Stafford Technical Center DECA Chapter Inducts New Students

 

Stafford Technical Center DECA  Chapter Inducts New Students

On the evening of October 18, 2011  students, parents, friends and staff gathered to participate in the induction of new members to the Stafford Technical Center Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA) chapter.  DECA prepares emerging leaders and entrepreneurs in marketing, finance, hospitality and management. Students in the STC chapter participate in local, state and national DECA events and conferences. Their store, Campus Common Grounds has been Gold level certified for the past two years through DECA’s School Based Enterprise program.

Nick Sweet was recently elected as the Vermont DECA Vice President for the 2011-2012 school year. 

The following students were inducted to the STC DECA Chapter for the 2011-2012 school year:

Marisa Chamberlain, OVUHS-President

Nick Sweet, RHS-Vice President

Shelby Blackmer, FHUHS- Secretary

Alicia Hill, RHS-Treasurer

New members include:  George Berry, RHS

                                       Alayna Billings, MRUHS

                                       Lexi Champine, WRUHS

                                      Breeauna Frazier, RHS

                                      Kiley Gagnon, RHS

                                      Carolanne Greene, WRUHS

                                      Teresa Isabelle, Proctor HS

                                      Brandi Kapitan, OVUHS

                                     Sierra Quenneville, OVUHS

                                     Alyssa Ruiter, MRUHS

                                    Lindsey Ruiter, MRUHS

                                    Jackson Smith, OVUHS

                                    Katelyn Young, MRUHS

 

Stafford Teachers and Guidance Coordinator make High Honors

Stafford Technical Center is pleased to announce that three members of its staff have received special accolades for their contributions to the education profession. 

Susan Densmore, Stafford Technical Center’s  Human Services Instructor, is being honored as an Outstanding Teacher by the University of Vermont’s College of Education and Social Services & Vermont Supervisory Unions & School Districts.  The criteria for selection is  to exemplify one or more of the Five Standards for Vermont Educators-learning, professional knowledge, advocacy, colleagueship, and accountability.  Densmore has been  at Stafford for 25 years; first as a  pre-school teacher and then Human Services Instructor. She receives her award on October 19th in a ceremony at the University of Vermont.

Lori Cillo, Stafford Technical Center’s Guidance Coordinator, was the recipient of the Vermont School Counselor Association’s 2011-2012 James Cawley Outstanding Counselor of the Year Award. This award recognizes outstanding innovation and distinguished contributions to school counseling in Vermont.  Cillo has been a Guidance Coordinator at Stafford since 1999.  The award was presented at a statewide meeting of Guidance professionals on September 22nd.

Cheryl Niedzwiecki, Stafford Technical Center’s Hospitality & Entreprenuership Instructor, was acknowledged as the 2011 DECA Advisor of the Year at the annual Take the Helm Conference for Career & Technical Education held this past July.  DECA stands for Distributive Education Club of America and prepares high school and college students  for careers in marketing, finance, hospitality, and management. Niedzwiecki first began teaching in Stafford’s Culinary Arts Program in 1998 , becoming its Hospitality and Entreprenuership Instructor in 2001.

Stafford Students Become I-SAFE Mentors

Recently, the first year students in the Stafford Technical Center Public Safety Services Class became nationally certified as trainers in the area of internet safety. The training was provided by Paul Faenza, a retired NYPD Sgt. who is a master trainer through I-SAFE and is presently employed by the Black River Area Coalition. I- SAFE is the largest and most well-known source for internet safety materials and training.

  The train the trainer course that the students took had four main components; the students can offer any or all of the components in any trainings that they do in the future. The first element was cyberbullying, which is using a computer to harass someone else. This is most commonly done by teens that pick on another; sometimes, like in the case that occurred a few years ago inEssex, where fellow students harassed a teenager to the point where he committed suicide. Just recently, on the national scene, a mother was indicted in a similar case, where she allegedly harassed a classmate of her daughter until, she, too, killed herself.

  The second component of the class deals with illegal downloading and file sharing. The class had clips from stars of music and film who explained that their work was their intellectual property, and then when people illegally download and file share, that the artists, composers and performers all suffer personal financial losses. The class also makes people aware of the significant penalties that you can incur for doing this.

