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Lockhart Power to break ground on new corporate office building
by Charles Warner
Editor
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Bryan Stone, Lockhart Power COO, second from left, presents Andrena Powell-Baker, Union County Development Board executive director, left, Joe Nichols, City Union Utility director and development board chairman, second from right, and Tommy Sinclair, Union County supervisor, with a check for $100,000 in December. The donation was designed to support infrastructure improvements for the construction of the Gonvauto South Carolina steel service center being built in the Bonham community. Lockhart Power will break ground Thursday on a new corporate office facility in Lockhart.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Bryan Stone, Lockhart Power COO, second from left, presents Andrena Powell-Baker, Union County Development Board executive director, left, Joe Nichols, City Union Utility director and development board chairman, second from right, and Tommy Sinclair, Union County supervisor, with a check for $100,000 in December. The donation was designed to support infrastructure improvements for the construction of the Gonvauto South Carolina steel service center being built in the Bonham community. Lockhart Power will break ground Thursday on a new corporate office facility in Lockhart.
slideshow
Derik Vanderford|Daily Times
Hugh Gregory, Lockhart maintenance engineer, Lockhart Town Councilman Glenn Stein, Stuart Winslow, Pacolet Milliken Enterprises project manager,  Lockhart Town Councilman Donnie Adams, Lockhart Mayor Ailene Ashe, Jennifer Calabria of Pacolet Milliken, and Bryan Stone, COO of Lockhart Power, take part in a ceremony dedicating trees donated to the town. The trees were donated in celebration of the 100th anniversary of Lockhart Power.  Lockhart Power will break ground Thursday on a new corporate office facility in Lockhart.
Derik Vanderford|Daily Times Hugh Gregory, Lockhart maintenance engineer, Lockhart Town Councilman Glenn Stein, Stuart Winslow, Pacolet Milliken Enterprises project manager, Lockhart Town Councilman Donnie Adams, Lockhart Mayor Ailene Ashe, Jennifer Calabria of Pacolet Milliken, and Bryan Stone, COO of Lockhart Power, take part in a ceremony dedicating trees donated to the town. The trees were donated in celebration of the 100th anniversary of Lockhart Power. Lockhart Power will break ground Thursday on a new corporate office facility in Lockhart.
slideshow

LOCKHART — The first year of Lockhart Power’s second century of service to its customers will continue with the company breaking ground on its new corporate office in the Town of Lockhart Thursday afternoon.

In 2012, Lockhart Power celebrated its centennial anniversary by planting a total of 100 trees in the Union County area. The trees not only celebrated the company’s anniversary, but also its commitment to continue serving its customers and the communities in its service area. The company’s service area spans portions of Cherokee, Chester, Spartanburg, Union, and York counties.

That commitment will again be symbolized Thursday afternoon when the company breaks ground on its new corporate office which will be located at 420 River Street, Lockhart, next to its current office facility. The ceremony, which will take place at 2 p.m., will be attended Lockhart Mayor Ailene Ashe, Union Mayor Harold Thompson, Jonesville Mayor Ernest Moore, and Pacolet Mayor Elaine Harris. Also attending the ceremony will be Lockhart Power Chief Operating Officer Bryan Stone, Pacolet Milliken President Richard Webel, and Pacolet Milliken Senior Vice President of Energy Ralph Walker.

The trees planted by Lockhart Power in 2012 also symbolized the company’s commitment to providing its customers with cost-effective, environmentally-friendly electricity from renewable sources. The company’s commitment to renewable energy dates back to 1920 when it first began generating hydroelectric power. Today, the company generates 99 percent of its power from environmentally-friendly sources including hydroelectric facilities such as Lockhart Dam which has maximum power generating capacity of 16.5 megawatts.

The company continued its commitment to green energy in 2012, announcing plans to build new hydroelectric facilities in Lockhart and Pacolet. The Lockhart facility, which will be located on the site of the old Lockhart Mill, will run water from the Lockart Canal through a new turbine generator rated for 800 kilowatts, roughly enough to provide power for approximately 800 households. The Pacolet facility, which is to be located on the Pacolet River just upstream from the State Road 150 bridge, will be rated for 1,100 kilowatts.

