On a typical day, Jemtegaard Middle School attendance Amy Lyall records about 100 student absences. On Wednesday, April 19, she recorded 32.
If you ask Hillary Chapman about the reason for the drastic decrease, she’ll say that the school’s annual Career Day event probably had a lot to do with it.
“That was the (best) attendance we’ve had in three years,” said Chapman, a principal intern at Jemtegaard. “Amy would say that a good day is if she has less than 100 students absent, and a miracle day is less than 60 absent. We had only 32 (on Career Day), and I’m really proud of that. And we only had eight students in the office that day for behavioral issues. After spring break, getting close to the end (of the school year), behavior (specialists) are usually busy.”
The event, which introduced more than 500 Washougal middle-school students to high-school readiness, career discovery and future planning, was “incredibly successful,” according to Chapman, who also serves as a library media specialist at Gause and Hathaway elementary schools.
“(I hoped that they learned that) there are so many pathways,” said Chapman, who organized the event. “If they have a talent or skill, there are different ways that they can pursue that talent or skill and find out what careers are within that. And (I hope they learned) that they don’t have to have just one career their whole life — they can kind of morph as their interests and talents develop as an adult.”