Empowerment Collaborative Summer Planning Conference gives students a seat at the table
FAYETTEVILLE, WV (WVNS) – While schools across the state are wrapping up the 2024-2025 school year, students and teachers at Fayette County Schools are already planning for next year.Tuesday marked the first session of this year's Empowerment Collaborative Planning Summer Conference, an annual event that brings students and teachers for the chance to work toward an educational approach that works for everyone.'We're trying to focus on bettering our school programs, helping out with our schools' needs, and seeing what we need to do and what we need to have done in our schools in Fayette County,' says Oak Hill Middle School student, Greyson Hess.
Participants said the combined perspectives of students and educators in the planning process can lead to a more informed and more balanced curriculum, with the potential to create significant educational change on the community level.'Kids can do a lot of things whenever they've been given the tools,' said Lilly Lockhart, also a student at Oak Hill Middle School. 'I think that the Empowerment Project can really change the community, and it can change how students learn in school.'Also, on-hand for the event was Curriculum Specialist for Fayette County Schools, Kennedy Moore, who told 59News that the inclusion of students in decision-making processes that will ultimately affect them can positively impact the end result. 'The voice of the students is so important in this work because it allows them to truly be empowered and it allows them to feel like they have a voice in their education,' she said. 'I think that that makes all the difference.'
The third annual Empowerment Collaborative Summer Planning Conference, hosted this year at the Historic Gaines Estate, will continue through the week, giving students a chance to engage with educational assessments, workplace simulations, and other resources to help them prepare for a year of collaborative learning.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Empowerment Collaborative Summer Planning Conference gives students a seat at the table
FAYETTEVILLE, WV (WVNS) – While schools across the state are wrapping up the 2024-2025 school year, students and teachers at Fayette County Schools are already planning for next marked the first session of this year's Empowerment Collaborative Planning Summer Conference, an annual event that brings students and teachers for the chance to work toward an educational approach that works for everyone.'We're trying to focus on bettering our school programs, helping out with our schools' needs, and seeing what we need to do and what we need to have done in our schools in Fayette County,' says Oak Hill Middle School student, Greyson Hess. Participants said the combined perspectives of students and educators in the planning process can lead to a more informed and more balanced curriculum, with the potential to create significant educational change on the community level.'Kids can do a lot of things whenever they've been given the tools,' said Lilly Lockhart, also a student at Oak Hill Middle School. 'I think that the Empowerment Project can really change the community, and it can change how students learn in school.'Also, on-hand for the event was Curriculum Specialist for Fayette County Schools, Kennedy Moore, who told 59News that the inclusion of students in decision-making processes that will ultimately affect them can positively impact the end result. 'The voice of the students is so important in this work because it allows them to truly be empowered and it allows them to feel like they have a voice in their education,' she said. 'I think that that makes all the difference.' The third annual Empowerment Collaborative Summer Planning Conference, hosted this year at the Historic Gaines Estate, will continue through the week, giving students a chance to engage with educational assessments, workplace simulations, and other resources to help them prepare for a year of collaborative learning. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Remembering Trey Yates and the legacy he leaves behind
RAINELLE, WV (WVNS) — On Sunday morning, the agricultural community of West Virginia lost one of their own. Farmers seeking answers regarding federal cuts and frozen funds Trey Yates, owner of Greenbrier Dairy was an entrepreneur, an advocate, and a valued member of the farming community of Greenbrier County. When I first met Trey, he met me at the Farm Service Agency in Beckley to talk about how the recent federal cuts were affecting his business. I did not expect the man who spoke so clearly and passionately and knowledgeably to be so young. Trey was only 28 when he left this world, but his mother, Stephanie Yates, says he has left behind a legacy that won't soon be forgotten. 'He would just smile at somebody and I've had people contact me and say, well, you know, 'Trey helped me carry in some groceries or he smiled and waved at my grandkids.' The kids across the street and they left toys and flowers at the Greenbrier Dairy on the cow bench that we have there and just because he would smile at them in the mornings. It's, you know, he touched their lives just because he would smile at them in the mornings and wave at them. They said they're really gonna miss him.' said Yates. Trey also touched the lives of his follow farmers as someone who was known to be a quiet, no-nonsense, but forever giving and helpful man. Spencer Moss, Executive Director of the West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition, said she and her staff are still trying to process his loss. 'Trey's loss has certainly been really challenging on our team. There's already been a number of things in the day-to-day that have popped up that have been like, 'Oh, we'll call Trey.' And then the realization sort of sets in. But I think, you know, more importantly, Trey held a space in the larger food and agriculture community and he supported so many farmers,' said Moss. Stephanie Yates said the reason he supported so many people was because he lacked those resources when he was first starting out. 'His goal now was to try to get grants and money and try to help people his age to get a start if they wanted to go into agriculture and farming. You know, pave a road where somebody like him could maybe get started a little bit easier than what he did,' said Yates. That legacy will continue. The West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition is organizing the Trey Yates Legacy Fund, designed to help young agricultural entrepreneurs get their start in Trey's memory. WV Farmers Market Association offers mini-grants to farmers who need signage For more information or to donate to the Trey Yates Legacy Fund, please visit the West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition website. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Yahoo
Raleigh County Sheriff's Office awarded grant to increase number of DUI checkpoints
BECKLEY, WV (WVNS) — The Raleigh County Sheriff's Office is cracking down on drunk awarded grant funding will allow for the sheriff's office to expand its resources to identify drivers who get behind the wheel after too many drinks. A recent meeting of the Raleigh County Commission saw funds secured for the department to conduct a greater number of DUI checkpoints throughout the county. Sheriff's office members said drivers should think twice before operating a vehicle under the influence.'You don't want to be in that position where you caused a fatality because you have to live with that your whole life,' says Corporal Eikost of the Raleigh County Sheriff's Office. 'It's very important for you to have public safety at your main focus when you're driving.' $15,000 in grant funding approved by the Raleigh County Commission was awarded during a Raleigh County Commission meeting on Tuesday, June 3, 2025 to allow for more frequent roadside checkpoints from the sheriff's office, which are expected to be conducted in the area over the next several months. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.