Running vocational programs requires current technology and equipment and adequate supplies to give students the best experiences possible for the short time they are in high school.
Due to budget limitations, SSVT often looks for grant opportunities. Grants provide funds from outside sources, allowing schools to grow and modernize. It is not easy to get grant money because there are typically many schools and organizations who compete for this money.
I think this is important to share because it underscores our excitement when we learned that SSVT was awarded a $133,000 Massachusetts Life Sciences Award from the Mass Life Sciences Center. Here is a full copy of a press release issued from SSVT on the grant award.
The students who will benefit from the grant are our Engineering Academy students. The Engineering Academy includes students in Precision Machine Technology, Drafting and Electronics.
Congratulations to Electronics instructor Mr. Barba for writing the grant. It was a lot of work!
Below is the write-up and picture from the January 18, 2015 issue of the Boston Globe South section.
"The South Shore Vocational Technical High School in Hanover has received a $133,000 grant from the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, an organization dedicated to supporting innovation in the life sciences in Massachusetts. Administrators at the school announced that they plan to use the money to jump-start the school’s 11th- and 12th-grade engineering curriculums and to introduce students to real-world prototype manufacturing processes. “It’s going to allow us to expand our shop and to buy equipment to teach students premanufacturing processes,” Vincent Barba, the school’s electronics department head, said of the grant. He said he also hopes to expand the school’s relationship with electronics companies, which provide excess and obsolete components for the students to work with.
Electronics students Brittany Ceurvels, Nathan Tavares, Richie Lobo, and Madeline Long, with instructor Mr. Johnson |
---Mr. Hickey