Category Archives: Waco

TSTC Graduate-Veteran Starts Work on Second Associate Degree

(WACO) – Hours of grueling work in the biting cold while serving in the U.S. Army trained Luis Trevino to deal well with extremes.

“I had never been in snow like that,” said Trevino, 34, of San Benito. “We trained in the mountains and the weather. Afghanistan got really cold. The military taught me about being organized, being disciplined, and with Alaska, about safety. You had to have gloves on or you could get frostbite. You had to use safety precautions.”

Trevino graduated in August from Texas State Technical College in Harlingen with an Associate of Applied Science degree in Welding Technology. A week late, he began the Fall Semester at Texas State Technical College in Waco, pursuing an Associate of Applied Science degree in Occupational Safety Compliance Technology.

“I could not wait to come back and learn more,” he said. “I think it’s amazing and I love my instructors.”

TSTC in Waco’s technical program specializes in teaching students about environmental and construction regulations, jobsite inspections, training and standard operating procedures.

“Our graduates on average enter the workforce making $55,000, depending on the location of the job and previous experience,” said Martin Knudsen, an associate professor in the Environmental Health, Safety and Radiation Protection Technology Department at TSTC in Waco. “Typical job titles include safety and health manager, regulatory compliance coordinator and corporate safety officer.”

Trevino said he has enjoyed learning about what Waco has to offer, including the hiking trails at Cameron Park and opportunities to run on hills. He looks forward to exploring the city’s museums and restaurants.

“When you get out of the Rio Grande Valley, you start thinking bigger, you open your mind, you are challenging yourself,” he said.

Trevino grew up in San Benito.

“We would climb on trees in the backyard and play football with the kids in the neighborhood,” he said. “By the time the outdoor lights came on, you had to be inside.”

He graduated in 2001 from San Benito High School, where he was on the track and wrestling teams.

He waited a couple of years before enlisting in the U.S. Army with postings at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Fort Wainwright in Alaska. He was in the Army for nine years, leaving as a sergeant. His service included tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq.

After he left the military, he knew he needed a career.

“I always wanted to be a welder and wanted to do it on the side,” Trevino said. “It is hard and rough work, and when I was in the military I was in infantry and did a lot of hard work. Welding is a labor of love, but it’s not what I want to do. Safety naturally came to me as something I found interesting, especially in welding with safety using gases, the hoses and being safe.”

Kenny Moore, chair of the Welding Technology Department at TSTC in Harlingen, admires Trevino’s perseverance.

“He got out of sequence on some of his classes from the beginning but pushed through,” Moore said. “He never gave up and always had a great attitude. He was always very respectful and patient and was always very eager to learn new welding and fabrication techniques. He seems to thoroughly enjoy this industry, and because of that he will definitely succeed.”

Trevino was active in TSTC in Harlingen’s Veteran Student Alliance Club, a group he hopes to be part of in Waco.

He wants one day to own property north of Houston and become a federal occupational safety and health administration inspector.

“You get to look out for the welfare of other people and take responsibility of other people,” Trevino said.

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TSTC Alumna Returns as Employee

(FORT BEND) – From lost to found, Texas State Technical College alumna Georgeann Calzada attended classes on the Harlingen campus during a time when her future was uncertain. She now finds herself back at TSTC, this time as an employee ready to help college students the same way she once was helped.

Calzada now works at the TSTC campus in Fort Bend County as director of student services while finishing up graduate school at Sam Houston State University, where she is pursuing a master’s degree in higher education administration.

But it has been a difficult decade to get where she is today.

The 33-year-old single mother first graduated from TSTC in 2007 with an associate degree in business office technology, which is now business management technology.

“I found myself at TSTC,” said Calzada. “I had just had a baby. I was a single parent and I was lost, but the support I received at the college was invaluable to my growth.”

It was during Calzada’s timGeorgeann Calzadae at TSTC that her passion for higher education began to blossom. She was involved with Student Government Association, serving as secretary and president. It was through her student leadership positions that she started to see the importance of a college experience outside of a classroom.

“I had no idea where life was taking me. I was living off of food stamps and Medicaid,” said Calzada. “I suddenly then fell into my career. I had no set plans of going into higher education, but now I can’t see myself doing anything else.”

Calzada got her feet wet in higher education when she worked for TSTC as a pre-tech advisor for the High School Equivalency Program, working closely with the General Educational Development (GED) student population.

“I’ve always advised students that TSTC is just the beginning to a successful career,” said Calzada. “It’s an important stepping stone in their life and it definitely was in mine.”

