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Appleton North High School senior Matt McDaniel didnt expect to
win an award for doing the activity hes passionate about.
McDaniel, who spends his Saturdays volunteering at the Wind River Wildlife
Rehabilitation Center, was among the first round of students to receive
the Appleton Education Associations Great Schools Community Service
Award. The Appleton Secretaries and Clerical Association and the Educational
Assistants Association are also active in the program.
As a volunteer, McDaniel assists staff at Wind River with injured animals.
Hes also trained to educate the public about owls, falcons and birds
that are on the endangered species list.
McDaniel began his work at Wind River because he needed to complete a four-hour community service project for Connie Roops environmental science class. Roop encouraged him to go to Wind River because she knew how much he enjoyed working with nature. McDaniel enjoyed the experience so much he continued to volunteer even after his class requirement was met.
Now McDaniel spends six hours each weekend at the rehabilitation center.
I knew hed be perfect, Roop said. Its incredibly
rewarding to see someone matched with something theyre so passionate
about so early on.
As a winner, McDaniel received a T-shirt with a Great Schools logo printed
on it; his school will display a poster featuring him; and hell
be recognized at a banquet for winners at the end of the school year.
Fox Cities Newspapers also printed his picture and an article about him.
After my picture was in the paper, everyone saw it and mentioned
it to me, McDaniel said. That was really cool.
Three winners each month
Educators, parents or adult friends are encouraged to nominate students
for dedicating time to service projects that benefit the community. One
student from each school is chosen as a school winner each month and receives
a Great Schools T-shirt. The names of the school winners are then forwarded
to a three-member selection committee, which chooses one elementary, middle
and high school student to receive the Great Schools Community Service
Award every month. The selection committee includes one person each from
the AEA, Appleton Secretaries and Clerical Association, and the Educational
Assistants Association.
Students only have to follow one rule to be eligible for the Great Schools
Community Service Award: Their service project cant be a school
requirement.
WEAC grant helped launch program
The program has its roots in the spring of 2000, when WEAC awarded the
AEA a Great Schools grant to help fund an innovative idea.
AEA President Dianne Lang wanted to reward students who volunteer in
their communities. We wanted a way to get our name out and involve
kids doing something positive, she said.
AEA members found sponsors for the program and began to publicize it
with posters, e-mails and fliers that were distributed throughout the
district.
Fox Cities Newspapers offered to print stories about the winners each
month. It is also co-sponsoring the spring banquet to honor winners, their
parents and the community service agencies where the students worked.
Reaching out
Stephanie Malaney, vice president of the Appleton Education Association,
chairs the selection committee that names award winners each month. She
said students who have been nominated for Great Schools Community Service
Awards get involved in the community in a variety of ways.
Some examples:
Other students have worked for the Salvation Army or helped with rummage
sales and dog washes for charity.
But for Matt McDaniel, winning the award was just icing on the cake.
Through his work with Wind River, hes discovered that hed
like to pursue a career working with wildlife. After graduation, hell
donate a second day every week to the center.
Hes gone above and beyond his class assignment, said Roop.
Matt has learned about science, networked with people who have similar
interests and helped the community, she said.
Posted February 8, 2002