Archive for October, 2013

283. Repioneering Education

I was pleased to read in last week’s Albion News that the Boone Central School’s Career Academies program is off to a good start. In the past high school students with an interest in certain fields, including teaching, could do job shadowing in the school or community.  The new Career Academies program takes this much farther and has the potential to be of great benefit to both our students and our community.

Recently Boone Central Guidance Counselor Lynne Webster was kind enough to explain this program to me.  Boone Central is on the forefront of efforts to help students identify their career interest and gain real-world experience in that field while still in high school.  Not only does this help students plan for college, it demonstrates that rewarding careers in a variety of fields are available not just in cities but in this area as well.  Lynne told me that a significant number of Boone Central students want to come back to this area after college, and this program is helping them realize that there are more rewarding career paths here than many young people imagine.

Potential careers are grouped into six clusters: Agriculture, Food & Natural Resources; Communication and Information Systems; Business Management; Skilled and Technical Sciences; Human Services and Health Science. So far 22 local businesses are working with the school by providing internships.  Some businesses have even said they will help students who prove to be a good match for their line of work with their college expenses.

Careers in the Health Science cluster are particularly popular today and Boone Central is working with the local Good Samaritan Care Center so that starting next year students can earn their Certified Nursing Assistant certification which they would otherwise have to take classes in Norfolk to obtain.  And next year Boone Central students will also be able to get a head start on an Associates Degree at Central Community College through some programs.

Students don’t always know, though, what they want to be when they grow up in time to take advantage of these new opportunities.  To address this, Boone Central is continuing its partnerships between local businesses and elementary classes to give students exposure to the work world as early as possible.  In Middle School students now take field trips to businesses in each of the six career clusters. Students also take an extensive Interest Inventory that helps identify their strengths and aptitudes in all six clusters.

Once in High School students study more about each of the six clusters and explore career opportunities in this area.  Those who pursue the Career Academies pathway spend the first semester of their Junior year learning communication skills and professional etiquette.  Then in the second semester they begin interviewing for an internship.  Area businesses are willing to help students, but only if those students have the skills and the interests necessary for them to do well in that particular vocation.  These internships are not a way to get out of class for a while – students will be monitored as closely by the businesses as they would be at school, and will have at least as much expected of them.

Boone Central has shown great foresight in developing this progressive approach to education.  By helping students identify their interests at an early age and partnering with area businesses so students can gain real-world experience, Boone Central is repioneering the school/community relationship.  Through their Career Academies program, which currently has 28 students involved, Boone Central is making it easier for young people to build their lives here while providing local businesses with an expanded pool of skilled new workers.

282. “He May Run…”

Making decisions can be tough, especially when you’re young.  Our son Thomas tried cross country and football in middle school and liked them both.  It wasn’t easy to choose one, but he decided now that he’s in high school that cross country is a better fit.

Thomas has really been putting his all into his running and is doing better and better as the season progresses.  Thanks to GPS Lori and I’ve found our way to all his races and it’s been great to become part of a very warm and welcoming cross country family.

Like all the runners, Thomas is working hard to improve.  Last Thursday he finally finished in the top ten but it took everything he had.  After the race he put his arm around my shoulder for support and couldn’t seem to catch his breath.  Fortunately, a teammate’s mother, Patti Meyer, came over and helped him take slower, deeper breaths which helped him recover.

Seeing Thomas struggle to breathe really got to me, and not just because no parent wants to see their child in distress.  Being winded is to be expected at the end of a race.  But seeing Thomas like this took me back to a night when he was just two months old and his breathing had been just as labored.

We thought maybe it was croup so we shut the bathroom door and turned on the hot water.  But that didn’t help.  Finally, around 3 a.m., we took him to the Emergency Room.  We should have done so sooner – when we arrived he was cyanotic – turning blue from lack of oxygen.  Thomas had developed double pneumonia.

Morning finally came but he wasn’t getting any better.  Lori and I sat watching him struggle for every breath.  Hour after hour I silently debated whether it was time for our older children, William and Angela, to come tell their beloved little brother goodbye.  I knew how traumatic it would be, but I didn’t want them to miss their last farewell.

Our physician, Dr. Kusek, kept a positive attitude throughout this ordeal, and that helped us cling to hope.  He indicated afterwards, though, that my fear of losing Thomas had been justified.

Lori and I took turns staying with Thomas day and night at the hospital.  Finally, after a week of round the clock care, he came home.  But so did something called a “nebulizer” which we used to give Thomas four breathing treatments every single day for a year.

Slowly but surely Thomas got better, and eventually Dr. Kusek told us that because Thomas was so young he might recover enough to be able to run someday.  At the time I didn’t care – all I wanted was for him to be able to breathe.  But boy was Dr. Kusek right – now Thomas won’t let anything slow him down, including being barely able to breathe at the end of a long and grueling race.