Calzada went on to transfer to the University of Texas at Brownsville, where she received a Bachelor of Applied Arts and Science degree with minors in sociology, psychology and business technology.

Calzada also worked for Texas State University as a freshman academic advisor for four years, before deciding it was time for a change.

Fortunately, Calzada was offered her new position at TSTC and made the move to Fort Bend County.

“I was shocked when I was offered this position,” said Calzada. “I wanted it so badly, yet it was my worst interview ever. But I guess my experience was enough. This job is exactly what I need right now.”

The student services director is now ready to help students find themselves, the way TSTC helped her chart her future.

“I’m here to bring their (students’) dreams to life,” said Calzada. “I’m here to make sure they succeed, and I promise that there will always be help for them if they need it.”

In the New Year Calzada plans to make the most out of homework-free evenings. She plans on spending more time with her son, traveling and enjoying having family nearby once again.

For more information on programs offered at TSTC in Fort Bend County, call 346-239-3438 or visit tstc.edu.

Fredericksburg Students Find Their Way to TSTC in Waco

(WACO) – Village Oaks Apartments at Texas State Technical College in Waco could unofficially be renamed Fredericksburg North.

At least 10 students from Fredericksburg High School are enrolled this year at TSTC and live at the on-campus student apartments. Several of them are pursuing the same major and tackling the transition from high school to college together with humor and discovery.

“I thought it would be hard meeting new people, but it’s not,” said William O’Connell, 18, a first-semester Computer Maintenance and Technology major.

Some of the students learned about the technical college from Fredericksburg High School automotive teacher and 2000 TSTC in Waco graduate Blake Schmidt.

“I spent 11 years as a technician working in dealerships on GM products,” Schmidt said. “This is now my third year teaching and I love it. I get the opportunity to teach at the same high school I graduated from. It is so important to inspire students and let them know what is available to them after high school. I thought the Automotive Technology program was great when I attended, and the instructors pushed and encouraged me to be the best I could be.”

Jacob Coolidge, 19, a first-semester Diesel Equipment Technology – Heavy Truck Specialization major, credits Schmidt with motivating him to enroll at TSTC. He said Schmidt emphasized during classes what students would expect at the technical college.

“I didn’t want to go to college for the longest time, but I thought of being an electrician or working in the oil fields,” Coolidge said. “I thought I could go to college and become a diesel equipment repairman.”

Coolidge already had a tie to the Waco campus before he moved into his on-campus apartment in mid-August: his grandparents lived at what was then Connally Air Force Base and his family has traveled to the Waco area for years to visit relatives and go fishing.

Two years ago, Schmidt and Logan Minshew, a counselor at Fredericksburg High School, began taking 40 juniors and seniors each spring to visit TSTC in Waco.

“I believe letting the students see firsthand the quality education they can receive helps a lot,” Minshew said. “They also see the potential for increased earning power. With Blake, I think they also see that they can stay part of the awesome Fredericksburg community when they complete their training. We really enjoy our annual trip to TSTC and hope to continue to grow the partnership that is helping train tomorrow’s leaders.”

So far, the students have been adjusting to long breaks between classes and realizing the importance of balancing work and studying without parental supervision. O’Connell has taught Isaiah Rivera, 18, a first-semester Automotive Technology major, how to do his laundry.

“We are just now getting to the first bills,” said Rivera. “Three of us work at Whataburger part time. We are trying to support ourselves while attending school.”

Rivera said he has had to adjust to doing classwork online.

“I like it for the most part, but I don’t like thinking if instructors received the homework or not,” Rivera said. “With technology there is a chance it could not be submitted.”

Many of the Fredericksburg students tend to migrate to classmate Dillon Nielsen’s apartment at Village Oaks because of cable availability, Coolidge said. Schmidt said Nielsen, 18, is attending TSTC on a scholarship from Toyota of Boerne.

A lot of the students have longtime ties to one another. Coolidge and O’Connell estimated they have known each other since elementary school, while Tyler McWilliams, 18, an Automotive Technology major, grew up across the street from Coolidge.

Some of the students said they missed cruising Fredericksburg’s Main Street, off-roading on dirt roads and socializing in the parking lots of popular eateries and stores.

Rivera said their joint goal is to visit Fredericksburg once a month.

“We have family and some of us have relationships,” he said.

Some of the students are already making plans for life after graduation.

Randall Friedrich, 18, is an Automotive Technology major with a simple goal: to make money.

McWilliams said he wants to return to Fredericksburg and work with his relatives.

