West Jordan Journal - December 2014 - Vol. 14 Iss. 11

Page 1

opening brings smiles

5

plowing neighborhoods

6

Kaylene White, McKayla Heath, McKenzie Burgess and Rachel Miller helped create this gingerbread house (above) from scratch. JATC students put the final decorations on the tree (right) to get ready for the Festival.

Future Teachers Believe Money Grows On Trees

I

t’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas, especially in the teacher education class at the Jordan Applied Technology Center in West Jordan. The 19 high school students are all members of the Family, Career, and Community Leaders of America and decided to donate a Christmas tree and a gingerbread house to the Festival of Trees, held at the Sandy Expo Center from Dec. 3-6. “Because this is a teacher education program and because these students want to be either general or special education teachers, and because this helps Primary Children’s Hospital, that’s a great connection,” teacher and FCCLA advisor Kaylene White said. “We decided to do this as part of our FCCLA service project.”

“ We are trying to become teachers

so we want to show that we’re here, we want to be here, we want to make a difference in the world.” The white Christmas tree titled “Candy Cane Christmas” is decorated in red, white and green decorations and is surrounded by a big candy cane fence. The gingerbread house, made by four of the students is called “The Candy Cane Palace” and shares the color scheme of the tree. Both were available for purchase at the Festival of Trees. The students met at White’s Holladay home to bake and assemble the gingerbread house.

By Marci Heugly “We voted on doing a gingerbread house, so we got put in charge of doing it,” Rachel Miller said of their cinnamon-scented creation. “We’re going to see if we can keep it together with hot glue, but it will definitely smell good.” The students each made a batch of gingerbread and donated bags of candy to use for decoration. The tree was also provided as a donation and came from the JATC. “Our principal, Chris Titus, purchased our tree and FCCLA purchased the decorations,” White said. “We could use our budget for other things, but we choose to use it for this. Some people spend thousands on a tree. We spend a couple hundred dollars, but we probably triple what we spend when the tree is purchased.” McKinzie Burgess is the FCCLA public relations officer and is in charge of their Festival of Trees participation this year. “It’s a little stressful and all, but it’s fun and actually gets me more in the spirit of Christmas,” Burgess said. “We decided to do a white tree instead of the traditional green to bring out all the white, red and green decorations. We are super excited to be part of this.” Every year, members of the FCCLA compete against other schools in STAR events (Students Taking Action with Recognition), which includes doing projects and service in the community. These events help develop leadership skills and career preparation as a team and as an individual. “The Festival of Trees is part of our community service for our regional STAR competition in February,” White said.

Future Teachers continued on page 4

pie squared

12

jags jump to it

17

q u o ta b l e c o m m u n i t y :

“This man parachuted in behind enemy lines in the D-Day invasion and served the rest of the war in different campaigns, including Holland and the famed Battle of the Bulge.”

page 2

Local Postal Customer ECRWSS

Presort Std U.S. Postage PAID Riverton, UT Permit #44


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.