Friday, January 30, 2015
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NEW KID IN TOWN
78th Texas Citrus Fiesta “Old Time Rock & Roll” Fiesta Fun Fair
Saturday, Jan. 31, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Free Gate Admission at Leo Peña Placita Park Food Vendors – Arts & Craft Kiddie Rides – Entertainment
Parade of Oranges
Saturday, Jan. 31, at 3 p.m. North to South on Conway, from FM 495 to Fourth Street Line up starts at 11 a.m.
Vaquero Cook-off
Saturday, Jan. 31, all day Leo Peña Veterans Park
Fun Run
Mission Collegiate joins Parade of Oranges tradition
W
By Julie Silva hen two students at Mission Collegiate High School suggested constructing a float for the Texas Citrus Fiesta Parade of Oranges, Principal Orlando Farias hesitated. Everyone had just returned from winter break, the deadline to enter the event – Jan. 20 – was drawing near, and they had less than a month to put a float together. And they weren’t talking about constructing just any old float. The school is the only newcomer this year to the products division of the annual Parade of Oranges, held on the last Saturday of the Texas Citrus Fiesta. To qualify, the float must be covered in products grown specifically in the Rio Grande Valley. “I was looking at the timeframe and thinking we may not be able to make it,” Farias said. “But we put stu-
“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life.” – Lourdes Acuña dents first.” This year’s parade is slated for Saturday, Jan. 31, at 3 p.m. It will run north to south on Conway, starting at Farmto-Market Road 495 and ending on Fourth Street. When he started discussing the idea with employees on campus, they all encouraged it. The school’s art teachers drew up a sketch of what the float should look like, working with this year’s “Old Time Rock & Roll” theme. Art teacher Lourdes Acuña is the one who first sketched the outline of the float and handed it to Farias, telling him, “This is your job, do good.” She said her boss works just as hard as the
See TRADITION 14
Saturday, Jan. 31, at 7:30 a.m. Mission Hike and Bike Trail
Mission Historical Museum exhibit Featuring traditional dresses of Mexico and sister cities On display through Feb. 7 Celebrating Cleo Dawson Friday, Jan. 30, at 1:30 p.m.
The Border Theater
Screening of “She Came to the Valley” begins at 2 p.m., followed by reception at Mission Historical Museum
Heart of America Carnival FM 495 and Conway Avenue Jan. 21-31
Citrus Youth Show Jan. 31
For more information TOP: Carlos Ceja Jr., left, and Jonathan Perez, both juniors at Mission Collegiate High School, paint a sign for a float the campus intends to submit for the Product Division of the Parade of Oranges on Saturday. BOTTOM: Lourdes Acuña, art teacher, displays onion seeds used to detail the float. Progress Times photos by Julie Silva
Call 956-585-9724, email info@texascitrusfiesta.org or visit www.texascitrusfiesta.org.
Student careers become the priority in RGV
V
By Lea Victoria Juarez alley schools are adopting curriculum to better prepare their students for the real world. Ford industries is teaming with up with 12 districts in the Rio Grande Valley to implement a business model that focuses on students’ career interests in relation to their everyday studies. Mission CISD Superintendent Ricardo Lopez said he expects his district to lead the way for the rest of the Valley and is ready to hit the ground running. “As times evolve, we will evolve with them,” Lopez said. “No longer will you have a disconnect where the business community says ‘We’re not preparing
our kids for the real world.’ We’re bridging that gap.” RGV LEAD, a nonprofit organization that works to transition students from high school to college, is facilitating the partnership between Ford Next Generation Learning and the districts. Ford NGL is working to make high school students both college and career ready. The Linking Economic & Academic Development organization released a regional labor market report that highlighted the targeted occupations, their paying entry level and the opportunity for advancement in those occupations. Ford NGL responded to the report by offering to help introduce the academy formula to students in the region.
“This model really pushes at getting the student to identify with what they’re interested in,” RGV LEAD Director Norma Salaiz said. “It encourages educators to make it relevant to student interest and how it’s going to apply to their future success in the workplace.” Since September, the partners have been conducting once-a-month training and hope to finalize the curriculum in the summer. Mission CISD and La Joya ISD are among the 12 districts. LEAD also teamed up with the economic development corporations in the region to identify more specific targeted occupations. According to Salaiz, about 80 percent of students who graduate in the Rio Grande
Valley remain in the Valley and are not informed about the job market and training opportunities for any career of their interest. “We’re able to put together some educational information brochures for students and parents so the educators from those communities can use and say, ‘In the Mission area, or La Joya, these are the type of occupations that we currently have. This is what they’re paying. This is the kind of post-secondary training that you need to be able to get these types of jobs,’” Salaiz said. Ford NGL has implemented this model throughout the nation, including Nashville, Tennessee, and Louisville, Kentucky, and the Valley has the first Texas schools partic-
ipating. Students will learn in the classroom and have the opportunity to partake in internships, externships, job shadowing and practicum in the field of study they choose. Part of what makes the program successful, according to the RGV LEAD director, is the fact that the curriculum model largely focuses on student interest – a concept that can often be lost in a classroom. “It’s so easy to get caught up in focusing the curriculum and preparing students to pass end-of-course exams,” said Salaiz, a former teacher, administrator and superintendent. “It’s so easy to make that the focus and spending very little time stopping to
ask a student, ‘What is it that you want to do in life?’” La Joya ISD Superintendent Alda Benavides said the Ford NGL program aligned with the district’s goals. The district sent a group of representatives to check out the program already in place in a Nashville school last year. “We really want to make sure that we transform the lives of our secondary kids, our high school students–that they have a good experience and they’re ready to go out into the world with a career or a field of study that they really enjoy, and they want to pursue,” Benavides told school board members in a recent meeting. Benavides also presented
See STUDENT CAREERS 11
INSIDE
INDEX
Athletes inaugurate soccer fields
Mission residents in Slimdown Showdown
Chandler breaks swimming record
Thanks to a $50,000 donation, the city of Mission has two new soccer fields complete with goals, bleachers and irrigation.
Two of Mission’s own have been chosen to compete in H-E-B’s annual contest aimed at educating the public to lead healthy lifestyles.
Autumn Chandler, a swimmer for the Pioneer High Lady Diamondbacks, set a new district record in 100yard breast stroke.
See story page 5
See story page 3
See story page 8
Entertainment | pg. 2
Lifestyle | pg. 6
Opinion | pg. 4
Sports | pg. 8
Obituaries | pg. 11
Classifieds | pg. 13