Coolidge wants to move to Florida and do diesel work.

“I do like to travel and go to different places,” he said.

For more information on TSTC, log on to tstc.edu.

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TSTC Works With Waco Companies on Skills Development

(WACO) – Texas State Technical College in Waco and the Texas Workforce Commission are partnering to provide workforce development to two local companies.

Jobe’s on Franklin Avenue and Hobbs Bonded Fibers on South Commerce Drive, both in Waco, are utilizing TSTC’s Workforce Training and Continuing Education programs to update workers’ skills.

“I know the quality of education at TSTC,” said Wayne Winekauf, Jobe’s director of plant operations. “I’m very impressed. It’s a gem that is hidden.”

Jobe’s employees take master rolls of outdoor commercial fabric, such as burlap and sun screen, and cut them to be consumer-ready in various lengths. The company has 30 workers, but increases to 100 employees during their busy period from January to May.

The Jobe’s workers recently took part in operation care classes through a state Skills Development Fund grant valued at more than $60,000. Workers learned about troubleshooting, upkeep and quality control on their shrink wrap, winding and other machines. A representative from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration also visited to talk about workplace and machine safety.

“TSTC is focused on the manufacturing side,” said Winekauf. “The safety was key to having someone come in and review the safety recommendations. Someone from the outside is respected more.”

Several of Jobe’s workers said they benefited from the training.

Arturo Vicinais, a night lead operator who runs machines and works on production floor compliance, has been at the company for 10 years. He appreciated the training in the importance of communication, inspection and audit forms.

“You can take more pride in your work and everything will be more organized,” he said.

Barron Parks, a machine operator, has worked at Jobe’s the last year and a half.

“The safety class we had was very much needed,” Parks said. “There are a lot of dangerous machines here if you don’t know the safety procedures. Everyone should be held more responsible.”

Thirty-eight workers from Hobbs Bonded Fibers began taking Thursday and Friday classes in mid-August lasting for six weeks so they can learn to weld using structured steel. The training is also under a state Skills Development Fund grant worth at least $60,000.

“These guys have never welded before,” said Shawn Grisham, a welding trainer in Workforce Training and Continuing Education at TSTC in Waco. “They are making very good welds.”

For more information on Workforce Training and Continuing Education at TSTC, call 254-867-2053 or log on to tstc.edu.

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Project Link Students Begin Academic Year at TSTC in Waco

(WACO) – Andre Bernal and Joseph Ramos Jr. have been linked since they were preschoolers.

The two attended Head Start together, grew up a street apart, both attended the old University Middle School and graduated together earlier this year from University High School in Waco.

Now, the lifelong friends are students at Texas State Technical College in Waco. Bernal, 18, is a Computer Network and Systems Administration major and Ramos, 18, is an Automotive Technology major. Both are Texan Success Scholarship recipients.

The students are among more than 20 members of the 2015-16 cohort of Prosper Waco’s Project Link representing University High School and La Vega High School to enroll at TSTC this fall.

Project Link is a grant-funded initiative aimed at creating a college-going culture by connecting students to higher education and the workforce. The La Vega Independent School District, the Waco Independent School District, McLennan Community College, TSTC and Prosper Waco are partners in the project, which included more than 130 high school seniors in its first year who took advantage of education and career advising. The program had 730 students in grades nine to 12 last year, according to Project Link information.

“The liaisons at the high schools did a good job preparing them for college,” TSTC Project Link Coordinator Brandon Chappell said. “Some of the students registered toward the end of registration. We need to be more aggressive and keep them on track after graduation. Financial aid was a common question from the students.”

Bernal and Ramos are among the first generation of their families to attend college – something Project Link campus liaisons look for when recruiting students.

So far, Bernal has discovered TSTC’s Murray Watson Jr. Student Recreation Center to play pickup games of basketball. He wants to work in the technology field after graduation and pursue a bachelor’s degree.

“I am not used to long breaks between classes and the free time,” Bernal said. “I am getting used to it. I am meeting new people.”

Ramos took automotive classes for four years in high school and said he wanted to learn more in college. He wants one day to work at a Chevrolet dealership.

Bernal, Ramos, and their University High School classmates all completed applications through ApplyTexas and had a 100 percent federal financial aid application completion rate. La Vega’s Project Link seniors had a 98 percent federal financial aid application completion rate and a 100 percent ApplyTexas application rate.

The program has made some changes to start the new academic year.

Project Link has expanded to Waco High School and added a campus liaison, while University High School has two new program liaisons to work with students.

