Every once in a while you come across something so special it’s hard to believe it’s real. Usually I think of love – when I think of things that are unbelievable. Unconditional, redemptive, speechless love. There’s a corner of Georgetown, Texas – northwest of downtown, behind a jungle of cactus bushes and in between two fields – where that type of love is so apparent that you can feel it.
Annunciation Maternity Home is a home and charter school for young women who are learning how to be mothers, having their babies, and who are becoming equipped to be self-sufficient and successful in the face of an unplanned or crisis pregnancies. Linda Holmstrom is mother – or I should say grandmother – to almost 20 high-school aged women who are all either pregnant or raising newborns. She’s the executive director of the home, which also houses a University of Texas charter school.
This one-room, one-teacher school has a 100% TAKS passing rate and a self-paced curriculum that allows students to finish faster or slower, according to where they are with their grade level and/ or pregnancy. The schools is under alternate accountability, but by traditional guidelines would be considered an exemplary school. All of the women receive free counseling and therapy throughout their pregnancy, and half of the women receiving services live on site to and through their pregnancies – and until they graduate. Many enroll at Austin Community College and continue to receive support up to two years after delivery of their babies, who remain in the care of child life specialists during the day while students are in class.
Residents live in doubles, triples, or quads. Community food, bathrooms, changing tables, and toys for toddlers are neatly organized around the living space. Murals of mothers and their children and quotes about parenting serve as constant reminders of the blessings, and not the barriers, of their new lives. There is a tangible sense of hope.
“We want to remove every single barrier that we can; any reason a woman believes she can’t do something, we want to remove those thoughts. We want her to know she can live independently and support herself and her child without being subsidized by the government,” Holmstrom said.
I was able to tour the facility and meet some of the future and current mothers. A., a junior, will be delivering a baby boy in about 10 weeks, and was excited to be going on a weekend trip to San Antonio with her mother and sister. L., a college student at ACC who is now 20 weeks along, wants to be a social worker for children in foster care after her own experience as a foster child. M., held her baby close to her as we met and spoke; she glowed with uncertainty and pride and left quickly to attend to her newborn.
Meeting the staff at this school and the young women who attend it gave me so much hope in education and in the charter movement in general. Charter schools are diverse so they can educate a child in ANY circumstances. Annunciation Maternity Home is a perfect example of an effective special mission charter school.
I’ve never seen a place like this or a school like this one. Opportunity and possibility are so apparent in this dusty little corner of Georgetown that is bursting with light and life.To learn more about Annunciation Maternity home, visit www.thematernityhome.org
About the Author: Lindsey Windham is currently a teacher at YES Prep Public School and was a summer communications associate at TCSA. Lindsey remains active in TCSA and the charter school movement.




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