
Advancing Tigers
Mar. 27—EPHRATA — A school district has all kinds of children in it, and those children learn at different paces. Some have learning disabilities and need a little extra help, while others excel in one or more academic fields.
Programs for those students with a talent for one or more academic endeavors go by different names — talented and gifted, accelerated learning, enrichment — but at Ephrata schools it's called the Highly Capable Program. The Ephrata School District has the Highly Capable Program, or "Hi-Cap," as educators sometimes abbreviate it, at Columbia Ridge and Grant elementary schools and Parkway Intermediate School, meaning students can get the benefit of extended learning through sixth grade.
"This year, we've been doing STEM lessons," said Alicia Keegan, who teaches the HCP classes at Columbia Ridge Elementary School. "We've been learning about movement for the entire year, and specifically movement with automobiles and how that impacts neighborhoods. This has gone in many directions, because now my primary kids are actually building bridges."
That's the first and second graders, Keegan explained. The third and fourth grade class took a different approach.
"In my intermediate class, we are now doing robotics," she said. "They are programming, using code, their own robots and they're seeing how speed impacts turns and how it impacts the balance of the robot and things like that. It's taken quite a dramatic turn, and we all started in the same place. We all started talking about speed, what that looks like in vehicles and how that impacts a neighborhood. The first activity that both of my groups did is we actually built a neighborhood with little cardboard cutouts."
Keegan came to choose the topic through surveying the students' parents, she said.
Marshall Bilodeau, who teaches the Highly Capable classes at Grant Elementary, has done STEM in the past but is taking a musical approach this year.
"This year, I have a group of musicians that has come into my Hi-Cap class," Bilodeau said. "So, I wrote this class called Beats and Bytes. It's kind of like a Chromebook music lab. The class explores digital music, how to create beats and melodies, sound effects, any kind of music that you love."
There's no set formula or curriculum for Highly Capable classes, although Parkway Principal Jeremy Vasquez said the district is trying to work one out. In the meantime, the teachers have the freedom to choose their own curricula.
Naileah Shaporda, the Highly Capable teacher at Parkway, has led her fifth and sixth graders through a series of projects only loosely connected to each other. The one they've been doing the last few months is a student-run newspaper called the Parkway Post — as reported on by the Columbia Basin Herald last week — but this year they've already done a research project for Women's History Month, where they studied woman who have impacted the world. That was followed by an art unit where they created their own animated film. During the winter Shaporda's class created a winter ecosystem diorama that's now on display in the entry hall.
"We learned about the animals that live there," Shaporda said. "We learned about tundras, forests, wetlands, how (animals) adapt to survive, the types of plants that thrive in in the cold environments."
Some of the students had some help from their parents; others did everything on their own, said fifth grader Viviene Springs.
"(My mom) got me a hot glue gun and some stuff from outside, and then she 3-D printed the animals, but I painted them all," Viviene said. "One person used clay for her animals, and her dad helped her paint the mountains in the background."
Their next project will be an invention — nobody yet knows exactly what kind of invention — to help the environment in some way, Shaproda said. The students will come up with their own ideas and then submit them like on the TV show "Shark Tank."
"Our students are going to Shark Tank-pitch their idea for their invention, and then we'll vote, and whoever wins, we'll get it 3-D printed," Shaproda said.
The Wild-West nature of Highly Capable curriculum is a benefit because children's talents and gifts come in an endless variety, Keegan said.
"Sometimes the kids have one avenue that they're really strong in like say, the subject of math," she said. "But often what we get are kids that are highly capable in many different areas and oftentimes the word talented comes with being highly capable. Talent can be musical arts, it can be dramatic arts, like theater or it can be something that they're painting or drawing. Being highly capable simply can mean needing an enrichment, and our job is to try to figure out what type of enrichment is going to be appropriate for those kids in that particular season of their learning."
The students come to the Highly Capable Program in different ways, Parkway Principal Jeremy Vasquez said.
"Parents can request their kids be evaluated," he said. "This whole week, all fifth graders are being tested to see if they qualify for Hi-Cap or not, and if they do, they will be in Hi-Cap next year. At the elementary schools they do it as well, and if they are qualified for Hi-Cap, when they come to Parkway they're in Hi-Cap and we just keep it going."
The effect the Highly Capable Program has had on the students is noticeable, said Viviene's mom, Tammie Springs.