“With the addition of Waco High School, Project Link will be serving 1,000 high school students at three different high schools for year two of the program,” said Natalie James, Project Link Coordinator at McLennan Community College.

For more information on Prosper Waco and Project Link, go to prosperwaco.org.

For more information on TSTC, visit tstc.edu.

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Challenger Learning Center Formally Opens at TSTC in Waco

(WACO) – Haylee Harper, 9, of Bosqueville, has career goals as big as the solar system.

“I like learning about science,” the Bosqueville Elementary School fourth-grade student said. “I want to one day put a flag on a planet.”

Harper said she enjoyed talking into a microphone inside Mission Control at the new Challenger Learning Center, which formally opened Thursday night with a community event at Texas State Technical College in Waco.

The educational center on Airline Drive is the third of its kind in Texas and is affiliated with the not-for-profit Challenger Center for Space Science Education in Washington, D.C. The state’s other centers are at Texas State Technical College in Harlingen and San Antonio College. There are more than 40 centers nationwide and in Canada, South Korea and Great Britain.

The center’s purpose is to bring the sun, moon, stars, and planets to life for students. After a meeting in a briefing room, students are divided into two groups, one to work in Mission Control, and the other in a working laboratory. Students also “ride” on the Space Shuttle Challenger and visit a planetarium. The activities center on communication, critical thinking, leadership, science, mathematics, engineering and technology.

“These kids get a sense of accomplishment,” said Dr. Lance Bush, president and chief executive officer of the Challenger Center.

Kris Collins, senior vice president of economic development for the Waco Chamber of Commerce, said aviation and aeronautics are target industries for the city. She said TSTC and its learning center, along with SpaceX in McGregor, were critical to the chamber’s goals.

“I think it’s fantastic for the technical school to bring students in to showcase the programs offered,” Collins said.

Finding ways to teach science creatively to students can be a challenge for educators.

China Spring Middle School eighth-grade science teacher Shannon Field saw the learning center for the first time and imagined her students visiting. She said the center puts space science in front of the students and can hopefully spark curiosity.

“I think it’s great,” Field said. “Field trips are usually confined. This in our backyard.”

Carson Pearce, director of the TSTC Aerospace Division, hopes the students’ interest in science today translates into future air traffic controllers, pilots, aircraft technicians and other aeronautical careers. He said there is a 94 percent placement rate for division graduates.

“Once they (students) get energized and have the imagination, they are going to want an outlet,” Pearce said.

The Cooper Foundation and the Rapoport Foundation, both in Waco, made substantial financial gifts to the initiative.

Casey Sadler, the Rapoport Foundation’s foundation coordinator, predicted the center would bring more exposure to the technical college and Waco. She said education is one of the foundation’s areas of interest.

“Geographically it is an excellent location,” Sadler said. “Waco is on Interstate 35 with Dallas-Fort Worth and Austin close by for unbelievable opportunities for students.”

Addison Haygood, a fifth-grade student at Woodgate Intermediate School in the Midway Independent School District, dreams of being an astronaut someday, but also an actress.

“It was cool,” Haygood said about her visit. “I liked looking at all the planets and stars in the planetarium.”

Tours for area schools will begin later this fall. Trey Pearson, director of the Challenger Learning Center, is ready to see how students of all ages take to the simulations and planetarium.

“That’s going to be the exciting thing,” he said.

TSTC Chancellor Michael Reeser reminded attendees that the technical college was founded in 1965, the year of the early NASA spaceflight program Gemini. He said space can excite children.

“There is no more worthy way to explore space than to honor the people who explored the outer reaches of the universe,” Reeser said. “Every time a child comes through the center, we want hope and excitement to do the technology to make a difference in the country and world.”

The Challenger Learning Center honors the astronauts who died Jan. 28, 1986, when a booster engine failed on the Challenger space shuttle launching from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The initiative was founded later that year by the families of the seven astronauts tragically killed.

To register a class for the space exploration experience, log on to tstc.edu/challenger.

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TSTC Graduate Channels Love of Science Into Career

(WACO) – It is a place that one may not think of as visiting to get back to nature: the Chernobyl Power Complex in the Ukraine.

The nuclear facility became well known in spring 1986 as the site of reactor explosions due to inadequate design and worker error, according to the World Nuclear Association.

The plant was re-opened as a tourist attraction in 2011, according to the WNA. And this is a place Garrett Fulcher of Hamilton wants to visit because he is curious about how nature adapted to the accident.

