Tag Archive: breakfast


Muffins for Moms

woman and child eating breakfast

Muffins for Moms provides an opportunity for positive female role models to join students for breakfast and enjoy quality time together. Photo courtesy Communities In Schools of Jacksonville.

Today’s blog post is by Erin Ocobock, Resource Development Specialist for Communities In Schools of Jacksonville, Florida.

Communities In Schools is about more than checking on students’ grades and attendance to see if they are staying on track for graduation. It’s about providing resources to help students choose success by offering support in every way we can. One way we can accomplish this is by appealing to adults who have the potential to be a positive role model on students’ educational achievement.

On Wednesday, October 10, Communities In Schools of Jacksonville hosted their 5th annual Muffins For Moms Breakfast at Biltmore Elementary School. This event provides an opportunity for mothers, grandmothers, sisters and other positive female role models to join students in the school for breakfast and enjoy quality time together.

More than 50 students and adults who attended the event in the school’s media center were greeted by all things “girlie”: pink tablecloths, sweet pastries, soft jazz music in the background and a powerful female role model: Santhea Brown, the first lady of Jacksonville. As the Mayor’s wife and a mother of two, Mrs. Brown knows a thing or two about educational issues and being involved with your child’s school. She spoke to the families about the importance of making a connection between school and home, and about how important it is for family members to be there for a student and be active in his or her education.

To the surprise of the staff, and Mrs. Brown herself, the Mayor decided to stop by in support of his wife’s presentation. The Mayor’s office has been a major supporter of Communities In Schools of Jacksonville, helping to secure funding for an after-school program and partnering with the affiliate on a mentor initiative, The Mayor’s Mentors.

Site Coordinator Bramley Ross has hosted Muffins For Moms once a year for the past three years. She also hosts its counterpart, Donuts For Dads, which will be held this year in January.

“These events have been such a success. After each one, family members always ask when the next one will be!” Ross said. She creates a relaxed atmosphere, making it easy for students and adults to be comfortable and excited to spend the morning together, taking in the words of encouragement from an influential guest speaker.

“The family members and students love being able to have this time at school to spend with one another – time that they might otherwise not have due to jobs and other life responsibilities.”

Site Coordinator Donna Wiseman.

As a teacher at North Rowan Elementary in Rowan County, N.C., for 31 years, Donna Wiseman absolutely loved her job. But her numerous duties as a teacher often left her without the time to give individual students the help they needed with problems that occurred outside of the classroom. So when Wiseman retired from academia seven years ago, she become a Communities In Schools site coordinator, and now has a chance to help children at North Rowan Elementary School in the ways she couldn’t as a teacher.

“It was not a hard transition from teacher to site coordinator at all,” said Wiseman. “When I was teaching, I always wanted the time to nurture and care for students, and sometimes I just couldn’t do that. So when I became a site coordinator, I was able to suggest to teachers, ‘let me help you find a mentor for that child, do you need me make a home visit.’ All those things that teachers would like to do but do not have the time for, I can now help meet those needs at North Rowan Elementary.”

As a site coordinator, Wiseman still loves to instill a love of learning within children. One of the first programs she ever created was a breakfast book club for students and their parents/guardians. Once a month students are invited to come to school early to eat a healthy breakfast, listen to a story and participate in fun activities that foster reader engagement and comprehension.

All the first and second-graders at North Rowan Elementary are invited to attend, but the rule is that they have to have a parent, adult family member or another responsible adult accompany them. Having this rule in place enables children to learn alongside a positive role model. Unfortunately, some children do not have parents who can participate, due to work and other commitments. Wiseman makes sure that some of these children are not left out of the program. A number of adults, including teachers and school staff members, volunteer to be “book buddies” and attend the breakfast book club with children who would otherwise be unable to attend.

breakfast book club

North Rowan Elementary Schools' breakfast book club.

“In the first year I expected to have maybe 15 people,” Wiseman said. “We registered about 50. And once parents know about the breakfast book club, they talk it up to other parents and get them involved. Sometimes they become book buddies even after their child has finished the program.”

Donna Wiseman is a teacher through and through. As a Communities In Schools site coordinator, she gets to fulfill her passion to help children get everything they need to succeed in the classroom and beyond.