Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Valley Oaks Elementary Nurse Honored

Caring, generous, and positive are just a few words that describe Valley Oaks Elementary School nurse Jacquelyn Petrie, who has been selected as an Outstanding Nurse honoree by editors of the Houston Chronicle newspaper.

For more than a decade, the newspaper has published a special-edition print section, “Salute to Nurses,” to honor nurses in the greater Houston area. Nurse Petrie will be featured in this year’s publication, which is scheduled May 12. She is one of 100 nurses who will be honored for their impact on the area’s nursing community.

Nurse Petire has spent 19 years overseeing the health and well-being of countless Spring Branch students. She came to SBISD after working at Ben Taub Hospital, a job that she loved but chose to step away from in order to spend more time at home with her three children. Students, parents and faculty members at Valley Oaks feel safe knowing that all health-related issues are in the expert and reassuring hands of Petrie. She handles every accident, injury and emergency in a calm and orderly fashion that puts students, staff and parents at ease. “Jackie truly cares about each student and faculty member on our campus.

She has the most positive attitude, always greets you with a smile, and engages students and teachers in conversations that make them feel cared for and important,” said Valley Oaks Elementary staff member Melissa Cornsack. “She constantly thinks of things she can do for our students and families in need of extra support,” Valley Oaks Elementary Principal Gary Henry said. Sunday, May 12, is the first day of National Nurses Week.

This report was compiled by Communications Dept. student intern Kali Venable.

School Board Election Day - May 11


Please be reminded that SBISD School Board Trustee Elections are this week.

All registered voters residing within SBISD, including SBISD employees who live in the district,  are reminded to vote in this year’s School Board Elections. 

Early voting continues through tomorrow, May 7, and Election Day will be on Saturday, May 11.  Please visit www.springbranchisd.com for more information.

Click here for ELECTION RESULTS.

Early Voting sites:

Wayne F. Schaper Leadership Center (SBISD Administration Bldg.)
955 Campbell Road, 77024
 
Don Coleman Community Coliseum,1050 Dairy Ashford, 77079
Holy Cross Lutheran Church 7901 Westview, 77055
City of Piney Point Village 7676 Woodway Suite, #300, 77063

Election Day sites:
The following seven Election Day voting locations will be open from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Saturday, May 11. Voting locations are based on middle school attendance zones and home street address:

Election Precinct No. 41 – Landrum Middle School, 2200 Ridgecrest, Houston, TX 77055
Election Precinct No. 42 – Memorial Middle School, 12550 Vindon, Houston, TX 77024
Election Precinct No. 43 – Spring Branch Middle School, 1000 Piney Point, Houston, TX 77024
Election Precinct No. 44 – Spring Woods Middle School, 9810 Neuens, Houston, TX 77080
Election Precinct No. 45 – Spring Forest Middle School, 14240 Memorial, Houston, TX 77079
Election Precinct No. 46 – Spring Oaks Middle School, 2150 Shadowdale, Houston, TX 77043
Election Precinct No. 47 – Northbrook Middle School, 3030 Rosefield, Houston, TX 77080

Candidate Information:
Competing for the Trustee Position 7 are attorney Karen Peck and Exxon retiree John Buchanan. Both candidates are seeking the vacancy created by Mike Falick, who is not seeking re-election after serving three Board terms.

Unopposed in Trustee Position 5 is current Board Member Bob Stevenson. Board of Trustees President Pam Goodson is also unopposed for re-election in Position 6.

All positions are for three-year terms.

If you need assistance, or for all other questions, please call 713-251-2217. 
 

Gates Millennium Scholar

An International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma program student at Westchester Academy for International Studies who wants to be a women’s physician is one of just 10 Houston students named a Class of 2013 Gates Millennium Scholar. Bushra Bangash, a native of Pakistan who came to Spring Branch as a seventh-grader, is one of only 1,000 students from across the United States selected for this prestigious and selective scholarship.

 The Gates Millennium Scholars (GMS) Program, directed by the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), issues “good-through-graduation” scholarships for students to pursue degrees in any undergraduate major at the college or university of the student’s choice. Established in 1999, the GMS Program is made possible through a $1.6 billion grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. This year, 122 Texas students were selected for the scholarships. Bushra set this top scholarship as a graduation goal five years ago.