"She's definitely improved with her reading," Springs said. "And it totally coincides with her joining the Highly Capable (class). At the beginning of the year, she was supposed to read, like, 40,000 words in the first quarter, and let's just say it by (this time in) the school year, she's over 2 million words. She's just gone crazy with her reading, and everything has improved as a result."
The benefit of Highly Capable class slops over into the rest of the students' education, Bilodeau said.
"They understand that if they don't get their regular class work done, they can't come into Hi-Cap, because the regular classroom teachers struggle sometimes because (students) are being taken out of their regular subjects to be in the enrichment class," he said.
Maintaining the students' enthusiasm for the Hi-Cap program is no challenge at all, Keegan said.
"The kids come in motivated, and we as teachers just really want to suit their needs and enrich what they are already developing in their own lives, so it's fun," she said. "I haven't had anybody who doesn't want to come to Hi-Cap ... The biggest challenge I have (is) kids who have recommended to me, 'Can we can we come earlier to Hi-Cap? Can we stay later?' And the truth is, I always have to tell them no."
Bilodeau's experience has been similar, he said.
"(Highly Capable) is in a spot in the schedule where ... it butts up against their recess time, and so they wind up using some of that time for their projects," he said. "They really are into it. I have to kick them out. I'm like, literally, I have to go. You kids have to leave now."
Having lessons, they're eager to learn has an effect on their attitudes toward the rest of their schooling, Springs said.
"(Viviene) is getting straight A's in everything," Springs said. "She's got this drive that she wants to succeed now, and she takes a lot of pride in being able to ... There was one kid (on the Parkway Post project) that was kind of messing around in, I think, a Google document. She's like, 'I'm going to have to have a talk with him. He's not taking it seriously enough.'"
It's not just the students who love the Highly Capable classes, Keegan said.
"Working with talented kids is one of my passions in life, and I'm super excited that I've been able to do that for three years here in this district," she said.
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But then I want to bring something of my grandson's that means something to him. There's also music that I want—I don't even know if we could listen to music, but I like the idea of that. LS: Well, Katy can just sing up there. KF: You'd be the first [music artist] in space to sing. KP: I feel like I should. Beauty Tip: Even out skin tone with e.l.f. Cosmetics Hydrating Camo Concealer. Add rich color to your lips with O Face Satin Lipstick in Dirty Talk. GK: I'm looking forward to weightlessness, seeing what that feels like. And then I'm looking forward to just seeing what space looks like. So number one, I plan to open my eyes. [Laughs] I think it puts everything in perspective, because I know that there's more than just us down here. So I want to be up there and looking down to see what that looks like and what that feels like. Everybody who has gone to space says you are forever changed by it. I want to know what that means for me. Because listen, I'm not a brave person. I'm not. People come up and say, 'I'm so proud you're doing this.' I think I'll be really proud of myself once we do it, and I'm looking forward to that. KF: I'm looking forward to looking out into the vastness of space. I will obviously look down on our beautiful planet to get that perspective and hopefully experience the overview effect, too. And I'm crossing my fingers that we go at a time when we'll also be able to see the moon. I feel a real connection to the moon, and I think that would be really special. I'm also interested to get to know the person I am when we land on the other side. LS: I have no idea what it's going to be like. The fact that we're going to be able to come back and inspire people and bring people together excites me the most. Little girls and little boys are going to be more curious about space and what else is out there because we're bringing attention to it. It will be great to inspire a new generation. AB: Exactly. You're going to see six people who are going to come back and be forever changed. But we're also going to inspire people who are going to have an opportunity to go to space in countries that don't even have space flight programs. When I started working at NASA, I never could have conceived that a company that wasn't created yet would put me in the sky. I'm also partnering with Blue Origin and the Club For The Future program [which sends postcards to space], and have been traveling around for the last year and a half collecting dreams from kids all around the world. And those are flying to space with me. Thanks to Lauren and Jeff, those postcards are going back to those kids afterward. So kids in India, Kenya, France, and The Bahamas are going to get their postcard from space back. Even the prime minister of The Bahamas wrote a postcard. GK: I'm starting to meditate. I tried it years ago, but one of these women said, 'I have the perfect person for you.' So he's coming to my house. I have some sessions planned before we go up just to help me with [my anxiety]. AB: I've been training for this in some way or another for the last year, but recently I turned up the intensity. I just completed a