That kind of interest propelled Fulcher to earn an Associate of Applied Science degree in Radiation Protection Technology at the Summer 2016 Commencement at Texas State Technical College in Waco.

As a student worker, he worked with Environmental Health, Safety and Radiation Protection Technology faculty members.

“He assisted in setting up the labs for experiments and was very helpful packing equipment to ship out for calibration,” said Jacob Navar, an instructor of Radiation Protection Technology. “He grasped the technical aspects and could do these without supervision.”

During the summer, Fulcher and other students took soil samples along the Brazos River and sent them to The University of Texas at Austin’s Nuclear Engineering Teaching Laboratory. The goal was to detect radiation and elements such as cadmium, chromium and arsenic in soil.

“The hands-on work gives me the job experience I need to get where I am going,” he said.

Fulcher will begin temporary employment in September at Quantum Technical Services in Houston, where he will work with employees performing diagnostic scans for naturally occurring radioactive material deposits at chemical and petroleum plants.

Meanwhile, Fulcher is applying for positions at U.S. Department of Energy labs and wants to conduct nuclear research.

He wants to see more students join the Radiation Protection Technology program because as baby boomers retire, younger and knowledgeable workers will be needed to fill positions.

“Follow what you are passionate about,” Fulcher said. “I’ve always been fascinated by how things work. And, keep an open mind.”

During his downtime, he enjoys hunting, fishing and off-roading.

“I am a small-town farm boy who grew up in the country,” he said.

He graduated in 2004 from Evant High School where he ran track.

After high school, he worked in a machine shop, was a certified hostage negotiator for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and traveled throughout the country.

He came to a point when he knew he needed to find a career that interested him.

“I was fascinated with working with atomic particles and how they work with each other,” Fulcher said.

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TSTC Instructor Named to Joint Radioactive Waste Disposal Commission

(WACO) – A member of Texas State Technical College in Waco’s Environmental Health, Safety and Radiation Protection Department has been reappointed to a federal-state commission.

Linda Morris, an adjunct instructor, campus radiation safety officer and former department chair, was named by Gov. Greg Abbott in August to serve a term expiring Sept. 1, 2021, on the Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commission. She was first appointed in 2012.

“It’s been an honor serving under Gov. Rick Perry and now Gov. Abbott,” Morris said. “I consider it a bright point of my career.”

The commission oversees the Texas Compact Waste Facility operated by Waste Control Specialists LLC in Andrews.  The commission looks after the disposal of low-level radioactive waste and studies new applications.

“I think it’s a positive image for TSTC,” Morris said about her role on the commission. “We have the only radiation protection technology program among Texas’ two-year colleges. Everyone sees me as a non-biased source on the commission.”

Morris is a technical expert on the eight-person panel made up of representatives from Texas and Vermont – states forming the commission.

“This allows the commission to analyze and assess many of the issues that come before us without the need to hire outside experts,” said Brandon T. Hurley, commission chair and an attorney at Kelly Hart and Hallman law firm in Fort Worth. “Linda has also been the chairman of our rules committee during a time when we have undergone a significant revision and addition to our rules that improved the way our commission operates and improves the processes utilized by waste generators and the operator of the low-level radioactive waste facility in Andrews County.”

Morris is a licensed medical physicist by the Texas Medical Board. She is a co-advisor for TSTC’s student branch of the Health Physics Society and co-director of the Central Texas Science and Engineering Fair held each winter at TSTC in Waco.

Morris has made presentations on radiation protection topics at conferences in Canada and the Czech Republic.

She earned a bachelor’s degree in biology with a minor in chemistry in 1970 at Lamar University in Beaumont. Morris went on to receive a master’s degree in biophysics in 1971 from Texas A&M University in College Station.

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Culinary Arts Program Cooking Up Visibility at TSTC

(HUTTO) – Texas State Technical College’s Culinary Arts program is gaining interest among students.

Chef Martin Ellenberger of Hutto joined the faculty at Texas State Technical College in Williamson County in late August. He is the primary instructor for that campus’ Culinary Arts program, which also has a high school dual enrollment teacher and an adjunct instructor.

Ellenberger, an Ohio native, initially joined the Culinary Arts faculty at TSTC in Waco in January 2015. He decided to change campuses to decrease his commute.

“It’s definitely different (at the Williamson County campus),” Ellenberger said. “There is a lot more stuff I need to stay on top of. I’m buying products and doing lesson plans. I’m able to create the recipes I want and have more responsibility with what I’m doing.”

The program had four students last fall, but has 12 students enrolled this year.