 “When I came to America in seventh grade, I knew that Bill Gates was the richest person in the world, but I did not know about the Gates Millennium Scholarship until my cousin Sundus told me. I made this my goal. I said to myself that to graduate high school, I would need this scholarship,” Bushra says. Her goal was no easy hill climb.

Then a seventh-grader, Bushra, joined her two brothers and two sisters, and parents, in Houston after leaving Dera Ismail Khan, a city of 32,000 people located in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistan, about 200 miles west of Lahore. The city and province have been sites of religious conflict, including Taliban attacks. Bushra arrived in Houston with a language barrier, too. “My English was horrible,” she confesses. She speaks now in impeccable, quick-paced English sentences. Her grades, at first, were average or above, but she kept working on her English and improving grades. Pakistani schools focused on rote memorization.

Here, she learned to apply key concepts and ideas, rather than recall simple facts. “In seventh and eighth grade, my grades were not all A’s. But from 10th grade on, except for one 89 in biology, all of my grades were A’s,” she says proudly. Having won a Gates Millennium Scholars award, Bushra’s next planned stop will be the University of Texas at Austin. She plans to major in biology despite that single B grade, and then later apply to a prized medical school. She loves dissecting animals. Bushra would like to be a practicing gynecologist, she says, in part so that she could find a way to return to Pakistan annually and to help other women.

“There are few OB/GYNs (obstetrics and gynecology) or gynecologists in Pakistan. I want to deliver babies, and do other stuff. I see myself as an American-Pakistani. I see myself in the future as being in a place where I will go back to Pakistan and be able to help others,” she says. This Westchester Academy senior, of course, is already taking steps to achieve her next top goal. She has volunteered almost 400 hours at Memorial Hermann at Memorial City Hospital. She has picked out her medical school, too: Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Md. “It’s one of the top medical schools in the world. I always want to aim for the top. I want to be the best that I can possibly be,” Bushra says. The Gates Millennium Scholars Program has a similar goal.

“Today more than ever, it is important that our young people get the education they need, and that we need them to have, in order to remain competitive in the 21st century,” states Michael Lomax, president and chief executive officer of UNCF. “For the 20,000 young men and women who will attend college as Gates Millennium Scholars, the financial support, leadership training, mentoring and academic and social support they receive will enable them to become college graduates and our next generation of leaders.” For her counselor, Karren Sims, the faculty-chosen student award that Bushra received twice speaks volumes about her dedication to self improvement.

 “I feel that Bushra’s biggest accomplishment has been the fact that she was nominated and voted for the Alton Frailey Award for her 10th and 11th grade years. This is an award for students who may not be the most gifted academically, but they work hard enough to change the situation to one of success,” Sims states. “Bushra is a model student for this award. It is a great honor to be nominated; it is an even greater honor to be chosen by the faculty two years in a row to receive the award.”

Bushra’s accomplishments at Westchester Academy for International Studies:

• International Baccalaureate Diploma Program graduate
• Memorial Hermann Memorial City Hospital volunteer (358 hours)
• President, Muslim Students Association
• Vice President, Science National Honors Society
• Member and Public Relations Officer, National Honors Society (3 Years)
• Spanish & Math Honors, National Honors Society
• Secretary, Medical Club
• Executive Board, Model United Nations
• Alton Frailey Award, 10th and 11th Grades

A Record Run


A perfect morning greeted about 2,700 registered runners, joggers and walkers on May 4 (2013) for the 21st annual Spring Branch Education Foundation-supported Running for the Arts 5K and 1K Walk.

VIEW EVENT PHOTO GALLERY >>

Several cross country and track teams from Spring Branch ISD high schools met at Memorial City Mall and ran the fast, flat neighborhood course. Two runners from Memorial High clocked best overall student times. They included a senior, Carlos Arias, and fast freshman, Leslie Romero.

“It was beautiful weather, perfect conditions,” Arias said. “I was running for fun, and I was running for my school.” He finished the 5K in 15 minutes, 47 seconds. Carlos, who is headed this fall to the University of Texas at Arlington with a track and cross country scholarship, hopes to qualify for the 10K in the Panama Games.

