Michael Giovannetti is Kremen School’s Top Dog

Dr. Michael Giovannetti is this year’s Kremen School’s Top Dog.

On Friday, Oct. 26 Fresno State held its annual Top Dog Alumni Awards Gala. The Top Dog Alumni Awards Gala recognizes the accomplishments of some of Fresno State’s most notable alumni.

“Fresno State did prepare me for life,” said Giovannetti. “I became connected to teaching the moment I saw that excellence and care for kids in that classroom.”

Giovannetti moved to Fresno from Italy in 1959. “So, my journey began in a small town of about 500 people to large Fresno” he says.

Giovannetti completed all of his education at Fresno State, starting with his bachelor’s degree in 1970 and attaining his doctorate in educational administration in 2001. During his time at Fresno State, Giovannetti also completed his teaching credential.

Giovannetti says “I know that the Save Mart Center is huge, but I could fill it with the people that I’m grateful to.”

Fresno State Awarded $3.75M To Increase Hispanic Teacher Pipeline

Fresno State will soon enhance its partnerships with Fresno City College and Reedley College to create a pathway of support for Latinx students who want to be teachers in the San Joaquin Valley.

It will start with recruiting early in local high schools, helping students through the community colleges then into Fresno State’s liberal studies and teacher credential program in the Kremen School of Education and Human Development to earn a bachelor’s degree and teaching credential.

The goal is to increase the number of bilingual Latinx teachers who will return to their hometowns to inspire and teach the community’s future leaders.

“It’s about growing our own — growing students who mirror children in P-12 schools whether it be ethnically, linguistically, racially or in terms of overall experiences,” said Dr. Laura Alamillo, interim dean for the Kremen School.

Fresno State received a five-year, $3.75 million Title V grant from the U.S. Department of Education that will allow it to partner with the local community colleges in growing the Valley’s teachers. Each of the three schools is designated as a Hispanic-Serving Institution by the U.S. Department of Education, meaning at least 25 percent of the undergraduate enrollment is Hispanic.

Nearly half of all undergraduate students at Fresno State are Hispanic. The percentage goes up at Fresno City and Reedley where the Hispanic student population is 53 percent and 71 percent, respectively.

“There is a huge demand in the region for teachers, especially Hispanic teachers whose proportions lag the proportion of Hispanic students,” said Dr. Robert Harper, interim provost and vice president for student affairs at Fresno State. “Fresno State is proud to partner with Fresno City College and Reedley College to provide a pipeline for future Hispanic teachers to return to their communities and make a difference in our Valley.

About 80 percent of Fresno State graduates stay and work in the Valley.

In Fresno County, Hispanics only make up about 25 percent of the public school teachers while the student population is nearly 65 percent Hispanic, according to the California Department of Education.

Dr. Patricia D. López, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction at Fresno State, will oversee the grant. The Visalia native spent nearly a decade overseeing the “Grow Your Own” teacher initiatives focused on developing partnerships to increase the number of Latinx teachers nationwide.

López will work to recruit high school students to attend the community colleges. The first cohort of 30 students on each campus will start in fall 2019 by taking Associate to Degree Transfer courses, and after two years will transfer to Fresno State to pursue their bachelor’s degrees in liberal studies and multiple subject credentials. They will also have an opportunity to obtain their bilingual certification. Each campus will have a designated resident counselor and director to support students.

“We’re completely strengthening and finding new ways to build the capacity of local communities,” López said. “This is an opportunity for us to underscore the things that we are already doing well.”

In addition to increasing the number of Hispanic teachers, the program will help retention as well. The idea behind recruiting from the community is that once finished with their degrees, students will remain local to teach in the Valley.

These are the students with the biggest heart and dedication for their hometowns where they feel they can make a difference, López said.

“We have many young people here that are committed to contributing to the Valley.”


Written by: BoNhia Lee, Fresno State Communication Specialist. Read full article here.

Oktoberfest Funds Scholarships for Students

The Louise Sorrenti Petrosino Scholarship has been impactful for Marivel Bravo-Mendosa’s life.

The Petrosino Scholarship is one of many scholarships that are funded through the Kremen School of Education Alumni and Friends Chapter’s Oktoberfest. This annual event includes a silent auction and ticket sales that assist with raising money for scholarships to give back to Kremen School of Education and Human Development students.

Bravo-Mendosa, Master of Science in Counseling – Student Affairs and College Counseling student, stated how this scholarship has allowed her to commit 100% to her studies.

“As a graduate student I’m so busy, I’m always somewhere, I’m always doing something. But the reason I moved to Fresno was so that I would be able to afford living here on my own, I do not live here with my family, so I pay my own rent, my own bills, groceries. And that also means my own tuition.”

Bravo-Mendosa works on campus as an Intern Advisor at the Study Abroad Office. This paid internship allows her to fulfill her graduate program’s required internship hours while assisting with some of her expenses.

“I do receive a little bit with FAFSA, but everything else I have to come up with on my own. So not only did the scholarship help me cover my tuition and fees, but because of that I don’t have to be as stressed out trying to come up with the rest and trying to come up with funding for tuition and my own personal finances.”

Scholarships truly impact student’s lives and help make it possible for them to be successful during their academic journey.

“I’m definitely very very grateful for the community support that I’ve received with this scholarship. I feel like somebody invests in me, and that really inspires me and really motivates me to do the same when I make it, when I finally get to where I want to be. And to do the same to give back the way it was given to me.”

Learn more about how you can support students at the Kremen School of Education and Human Development here.