BES alumna Kayla Colona has found her niche at Mission: St. Louis

by | Jun 20, 2018

The 2015 graduate oversees the volunteer program at the Beyond School portion of the local nonprofit, which works with underserved communities.
Kayla Colona

Kayla Colona, a 2015 Bachelor of Educational Studies graduate, first heard about Mission: St. Louis during an agency fair at UMSL. Now, she serves as the organization’s volunteer coordinator for the Beyond School program. (Photo by August Jennewein)

Kayla Colona had an awesome first-grade teacher. So exceptional, in fact, that growing up in south St. Louis County, Colona couldn’t think of a better way to spend her life than replicating that experience for schoolchildren to come.

She went to the University of Missouri–St. Louis with the clear aim of becoming an elementary school teacher.

“I was going to be a traditional teacher in a classroom,” Colona said. “That is not what I am doing, at all.”

She discovered something she likes even better at an agency fair at UMSL. The College of Education brings partner agencies to campus each semester so students can learn about the work being done to make a difference for underserved students. That’s where she first heard about Mission: St. Louis and its Beyond School program.

Colona volunteered as a class requirement, which is part of the program design for all teacher preparation students at UMSL, to give them a chance to get working experience and find the career that will be right for them. She stayed on after she had fulfilled her assignment. After she graduated from UMSL with a Bachelor of Educational Studies in 2015, she came back to Mission: St. Louis on a part-time basis while doing a year of service with AmeriCorps. Last year, she was hired as Beyond School’s full-time volunteer coordinator.

“I just loved it and fell in love with the students I was working with,” Colona said. “The values and just the staff in general at Mission: St. Louis, every single person there is so passionate about revitalizing St. Louis. They believe in it. They believe in the people of St. Louis. I think that’s super cool, and I want to be a part of that.”

Mission: St. Louis takes a three-pronged approach to helping transform “lives, families and neighborhoods” of traditionally underserved people in the city. The Beyond School program provides an expanded learning opportunity for students to help raise their math and reading levels, as well as social/emotional learning and community service activities.

Beyond School worked with 136 students during the 2017-18 school year: 77 from the St. Louis Language Immersion School‘s Spanish campus on Papin Street and 59 from St. Louis College Prep. It’s the sort of intensive 1-on-1 tutelage that schools just aren’t able to provide during instruction hours.

“We’ve seen a huge amount of growth in reading and math with our students and getting them up to grade level,” Colona said. “Students in our program see a future. Not that they didn’t see a future before, but a lot of times you can get stuck in this mindset of, ‘I’m probably not going to graduate high school, definitely not going to go to college.’ With a lot of them, I see a difference in what they see themselves doing in their future.”

Colona’s “volunteer coordinator” title encompasses a variety of duties. Beyond School relies on volunteer academic mentors, so Colona is in charge of recruiting and communicating with them. She also leads two liaisons, who coordinate the volunteers at each site, and an enrichment specialist, who is in charge of coming up with 12 experiential learning classes and community service activities each semester for the students.

Colona served as the enrichment specialist at College Prep this year. Next year, she’ll run her team from Beyond School’s new, third site at the SLLIS French and Chinese School on Marine Avenue.

And, of course, duties as otherwise assigned.

“Sometimes we need somebody to take the van to get an oil change or take this kid home on a whim. Things come up,” said Erin Malone, director of Beyond School. “She’s always very willing to do whatever it takes to help out our students and our team.”

Malone has seen Colona’s passion for her work since she started as a 1-on-1 student mentor during her time at UMSL. Colona exulted in her pupil’s successes and was understanding and empathetic during the boy’s bad days.

The connection between teacher and student was anything but superficial.

“There needs to be a genuine care for students and love for them. We need to recognize that there’s potential in all students, and then be willing to be patient and see that through, even though our students are at many different levels emotionally, academically, socially,” Malone said. “Sometimes it can be a little bit messy, but it’s just being willing to put themselves out there – Kayla definitely does that.”

Colona didn’t even know about the BES program at UMSL until a trip to her advisor’s office, right around the time she was figuring out that elementary education wasn’t exactly right for her. It was also around this time that Mission: St. Louis came into her life and gave her a glimpse into a nonprofit educational enterprise.

She’s still fulfilling a desire she has held for nearly as long as she can remember. It’s just taken a slightly different form.

“We all love kids and working with them, but it can be exhausting,” Colona said. “So having a good team of people, a good support system is basically what you have to be when you’re working with students. More than half of the satisfaction is the students, getting to see growth. The other part is just it’s a really great team of people who are passionate.”

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David Morrison

David Morrison