Phoenix Charter Academy Network
05/07/2024
We're thrilled to announce that we have two exciting opportunities available for Bilingual School Social Workers to join our dedicated team at Phoenix Charter Academy. We're on the lookout for individuals who are fluent in Spanish or Portuguese and eager to support our diverse student community.
Apply Now! https://bit.ly/4drllML
Bilingual Social Worker - Careers At Phoenix Charter Academy Job Summary The Bilingual School Social Worker will be part of the Student Support Team at Phoenix Charter Academy They will work in a dynamic school environment that values collaboration and teamwork The Social Worker will be responsible for case management referral management and coordination with...
02/12/2024
"Embracing our past, celebrating our present, and shaping our future!" ✊🏿✊🏾✊🏼Happy Black History Month from all of us at Phoenix Charter Academy! Here at Phoenix we are proud to celebrate and affirm the identities of our incredible Black students, staff, and families. From Black literature book clubs to Soul Food Lunch celebrations, from door decorations to mural painting, our schools are going above and beyond to honor Black heritage, and to ensure that we continue to celebrate Black excellence all year long. See below for a few examples from our Chelsea campus, and keep an eye out for more later this month!
11/21/2023
November is Native American Heritage Month! This year, we’d like to feature a new staff member, Olivia Larson-Locke. Olivia was born in Utah and was adopted shortly after her birth by a non-Native couple. Olivia’s birth mother, Leonna, was born to the Shoshone Tribe and was herself adopted by a non-Native family. As the adopted daughter of an adopted daughter, someone twice removed from her tribe and its land, Olivia still managed to find a connection to her roots...it just took some time. But then again, according to Olivia, "everything happens for a reason."
“Before I graduated from high school, I had been enrolled in 13 different schools...that’s one per year! At one point I was getting in so much trouble that I was sent to a wilderness program for troubled young women and eventually to a therapeutic boarding school for long-term placement. The conditions at both were tough, but one of the things I loved about them was how grounded they were in nature and in indigenous traditions. We would sit in circle, spend evenings in sweat lodges, and take long hikes in the woods each day. We shared Native American sayings, and learned about indigenous spiritual practices. I’m not a religious person, but these experiences put me become in touch with my spiritual side, helping me to overcome some trouble and trauma as a teenager. That spirituality is also something I'm fortunate enough to share with my adopted mother, too.”
For Olivia, nature has been an important way for her to feel connected to her birth mother’s heritage. “I’ve always felt a strong connection to animals (especially horses!) and to nature more generally. I know myself well enough to know that I couldn’t live in a city full time - I need to have space and fresh air. When the weather is nice enough, I’m always walking barefoot, so that I can feel connected to the earth. It’s something you can’t see, but can definitely feel.”
“Being Native American is something that has brought me so much comfort, and a sense of belonging in a world where I didn’t always feel that. I’ve been in a lot of positions in my life where things have been taken away from me, including my physical freedom. But my Native American heritage is something which can never be taken away from me, and that has kept me going.”
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