Proctor grad Hanninen eyes a social work career – Duluth News Tribune - Kenya writes

Post Top Ad

Responsive Ads Here

Proctor grad Hanninen eyes a social work career – Duluth News Tribune

Share This

Madison Hanninen estimated she’s spent about half of her time enrolled at Proctor High School learning outside it.

The COVID-19 pandemic meant swaths of her sophomore and junior years were spent learning from home while her mom, an essential worker at St. Luke’s hospital in Duluth, was away at work. That spurred Hanninen to throw herself into her senior year at Proctor, which is set to end on Sunday when she and about 125 of her classmates graduate at the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center.

Student smiles while adjusting clothes inside a thrift store
Proctor High School senior Madison Hanninen, 17, smiles while she gets ready to adjust some of the items on display in the Boxcar, which is the school’s thrift store, on Thursday. Hanninen will graduate Sunday.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

“I’ve really put my foot in the door,” she told the News Tribune.

The 17-year-old sampled several careers — nursing at Lake Superior College, emergency rescue via St. Louis County, autobody work at a local shop, and so on — via the “Proctor Pathways” program there and made a point of volunteering at the Boxcar, a thrift store filled with donated clothes and toiletries Proctor students can pick up free of charge twice a week or by appointment. Hanninen pushed to add a “hygiene cart” filled with soap, toothpaste, tampons, and so on.

She also put in time at the Salvation Army, cleaning and organizing donated clothes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Inspired by her extended family’s complicated path through parts of the criminal justice and social service systems, Hanninen hopes to become a social worker herself.

Kids, she said, need a good support system in similar circumstances.

“They need a good social worker,” Hanninen said. “They need somebody that wants the best interest for them.”

Reflection of a female student in a mirror inside a thrift store
The reflection of Madison Hanninen, 17, can been seen in a mirror inside the Boxcar Thrift Store at Proctor High School on Thursday. Hanninen, a senior, volunteers with the thrift store. She will graduate Sunday.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

She plans to head to Lake Superior College next fall to get an associate degree and then the University of Wisconsin-Superior to earn her bachelor’s degree.

Returning to class a struggle

But there was a downside to coming back to school in-person for Hanninen and many of her classmates. Switching from at-home Zoom calls and half-paid-attention-to lessons to a much more regimented, work-like class schedule was jarring, she said, which meant social anxiety as Hanninen and others adapted to their new routine.

“I suffered for the first few months of just having really bad anxiety attacks from being here,” Hanninen said, “and not being used to being around all these people and the loud noises and unexpectedness of what was going to go on with the day.”

High School staff member listens
Sarah Klyve, the dean of students and Proctor Pathways coordinator, listens during a conversation while sitting in her office at Proctor High School on Thursday.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

Almost all of the students and staff at Proctor High School had a similar experience, according to Sarah Klyve, the school’s student success coordinator and its dean of students. She said she helps students with behavior issues or other “negative outlets” figure out what they want to do after high school and, the hope is, get more comfortable in school and find a way that it applies to them.

Back in a run-of-the-mill classroom, Klyve said, students were more prone to outbursts and sickness, which she chalked up to anxiety manifesting itself as, say, a stomach ache.

ADVERTISEMENT

Most students weren’t particularly successful, academically, learning online, Klyve said. Many skirted by a subject during distance learning and weren’t ready for the rigor expected of them during in-person classes.

Female high schools student smiles and listens
Proctor High School senior Madison Hanninen, 17, smiles while describing her plans after she graduates on Sunday. Hanninen plans to attend Lake Superior College to complete her general studies and then pursue a degree in social work at the University of Wisconsin-Superior.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

“It’s been really, really difficult,” Klyve said. “We’ve seen at least a year delay in most students.”

District leaders hope to make up for some of that lost time by offering “extended” school days for students who have struggled with the transition back to class. That means a spot to stay after school and work with a teacher to get homework help and other assistance.

And the Pathways program, which the district instituted a few years ago, can also help ease the switch back to a physical school by offering chances to sample careers outside their normal classrooms — such as job shadowing and internships.

“That helps students feel more engaged with school,” Klyve said, “and see the value of what they’re doing in the classroom.”

High School student smiling
Madison Hanninen, 17, a senior at Proctor High School, smiles during a conversation about her future plans. She will graduate from Proctor High School Sunday.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

Student looks at clothing items in a thrift store
Madison Hanninen, 17, looks over the clothing items inside the Boxcar Thrift Store at Proctor High School on Thursday while her reflection can be seen in the mirror in the left corner. Hanninen, a senior, volunteers with the thrift store. She will graduate on Sunday.

Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune

You can reach Joe Bowen at 218-720-4172 or jbowen@duluthnews.com .



from WordPress https://ift.tt/xVGptKb
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Post Bottom Ad

Responsive Ads Here

Pages