NASTAR simulation, where I had the opportunity to actually experience what I can expect to encounter on the flight. For me, the physical preparation is really important. I want to have my body know what it feels like to go up. We've got a fighter jet flight booked, and I'm really excited about that. KF: I've done several zero-gravity simulation flights. They carve out a Boeing 747 and fly the plane in a parabolic pattern, so when the plane descends, everyone floats up. That was to get used to the feeling of weightlessness. So I think I'm going to have some fun with that when we're up. I also did the NASTAR training in Philadelphia and experienced up to five Gs of pressure. AN: Somebody said to me recently, 'The reason why you left [your dreams to go to] space behind is how you're getting to fly now.' When Blue Origin reached out, they said, 'We want to uplift your women's rights work.' So I'm flying for two people—one of course is my community, as the first Vietnamese woman. The other is all survivors of sexual violence. For so many of us, healing is such a difficult path that we don't know if we're ever going to make it through. And when I look at that note, I hope that is a healing moment for me. It will be a full circle moment that I can share with other survivors—your dreams still matter; the person you were before you were hurt still matters. And not only do your dreams still matter, they can come true—even flying in space. AB: I'm dedicating this flight to everybody who was told their dream was too big. I was told that I would never get into the aerospace program that I went to, that it was unlikely I was going to work for NASA. So if there's one thing that people take away from this, it's that there is nothing that you can't do, and you cannot allow others to define success for your life. KF: I'm doing this to leave a legacy for my family. I'm doing it for my son. We are the future of space travel. Sending civilians to space will become something that everyone will have an opportunity to do one day. And I feel honored to be one of the pioneers among these women to make this possible for future generations. I want to leave something for my son to be proud of and want to be an inspiration for any future generations. KP: I'm flying for my daughter, Daisy, to inspire her to never have limits on her dreams and show her that any type of person can reach their dreams—no matter your background, your ethnicity, your economic situation, or your education level. She's already such a big dreamer and she's only four. But also to inspire a whole new generation and make space and science glam. LS: For the next generation of explorers. There are going to be children out there who are going to see this incredible group of explorers and go, 'I want to do that.' And by the way, it could be, 'I want to be a journalist,' 'I want to be an activist,' 'I want to be a musician,' 'I want to be a rocket scientist.' It's not just about this trip. It's about the fact that they're seeing that all of these incredible explorers do other things as well. GK: I feel that too. I like to think that for anybody who can look at me and say, 'If she can do that, so can I.' Anybody who knows me is stunned that I'm sitting at the table with this group of people. I'm kind of stunned myself. But I want people to know that you are far more capable of things than you realize. And I am a living example of that. So I'm dedicating this to showing people that number one, it's okay to have dreams. Dreams do not have deadlines. And if you think that you're afraid of something, release the fear and do things that you don't think are possible. Set design by Peter Gueracague Studio; produced by Crawford & Co Productions. You Might Also Like The 15 Best Organic And Clean Shampoos For Any And All Hair Types 100 Gifts That Are $50 Or Under (And Look Way More Expensive Than They Actually Are)


Forbes
01-04-2025
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When Dr. Katriona O'Sullivan walks into a room, she's not seeking charity; she's demanding recognition. A former teenage mother who left school at 15 and battled homelessness and addiction, O'Sullivan beat the odds to become a senior academic at Maynooth University and one of Ireland's most outspoken advocates for educational equity. But she doesn't want her story to be an exception; she wants to make it a blueprint. "Having less money is not the same as being poor," she says. "Poverty is about a lack of choices, power, dignity." In Ireland, just 9% of students from disadvantaged backgrounds enter STEM fields compared to 25% from higher-income families. O'Sullivan's mission is to close that gap. She's connecting girls from underrepresented communities with training, mentorship, and job opportunities through her STEM-Passport for Inclusion program, which was developed in partnership with the government and nearly 200 companies, such as Microsoft. Nearly 7,000 girls have participated so far, with a target of 11,000 by 2027. "We're in a national talent crisis, and yet we're throwing away the potential of girls living in poverty," she says. "That's not just unjust. It's short-sighted." Dr Katriona O'Sullivan pictured with students from STEM Passport for Inclusion programme at ... More Microsoft Dublin November 2024 For O'Sullivan, the work goes beyond numbers. It's about reshaping cultural perceptions. "Disadvantage doesn't mean deficiency," she says. It means you've had to become fluent in resilience, hustle, and adaptation. To me, that is