In addition to its hydroelectric systems, Lockhart Power also gets electricity from a landfill gas-to-power facility in Wellford that converts methane gas created by decaying garbage into electricity. The company has also set up an electric vehicle charging station and at its Lockhart office. The station is used to charge the company’s modified Toyota Prius, a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. The station is also available for use by the public.

Lockhart Power’s commitment to the community also includes support for economic development projects. The 100 trees the company planted in the Union County areas included 25 planted at the gateway to the City of Union on U.S. 176. During the dedication ceremony at the gateway, Stone presented Tommy Sinclair, Union County supervisor, Joe Nichols, City of Union utility director and Union County Development Board chairman, and Andrena Powel-Baker, Union County Development Board executive director, with a check for $100,000. The funds were to be used for infrastructure improvements for the Gonvauto South Carolina steel service center currently under construction in the Bonham community.

In addition to planting the trees, Lockhart Power also celebrated its centennial and its commitment to green energy by unveiling a new logo in 2012. The blue and green logo symbolizes the company’s to hydroelectric and other renewable energy sources.

The logo is featured prominently on the company’s redesigned website (www.lockhartpower.com) which the company unveiled earlier this year. In announcing the redesign, Stone said the company decided to ring in its second century of service with a website with a more functional and professional design to better reflect its legacy of customer service. The background of the redesigned website features water to represent the rivers that originally powered all of the power company’s operations.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

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Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

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(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

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(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow
Child plants cabbage in neighbor’s garden
by Derik Vanderford
Staff Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 163 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo submitted

Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
Photo submitted Eliza Petty, right, and her neighbor, Bo Ham, left, stand in front of the cabbage they planted in Bo's garden.
slideshow

KELTON — Eliza Petty, 9, just completed third grade at Monarch Elementary School, and after studying a unit about plants in Carolyn Brown’s class, Petty brought home a cabbage plant.

Typically, Eliza and her parents — Kip and Tracy Petty — have a garden each year, but when Eliza brought home her cabbage plant, Kip was deployed to Kosovo with the National Guard.

The Pettys’ neighbor — Bo Ham — decided to help Eliza plant the cabbage in his garden, which is behind their house on Pea Ridge Highway in Kelton.

“We let the plant sit around for a day or two, and we thought it was a goner,” Tracy said. “Eliza and Bo rescued it. She seems to have her Daddy’s knack for gardening. She keeps little plants around the house.”

To the surprise of the Pettys and the Hams, the plant grew to an enormous size and resulted in two heads of cabbage. Eliza’s plant was the only one in the garden to produce such a result.

“It made a monkey out of the cabbage plants I set out of my own,” Ham laughed, adding that the cabbage weighed in at seven pounds.

Ham said he was glad for Eliza to help him and joked that he should get her to help him each year with those results.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow
A rewarding future for at-risk youth
by Charles Warner
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 426 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Charles Warner|Daily Times
Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
Charles Warner|Daily Times Lakesha McKissick, director of Impressions Outreach, works on her computer Tuesday morning. Impressions Outreach provides tutoring and mentoring services to at-risk youth.
slideshow

UNION — The help she received as a teenager and the help she later saw provided other teenagers inspired Lakesha McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach to assist young people in Union County in need of academic tutoring and social counseling.

Established in 2007, Impressions Outreach is located at 309B Hunter St., Union, and, according to its vision statement, is designed to serve at-risk youth and their families, challenging the youth enrolled in the program to “envision and navigate a course for a rewarding future characterized by achievement, independent thought, and social responsibility.”

Impressions Outreach was founded by Lakesha McKissick who said that the breakup of her parents’ marriage lead to her becoming an at-risk youth as a teenager. McKissick said it was her participation in a program that provided her with an outlet to successfully deal with the impact of her parents’ divorce enabled her to get her life back on track. She said it was this and her later experience of helping at-risk youth that lead her to establish Impressions Outreach.

“I set up Impressions Outreach to make a positive impact on the lives of youth based on my experiences growing up,” McKissick said. “I was raised in a middle class home, my parents were married but they divorced right when I was going into high school. Even though I was an honors student I didn’t have an outlet for my emotions and so my grades began to slip.

