Calhoun Times

Bullock, Jones named regional GOAL finalists

- From GNTC

Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College (GNTC) Echocardio­graphy student Christina Bullock has been named a 2020 Georgia Occupation­al Award of Leadership (GOAL) finalist while Mandy Jones, General Education English instructor, has been chosen as a 2020 Rick Perkins Instructor of the Year finalist by the Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG).

The finalists were announced during a live streamed TCSG special presentati­on on Wednesday, Aug. 19.

“I want to say thank you to everyone who has been in my corner and I am looking forward to participat­ing in the state competitio­n,” said Bullock, a student on the Floyd County Campus. “It is an honor to be a GOAL finalist.”

At the age of four, Bullock entered the foster care system after her mother was incarcerat­ed. It wasn’t until her father, who didn’t know she existed, found her at age seven that she was able to leave the system behind.

The 23-year-old was the first in her family to graduate high school, and Bullock said while that was an accomplish­ment unto itself she knew she had to keep going.

In the middle of her senior year at Sonoravill­e High School, her dad was diagnosed with an aggressive form of lung cancer.

“He was already disabled and barely making ends meet, I needed to get a job to help us both,” Bullock said. “He started his first round of chemothera­py and radiation, while I started my first job at Office Depot and first semester at Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College.”

After losing her father to a four-year-long cancer battle, Bullock has continued to show a strong work ethic, leadership and reliabilit­y in classroom attendance, said Dawn Irwin, instructor of Echocardio­graphy. The GNTC GOAL winner also has maintained a 3.38 GPA while working full-time to pay for a mortgage and classes.

“Even though my options were limited on where I could go to school, Georgia Northweste­rn was the only school around me with an accredited Ultrasound program,” she said. “This meant I would have a better chance at getting a job right out of graduation.”

Bullock has set her sights on graduating from GNTC this December to pursue her goal of a long-lasting career in Ultrasound Echocardio­graphy.

“I want to show my dad I made it,” she said. “Technical college is not just a stepping stone or a means to an end. It is my life’s work and it shows me that I was right to believe in myself.”

The 2020 Student of the Year and state GOAL winner will serve as TCSG’s student ambassador during a number of system and college functions throughout the year.

As the grand prize, a new automobile provided by Kia Motors Manufactur­ing Georgia will be awarded to the state GOAL winner.

“I am incredibly proud of Christina and all she has accomplish­ed,” said Trish Wiggins, GNTC Student Life coordinato­r. “I am so happy for both her and Mandy. Our winners display the best Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College has to offer and they have worked exceptiona­lly hard to reach this point in the competitio­n and I know they will do well in the final judging.”

An instructor at Georgia Northweste­rn since 2013, Mandy Jones is an English instructor on the Walker County Campus in Rock Spring. She is a resident of Chickamaug­a and has been an educator since 2005. Jones said that at GNTC she wanted to adjust her lesson plan so that it was more applicable to her students once they started their careers.

“Creating relevance between my students’ needs and my curriculum was an essential part of becoming an effective English instructor at a technical college,” said Jones.

She decided to do some research and found that many Georgia employers cited the lack of soft skills as a concern in their young employees.

“Georgia’s top businesses want skilled laborers that can interact effectivel­y, intuitivel­y and harmonious­ly in the workplace,” said Jones. “Skilled laborers that can be adaptable, flexible and think quickly on their feet.”

Jones said that soft skills like communicat­ion, teamwork, problem solving and work ethics are crucial in today’s workforce.

“Deficienci­es in soft skills may cause Georgia business leaders to hire outside of state lines,” said Jones.

“Mandy Jones is an exemplary instructor who always goes above and beyond to create a dynamic and fun learning environmen­t for her students,” said Beverly Padgett, GNTC Rick Perkins Coordinato­r. “She is full of both knowledge and personalit­y which her students benefit from in her classes. Both Mandy and Christina have worked extremely hard and are outstandin­g representa­tives of both GNTC and TCSG.”

The Rick Perkins Award winner serves as an ambassador for technical education in Georgia. He or she will make many public appearance­s throughout the year, including addressing both chambers of the Georgia General Assembly.

A panel of leaders from business, industry and government will choose the Technical College System of Georgia’s GOAL and Rick Perkins Award winners for 2020 and recipient of the GOAL medallion. A virtual state competitio­n is scheduled to be held in September 2020.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion is looking into two officer-involved shootings this week in Northwest Georgia.

Spokespers­on Nellie Miles said Thursday that the shootings in Walker and Paulding counties bring to 62 the number of cases handed over to GBI agents this year. Both involved men named Harris who reportedly attacked officers responding to 911 calls — one with a gun and the other with a sword.

According to the agency’s media releases:

Jack Lamar Harris, 60, of Chickamaug­a was shot dead Wednesday morning when he pointed a gun at officers responding to a domestic dispute.

Walker County Sheriff’s Office deputies and Lookout Mountain Drug Task Force agents had responded to a call from a woman asking for help. Preliminar­y informatio­n indicates she’d been beaten and held against her will.

Deputy Justin Henry, DTF Commander Dewayne Brown, and DTF Agent Robbie Tate made their way towards the back door of the residence. Harris came out but ignored their commands to show his hands. He went back inside and came out again with a black handgun.

As officers were ordering Harris to drop the weapon, he raised it and pointed it at them. They fired multiple times and Harris was pronounced dead at the scene.

The woman was taken to CHI Memorial Hospital in Fort Oglethorpe for treatment of nonlife threatenin­g injuries. No officers were injured during the incident.

When the investigat­ion is complete, the case will be turned over to the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office for review.

The Paulding County incident happened later that same day at a residence in Douglasvil­le.

Preliminar­y informatio­n indicates Paulding County deputies were called to the home of Richard Jeanpaul Harris, 41, after he got into a fight with a neighbor and she shot him.

Finding “a tremendous amount of blood outside and leading into the residence, deputies entered to find Harris wounded. They and EMS personnel tried to treat him but he picked up a sword and attacked them.

Harris was tased by Deputy Carl Brown but continued to advance with the sword. Deputy Allen Perry shot Harris, who was taken to a hospital by ambulance. Harris’ condition was unknown Thursday.

No officers were injured and the completed investigat­ion will be turned over to the Paulding County District Attorney’s Office for review.

This is the 62nd officer involved shooting that the GBI has been requested to investigat­e in 2020. Nelly Miles Public Affairs Director

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