Freshman Mustang Leslie Romero, meanwhile, finished first in the 12-14 age group for women. She ran a speedy 20:50 time, and was the top school female finisher. A varsity cross country runner, she is interested in running during college and dreams about being a cross country coach one day. Supporting all the Memorial runners on Saturday morning was cross country coach Vicki Bevan.

“We got a real nice run in here, and we are supporting Spring Branch this morning,” she said. Officials with the Spring Branch Education Foundation (SBEF) reported having an incredible day and great turnout to support fine arts and health fitness.

All Running for the Arts proceeds benefit the district’s highly popular Art Partners Program, which gives more than 18,000 students an opportunity to attend fine arts performances ranging from the opera and symphony to many local museums. In addition, event proceeds benefit the SBISD Health Fitness Association.

A silent art auction also raises funds the annual event. Memorial City Mall, an underwriter, was the location for all Running for the Arts events.

Spring Branch Education Foundation Chairman Mike Rome recognized the many dedicated volunteers who spent months helping put together the benefit run/walk.

He honored the following groups and volunteers during special remarks:
  • National Charity League volunteers
  • District Art Coordinator Sally Doyle
  • District Fine Arts Coordinator Rusty Hess
  • Housman Elementary Health Fitness Teacher Jackie Truesdale
  • District musical groups, including the jazz bands at Northbrook High, Memorial High and Spring Woods High; Stratford High Marching Band; Spring Woods High Percussion; SBISD Elementary Strings; and the choirs from Buffalo Creek, Cedar Brook, Sherwood, Thornwood, and Spring Shadows elementary schools.
  • Food donors, including My Fit Foods, Third Coast Fresh Produce, B.J. Nix Produce, Labatt Food Service and SBISD Child Nutrition Services
 Event Silver Sponsors are:
  • ER 24-7
  • Brandon Fielder, Collins & Mott, LLP
  • Methodist West Houston Hospital
  • Memorial Hermann Memorial City Medical Center
 Event Bronze Medal Sponsors are:
  • Mallory and James Shaddix
  • Sue and Barry Abrams
  • Wright Asphalt – Pam and Doug Goodson
  • Johnson Deluca Kurisky & Gould, PC
  • Bernstein Realty Young Audiences of Houston donated two $500 gift certificates to Running for the Arts and to Arts Partners for their continued support.
An awards ceremony and random prize drawings were also held. Overall male and female winners each received a $300 Memorial City Mall gift certificate.

Male and female top finishers in the masters, or 40-years-old or older division, also each won $200 mall certificates. Medals were awarded to 1st, 2nd and 3rd place male and female winners in a variety of age groups.

As the school with the most participation, Memorial Drive Elementary School won a $500 Young Audience and $500 Academy gift certificates for its health fitness department. In the random drawing for campuses with at least 10 event registrations, separate $500 Young Audience and Academy gift certificates were awarded, respectively, to Valley Oaks Elementary and Spring Woods Middle School.

Running for the Arts winners by top open categories:
Overall Male & Female Open Winners Luis Armenteros -- 15:49.8 Kylee Short -- 18:51.6
Masters Division Male & Female (Over 40) Jace Heuring -- 18:06.5 Cindy Taylor -- 18:56.7

For more times and categories, please visit the race website:

http://eztoregister.com/assets/Arts13.HTM

Odyssey of the Mind Primary Round UP!

All kindergarten and first grade parents are invited to attend the first annual "Primary Round Up for Odyssey of the Mind."

The event will occur on Tuesday, May 14th at 6:00pm at West Transition Campus in the lunchroom. The campus is located at the corner of Tiger Trail and Shadowdale (Which is right next to Spring Oaks MS). Come see what Odyssey of the Mind is and how your child can benefit from this fun international program. This year SBISD had 22 teams compete at state finals and 5 are heading for World Finals.

The primary problem is not competitive but they solve the same type of problems and have just as much fun as the 3rd-12th graders. The program will be led by Iris Story, Council of PTA Creativity and Odyssey of the Mind Director who has coached over 45 teams of her own. Don't miss it and start your own Odyssey! For questions call 713-690-1108 or email Omers5@aol.com.

Mustangs vs. Mustangs

Yes, onlookers during the Class 5A state championship boys double tennis match in Austin on April 30 could be forgiven for “seeing double” during one final state match up.