excellence." Yet she knows that policy alone won't change hearts and minds. That's why O'Sullivan shares that she continues to speak boldly, demand more, and tell the truth about what it takes to overcome socio-economic bias. "Talent is everywhere. Opportunity isn't," she shares. "That's the gap I'm trying to close. I want to create an Ireland where a girl like me doesn't have to beat the odds to thrive—because the odds are finally on her side." Aoibheann O'Brien returned to recession-weary Dublin in 2012 with a question: how can a country throw away tons of food while so many go hungry? The result was FoodCloud, a tech-driven social enterprise transforming how Ireland handles food waste and food insecurity. FoodCloud Co-founders Aoibheann O'Brien and Iseult Ward host UN FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu, and ... More his team In Dublin Hub June 2024 "I was working in banking in London and saw these amazing food-sharing initiatives emerging — in Dublin, there was nothing," she says. "It started with one market and mission: connect surplus food to people who need it. But we knew from day one that charity alone wasn't enough. This had to scale." Globally, one-third of all food produced is wasted, contributing 8–10% of total greenhouse gas emissions. In Ireland alone, an estimated 750,000 tonnes of food is wasted annually (enough to feed every person in Ireland three meals a day for more than three months). FoodCloud's digital platform now connects over 500 retail stores and 200 food producers to 650 charities across Ireland, enabling the redistribution of surplus food that would otherwise be wasted. Their platform, FOODIVERSE, operates in six countries, from the UK to Kenya. "We've redistributed the equivalent of 340 million meals," says O'Brien. "Our goal is to hit one billion meals by 2030 — not by scaling endlessly ourselves, but by helping others do what we've done faster and better. It's about using what we've built — all the sweat and years of work to help others leapfrog," she says. "Food waste isn't just a climate issue or a supply chain glitch — it's a massive systems failure," O'Brien continues. "And what's powerful is that tackling it has immediate, measurable social impact. Today, people are eating meals made from the food we rescued yesterday — and that same action is reducing emissions for the future." The organization also partners with Harvard University and other institutions to embed food redistribution into national and international policy frameworks. But while the ambition is global, the heart of the mission remains local. "We imagine a world where Ireland becomes the world's first zero food waste country," she says. "And if we do, it won't be because we treated food as waste — it'll be because we treated it as worth." Natasha O'Brien never set out to lead a movement. But after surviving a violent physical attack and watching her assailant walk free despite overwhelming evidence—she became the voice of a nation demanding change. "The system didn't fail me," she says. "It functioned exactly as it was designed—to protect the offender, not the victim." Over 1,000 people who gathered in support of assault victim Natasha O'Brien at a protest in her home ... More city of Limerick to show solidarity. Picture: Olena Oleksienko/ilovelimerick In June 2024, her attacker, a serving soldier, received a suspended sentence despite CCTV footage, eyewitness testimony, and text messages confirming intent. The ruling ignited public outrage. Within days, protests erupted across Ireland—thousands marched holding signs that read 'Her Name Is Natasha.' What began as one woman's pursuit of justice quickly became something more significant: a national reckoning with how Ireland's justice system treats victims of violence—and how it responds when those victims speak out. At the center stood O'Brien. Unflinching. Unapologetic. Her story forced the country to confront a flawed legal system and the cultural discomfort with women who challenged it. As journalist Justine McCarthy observed, 'Ireland loves its strong women—as long as they're dead or never lived at all.' Natasha O'Brien shattered this tradition. She stood defiant and shouted loud against a system she felt tried to make her, and so many other women invisible. Her successful appeal resulted in a new sentence, but for O'Brien, her work was just beginning. She is now collaborating with criminologists and advising Irish policymakers on legislative reform around sentencing, victim protection, and judicial accountability. O'Brien's leadership is reshaping more than policy. It's shifting Ireland's cultural conversation about power, safety, and whose voices are heard. 'The Ireland I'm fighting for is one where silence isn't the cost of survival, and justice doesn't have to be earned.' In a moment when global conversations about equity are growing more polarized, these three women prioritize substance over symbolism. Though working in different spheres, their approaches are committed to identifying structural problems, applying evidence-based solutions, and rethinking accountability. While Ireland grapples with its legacy of inequality, these women stand out not by simply seeking acknowledgment, but by fundamentally reshaping leadership itself. They refuse to be relegated to historical footnotes or to wait for permission to create change. As Women's History Month concludes, their work clearly embodies not just Ireland's history or current reality, but hope for a more equitable future.