GA Student Wins $5,000 in Scholarships Using Rubin “Storytelling” Method

cover letter for college and career readiness

GA Student Wins $5,000 in Scholarships Using Rubin “Storytelling” Method

The ultimate goal at Rubin is to provide teachers with high quality resources for college and career readiness they can share with students.

We have no better example of such a pursuit than Lamar County Schools in Georgia southwest of Atlanta.

Ms. Sharonda Bostic, a CTAE (career, technical and agriculture education) teacher in Lamar County, employs the Rubin “storytelling” method for cover letters and job interviews.

In short, the story approach encourages students to share an example of a time they overcame a challenge (ex: school project, part-time job) rather than use words like “hardworking” or “problem solver.”

Shorter than that, it means: show me, don’t tell me.

Ms. Bostic went further. She helped her own son use the narrative approach for college scholarship essays.

Lo and behold, her son won big — to the tune of $5,000 across five different scholarships. He begins college in fall 2022.

“What better proof do I need?” Bostic said. “Rubin’s techniques win, plain and simple.”

At Rubin, we want teachers to embrace our methods and share them with students to achieve real-world results.

All you need to know is $5,000 in scholarship money from a short story about work ethic.

What’s your student’s story worth?

Explore our robust Emerge curriculum (which includes our “storytelling” unit) and find out!

cover letter for college and career readiness

The ultimate goal at Rubin is to provide teachers with high quality resources for college and career readiness they can share with students.

We have no better example of such a pursuit than Lamar County Schools in Georgia southwest of Atlanta.

Ms. Sharonda Bostic, a CTAE (career, technical and agriculture education) teacher in Lamar County, employs the Rubin “storytelling” method for cover letters and job interviews.

In short, the story approach encourages students to share an example of a time they overcame a challenge (ex: school project, part-time job) rather than use words like “hardworking” or “problem solver.”

Shorter than that, it means: show me, don’t tell me.

Ms. Bostic went further. She helped her own son use the narrative approach for college scholarship essays.

Lo and behold, her son won big — to the tune of $5,000 across five different scholarships. He begins college in fall 2022.

“What better proof do I need?” Bostic said. “Rubin’s techniques win, plain and simple.”

At Rubin, we want teachers to embrace our methods and share them with students to achieve real-world results.

All you need to know is $5,000 in scholarship money from a short story about work ethic.

What’s your student’s story worth?

Explore our robust Emerge curriculum (which includes our “storytelling” unit) and find out!

Marketing teacher Anna-Lisa Wanack from Nacogdoches Independent School District in Texas stands by her Rubin poster about the power of strong writing. Wanack relied on Rubin when she taught in Virginia Beach City Public Schools in Virginia. As soon as she landed in Texas, the Rubin posters and employability skills products returned.