Memorial High School’s boys doubles tennis pair Grant Reichmann and William Jou faced opponents they knew really well – Memorial High teammates Thomas Pecor and Christian Vieira.

“We had to treat it like they were someone that we didn’t know. But at the same time, we couldn’t be overconfident because we knew who we were playing,” Grant Reichmann told a Houston Chronicle news reporter in Austin.

Reichmann and Jou won the state Class 5A title 6-2, 6-4 against their teammates at the Penick-Allison Tennis Center during the state finals. In all, nine Memorial High tennis players travelled to the University of Texas at Austin for the state tennis tournament after winning at the 5A Region III Tennis Finals.

The Mustangs dominated the regional tournament by winning four out of five championships. Separately, the Stratford High Spartans qualified six athletes for the state tourney after a record performance at the 4A Region III Regional Tennis Tournament.

In Austin, the 4A state finals were also held April 29-30. Regional champions and state qualifiers from these two high schools include: 

Memorial Boys Singles: Dane Esses – Regional Champion/State Qualifier Tadhg Collins – 3rd Place/ State 1st Alternate

Memorial Boys Doubles: Thomas Pecor and Christian Vieira – State Winners/Regional Champions Grant Riechmann and William Jou – Regional Finalist/ State Runners-up

Memorial Girls Doubles: Nava and Nousha Nowamooz – Regional Champions/State Qualifiers 

Memorial Mixed Doubles: Katie Davis and Ciro Lampasas – Regional Champions/State Qualifiers Memorial High’s tennis coach is Bud Booth.

Stratford Boys Singles: Cameron Long – Regional Champion/State Qualifier 

Stratford Boys Doubles:  Thomas Leyden & Nicholas Butler – Regional Champions/State Qualifiers

Stratford Mixed Doubles:  Josh Holloway & Kaylin Kruseman – Regional Champions/State Qualifiers

Stratford High’s tennis coach is Rory Frazee.

Best High School Rankings

Several news organizations have published their annual ratings and reviews of high schools. Several Spring Branch ISD campuses ranked well in these annual ratings. 

U.S. News & World Report 

http://www.usnews.com/education/high-schools/articles/2013/04/23/us-news-releases-2013-best-high-schools-rankings 

Memorial and Stratford high schools earned national Gold Medal awards, and the district’s public charter secondary school, Westchester Academy for International Studies, brought home a national Silver Medal in this news group’s rankings.

Nationally, the three SBISD high schools were ranked 233 (Memorial), 500 (Stratford), and 1,172 (Westchester Academy).

U.S. News & World uses a formula to rank 18,196 public high schools across the nation based on 2011 Advanced Placement performance, college readiness standards and academic performance among black, Hispanic and low-income students.

At the state level, the schools were ranked 32 (Memorial), 53 (Stratford) and 111 (Westchester Academy).

Spring Woods and Northbrook high schools were not ranked.

Newsweek/The Daily Beast 

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/features/2013/americas-best-high-schools.html 

Memorial and Stratford high schools joined Westchester Academy on this group’s ranking of the best 2,000 public high schools in the nation. Memorial ranked 254 on this list, followed by Stratford at 774 and Westchester at 924.

According to editors, these top 2,000 public high schools are the best for turning out college-ready grads. Rankings are based on six factors – graduation rate (25 percent); college acceptance rate (25 percent); AP/IB/AICE (Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate or Advanced International Certificate of Education) tests taken per student (25 percent); average SAT/ACT scores (10 percent); average AP/IB/AICE scores (10 percent); and percent of students enrolled in at least one advanced level course like AP/IB or AICE (5 percent).

Washington Post’s Most Challenging High Schools

http://apps.washingtonpost.com/local/highschoolchallenge/schools/2013/list/texas-schools/

Based on self-reported information, Stratford High was ranked 58th statewide among Texas high schools. High schools in this ranking earn an index score that is determined by the number of college-level tests given at a school in 2012 divided by the number of graduates that year. Also noted are the percentage of students who qualify for lunch subsidies and the percentage of graduates who passed at least one college-level test during their high school career.

SPA Awards & Scholarships

Seven Memorial High students earned awards and scholarships during the 15th annual Student Visual Art Contest sponsored by the Society for the Performing Arts (SPA). The event, held at the Wortham Theater Center, is underwritten by Wells Fargo this year.