  The third area of concern is viruses, and other things that can damage or destroy computers. People who send viruses out to wreak their damage on others are hard to understand; they do it for the warped enjoyment that they get by hurting people who are strangers to them.

  Lastly, hacking, identity theft and internet scams are all too common. Most of us have received one or more “Nigerian scams”, where someone from Nigeria says that he has just come into a large sum of money (often under questionable legal circumstances), and would be happy to share that with you, if you provide a much smaller sum of money as a show of good faith. Of course, people who send the money never get anything in return. Others have purchased items through the internet only to find that they got nothing in return, or got something completely different than what they ordered. Even more sinister are scams that steal your credit card numbers and other personal identification, thus allowing the thieves to steal your identity in order to access your bank accounts and credit.

  The students who are now certified to provide this training to others are: Vinny Venturella, Megan Barber, Kayla Temple, Bryan Raiche and Logan Clark from Rutland High School, Chelsea Fitzgerald from Mill River Union High School, Brian Ward, Brandon Ellis, Emily Newton, Stephen Marcoux, and Dylan Goad from Fair Haven Union High School, Kody Baker, Colton Benoit, and Zach Field from Otter Valley Union High School, Aaron Hildebrand from Rutland Area Christian School, and Tyler Manning and Alison DeRoy from Poultney High School. The students are now available to do presentations to school groups, Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts, church youth groups and other groups that would benefit from this program.

Stafford Technical Center’s Power Mechanics/Welding Students Go Green to Earn Green

Stafford Technical Center’s Power Mechanics/Welding Program is once again thinking green. They are asking for donations of recycled lawnmowers, garden tractors, compact equipment, all terrain vehicles, and motorcycles for their student projects.  The students work on the equipment throughout the school year and are able to sell some of the pieces to earn money for their program.  If you would like to make an equipment donation to Stafford’s Power Mechanics/Welding Program contact instructor Kevin Corkins at (802) 770-1058 or email [email protected], and they will be happy to pick it up.

Stafford VTLSP Members and RRMC Run a Texting While Driving Simulation at the Recent RRMC Wellness Fair

    At the Wellness Fair sponsored by theRutlandRegionalMedicalCenter, a number of attendees were able to see firsthand the dangers of texting while driving. Using a design developed by the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles, the event staff, which consisted of four members ofStaffordTechnicalCenter’s Vermont Teen Leadership Safety Program (VTLSP) Chapter and adult volunteers, made a figure eight course bounded by over 100 traffic cones, for participants to drive golf carts through. The participants would drive through the course once without texting and once while attempting to send a text to a specific phone number. One of the VTLSP members “rode shotgun” with the participant in the golf cart, and timed the course as well as documenting the driving errors, which would correspond to a vehicle crash. As expected, the participants universally did worse while texting, taking a longer period of time, while committing significantly more traffic errors.

  The VTLSP members who helped set up, maintain, and take down the course, as well as documenting the performance of the participants, were Kim Rupe, a senior from Poultney High School, Aaron Hildebrand of Mount Holly, a senior from Rutland Area Christian School, Vinny Venturella of Chittenden, a junior at Rutland High School, and Dylan Goad of Castleton, a junior at Fair Haven Union High School. The adults who volunteered their time on this project were Laura Vien of RAVNAH, Susie Lebel and Nancy Brower from RRMC, radio personality Nancy Gordon, and Stafford VTLSP Advisor John D’Esposito. A number of the participants shared their own experiences regarding using handheld electronic devices while driving (they said that they had already had crashes as a result) or said that they would tell their family members what they had learned. Some of those who were successful in sending out texts while driving the golf carts were surprised to find that they had sent the text to the wrong number or that the text was completely mixed up and sometimes unintelligible.

    The participants were informed that the amount of time that it takes to text, at 60 miles per hour, would result in the vehicle traveling the length of a football field. Statistically speaking, a person is more likely to be involved in a traffic crash while riding with a texting driver than with a driver who is legally intoxicated.

Photo: Vinny Venturella of Chittenden and Dylan Goad of Castleton do a test drive of the texting while driving course

Stafford Student wins Vermont Teen Leadership Safety Program Highway Safety Contest

Stafford Technical Center’s Vermont Teen Leadership Safety Program, a teen-led group dedicated to promoting highway safety, recently announced the winner of their 2011 “Save Our Students” highway safety contest. All Stafford students were offered the opportunity to sign a responsible highway user’s pledge that as a driver, they would not speed or text while driving, and would always wear their safety belt and otherwise be a safe driver. Passengers pledged to not distract the driver or act unsafely, and to always wear their safety belts.

