So my email inbox is chock full of awards and kudos for local
students. We should all share in congratulating these fine, bright
young people among us!
CKHS junior Devon Lewis received a
national award for his essay on the Civil Rights Movement.
Devon Lewis, a junior at Central Kitsap High
School, was one of two runners-up in the nationwide The Legacy
Essay Contest. He recently traveled to Washington D.C. to receive
the award for his essay titled: The Civil Rights Movement: The
Past, Present, and Future.
The Legacy Essay Contest was designed to inspire
high school juniors and seniors to look at their own lives and
times in the context of the values and goals of the Civil Rights
Movement. It is a joint project of Karz Productions (creator of the
feature documentary ”Legacy: Black and White in America,”) the
Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, the National Education
Association and the American Federation of Teachers, among
other groups. Judges included Muhammad Ali, India.Arie and
Morris Dees. Lewis met Education Secretary Arne Duncan at the
ceremony. He and his mom, Tarra Lawson, also received an
all-expenses-paid trip to Washington D.C.
Tucker Alexander, a student at Mountain View
Middle School in Bremerton, has been named one of two honorees
statewide for the Prudential Spirit of Community Award. Alexander
received a letter of recognition and a silver medallion from state
Superintendent Randy Dorn. A $1000 will also be contributed in her
name to Bremerton Foodline, where she has volunteered since age 5.
Alexander will also participate in a conference in Washington D.C.,
touring the capitol and the Museum of Natural History. Alexander is
also eligible for a national award and a $5,000 contribution to the
charity.
Alexander has been working at Foodline since she was 5 and has
held yard sales and food sales to raise money for the food bank. In
2009, she gathered $1,500 for Foodline through sales of garden
produce, zucchini bread, flowers and crafts.
Three teams from the Central Kitsap School
District were chosen to compete in the Destination
Imagination Global Finals in Knoxville, Tenn., in May. The teams
are from Emerald Heights and Silverdale elementary schools and CK
High School. As you can imagine, the travel to Tennessee and the
entry into the competition is pretty expensive (I think $1,000 per
child. Each team has five or six kids.) So the teams are
fund-raising. Tonight and tomorrow night you can support the
teams by eating at Chung’s Teriyaki on Bucklin HillRoad in
Silverdale. Just ask your server to have 20 percent of your
check go to CKSD’s Destination Imagination teams.
Poulsbo Elementary School student Cheyenne
Martinek is the national winner of the Igniting Creative
Energy Challenge, a competition sponsored by Johnson Controls.
Martinek,a fifth-grader, was surprised with the award on
Thursday at school. ICE is national educational competition
sponsored by Johnson Controls that encourages students in
kindergarten through 12th grade to develop creative ways
to be more energy efficient and become better stewards of the
environment. Martinek created Ways to be Kind to the Earth and Save
Energy, a video featuring Lego characters performing eight
activities to save the environment, including picking up trash,
planting trees, recycling and using alternative forms of
transportation.
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