 In all, more than 500 pieces of student art were submitted to this year’s contest. They represent student artists enrolled from kindergarten to 12th grade. Contest theme for this year was “The Spirit of Cultural Celebration.”

 Memorial High students honored by the SPA at the Wortham Center were:


  • Jun Young Baik, a senior, who was the recipient of the $1,000 Jake Scholarship for Artistic Merit for her work titled “Dressed Up”
  • Seoyoung Kim, 1st place in Division D (9th through 11th grades)
  • Bethany Ochs, 2nd place, Division D
  • Anna (He Won) Cho, See Woo Jong and Hyeyun Jeong, Honorable Mention, all in Division D
  • Timothy Davis, senior, Division E (Graduating Senior) 
Memorial High School winners received scholarships to the Glassell Junior School, memberships to the Museum of Fine Arts, and tickets to see a SPA-presented performance.

Saving the Greeks


Cornerstone Academy theater students poked fun at the ancient Greeks with two performances of the comedy, “Saving the Greeks: One Tragedy at a Time.” The show poked fun at mythology, and it was performed April 19-20.

“We had fun inserting characters that didn’t belong in Ancient Greece – for example Napoleon, a mailman, and a chorus from “Grease,” the American movie, not Greece,” stated July Pendergrass with Cornerstone Drama. In addition, Cornerstone middle school students designed and built a 10-foot cyclops that came to life through four puppeteers.

In Greek and Roman mythology, a Cyclops was a member of a primordial race of giants, each with a single eye in the middle of its forehead. Students also designed and painted a 15x30 feet backdrop. They also created additional projected backgrounds through the use of Cornerstone’s newly installed projector.

A+ in Agribotics


Two sixth-graders and a sophomore at Westchester Academy for International Studies won a second-place title in the first annual 2013 Agribotics Competition held recently at Prairie View A&M University. Students were Miles Turner and Jack Chipman, both sixth grade, and Randy Caraballo, 10th grade.

 Student teams were invited to compete based on placement in City-Wide and All-City competitions in March and April. In all, 14 teams competed during three rounds, followed by single-eliminate competitions. 

During the competition, the Spring Branch ISD team was complimented for teamwork and their respect for each other.

Distinguished Service Award

Spring Branch ISD Executive Director of Athletics Paige Hershey was one of four area sports leaders inducted May 1 into the Greater Houston Football Coaches Association’s 2013 John Kelly Distinguished Service Awards hall of fame. She is the first area woman to receive this group’s highest service honor.

Paige Hershey received the distinguished service award at the association’s Awards Night, which was held at the University of Houston. Joining her there as service award recipients were Mike Atkinson, a Texas Association of Sports Officials (TASO) referee, Rice University head coach David Bailiff, and TASO referee Keith Kimmel.

A 1984 graduate of Rice University, Paige Hershey’s entire professional career has been devoted to SBISD athletics. She was named district athletics director in 2001, and she was elevated to the executive director position in May 2010.

In December 2009, Paige was one of seven recipients to be awarded the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (NIAAA) Distinguished Service Award at the national level.

First at Eurofest

A Spring Woods High School student team took first recently at Odyssey of the Mind’s Eurofest international gathering, which was held in Berlin, Germany.

 Students Odalis Garcia, Emily Mitchell, Parker Blome, Richard Young, Adam Tutt, and Jeremy Jackson were invited to compete during the 2013 Odyssey of the Mind Eurofest, which included students from 18 countries and four continents.

In all, 110 student teams met at Eurofest. The Spring Woods High students worked all year preparing their solution to Odyssey of the Mind problem No. 5, titled "It's How You Look at It."

 Their creative solution included a spinning background, a student team created instrument called a tubaphone, and a librarian's dress made from pages of a book.

Eurofest differs from Odyssey of the Mind World Finals in that teams are grouped with two other countries to solve a problem. Despite the language barrier, Spring Woods High’s team created and performed a stunning performance with student teams from Moldavia and Russia.

Meeting the Challenge



Spring Branch ISD’s volunteer-fueled Collegiate Challenge program paid off handsomely for 178 seniors when they learned recently that their hard work on thousands of essays and applications had returned $3.4 million to them – and the good news is still piling up!

