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Berks County | 610-779-0700

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Home » News » Page 24

News

Twenty students receive recognition for being at the top of their class in math and science

December 16, 2022

student receive awards in library

This morning, 10 juniors and 10 sophomores were recognized by Principal Tom Campbell and Exeter Community Education Foundation (ECEF)'s President Angela Cooke for their outstanding math or science achievements. The awards are given thanks to Dr. Harlan & Mrs. Carole Kutscher, longtime Exeter residents and supporters who created a $25,000 endowment for students through the ECEF, which recognizes students with a certificate and monetary award to celebrate the achievements of those who earned the highest weighted final grade in their 9th and 10th grade science and math classes.

Our sincerest thanks to the Kutscher family for establishing this incredible endowment to recognize the academic achievements of our students, the ECEF for their hard work in coordinating the second year of these awards, and our warmest congratulations to the following students who were recognized today for their outstanding academic work in math and science. They are:

Sophomores:

  • Perla Alvarado-Rueda, Science
  • Griffin Beidler, Math and Science
  • Carson Frederick, Science
  • Ridleigh Moyer, Science
  • Alexis Nonnemacher, Math
  • Sabrina Panford, Math
  • Stafan Patriak, Math
  • Kayla Schafer, Math
  • Logan Wegman, Math and Science
  • Luke Zawilla, Math and Science

Juniors:

  • Sofia Beggs, Math
  • Thomas Curry, Math
  • Charlotte Dolena, Science
  • Sophia Jones, Science
  • Abby Kravetz, Math
  • Hansika Kunduru, Science
  • Kai Loose, Math
  • Abigail Smith, Math
  • Ava Strauss, Science
  • Rachel Tschudy, Science

Filed Under: News, Senior High

Intern Spotlight: Taylor Hill and Anni B Monogramming

December 7, 2022

Internship Spotlight: Taylor Hill, a junior, plans to attend a four-year college for business following graduation and hoped to intern at a business where she could learn all the different aspects of running a small business, including marketing and finances. She was lucky to find a perfect match with Anni B Monogramming, a small business owned and operated by Antje Barrett Scantzos in Wyomissing.

Q: Can you tell us a little bit about what you do at your internship?

A: I help with preparing the product for customers by adding finishing touches. I iron, fold, and package, as well as add price tags to products that she uses for shows. I also spend time creating spreadsheets and sign-ups for shows. I also have helped with taking pictures, creating captions, and posting on the Facebook and Instagram business platforms. In addition, I enter information into QuickBooks and help with making deposits. 

Q: Why did you select this business as your internship?

A:I selected my internship because the creative business had a good atmosphere and my mentor told me I would be doing different things every day. 

Q: Has this internship helped you decide your college/career goals?

A: My internship has shown me a lot about the communication it takes to work in a small business. I have learned about the importance of building relationships with each client in a business of personalization (embroidering). While I don't plan to have my own small business, the skills will make me a stronger future employee. 

Q: What have you liked most about your internship? What have you liked least?

A: I have liked entering the information into QuickBooks and using problem-solving to detect the issue if totals don't add up. I can't think of a task I haven't enjoyed in some way. 

Q: Has anything surprised you about your internship? 

A: I have been surprised about the variety of different customers she receives. My mentor receives orders from anything from sports teams, to doctors’ offices, to prison guards, to grandmothers and moms looking for cute gifts. 

Q: Anything else you'd like to share?

A: The skills I have been taught and learned through observation have helped me learn so much more about the time that gets put into a business.

We’re so grateful to Antje for agreeing to mentoring Exeter students and Taylor for sharing her great experience this semester! To learn more about hosting an Exeter intern or signing up for an internship in the 2023-24 school year, please reach out to Mr. Mark Ricketts at maricketts@nullexetersd.org. 

 

Filed Under: News, Senior High Tagged With: intern

Reggie Dabbs Tells Junior High Students to Never Give Up

December 2, 2022

reggie dabbs performs at junior high
@etsdeagles The ETJH assembly today was part stand up, part concert and had many in tears by the end. https://tinyurl.com/2p8acpda #exetertownshipjuniorhigh ♬ original sound - Exeter Twnshp School District

In an assembly that started as part stand-up and part music concert and ended with many in the audience wiping their tears away, motivational speaker Reggie Dabbs today told students at Exeter Township Junior High School that they should never, ever give up. “At 13 years old, I couldn’t see who I am today,” he said. “I cried myself to sleep every night. I thought that nobody cared about me. I felt so unloved because even my own momma gave me up. She kept my brother and she kept my two sisters, but she said I was a mistake and gave me away.” 

Through an emotional retelling of his childhood, Reggie recounted how he found out that he was living with people who were not his biological parents at just 6 years old. “I went into kindergarten and all of the kids had their names on their desk with their first and last name. Mine just said ‘Reggie.’” It was then that he found out he was living with foster parents and that his biological mother had given him to the Dabbs. “I didn’t have a real last name until I was 13 years old when they adopted me.” 

