
Vice Principal in North Tahoe, CA, and Watsonville Native.
How Aptos High alum helps migrant kids/first-gen get to college.
Introduction
I met Alejo Padilla one morning while waiting for a bus on a street corner of my neighborhood, Mesa Verde in Watsonville, CA. We attended grade school, middle school and high school together and always traveled on the same busses. While planning our fundraising for the Rosales Sisters’ Scholarship I reached out to Padilla for his thoughts on being first-generation at Aptos High. What I learned was that he has become an Assistant Principle at North Tahoe High School. It is there where he has implemented a program called GRIT, helping students get to college. He has inspired my sisters’ and I immensely, because he has shown exactly what can be possible when you are driven to change the narrative about the road to higher education. In this interview we discuss his experience in Watsonville, his own road to college and how GRIT has changed the lives of so many students in the North Tahoe area.
About
Alejo Padilla started his first teaching position at Harden Middle School as a social studies teacher. He moved to Galt High School and taught social studies, became athletic director and eventually assistant principal. He then moved to North Tahoe High School where he currently serves as assistant principal. It was at NTHS where he founded GRIT, a program that has awarded over $275,000 to NTHS Latino students in the previous year alone.

“There is no reason that a high achieving student should not attend a university because of missed deadlines!” – Alejo Padilla
Interview
We’d like to start by thanking you immensely for supporting the Rosales Sisters’ Scholarship. We are so excited to learn about your expertise as we start our non-profit. Since attending Aptos High in the class of 1998, you’ve become a teacher and administrator in the Sacramento area and now in North Tahoe, California. I can’t wait to talk about your program GRIT with our readers. It is exactly the type of program that I hoped for as a student. But before we start let’s talk about your experience growing up in Watsonville. What was it like?

Tell us about your parents and what you know about their experience?
My father immigrated to the United States in his mid-twenties and married my mom within a few years. He worked in agriculture for 40 years and he is happily retired.
How has your first-generation experience shaped you as an educator?
Who were the angels who helped you along the way?

Close to 20% of the entire student body (at NTHS) is in the GRIT program and committed to academic excellence.
Tell us about GRIT! How did it start?
NTHS GRIT students (have been awarded) $275,000 in scholarships last year.
What are the GRIT goals? Do you think the program would work in the same capacity at other high schools?

“The GRIT program supports NTHS Latino students from 9th grade through 12th grade… (they) receive academic support, college awareness support, and social emotional support. ” – Alejo Padilla
There are teachers, administrators, counselors, and coaches who want to help. Seek them out, work hard, and follow through.
As I mentioned above, your experience is really inspiring. Since my sisters and I started the RS Scholarship we’ve been dreaming about a program that would be about more than just giving away money – although that’s important too. With your program GRIT, you’ve provided a substantial change in students lives, and a roadmap for other communities like the one we grew up in. You’ve made real change for Latinx youth and we have to say thank you! Thank you Alejo – for this interview and for your commitment to Latinx students.
Now the big question for our readers is this, can we bring GRIT to the central coast? Can you help us? Email me directly at Olga@olgarosalessalinas.com.
If you would like to join us by donating to the Rosales Sisters' Scholarship in general, please donate do so here. We are a 501(c)3 organization. Tax ID #87-1608363


