Johana Ibarra, Dreaming of a bright future
By her reckoning, some of the teachers Johana Ibarra ran into as an immigrant at a
San Diego elementary school were far from stellar.
鈥淚 was there for two weeks before they realized I didn鈥檛 speak any English,鈥 Ibarra said. 鈥淭hey thought I was just a quiet little girl who didn鈥檛 say much.鈥
鈥淚 was there for two weeks before they realized I didn鈥檛 speak any English,鈥 Ibarra said. 鈥淭hey thought I was just a quiet little girl who didn鈥檛 say much.鈥
Ibarra鈥檚 solution: become an elementary school teacher herself. Thanks to Cuyamaca
College, she is well on her way.
Carrying a GPA that is just one 鈥淏鈥 shy of a 4.0, Ibarra volunteers as a peer mentor
with both the Resources for Immigrant Students in Education (RISE) and the Cuyamaca
College Pathway Academy and serves as an Associated Student Government senator.
She volunteers with a variety of organizations, including the nonprofit One.org, and is on track to earn an associate degree in elementary teacher education in the spring of 2020. Ibarra has her sights set on transferring to San Diego State University or UC San Diego in the fall of 2020.
She volunteers with a variety of organizations, including the nonprofit One.org, and is on track to earn an associate degree in elementary teacher education in the spring of 2020. Ibarra has her sights set on transferring to San Diego State University or UC San Diego in the fall of 2020.
Her accomplishments resulted in a California Coast Credit Union Scholarship from the
Foundation for Grossmont & Cuyamaca Colleges, and she will be among the dozens of
students honored at a January scholarship award reception.
Ibarra, a Dreamer brought by her parents across the border without proper documentation, never envisioned her journey taking her to Cuyamaca College.
Born in the city of Tepic in the western Mexican state of Nayarit, Ibarra moved with
her parents and younger sister to the San Diego region when she was 7. She spoke no
English. Making matters worse, kids in her second-grade classroom often picked on
her because of her clothes and the way she wore her hair. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 get much support,鈥
she said.
It wasn鈥檛 until middle school that Ibarra began to feel comfortable, thanks in large
part to an English teacher who helped build her confidence and determination to become
fluent in the language and thrive in school. A Monte Vista High School teacher built
on that confidence and encouraged her to become involved campus service organizations.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 underestimate how a good teacher can change your life,鈥 Ibarra said.
鈥淢y dream is to become an elementary school teacher because I want to give children
the joy and comfort they need and deserve. I want to teach children what is right
and what is wrong so kids like me don鈥檛 have to feel like they do not belong in a
place that is technically their second home. I also want children to understand that
being from a different country and speaking a different language is not something
to be ashamed of.鈥
Ibarra, whose long-term goal includes earning a doctorate in education, was hoping
to enroll at a four-year college or university after graduating from Monte Vista High
School with straight A鈥檚. She was accepted to several, but her family couldn鈥檛 afford
it. Cuyamaca College was her only option.
鈥淎t first, I was a little ashamed because it seems like people look at a community
college as something less prestigious, and also all through high school my goal was
to go to a university,鈥 Ibarra said. 鈥淏ut coming here made sense. It鈥檚 just down the
street from my house. It鈥檚 a beautiful campus. Even though I鈥檓 a Dreamer, everyone
here is so supportive. Everyone is here to help. It鈥檚 at the point now that I鈥檓 sad
that I鈥檓 leaving.鈥