But despite the outcome of his adoption and his healthy home environment, Reggie’s past continued to haunt him through his early adolescence. “I wasn’t ok,” he said. “I wanted to scream ‘why me?’...My story may be different than yours, but I guarantee you we are all going through something that makes it hard to sleep at night.” He said he finally realized he couldn’t change his past, but he could change his future. “I made a choice: I now choose to be hope. I choose to be kind. I choose to be love,” he said, asking those in attendance, “What will you choose?” before he asked everyone to point to their neighbor and say, “Don’t you give up!” and then point to him/herself and say, “I won’t give up!” and then point to their other neighbor and say “Let me love you” before he launched into a rendition of DJ Snake and Justin Beiber’s “Let Me Love You” on his soprano saxophone. 

Click our video to see a few highlights from today–including a special tribute and appreciation to teachers, who he says, are responsible for allowing him to become who he is. “My foster mom was a school teacher and my foster father was a school janitor, and they are my heroes," he said earlier in his presentation. "Boys like me become men like me because of people like (teachers)... I am the product of the public school system... Boys like me make it because of people like you.”

 

Filed Under: Junior High, News

Exeter Spiritwear Holiday Pop-Up Shop Now Open!

December 1, 2022

spiritwear
Exeter Eagles Spiritwear Holiday Pop-Up Shop open now through Wednesday, December 7th only!
 
Adult and Youth Sizes in Nike & Under Armour • Delivery to your home before the holidays
 
Shop now: https://exetertownshipfall22.itemorder.com/shop/home/

Filed Under: Jacksonwald, Junior High, Lorane, News, Owatin Creek, Reiffton, Senior High

Jacksonwald Students Win Turkeys in Traditional Raffle

November 21, 2022

student lifts frozen turkey over his head
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Thanksgiving traditions in Exeter include pumpkin pie, mashed potatoes… and elementary students winning and then hoisting frozen turkeys over their heads at Jacksonwald Elementary during the school’s annual turkey raffle.

Although the school tradition was largely unknown for the majority of this year's students and families due to the raffle being paused during the pandemic, excitement was palpable throughout the school on Friday afternoon as the raffle returned to everyone’s delight. Students chanted “Turkey! Turkey! Turkey!” as they wore handmade turkey hats and filed into Jacksonwald’s cafeteria to find out who among them would be a lucky winner of one of 20 donated frozen turkeys. Soon after they were all seated, Jacksonwald’s principal, Mr. Matt Hathaway, emerged from behind the stage’s curtain wearing a pair of turkey glasses and hat, eager to carry on a tradition and reward for good behavior that retired Lausch and Jacksonwald principal, Dr. Joe Schlaffer, started more than 15 years ago.  

“The time we saw the most misbehavior was right before the holidays,” said Dr. Schlaffer, who reminisced about the origins of the raffle last week, which he started originally at Lausch and brought over to Jacksonwald when the building closed. “The whole idea was that kids could go home with a turkey, and when they get home, their parents were going to say, ‘Where did you get a turkey?’” And they’d be able to tell their parents they got the turkey at school for good behavior. I thought it was a win-win-win situation for students, their parents and goodwill in the community,” he said.

In keeping with tradition, Mr. Hathaway approached local grocery stores, farms and butchers to secure the frozen turkeys as a donation–a feat he said was not easy this year thanks to a turkey shortage. Weis Markets in Oley found humor and heart in the weird-yet-wonderful tradition, however, and agreed to donate 20 turkeys to give away to one student in each classroom. In also keeping with Dr. Schlaffer’s tradition, Mr. Hathaway insisted that each winning student turn and face their school mates packed into Jacksonwald’s cafeteria and lift (with assistance) the frozen turkey over his or her head to the delight and cheers of their peers. 

Proud to carry on tradition, Mr. Hathaway said the raffle was such a part of the fabric at Jacksonwald that he said that some teachers became emotional when they heard the tradition was returning this year. “Some of our teachers cried,” he said. “It’s that much a part of who we are at Jacksonwald.” 