“What happened was I got involved in ‘Imagine That,’ an improvisational group from Spartanburg where I was provided mentoring, not so much for academics but so I could build my self-esteem. It gave me an outlet for my emotions through acting.”

Through her involvement in Imagine That, McKissick was able to overcome the emotional turmoil she’d experienced as a result of her parents’ divorce and graduate from high school. Her experience inspired her to get involved with an organization that helped troubled youth as she’d been helped.

“Once I graduated I moved to Florida and I began to work with a non-profit called ‘Central CDC of Tampa,’” McKissick said. “They worked with youth giving them jobs and dealing with the academic aspect so they could graduate high school and get jobs.”

This experience, combined with the positive impact she’d experienced as a teenager, lead McKissick to establish Impressions Outreach.

“When I came back to South Carolina I wanted to merge the two ideas together along with my faith,” McKissick said. “My goal was to empower teenagers to enable them and to educate them through education, through learning to express themselves, through communication.”

As Impressions Outreach got underway, McKissick said the focus began to change as she came to understand a major challenge facing so many of the young people who enrolled in the program.

“What I’ve learned from 2007 is that if you fail the ninth grade your chances of graduating from high school decreases by 50 percent,” McKissick said. “So I wanted to give students and parents a support system that could help them with tutoring and bridge that gap so they can complete high school and continue with their education in higher learning.”

To do that, McKissick said when a youth enrolls in the program, a goal plan is developed for them that is followed throughout the school year and reassessed every nine weeks. McKissick said the program follows the student from the ninth grade through the 12th grade. She said that the marks of success are:

• The student continues in school.

• Their grades increase with report cards and interim grades being checked.

• Fewer behavior problems including fewer detentions and suspensions and less tardiness.

• Attitude towards authority (teachers, parents, grandparents) improves.

• Self-esteem and confidence improves.

• The student sets goals and works toward achieving them.

Students participating in the program are required to meet five out of the six marks of success.

McKissick that in the program’s first year, 83 percent of the students participating met the required marks of success. In its second year, 93 percent met the marks of success.

The program involves tutoring by McKissick and volunteers Vania Wimberly, Deidre Jeter, Britny Smith, Deais Neal, and Johnny McKissick. During the summer, McKissick said students are tuored in reading and math and are encouraged to continue reading on their own even though school is out. The tutoring expands during the school year to include the wide range of subjects being taught in school with McKissick bringing in additional volunteer tutors as needed.

In addition to academics, McKissick said the social aspect of growing up is also dealt through mentoring with students divided into groups based on the issues they are dealing with. Those groups are also brought together to collectively talk about and learn how to deal with parents and issues of sex, drugs, peer pressure, and fitting in. When it comes to fitting in, however, McKissick said the message she seeks to convey to the youths is that there is no such thing as fitting in, that they must instead be their own person responsible for their own behavior.

“It’s about accepting yourself because there is no true fitting in,” McKissick said.

While enrolled in the program, the youths go on field trips that McKissick said are designed to help expand their understandings and experiences of the larger world around them. This includes trips to the arts center in Greenville and hiking at Table Rock as well as visits to colleges that they might one day attend. McKissick, who holds an Associate of Art degree from Spartanburg Community College and is currently studying Psychology at USC-Upstate, said she wants to expose the students to as many institutions of higher learning as possible. She said this summer there will be visits to Lander, Limestone, Newberry and Winthrop as well as SCC.

McKissick said that her goal for Impressions Outreach is not only that it help at-risk youth develop into mature, responsible adults, but also that it inspire them to use what they learn to benefit their community.

“I would like to see the youth graduate from high school and get higher education and then bring those skills back to Union County,” McKissick said.

Impressions Outreach is open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Thursday. During the summer tutoring is from 6-8 p.m. and from 4-8 p.m. during the school year.

For more information on Impressions Outreach call Lakesha McKissick at 864-466-7418.

Editor Charles Warner can be reached at 864-427-1234, ext. 14, or by email at cwarner@civitasmedia.com.

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