, and I realized doing intensive math and science projects wasn't just for geeks, that it was actually fun and cool," he said. "In my junior year, I won three first-place (MESA Day) prizes, for the rocket, the math test and the model bridge competitions."
Alfonso's successes—getting into an independent university, earning his master's degree at a nationally recognized institution and becoming a tenured college professor—proved to be a powerful motivating force for his brothers and sisters and their classmates.
Martin recalls seeing the model rockets Alfonso brought home to work on and asking about them. Martin saw the medals his older brother brought home after his victories and decided to give it a try. The same basic scenario continued for each successive sibling.
Today Alex's classmates ask what his older brothers do, and "when he says one is an engineer and another is a professor, they are blown away," said Alfonso.
Alfonso Lobato, Sr., shares Patiño's pride. "Seeing all my children go to college is a beautiful thing for them and for me, because they are working at offices instead of the fields, like I used to," he said. "Even at the gym now I hear parents talk about how their kids are involved in MESA."
The Watsonville program is administered by the UC Santa Cruz MESA precollege center, led by director Adrienne Harrell.
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