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In addition to all the work that is done in our classrooms every
day, there is a lot going on outside of class as well. Last weekend
at the high school we hosted the Crystal Classic, an amazing
exhibition of show choirs. On Saturday the high school will be busy
again, as it will be the site of the third annual Summer Activities
and Job Fair. This popular event, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., has a
couple of appropriate subtitles, including “Fun in the Sun” and “Get
Off the Couch!”
The purpose of the event is to provide a single place where
students in grades six through 12 can come, with parents
accompanying the younger students, and explore all sorts of
opportunities for exciting and interesting things to do this summer.
With gasoline costing what it does, the opportunity to do this
without driving all over town shouldn’t be missed. Students and
parents can talk to representatives from many different
organizations and learn about camps, sports programs, library
activities, educational programs, and much more.
One special feature, which isn’t really a summer activity but is
always a big hit anyway, is SIDNE (Simulated Impaired DriviNg
Experience). The Fairfield Police Department’s electric go-cart
simulates the slower reactions of a driver who’s been drinking.
Police officers can dial in the amount of “impairment” by remote
control. Besides being fun, it’s also eye-opening. It’s part of a
never-ending effort to help our newest drivers understand how to
stay safe behind the wheel.
A neat aspect of this year’s fair is that our high school
students are involved in a significant way. The Interact Club – a
high school partner to the Rotary Club – has worked to publicize the
event, recruit vendors, and will be doing many different jobs on
Saturday. Our Business Academy students created much of the
publicity material, and also helped design the program that will be
handed to each person attending the fair. All of these activities
will help make the event more successful. Moreover, the work that
students did was directly tied to what they are learning in the
classroom, or seeking to accomplish as part of an extra-curricular
activity.
Our staff who worked on this told me it was fun to watch these
students participate in the planning committee meetings. The
students learned how committees actually work, how to keep meetings
on track, and the importance of communication and follow-up in
really getting things done. These are lessons that will be valuable
for them in just about any future path they might follow – and
they’re lessons that aren’t found in a textbook.
The school district and the Fairfield Rotary Club sponsor the
fair, and as I noted, there is a large committee that helps plan it.
But three people in particular do a tremendous amount of work, and I
would like to recognize and thank them for that. They are Dr. Fred
Valerius, a Rotarian and the former superintendent of Butler County
MRDD; Mandy Katz, one of our most active parents; and Jean Wesseler,
the juvenile diversion counselor in the Fairfield Police Department.
Without them, this valuable event probably would not happen.
Published in the Fairfield Echo, March 8, 2008 |