Filed Under: Jacksonwald, News

Jacksonwald Principal Receives National Summer Learning Award

November 18, 2022

Matthew Hathaway stands in Exeter Township’s Lorane Hollow Park, the original site of TIPs, with his Excellence in Summer Learning award from the National Summer Learning Association

Matt Hathaway stands in Exeter Township’s Lorane Hollow Park, the original site of TIPs, with his Excellence in Summer Learning award from the National Summer Learning Association

Jacksonwald Elementary’s principal, Mr. Matt Hathaway, will be recognized during Monday night’s 7PM Exeter Township Board of School Directors meeting for his receipt of the National Summer Learning Association’s Excellence in Summer Learning Award, which was presented to him in Washington, D.C. in October. The National Summer Learning Association (NSLA) selected Mr. Hathaway, who founded Teachers in the Parks (TIPs), through a rigorous review process to find the nation’s top summer programs committed to joyful learning experiences, innovative programming, creative family engagement and the health and well-being of the nation’s most underserved children and youth. TIPs was one of four programs honored at a dinner attended by more than 1,000 people in D.C., including U.S. Secretary of Education Mr. Miguel Cardona and U.S. Secretary of Labor Mr. Marty Walsh. Mr. Jim Quinn, the former president of Tiffany & Company and the current board chair of the NSLA presented Mr. Hathaway with the award following a highlight video that featured the Exeter and Antietam TIPs program.

“Teachers In the Parks started back in 2004 with a small group of students and teachers in Exeter Township, and is a shining example that a small, grassroots effort can be viewed as a model for affordable program solutions, community engagement, and instruction,” said the CEO of the NSLA, Mr. Aaron Dworkin. The other three programs who were recognized were the Boys and Girls Club of Santa Monica, California; The Fresh Air Fund of New York City; and ICAN of Chandler, Arizona.

The Exeter-based TIPs program came to national recognition in 2017 when the NSLA’s former communications director, Ms. Laura Johnson, approached Mr. Hathaway at a hot dog stand in D.C. and asked him to tell her more about TIPs and his thoughts about summer learning after she heard him speak at a U.S. Department of Education conference. Since then, Mr. Hathaway has gained national recognition as a leader on summer learning through his presentations at state and national conferences. TIPs, he says, has also become well respected as a leader on how to recruit and retain highly-qualified teachers who are willing to give up part of their summer vacation to work. “During the time of widespread teacher shortages, we are one of the only summer learning programs in the nation that has a waitlist of teachers who are willing to work over the summer,” he said, proudly. “I may be the guy up on stage accepting this award, but I really have to thank the teachers who gave up their summers to work when they didn’t have to.”

A teacher himself for 18 years, Mr. Hathaway founded TIPs “when kids just kept showing up” on his parents’ back porch during the summer after his first year of teaching third grade at Jacksonwald Elementary. Initially, his intent was to help a handful of kids prevent the “normalized” summer ritual of learning loss (otherwise known as the “summer slide”), but as more students showed interest in continuing to learn through the summer, and as word spread throughout the community about his lessons taught over popsicles on his parents’ back porch, Mr. Hathaway started to engage more kids by walking down to Lorane Hollow park. There, he spread out a blanket and informally invited kids to keep up with their literacy and math skills who were participating in Exeter’s summer Parks & Recreation program. Three summers later, the program had gained such popularity that Mr. Hathaway had to organize and hire teachers to keep up with the demand. Before COVID hit, TIPs could be found at six park locations around Exeter and up to a dozen other school districts in Berks where he subcontracted his program. He’s hired more than 200 teachers since 2007 and offered community service opportunities to roughly 300 students while serving hundreds and hundreds of Exeter and Berks County students who informally learn on blankets and at picnic tables in parks and at pools where they’d naturally hang out during the summer.

As the program’s grown beyond anything he ever imagined, Mr. Hathaway insists his mission has remained unchanged since that summer back in 2004 when he was sitting on his parents’ back porch. “Why do we let kids go three months over the summer without learning when we know it’s bad for them?” he asks, simply. “Literacy shouldn’t be seasonal.”

Humbled by being recognized for his grassroots organization among large, national non-profit organizations, Mr. Hathaway intends to use the national spotlight he’s been given with the award to continue his fight for state and federal funding for summer learning. “We’re coming out of a time where there was briefly money for summer learning,” he says in reference to the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) grants that were provided to districts to fund summer recovery learning during the early days of the pandemic. “But now that those dollars are gone, if we’re going to find new solutions to bridge the gap, then we need to look at new ideas and models that put teachers in front of kids during the summer. The only way to do that is to provide affordable programs that partner with school districts and existing community organizations rather than competing with them,” he says. Pausing, he finishes his thought: “Because when you put teachers in front of kids, immeasurable things happen.”

As part of the award, TIPs will receive:

  • A $10,000 grant supported by the New York Life Foundation;
  • National recognition at NSLA’s Summer Changes Everything national conference;
  • Connection to a network of award-winning leaders in the field and NSLA’s professional development opportunities; and
  • Visibility through national and local promotions, along with acknowledgment from local elected officials.

Mr. Hathaway will be joined at the Exeter Township Board of School Directors meeting by Pennsylvania State Senator Judy Schwank and Mr. David Volkman, the Special Advisor to the Secretary at the Pennsylvania Department of Education.

Filed Under: Jacksonwald, News

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Exeter Township School District

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