Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Interviews

- Monica Brich may be reached by email at mbrich@nwadg.com.

how he could help a student if he were struggling academical­ly and how he can practice now to be a good coach.

“You take a piece here and a piece here, and then you make your own plan. But you won’t have to structure all that on your own,” Beaumont said. “There’s lots of people who have been doing what you want to do, and they’re really good at it. So you kind of take from them and take the best of what you learn.”

Student Shakirah Parker said she wasn’t surprised about the questions she was asked about her interest in nursing, but was surprised with how she was able to conduct herself.

“She said I did actually really well,” Parker said about her interviewe­r. “I’m proud of that. I got to control myself and actually putting my best effort into the interview and not letting my nerves get the best of me.”

Eryan Zelaya said he’s had a long-time interest in becoming a plumber because he’s seen a labor shortage in the profession and wants to be able to help people, especially his parents.

Zelaya said he was asked why he should be hired as a plumber instead of another candidate.

“I explained because I’m a very hard worker, and I can do the stuff that other people would not like to do,” he said.

Zelaya said he also learned he could reach a higher certificat­ion if he takes certain trade school classes, and he’s interested in looking more into that.

Darby has held mock interviews for the eighth-graders for several years as part of the Career Connection class, though the event was canceled for the last two years due to the covid-19 pandemic.

Career Connection­s teacher Leslie Martin said the students did a whole unit leading up to the interviews, which included writing cover letters and resumes.

“In eighth grade they choose their career pathway,” she explained. “Obviously, we tell them it’s not set in stone, it can change. So once they’ve kind of decided, that helps them to choose the courses that they’re going to take for ninth through 12th grade. This kind of gives them an idea of what’s out there, what their options are.”

Interviewe­rs volunteere­d from ArcBest, Mercy Hospital, the Arkansas National Guard, Fort Smith EMS, the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith and the Sebastian County Health Department. Careers students were interested in included industrial engineerin­g and technology; clothing and housing design; robotics and automation; health and human services; business management and marketing; and photograph­y and videograph­y.

Heather Rincon, owner of Crane Clothing Company in Fort Smith, said she decided to volunteer as an interviewe­r because she taught at Darby for 18 years and knows how important real life experience­s are for

the students. She said it also helps her as a business

owner to see what the future workforce wants and expects from their careers.

“I’m really encouraged because I think they’re learning about what it means to work, not just to have a job, because that’s two different things. So I’m encouraged by them learning what it means to have a work ethic and want to work and want to earn their own money, and what they have to do to work toward that,” she said.

Rincon added she would be interested in interning or hiring the students in the future to help give them experience in her field, adding she’s done it before.

“If they think ‘Hey, I want to do this’ and they can intern, and then they get out there and they say ‘You know what? That’s not what I thought it was. I don’t want to do it.’ And that’s OK,”

she said. “That’s a valid response and time well spent, because they can check it off and move on to the next thing. I’ve always told kids that what they end up doing is not one decision, it’s a

series of decisions and happenstan­ce. And it’s a road, so they have to start traveling

it now.”

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