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Tag: K-12 Awareness

  • How Students Built Social Booths for Elder Texans with Support from Workforce Solutions Capital Area

    How Students Built Social Booths for Elder Texans with Support from Workforce Solutions Capital Area

    The elder population of Central Texas is one of the most impacted by COVID-19 and must live isolated to remain out of risk. To provide a space for elder Texans to feel connected and safely interact with their loved ones, Alzheimer’s Texas and the Austin chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA Austin) wanted to connect with local students, architects and builders to design and build social booths.

    In fall 2020, Alzheimer’s Texas and AIA Austin reached out to Workforce Solutions Capital Area to help identify students for this project. High school students designed and completed social booths that are allowing individuals with Alzheimer’s and dementia to safely interact with their families over the holidays.

    “These booths are love letters from the communities to the caregivers, to the families, and to the residents,” Ron Morelli, Director of Constituent Relations for Alzheimer’s Texas, said.

    Seven groups of four to five students each from schools in Austin, Manor and Round Rock ISDs, KIPP public charter schools and American YouthWorks participated in designing and constructing these booths. AIA Austin connected students with local builders, and St. David’s HealthCare donated funds for the student groups to purchase materials. In addition, the Gulf Coast Carpenters & Millwrights Training Trust Fund identified a builder and donated many supplies to KIPP’s project.

    These booths arrived at local assisted living facilities just in time for the holiday season!

    “What the three organizations achieved by partnering with each other allowed us a whole, not only to give back to our community, but to create experiences for students to participate and learn throughout the process. The students have been so enthusiastic to provide a real-world solution to the physical separation that COVID-19 has created between individuals,” said Viviana Trevino, designer with Page Southerland Page (an architecture/engineering firm) and Co-Chair of AIA Austin Design Voice.

    Workforce Solutions Capital Area provided each student with a $500 stipend through a generous grant from Texas Mutual Insurance Company. This project would not have been possible without the connections that our team of four workforce and career development outreach specialists have developed with our local school districts to identify groups of students to work on this project.

    Alzheimer’s Texas recently applied to the national Alzheimer’s Association to fund additional social booths. Out of all the grant applications in the nation, Alzheimer’s Texas received a $25,000 grant to scale up this work across the state of Texas!

    “Being socially connected in meaningful ways is vital to brain health and survival. We wanted to reimagine how we provided support during an incredibly stressful and isolating time,” said Catherine Campbell, Alzheimer’s Texas executive director.

    “This project initially started as a way to connect families with their loved ones but also realize it’s connecting the hearts and minds of multiple generations. It’s been truly heartwarming to witness how these talented students and the central Texas community have come together to build something extraordinary,” Catherine said.

    “Knowing we were all able to do something for the community feels great. I love seeing their smiles, their joy, their appreciation for what we did for them.” Calista Velarde, American YouthWorks.

    “I think the booth will open more opportunities for families to see their loved ones while keeping everyone safe. I thought this project was a great opportunity to get some hands-on learning experience and a great way to give back to the community,” said Jonathan Gonzales, a student with American YouthWorks.

    “Knowing we were all able to do something for the community feels great. I love seeing their smiles, their joy, their appreciation for what we did for them,” said Calista Velarde, a student with American YouthWorks.

    Learn about the design process from the students and architects and how they were able to provide a safe space for connectivity in this story from Austin Design Week!

    Want to know more about how Workforce Solutions Capital Area assists students, job seekers, employers and educators to explore in-demand career pathways in Central Texas? Go to ClimbtheLadderCTX.com!

  • At Westview Middle School, an Eighth Grade Group Inspires the Student Body About Future Careers in the Central Texas Workforce

    At Westview Middle School, an Eighth Grade Group Inspires the Student Body About Future Careers in the Central Texas Workforce

    For Westview Middle School in Pflugerville Independent School District, February was a big month for career exploration.

    Sixteen eighth graders, participating in the civics program Speak Up, Speak Out, hosted their school’s first career fair on February 7 with assistance from Victoria Leonardo, our Career & Education Outreach Specialist for Pflugerville Independent School District.

