BCS Advantage Magazine Special Edition #9 | Page 8

Lightning Rod for STEM Careers By Tim Reaves, Communications Department A local business reminded A.C. Reynolds Middle School students that they don’t need to look far for a promising STEM career! Alltec LLC, a Canton-based company that produces lightning and surge protection systems, hosted an essay contest about lightning and the effects it has on daily life. “It’s always a great thing for a local company to come out into the school system,” said eighth-grade English Language Arts teacher Amy McCollum. “It opens students’ minds to professions that are out there. Everybody got excited that you could work for a company that deals with lightning!” “There are a lot of different technical positions within our type of company,” said Alltec President Chris Bean. “And we’ve been fortunate to work with a lot of local graduates.” A.C. Reynolds Middle School Assistant Principal Heather Brookshire, left, and Alltec LLC President Chris Bean, right, pose with eighth-grader Hayley Bleasdale-Velky, who won an essay contest about lightning and the effects it has on daily life. Hayley Bleasdale-Velky took top honors in the essay contest and won a full scholarship to cover the cost of the annual eighth-grade field trip to Charleston, South Carolina. “I was impressed by her level of detail,” Bean said. “She really did her homework.” The company also donated several monitors to the A.C. Reynolds Middle School media center. The school will put them to good use, said principal Stanley Wheless. A.C. Reynolds Middle School students help deliver computer monitors, which were donated to the school by Canton-based Alltec LLC. 6 A.C. Reynolds Middle School Principal Stanley Wheless