logo
Meet our Student of the Week winner, one of two juniors from Pulaski

Meet our Student of the Week winner, one of two juniors from Pulaski

Yahoo09-05-2025

Our Student of the Week poll has now closed. Thanks to all who voted.
For this week's Wisconsin Student of the Week, we had two Pulaski students — both high school juniors — compete for the title.
Keep reading to see who won, and how you can nominate a student for our weekly poll. We plan to continue Student of the Week through May, so we're welcoming submissions through May 23.
Our winner, Samantha Wyent, nicknamed "Sammy," was nominated by Pulaski learning support teacher Mindy Micolichek.
Micolichek nominated Wyent for her "positive attitude, leadership, hard work, and kindness," she said.
"(Wyent) puts in extra effort to get items done, gets tasks done as soon as asked, problem-solves on her own, and is always the first to volunteer to make sure different things are done," Micolichek said.
In addition to working hard on classwork, Micolichek said Wyent also devotes her time to many extracurriculars, especially student council. Her involvement "enhances school culture," Micolichek added.
High school students are nominated for Student of the Week by principals, teachers, youth organizations and others who work with teens. Voting is open each week from 5 a.m. Monday until noon Thursday with polls at jsonline.com, postcrescent.com and greenbaypressgazette.com.
Do you work with youth and know someone who should be Student of the Week? Reach out to Debi Young, statewide education editor, at debi.young@jrn.com to get a link to the nomination form.
Rebecca Loroff is a K-12 education reporter for the USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin. She welcomes story tips and feedback. Contact her at rloroff@gannett.com.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Meet this week's Wisconsin Student of the Week winner, Samantha Wyent

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Social media erupts after Michigan officials have family of beavers killed at golf course
Social media erupts after Michigan officials have family of beavers killed at golf course

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Social media erupts after Michigan officials have family of beavers killed at golf course

When officials overseeing a municipal golf course in Michigan found a beaver dam causing a water backup, they decided the best option was to eliminate the animals. According to reports, a decision to terminate the beavers came this week. According to a story that appeared in the Ann Arbor News, the municipal Leslie Park Golf Course in Ann Arbor had a group of beavers damming up Traver Creek, which runs through the property. Since the state of Michigan considers beavers a "nuisance animal," it was difficult for the city to relocate them. Ann Arbor Parks Manager Josh Landefeld consulted with the Washtenaw County Water Resources Commissioner's Office about the dam. 'The concern with this dam is the impact that it would have on the stormwater mitigation in that area up and down stream from the dam,' he told MLive about the decision to clear the stream and have the beavers killed on Friday. The reaction was hostile on social media, where many residents said a better alternative must have been available. Here's more from the story. One Nextdoor discussion has over 135 comments such as 'No! That is despicable!' and 'That's ridiculous! Why can't they leave them alone.' 'They should be ashamed of themselves!' another person wrote, while one said, 'This is exactly why when I noticed the beavers at the golf course last year, I didn't tell anybody!' Others argued the broad-tailed critters should have been relocated. 'If they will trap them, I volunteer to drive them to a secluded area and release them,' one person wrote, while another argued killing beavers doesn't align with the city's A2Zero climate plan and commitments to protect natural resources. Tanya Hilgendorf, president and CEO of the Humane Society of Huron Valley, said what happened is really sad. Her organization is always opposed to killing healthy wildlife and wants to see humane alternatives, she said. 'I understand this may be tricky when there are concerns about critical infrastructure, but there are always other options,' she said. 'When there is will, there is a way, right? If you take killing off the table, you find a way.' According to the story, flooding could have caused problems for residents upstream and downstream. While beavers are known for great feats of engineering, building dams and lodges out of logs, sticks and mud, they can cause problems for landowners when their gnawing habits ruin landscape trees and when their dams create flooding, according to the Michigan Department of Natural DNR's 'nuisance wildlife' webpage offers tips for dealing with beavers, suggesting continually destroying their dams and materials used to build dams, fencing off drains and putting guards around such as a 'beaver pond leveler' or 'beaver baffler' also can be installed to allow water to move through while preventing dam construction, according the DNR, which says if methods do not alleviate beaver issues, the final step is to contact a nuisance animal control company or local wildlife biologist. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Officials kill beavers that built dam at Michigan golf course

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store