As a student new to Bryn Mawr in the sixth grade, Blien Habtu ’17 faced a situation in which countless other students have found themselves: making new friends and becoming comfortable in a new school. One of the first activities she remembers helping with her transition was Bryn Mawr’s Peer Education program. “It was really nice to have older role models to look up to,” Habtu says. “We got to meet these incredible older girls and talk about life and friendship. That’s such an important thing in the sixth grade.”
After such a positive experience, it seemed very natural that, three years later when Habtu was finishing her ninth grade year, she would apply to become a Peer Educator herself. “I was really influenced by it, and so I wanted to take this opportunity and do the same thing for someone else,” Habtu says.
Now a senior, Habtu has worked with the program for three years. Not only has it allowed her to make a positive impact on younger students, but it has also affected the way she lives her own life. “It has made me a better friend, and helped me know what to do in situations that I never really thought I would have to deal with,” she reflects.
Habtu is just one of thousands of Baltimore students who have been reached through the Christopher O’Neil Peer Education Program. First established in 1994 at Loyola Blakefield, the program was created by Pam and Tom O’Neil in memory of their son, Christopher, who was killed in 1992 at the age of 17 in a car accident involving a teenage drunk driver. Today, 11 different Baltimore independent schools take part in the program, the overarching goal of which is to educate students about a range of topics connected to physical and emotional wellbeing.
Bryn Mawr’s chapter of the program began in 1995; the school was the second member-school to join. Although the goals of the program are the same, each school runs its chapter slightly differently, says Upper School Counselor Vicki Mermelstein, who oversees the program at Bryn Mawr. “We target girls in the fifth and sixth grades, because that’s when peer influence becomes stronger,” Mermelstein says. “Our focus is not necessarily about drugs and alcohol, but about how to make good decisions.”
Each fall, current ninth graders are invited to apply for one of the six Peer Educator spots available for their grade. The hope is that the girls selected will remain with the program throughout the duration of their Upper School careers, providing a total of 18 Peer Educators across the tenth, eleventh and twelfth grades. The program is considered a leadership opportunity on par with other school-wide organizations.
For Rachel Bogin ’17, Peer Education has been a defining experience of her Upper School experience. Bogin was new to Bryn Mawr in the ninth grade, and came from a school she had attended since kindergarten. “At first, I struggled to find my place and navigate the basics of academic and social life,” Bogin says. “After I got more comfortable, I really wanted to reach out to other students who may be struggling to navigate these things too.”