  VTLSP member Kim Rupe, a junior from Poultney High School, came up with this year’s incentive, a CITGO gas card in the amount of $425. The Chapter got a grant from the state VTLSP organization to buy the card, and married the grant with a donation by Sherman V. Allen, Inc., the local CITGO gas supplier, and operator of the Mac’s Convenience Stores.

   At the recent awards ceremony at Stafford Technical Center, Director Lyle Jepson chose the winning entry, and the prize was awarded to Katelynn Dorman, a Rutland High School junior in the Human Services Program. She will be returning to Stafford next year as a member of the new Cosmetology Program. The award was made by VTLSP members Kim Rupe and Emily Johnson, a senior from West Rutland.

Pre School’s Out…. for Summer

Stafford Technical Center’s Pre-School recently held its end of the year closing ceremonies in the Rutland High School Theater.  Family and friends gathered for special musical numbers performed by the pre-schoolers along with their “Big Friends” , the students in Stafford’s Human Services Program.

Pictured L-R: Front row-Landon Lathrop, Ava Bishop, Madison Fernan, Gabrielle Dydo, Ethan Wideawake, Ryan Dydo, Grace Courcelle, and Kaitlyn Sharp; Second row-Preston Flanders, Aliah Stilwell, Olivia Morneau, Emma Eckler, Elise Colomb, and Emma Tenner

Stafford Inducts 12 into National Technical Honor Society

Stafford Technical Center inducted 12 students into the National Technical Honor Society (NTHS) on May 12, 2011 during a candlelight ceremony in the Dollhouse Restaurant.  The mission of NTHS is to honor outstanding student achievement in career and technical education, promote educational excellence, and help to create strong partnerships with business and industry.  These students exemplify the core values of NTHS which are leadership, citizenship, service, honesty, responsibility, skill, and scholarship.  Stafford is very proud of these accomplished young people. 

Inductees Pictured L-R: Nicole Bogucki –Public Safety Services (Poultney High School), Alyssa Hartwell-Human Services (RHS), Emma Lamberton-Music Technology: Jazz & Contemporary (Home School), Molly Nickerson-Human Services (RHS), Alyssa Chereshkoff-Health Careers  (Otter Valley), Emily Booska-Human Services (Otter Valley), Esther Bove-Culinary Arts (Otter Valley), Bethany Alger-Culinary Arts (Fair Haven), Audrey Taft-Digital Arts (Otter Valley), Katie Perry-Digital Arts (Otter Valley), Jeremiah Cole-Automotive Technology (Otter Valley) and Katie Simons-Digital Arts (Poultney High School)

STC Hospitality and Entrepreneurship Students Attend National DECA Conference

STC Hospitality students recently attended the DECA International Career and Development Conference in Orlando, Florida April 29th through May 4th.

Ashley Carroll from Rutland High School and Courtney Mumford from Mill River Union High School attended the School Based Enterprise Academy. They did a presentation on Customer Service in their school based enterprise, Campus Common Grounds. They were awarded the School Based Enterprise Gold Level Re-certification for their work on the manual that was submitted to DECA earlier this year.  They were invited on stage during the parade of flags during the opening session of this year’s national DECA conference for receiving this honor.

 To see them on stage and to watch the Opening Session, please visit   www.pdcproductions/deca/ .

Aimee DuBray from Rutland High School  and Emily Patch from Mill River Union High School attended the Senior Management Institute.

Kayla Buckley from West Rutland High School and Brent White from Mill River Union High School competed in role plays and written tests in the divisions of Hotel and Lodging Management and Food Marketing, respectively. 

Nick Sweet from Rutland High School, and Vermont DECA Vice President, participated in the LEADS Academy and was one of two Vermont delegates to vote for the 2010-2011 National DECA Officers.

Over 15,000 students participated in the National DECA Conference this year which included visits to Disney World, Universal Studios, and Sea World.

Photo:  L-R:  Ashley Carroll (Rutland High School) and Courtney Mumford (Mill River Union High School) at School Based Enterprise Academy at DECA International and Development Conference in Orlando, Florida