Fort Hood Sentinel (Fort Hood, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 4, 2014 Page: 19 of 34
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LIVING
www.FortHoodSentinel.com
December 4, 2014
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KISD Career Center in third year of success
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Protestant Gospel, 11 a.m., Sun.
Protestant Gospel Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.,
Bible Study, 7 p.m., Wed.
Intercessory prayer, 8 a.m., Sun.
Catholic, 2 p.m., Sat.
Protestant, 9 a.m., Sun.
Latter Day Saints, 11 a.m., Sun.
Korean Service
Service, 10 a.m., Fri.
Service times may change based on mobilization
schedules. Call the Garrison Chaplain’s Office for
more information, 288-6545.
A car sits in the bay in one of the KISD Career Center’s garages. This area is part
of the facility’s transportation, distribution and logistics career cluster under the
automotive technology courses.
ABOVE, The hospital room at the KISD Career Center is for the facility’s health
science students. Here, they can learn hands-on medical practices for courses
such as phlebotomy, anatomy and physiology and nursing. LEFT, Students in the
arts, A/V technology and communication career cluster work on graphic design.
Here, they are learning the ins and outs of designing T-shirts, from beginning to
end of the process.
Traditional Protestant Service, 10 a.m., Sun.
Protestant Samoan, noon, Sun.
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S INSTAGRAM
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COMANCHE CHAPEL
TANK DESTROYER BOULEVARD
15TH STREET CHAPEL
NORTH FORT HOOD CHAPEL
15th STREET AND HEADQUARTERS AVENUE
19TH STREET CHAPEL
“the ohana place”
Islamic (Jumah Prayers), 1 p.m., Fri.
Open Circle (Wiccan), 7 p.m., Wed.
33RD STREET CHAPEL
SPIRITUAL FITNESS CENTER
Chapel A.L.E. (Anglican, Lutheran, Episcopalian)
9 a.m., Sun.
Old Catholic (Not Roman Catholic)
Sun 11:00am
67TH STREET CHAPEL
13th esc chapel
CORNER OF 57th STREET
AND SUPPORT AVENUE
F3 Contemporary Protestant, 10 a.m., Sun.
58TH STREET CHAPEL
OIF VETERANS CHAPEL
Non-denominational Prayer, 7:30 p.m., Weds.
Catholic Confession, 4 p.m., Sat.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., Sat.
Spanish Catholic Mass, noon, Sun.
25TH STREET CHAPEL
25th street and battalion avenue
76TH STREET CHAPEL
IRONHORSE CHAPEL
SPIRIT OF FORT HOOD CHAPEL
TANK DESTROYER BLVD. AND 31ST
^7
CRDAMC CHAPEL
ROOM 507, HOSPITAL CHAPLAIN’S OFFICE
Protestant (General), 11:30 a.m., Wed.
GARRISON CHAPLAIN OFFICE 288-6545
TANK DESTROYER BLVD AND 31ST ST - BLDG 320
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DESTINY
EN ESPANIOL
Roman Catholic
Sunday Mass, 9 a.m.
Daily Mass, noon, Mon.-Fri.
Jewish, Egalitarian Shabbat
Service followed by light snack, 7 p.m., Fri.
Protestant
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.
Sun. contemporary service, 11 a.m.
BY ERIN ROGERS
Sentinel Staff
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Eastern Orthodox, 11 a.m., Sun.
Call 768-7649 for further details and schedule.
The KISD Career Center offers specialized courses in nine different career clus-
ters. More than 1,000 KISD sophomores, juniors and seniors attend the center
throughout the year, honing and perfecting their career interests.
Photos by Erin Rogers, Sentinel Staff
Students in the KISD Career Center’s cosmetology course practice on each other
at the beginning of a day at the center.
CAMP FINLAYSON
Fort Hood Open Circle (Wicca), celebrate all
Sabbats and Esbats, for dates and service times, call
368-8553.
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example, every cosmetology instruc-
tor is a licensed cosmetologist, and
has returned to school and gained a
teaching degree to be an instructor
at the center.
Roughly 1,000 students current-
ly attend the career center, and
it is still under-capacity, Herald
said, adding that their plans for the
future are big.
Under the career clusters, the
pathways are all very specific. For
example, the agriculture, food and
natural resources cluster offers
hands-on experience in animal
science, breaking down into even
more specific courses of small ani-
mal management, equine science,
veterinary medical applications and
many more. Under that same clus-
ter, the horticulture route offers
courses such as floral and landscape
design, plant and soil science and
more.
Each of these career clusters have
the latest and most state-of-the-
art technology and teaching sys-
tems available, which Herald says is
important when learning a skill.
“Technology is always improving
and changing,” he said, “so we have
them learn on the most advanced
systems so they are as up-to-date as
possible.”
Those up-to-date systems include
everything from the 3D printer in
the arts, A/V and technology cluster
for things like stop-motion, clay-
mation film making, to the most
advanced hospital equipment in
the phlebotomy, pharmacology and
anatomy course areas.
“Sometimes kids have no direc-
tion in their lives, but maybe have
an interest,” Herald said. “This
place allows them to pursue and
perfect that interest ... they can
figure it out early on, and leave here
already ahead of the game.
“The workforce is so competi-
tive nowadays, anything that makes
you more marketable is a big help,”
Herald said.
Find out more about the KISD
Career Center and the plans for
the future at their website at www.
killeenisd.org/schools/high/cate/index.
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The Killeen Independent School
District Career Center, now in its
third year of operation, offers an
extensive range of courses for KISD
high school sophomores-seniors
who want to hone their passions
and career choices.
The fully-provisioned facility
offers classes, hands-on education
specific to the student’s chosen
path, internship opportunities, cer-
tifications and licensures, business
partnerships and more in nine dif-
ferent career clusters, each with spe-
cific branches.
The current career clusters
include health science; arts, audio/
video technology and communica-
tions; information technology; agri-
culture, food and natural resources;
transportation, distribution and
logistics; architecture and construc-
tion; law, public safety, correc-
tions and security; manufacturing;
human services; and education and
training.
“We offer all of the upper-level
career technology education courses
throughout the district here,” said
Scott Herald, chief, career and tech-
nical education officer. “We pull
students from all four of the com-
prehensive high schools, plus Path-
ways.”
Students from five different cam-
puses typically attend courses at the
career center for either the first half
of the day or the second half, and
go to their home high school cam-
pus for the other half of the day.
“We prepare students for the next
level. Whether they’re going to a
two-year or four-year college, trade
school, technical school - we get
them ready for that,” Herald said,
explaining that the career center
gives these students a head start in
the employment world.
Any students sophomore and
above are eligible to attend the
career center, and leave more pre-
pared to go to college after gaining
hands-on experience and perfect-
ing specific skills pertinent to their
career choice — everything from vet-
erinary training and auto mechan-
ics, to EMT training, cosmetology
and welding.
Most of the instructors at the
career center are out of the indus-
try, and are experts themselves
in the field they’re teaching. For
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Pruden, Todd. Fort Hood Sentinel (Fort Hood, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 4, 2014, newspaper, December 4, 2014; Fort Hood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1205037/m1/19/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Casey Memorial Library.