McCann Pins Largest Practical Nursing Class in School History

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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The 23 graduates chose personal mentors to apply their pin to the shirts. See more photos here.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — It required 10 months, 945 hours of classes, 540 clinical experience hours but now 23 graduates of McCann Technical School's Practical Nursing Program are ready for their licensing.

The school pinned the largest class in school history on Wednesday.

"I feel like I am sending my children off. And I'm going to miss them so much," said Program Coordinator Susan Watson said with tears in her eyes at the ceremony.

Watson said the students have gone through a lot to get to that point and not just with the rigors of the coursework — and being a graduate of the program, she knows how tough it is.

But many of the graduates were balancing raising children or working while they went through the program, she said.

"I'm sure it was not always easy. The program demands a lot of devotion. But they are all here tonight," she said.

Superintendent James Brosnan said the families who supported the students during those 10 months deserve credit as well.

Giving the graduation address, Elizabeth Kassel, director of nursing at Berkshire Community College, said learning the tools needed for the profession is difficult and teachers don't make it easy.

"We see you as the future of nursing. We did expect perfection in nursing school. But now we want you to be human, compassionate and gentle. In the interactions with our loved ones and the loved ones of others," she said.

Kassel has been teaching nursing for 29 of her 40 years in the profession and said there has been tremendous changes in the field. But while it changes, the nurses can keep up with it because "nursing  isn't what you do. It is who you are."

Just last summer, Kassel was teaching a class at the University of Massachusetts and her students were working with an elderly patient who refused to eat. The students later heard the woman singing showtunes. When Kassel returned to the room, she found her students singing with the woman while feeding her the first bites of food she had taken since being admitted to the hospital.

"I couldn't have been prouder to have been a nurse, teaching others, who took the time to really care about this patient. Nursing has been so much better than I envisioned it when I entered 40 years ago," she said.

She asked the students to love the profession like she does and to "keep learning and keep loving the profession."

After Kassel's encouragement, the student each had a mentor — a friend or family member — attach the nursing pin to each of their shirts and School Committee Chairman Thomas Mahar awarded them their certificates. And before leaving the school, they took the nurses' pledge.

The graduates:    
Adams:

Demitre Allen
Alicia Benoit
Mandy Duplantis
Christina Hall
Rebecca Warner

Clarksburg:
Emily Underwood

Hinsdale:
Brittany Bolio

Lanesborough:
Stacy Pilot

Lenox:
Vayola Nicolas

North Adams:
Ann Davignon
Heather Fachini
Brittany LaBigne
Julie Rickert
Natalie Serrano
Kayla Tooley

Pittsfield:
Cynthia Duah
Laura Fenwick
Lauren Gogan
Mrgan Larrow
Kimberly Moro

Stamford, Vt.:
Katelyn Cristofolini

Williamstown:
Alicia Jalalian

Windsor:
Colleen O'Brien-Denno

 


Tags: LPN,   McCann,   nursing education,   

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Capeless Students Raise $5,619 for Charity

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Students at Capeless Elementary School celebrated the season of giving by giving back to organizations that they feel inspired them.

On Monday night, 28 fourth-grade students showed off the projects they did to raise funds for an organization of their choice. They had been given $5 each to start a small business by teachers Jeanna Newton and Lidia White.

Newton created the initiative a dozen years ago after her son did one while in fifth grade at Craneville Elementary School, with teacher Teresa Bills.

"And since it was so powerful to me, I asked her if I could steal the idea, and she said yes. And so the following year, I began, and I've been able to do it every year, except for those two years (during the pandemic)," she said. "And it started off as just sort of a feel-good project, but it has quickly tied into so many of the morals and values that we teach at school anyhow, especially our Portrait of a Graduate program."

Students used the venture capital to sell cookies, run raffles, make jewelry, and more. They chose to donate to charities and organizations like St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Berkshire Humane Society and Toys for Tots.

"Teaching them that because they have so much and they're so blessed, recognizing that not everybody in the community has as much, maybe not even in the world," said Newton. "Some of our organizations were close to home. Others were bigger hospitals, and most of our organizations had to do with helping the sick or the elderly, soldiers, people in need."

Once they have finished and presented their projects, the students write an essay on what they did and how it makes them feel.

"So the essay was about the project, what they decided to do, how they raised more money," Newton said. "And now that the project is over, this week, we're writing about how they feel about themselves and we've heard everything from I feel good about myself to this has changed me."

Sandra Kisselbrock raised $470 for St. Jude's by selling homemade cookies.

"It made me feel amazing and happy to help children during the holiday season," she said.

Gavin Burke chose to donate to the Soldier On Food Pantry. He shoveled snow to earn money to buy the food.

"Because they helped. They used to fight for our country and used to help protect us from other countries invading our land and stuff," he said.

Desiree Brignoni-Lay chose to donate to Toys for Tots and bought toys with the $123 she raised.

Luke Tekin raised $225 for the Berkshire Humane Society by selling raffle tickets for a basket of instant hot chocolate and homemade ricotta cookies because he wanted to help the animals.

"Because animals over, like I'm pretty sure, over 1,000 animals are abandoned each year, he said. "So I really want that to go down and people to adopt them."

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