By: John Wofford ā13
Published on

Success stories come in many shapes and sizes, especially in the field of education.
Some students achieve academic success right away. Others overcome serious challenges
to creating the life they want for themselves. Each journey is unique, and itās often
those personal challenges that inspire individuals to reach out to others who go through
similar experiences. Take Kevin Haff-Robydek, Special Education teacher and Aquinas
graduate.
āI first went to Aquinas for my Bachelorās Degree,ā Haff-Robydek said. āI only spent
about two years there. I didnāt do that well academically. As a kid, I was in and
out of foster homes. I just didnāt have a lot of support.ā Haff-Robydek eventually
graduated elsewhere. Despite leaving Aquinas, Haff-Robydek had built a connection
to the College that he couldnāt deny. āI always enjoyed Aquinas,ā he said. āI always
thought it was a great school. A lot of my friends from that time are still friends
of mine today.ā Perhaps it was these connections that turned Haff-Robydekās eye once
again to Aquinas when, years later, he decided to pursue a career in teaching: āI
got into the Master in Education ±č°ł“Dzµ°ł²¹³¾.ā
But how does a once-struggling student decide that the education system is the place
where his calling lies? Through his own connections to young people. āI had been coaching
football for about eight, maybe nine, years at that time,ā Haff-Robydek said. āI also
had been volunteering with coaching some younger kids. I just always loved kids.ā
Haff-Robydekās job also played a significant role: āI went back to work at Wedgwood
Christian Services, which is a residential treatment program. Thatās for kids that
are pulled out of foster homes; theyāre usually... kids that basically have nowhere
to go.ā
Working with young people who have experienced many significant obstacles in only
a few short years has an impact, even on those who went through similar experiences
themselves. āI found a lot of those kids had learning disabilities, things going on
in their lives,ā Haff-Robydek said. He had notable success in his work at Wedgwood.
āWhile I worked there, the restraints went down. A lot of those kids get restraints
because they will either hurt themselves or others.ā
Haff-Robydek was determined to be a part of the solution, to slow the spiral of young
people who have slipped through the cracks of society and lost control of their own
behaviors. āIf I could work with these kids a little sooner - if I could work with
them beforehand - we could prevent some of these kids from getting in that situation,
that would be huge.ā
Enter Aquinas College: round two. Haff-Robydek enrolled in the Education program,
his purpose clear. Were there obstacles to his academic success this time around?
āIt wasnāt necessarily a challenge once I decided to get my certificate, but deciding
to get my certificate was a long process,ā he said. He added that it was important
for him to realize āthatās the direction God wanted me to go in. So once I prayed
to God and realized thatās the direction I wanted to go, I went for it.ā Haff-Robydek
continued to work at Wedgwood while attending Aquinas, embodying through his example
the Dominican charisms (core spiritual values) of prayer, study, community and service.
āI was drawn to Aquinas partly because I wasnāt successful the first time, and people
were really good to me there,ā Haff-Robydek said. āI just wasnāt, at the time because
of the things that happened to me as a kid, I wasnāt mature enough. I didnāt have
the support system to be able to make it. [Aquinas] is that small community where
people draw you in, and they take care of you. And obviously it has an amazing reputation
in the Grand Rapids area - and I think throughout the state of Michigan - with education.ā
A 2010 graduate of Aquinas College, Haff-Robydek is now a teacher at a Portland public
high school. He was also recently accepted by the University of Michigan to complete
his Educational Specialistās degree, specifically in Educational Leadership. āI would
see me being either a principal, or eventually a superintendent,ā he said of his future
plans. Haff-Robydek is quick to bring the focus back to his current teaching work
in Special Education. āAs a Special Education teacher, it is the most wonderful, amazing
job that anybody could ever have! Every day I get to see kids reach success that they
never thought they could.ā