    Speak Up, Speak Out is a civic education program designed to teach third grade through twelfth grade students about their communities, and is led by the Moody College of Communication at the university of Texas at Austin.

    “Many of the students have parents who work low-skill jobs, so the youth think that’s all that is available to them,” Victoria said. “With this event, we can introduce them to many different occupations that they may have not thought about before and understand what it takes to get these jobs.”

    Eighth grader Camila Valdez said, “It’s about how students aren’t well informed about careers. We want to help them take better paths to a better future.”

    Eight hundred fifty students in sixth, seventh and eighth grades attended the career fair in the school’s gym and interacted with 16 partners, including Austin-Travis County EMS, Austin Carpenters Local 1266, and Westview’s Career and Technical Education (CTE) teachers.

    To fill the gym with vendors to speak to students, the organizers worked together to make a lot of phone calls, according to Jasmine Cortes, a Speak Up, Speak Out member: “We started by contacting people to come. We worked together to find people to come, and our teacher put in time to contact people. We planned it all in a short time.”

    Alfredo Mendoza helped create banners for the partners and set up tables beforehand: “I was nervous at the beginning, but by working together we got it done. I saw a lot of kids interacting and enjoying the career fair,” he said.

    Candace Hennessy is a recruiting coordinator for Parsley Energy who attended the career fair. “It was a great first experience for me. Most of the kids were engaged and all of them were respectful, so it was fun interacting with them,” she said.

    Jennifer Painter-Beillon, Round Rock Campus Director for Central Texas Beauty College, said, “The kids were so engaging. Better engagement than any other school we’ve been to, including the high schools.”

    Our team of outreach specialists serve students in grades 6 through 12 in Austin, Del Valle, Elgin, Manor and Pflugerville ISDs. This is a two-year program in partnership with school districts throughout the Austin metro area, for which we received a Workforce Career and Education Outreach Specialist Grant from the Texas Workforce Commission.

    Our team of specialists has served more than 11,000 students since the grant began in July 2019.

  • Garza High School Seniors Discover Career-Related Learning Opportunities at Programs Showcase

    Garza High School Seniors Discover Career-Related Learning Opportunities at Programs Showcase

    What to do after graduating high school? Some seniors plan to go to work, others to continue their education. But where to take their learning? At Garza High School, 160 seniors interested in what their local community college offers explored opportunities at the Austin Community College (ACC) Programs Showcase on February 5, 2020.

    Representatives from 13 ACC programs, including Engineering & Manufacturing, Computer Studies, and Dental Hygienist, met with students throughout the day in the school’s gym. ACC’s Financial Aid and Support Center, which provides childcare scholarships and textbooks, provided students information about supportive services available to community college students. Also represented was the Workforce and Education Readiness Continuum (WERC), a City of Austin- and Travis County-funded network of community partners linked to help prepare Austin-area residents to enter or reenter the job market.

    The Programs Showcase came together thanks to the coordinating efforts of Stephanie Calderon, one of our four Career & Education Outreach Specialists. Stephanie serves students, parents, teachers and counselors in south Austin and Del Valle Independent School Districts.

    “It’s important for students to learn about career pathways available at their local community college,” Stephanie said. “Some seniors think ACC is only for the basics, but there are many different departments to find careers needed in our workforce.”

    Christine Garza, 18, was most interested in the Childcare & Development program: “It was my favorite. I learned about the basics of what they do and the process of what the class can provide for me,” Christine said.

    “After graduation, I’m going to decide on a four-year degree or go to ACC,” Christine said. “I definitely want to earn a four-year degree, with a major in social work or maybe psychology.”

    IMG-1081
    Christine Garza, 18, talks with Stephanie Calderon, a Career and Education Outreach Specialist at Workforce Solutions Capital Area.

    Our team of outreach specialists serve students in grades 6 through 12 in Austin, Del Valle, Elgin, Manor and Pflugerville ISDs. This is a two-year program in partnership with school districts throughout the Austin metro area, for which we received a Workforce Career and Education Outreach Specialist Grant from the Texas Workforce Commission.

    Our team of specialists has served more than 11,000 students since the grant began in July 2019.