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The Latest Peace Corps News

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Sat, Jun 1, 2019 09:05 PM

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------=_Part_496054673_953975824.1559423126572 Content-Type: text/html;charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable decorative image [Peace Corps logo]( Press Release Peace Corps Director recognizes returned Volunteers making a difference in D.C. Public Schools 5/31/2019 9:25 PM [Four women stand together in a classroom holding a Peace Corps flag.] Pictured from left to right: Danielle Brooks, Emily Clayton, Director Jody Olsen and Katie Hamann. WASHINGTON – Peace Corps Director Jody Olsen met with representatives from the D.C. Public Schools Language Pathway Program (LEPP) at the West Education Campus last week to discuss the positive impact of returned Peace Corps volunteers in their local communities. The meeting included Emily Clayton, a D.C. Public Schools teacher who returned from her Peace Corps service in Nicaragua in 2014. As a fluent Spanish speaker with two years of experience living in Central America, Clayton finds she is able to easily connect through language and cultural understanding with her students, many of whom are first- or second-generation Americans. “I’ve taken the experiences I had as a Peace Corps volunteer in Nicaragua and brought them back to my work in the D.C. Public Schools system,” Clayton said. “As a teacher, there has been a direct correlation between the work I did during my service and the work I do now. Teaching without many resources and having flexibility and resiliency has prepared me and kept me grateful for what we have access to here in the United States.” D.C. Public Schools has collaborated with the Peace Corps for the LEPP program since 2016 with the purpose of connecting returned Volunteers to World Language and English Learner classrooms. Educators selected for this program are given the opportunity to continue developing their professional skills and careers in education in the D.C. Public Schools system, which places a high value on global competence. This year, the LEPP program has seen its highest number of returned Peace Corps volunteers yet, with five individuals currently in the program pipeline. “It excites me to see that the experiences Peace Corps volunteers are having in the field can be so relevant and easily translated to the career paths they take when they return home,” said Director Olsen. Also in attendance last week were Danielle Brooks, LEPP Teacher & Recruitment Pipeline Manager; Erika Pereira, LEPP Elementary English as a Second Language (ESL) Manager; and Katie Hamann, Program Specialist in the Peace Corps Office of Third Goal and Returned Volunteer Services. Many returned Peace Corps volunteers bring the skills they learned during service back to their communities in the United States. To learn more about how returned volunteers can be involved in the LEPP program in D.C., visit their  [website]( or connect with the Peace Corps  [Office of Third Goal](.   Read all of Peace Corps' press releases [here](.  [Peace Corps logo]( [Donate](   [Apply](   [About]( decorative image [View in Browser](  |  [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Privacy Policy]( This email was sent to {EMAIL} from Peace Corps - Paul D Coverdell Peace Corps Headquarters, 1111 20th Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20526 ------=_Part_496054673_953975824.1559423126572--

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