Brady Davis, 20, of Georgetown and a 2014 graduate of Eastview High School, has worked at the Walburg German Restaurant since high school. He said he finds kitchen life enjoyable and wants to learn everything he can in his classes. His goal is to own a food truck.

“I like the flexibility. The price was a huge factor, and I can keep a full-time job,” Davis said.

Brayan Flores, 18, of Taylor and a 2016 graduate of Taylor High School, took culinary classes through dual enrollment. The classes he is taking now at TSTC are an extension of what he has already learned. Flores also wants his own food truck or restaurant in a few years.

On a recent afternoon, Flores donned plastic gloves to melt a slab of butter on a pastry board to make dough.

“I like to look at different recipes and try them out,” Flores said. “I want to learn whatever will help me in the workforce.”

Some of the classes students will take this fall include Meat Preparation and Cooking, Food Service Operations and Systems, and Fundamentals of Baking.

“I like the way that we are structured,” Ellenberger said. “We take the students from having no culinary knowledge to being able to produce in a restaurant setting. I try to introduce as many items as possible that they would not be familiar with in the process.”

Culinary Arts’ two kitchens are on the third floor of the East Williamson County Higher Education Center in Hutto. The cooking kitchen can comfortably accommodate 24 students, and the baking kitchen can hold up to 20 students. Each kitchen has movable tables and stools, an array of skillets, pots, pans, ovens and cold-storage areas.

“I am excited and relieved at the opportunity to have someone who is as well-versed in our curriculum and as talented as Chef Martin is,” said Evan Morgan, Executive Director of the East Williamson County Higher Education Center. “In theory, this is his kitchen.”

When students leave the program with their Certificate 2 in Culinary Arts, Ellenberger wants them to be comfortable using knives, have an increased curiosity about food and have confidence in their skills.

Ellenberger’s goal, along with that of leaders at TSTC in Williamson County, is to see the program take advantage of the Austin area’s thriving culinary scene, where there is Thai, Chinese and Mexican cuisine, barbecue, Southern food and an assortment of food trucks.

The program will also enroll students in January for the Spring Semester. For more information, visit tstc.edu.

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TSTC and Richmond Rotary Make College a Reality for Local Woman

Apryl Molina finds herself in the daily struggle to make ends meet. With a brother and sister to take care of and medical bills to pay, the 21-year old dreams of a life where she has a career and a steady income.

“My mom is ill often and money is short, so paying for a college education is never on my priority list,” said Molina. “But I’ve just received a couple of scholarships and financial aid so everything is about to change for the better.”

Recently, Molina, who will be one of the first students to pursue an associate’s degree in Cyber Security at the new Texas State Technical College in Fort Bend County campus, was presented with a $500 scholarship from the Richmond Rotary Club, a donation made to TSTC for a student with financial need.

“This scholarship came out of nowhere and I couldn’t be more grateful. I literally cried when I found out I had received it,” said Molina. “I was really stressed out about how I was going to pay for school. For a while I thouApryl Molina receives scholarship from Richmond Rotary for TSTCght college wasn’t going to be a possibility for me.”

Richmond Rotary Club President-elect and Secretary Larry Pittman said it is helping students like Apryl that makes their donation so worthwhile. This is the first Rotary Club scholarship given to a TSTC student to help pay for tuition or books.

“Apryl is a terrific young lady who is fighting to get ahead,” said Pittman. “I hope that our scholarship can help fund a portion of her college career and help her achieve her educational and career goals.”

The Sugar Land native has big dreams to earn a college degree and work for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) helping save young children from the dangers of today’s cyber world. And because of the help she is receiving from TSTC and organizations like the Richmond Rotary, those dreams seem to be coming true.

“I’ve never received financial aid or scholarships before,” said Molina. “Because of all the assistance I’m getting I have been able to drop to part-time at my full-time job and fully focus on school and moving forward with my career.”

Molina also recently received a $1,000 scholarship from TSTC. She said she is so thankful for the help she received from staff at TSTC in Fort Bend County. Prior to TSTC, Molina had attended another local college and said she never received the kind of help she has at TSTC.

“Everyone from financial aid to admissions representatives really helped me get everything in order,” said Molina. “I’m excited to get started at a college where I’m a name, not only a number. They really care about the future of their students.”

For more information on TSTC’s Cyber Security program call 832-595-8734 or visit tstc.edu. The deadline to register is August 22. Fall 2016 students will be attending the new TSTC campus in Fort Bend County which will open in time for the first day of classes on August 29.