On April 23, many Collegiate Challenge seniors joined with their adult mentors and family members in a first-of-its-kind public celebration and reception at the Omni Houston Hotel Westside.

The district-wide event drew about 300 people. It included a reception with simple hors d’oeuvres and speeches addressed to students and families by SBISD Superintendent of Schools Duncan Klussmann, Ed.D. Dr. Klussmann gave gathered students his personal cell phone number and told them to call him if they needed counseling on college-related topics like first-year scheduling.

The Collegiate Challenge program is the college-focused mentoring program that currently pairs 110 community members and district staff members with more than 170 high school juniors and seniors.

Students must apply to the program. Most are in the top 10 or 20 percent of their classes. During weekly meetings, students are guided and mentored through the college application and admissions process, as well as college scholarship application and financial aid options.

At the April 23 celebration, Community Relations Officer Linda Buchman announced the following achievements for the 2013 Collegiate Challenge graduates – as of the April 23 event date:
  • $3.4 million in student scholarship opportunities to date
  • Recent announcement of a Gates Millennium Scholars Program senior scholarship winner at Westchester Academy for International Studies
  • An Air Force ROTC Scholarship recipient, also at Westchester Academy
  • Several big or fully paid student scholarships awarded to Ivy League colleges, including a Stratford High student with more than $200,000 in scholarships to MIT and a so-called POSSE student scholarship for one Spring Woods High student to Bryn Mawr College.
  • Several seniors have had brothers or sisters who were also Collegiate Challenge graduates
  • In all, students had committed so far to 35 universities ranging from the University of California at Santa Cruz to the University of St. Edwards in Scotland
  • The most popular college choices for students are: Texas A&M (29 students); University of Houston (24 students); Sam Houston State University (10 students); University of Texas at Austin (9 students); and Texas State University (6 students)
The Collegiate Challenge student program was founded in 2000 by district counselor and administrator Pat Waldrop and teacher Janet Sims. They worked at two campuses, Northbrook and Spring Woods high schools.

Several years later, SBISD’s Community Relations Department helped provide district support. The 13-year-old program has now won many awards, including Texas High School Exemplar Program and 2008 Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board’s STAR Award.

With Exemplar Program recognition, the Collegiate Challenge Program was expanded to all four traditional high schools and to Westchester Academy, a district public charter secondary school. “Collegiate Challenge…. was born from the need to help students better understand how to navigate the college application process,” SBISD’s Pat Waldrop said. “Due to the collaborative efforts of our coordinators and the Community Relations Department, the number of mentors and mentees has continued to grow.

With that growth, more students are realizing their college dreams and are able to secure funding to assure fulfillment,” she also said. Major community partners in this longstanding effort include Chapelwood United and Memorial Drive Presbyterian churches, Shell Oil, Westchester Alumni Association and the Notre Dame Club of Houston.

A program this year at Spring Woods High was supported by non-campus administrators. During keynote remarks, Dr. Klussmann warned the seniors that making a planned transition between high school and college was critical, including smart first-semester and first-year course choices. “Call me,” he said, after giving the group his cell phone number. “It’s important to ease into higher education.” He also encouraged students to follow their own interests and passions, and to be open to new ideas and challenges.

Parents should be supportive, while allowing their new collegians to figure things out on their own. Klussmann praised the first-time Collegiate Challenge gathering.”It is very important to have parents, mentors and students all in one place at one time like this,” he said. Five seniors representing the separate Collegiate Challenge programs talked about group and individual achievements.

At the end of the program, college “trunks” filled with freshman must-haves ranging from sheets and towels up to iPod Shuffles and instant noodles were given away as door prizes. Collegiate Challenge program coordinators include:
  • Memorial High – Counselor Darla Shirley and volunteer Ann Tidwell
  • Northbrook High – Counselor Emilio Gonzalez and Lisa Slinkard and volunteer Jeff Hoye
  • Stratford High – Counselor D’Ann Franklin and volunteer Emily Van Buren
  • Spring Woods High – Counselor Farah Ranjbaran, district staffer Becky Wuerth and volunteer Sandra Newton
  • Westchester Academy – Counselor Beverly Martin 
Student Reflections on the 2013 Collegiate Challenge Program: