teen times january/february 2015

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Magazine for Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, Inc. January/February 2015 Also inside... A Legacy of Leadership Celebrating 70 Years of Helping Young Men and Women Achieve the “Ultimate Leadership Experience”.

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Celebrating 70 Years of Helping Young Men and Women Achieve the “Ultimate Leadership Experience”.

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Page 1: Teen Times January/February 2015

Magazine for Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, Inc. January/February 2015

Also inside... A Legacy of LeadershipCelebrating 70 Years of Helping Young

Men and Women Achieve the“Ultimate Leadership Experience”.

Page 2: Teen Times January/February 2015

Washington, D.C. | July 5-9, 2015Walter E. Washington Convention Center

FamilyLeadersAc�ve

StrongerReady

Healthy

2015 NATIONAL LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE

The FCCLA National Leadership Conference brings FCCLA members from across the country, Puerto Rico, and the

Virgin Islands together for an opportunity to network with fellow members, attend FCCLA program workshops and

leadership sessions, and compete in STAR Events.

Mt. Vernon andOld Town Alexandria

Monumentsby Moonlight

D.C. City Tour with stop at ArlingtonCemetery & Eastern Market

Washington NationalsBaseball Game

Crime Museum & Madame Tussauds Wax Museum (walking tour)

D.C. NationalHarbor

EXPERIENCE WASHINGTON, D.C., LIKE THE LOCALS DO!The FCCLA tours will give you an opportunity to visit popular D.C.

destinations with fellow FCCLA members. Check the FCCLA Nationalwebsite for more information on NLC Tours and Special Events.

Page 3: Teen Times January/February 2015

Regulars3 Executive Director’s Note

4 FCCLA Waits2Text Winner Announced!

5 Social Media Roundup

10 2015 CTE Month

11 Help FCCLA Build Stronger Families...

13 Keeping Up with the Jones

14 Take an Interest

15 FCCLA in Action!

Features 6 New Year…Know You (and Them)

12 FCCLA Week: February 9-14

FCCLA MissionTo promote personal growth and leadership development through Family and Consumer Sciences education. Focusing on the multiple roles of family member, wage earner, and community leader, members develop skills for life through character development, creative and critical thinking, interpersonal communication, practical knowledge, and career preparation.

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 1

Teen Times is the national magazine of Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, a career and technical student organization that helps young men and women become leaders and address important personal, family, work, and societal issues through Family and Consumer Sciences education, or as determined by the state department of education.

Christopher Flynn, Director of CommunicationsJosh Bowar, Editorial ConsultantAshley Pournaras, Communications Manager, Art/Design

NATIONAL STAFFSandy Spavone, Executive DirectorLeah Buller, Director of MembershipMarla Burk, CMP, Director of ConferencesChristopher Flynn, Director of CommunicationsMark Hornby, CPA, Director of FinanceCarol Ann Riordan, Director of ProgramsCharles Carson, Mailroom ManagerEdie Doane, Program ManagerChristine Hollingsworth, Competitive Events Manager Ashley Pournaras, Communications Manager Ana Torres, Staff AccountantChiquita Boston, Affiliation and Registration CoordinatorStephanie Lussier, Competitive Events & Program CoordinatorSabrina Chacon, Communications and Programs Assistant Ronny Coombs, Meetings and Membership Assistant

Family, Career and Community Leaders of America is a private, nonprofit national organization of more than 200,000 members incorporated under the laws of the District of Columbia. It functions through public and private secondary school systems in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands as an integral part of the Family and Consumer Sciences education program, providing opportunities for enriched learning.

Editor’s Note: Please credit Teen Times for information you reprint, excerpt, or photocopy. Use the following statement to credit materials you use from this issue: Reprinted with permission from Teen Times, the national magazine of Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, Vol. 69, No. 3.

Teen Times (ISSN 0735-6986) is published five times per year in September, November, January, March, and summer by Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, Inc., 1910 Association Drive, Reston, VA 20191-1584, (703) 476-4900. A portion ($4.00) of national dues pays for a one-year subscription to Teen Times. Inclusion of an advertisement does not constitute an endorsement of the advertiser’s claims, products, and services. Periodicals post-age paid at Reston, VA, and additional mailing offices. Additional annual subscriptions for non-members: $8.00.

POSTMASTERS: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO: Teen Times, 1910 Association Drive, Reston, VA 20191-1584.

InsideJanuary/February 2015

5.

11.

6.

10.12.

Page 4: Teen Times January/February 2015

Together We Are…Ready!

Visit the FCCLA Store to see these great products and more.

fcclastore.org

UNDER ARMOUR SACKPACKBROOKSTONE® POWER BANK

HOODIES

LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS

FCCLA POLOS

Visit the FCCLA Store and stock up on all of your essentials.We have a new selection of fashion apparel. Keep warm with an FCCLA �eece jacket or hooded sweatshirt. Stay connected

by charging up your tech gadgets with our latest Brookstone® power charger. Celebrate with your students by ordering all your chapter supplies, such as balloons, stickers, and STAR Events binders. We have everything you need for all things FCCLA.

MEN’S & LADIES FLEECE JACKETS

BALLOONS

THE ADVISER TOTE

Page 5: Teen Times January/February 2015

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 3

and school marquees, and be sure to post them on social media so we can share your news success!

Take it to the next level with Table Tuesday! Join in on the FCCLA@TheTable project and post all of your chapter’s meals on social media. Then be sure to pay it forward by supplying a meal through our partnership with Share Our Strength.

Show our red strength with Wear it Proud Wednesday. Send us your photos of how your chapter created a red out!

The Ultimate Throw Back Thursday will be the best!We are excited to see which states and chapters send us some fantastic photos from our past 70 years! Be sure totag them #TUTBT.

And finally, we will wrap up FCCLA week by recognizing our members on FCCLA Friday. Be sure to check out the staff appreciation video and create your own to share your love for your adviser, state adviser, and chapter members!

Together we all can make FCCLA grow to even greater heights of recognition and success! I can’t wait to see how YOU all ROCK the RED TOGETHER!

Are you ready to rock the red together? We are all very excited for the 2015 FCCLA Week and have a great line up of national plans. We hope you join together with FCCLA members around the country and inspire your peers as they see the positive work and fun you have as part of FCCLA. This is our moment to shine and showcase we are 70 Years Strong, and FCS is here to stay and continue to prepare leaders. Use the power of your social media outreach to highlight that “Together FCCLA is…”!

Make headlines with Media Blitz Monday! The nationalofficers will be in NYC making a media blitz outsidewith the national morning news shows. We encourageyou to create and use “in-school” media announcements(TV, morning announcements), community billboards,

Executive Director’s Note

Page 6: Teen Times January/February 2015

4 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

FCCLA is proud to annouce the winner of the FCCLA Waits2Text contest.Congratulations to Oakleaf High School FCCLA in Orange Park, Florida, which has won a $5,000 cash prize to support its attendance at the 2015 FCCLA NationalLeadership Conference, to be held July 5-9 in Washington, D.C.!

FCCLA is grateful to AT&T, whose no driving while texting campaign is titled It Can Wait®, for underwriting the FCCLA Waits2Text contest. The support from AT&T made this contest possible and empowered FCCLA youth leaders to engage in leading efforts to spread the It Can Wait® message. Find out more at ItCanWait.com.

FCCLA Waits2Text is a student-led contest that encourages youth from across the country to take action to prevent texting while driving. Chapters developed creative videos and photo slideshows to spread the word to their families, friends, school, and community about the dangers of texting and driving. The combined efforts of FCCLA chapters reached over 97,000 people!

Oakleaf High School FCCLA wanted to increase awareness of the dangers of textingand driving while helping decrease the number of community members who text and drive. Chapter members put up banners and signs around their school, and skits were shared during the morning school announcements.

The high school’s outside digital sign shared information for the whole community, while articles were placed on the Oakleaf Community Board and in the Clay Today newspaper, County CTE Tech Talk newsletter, and Knight News. FCCLA Chapter mem-bers incorporated FCCLA Waits2Text into their homecoming events, even including floats in the homecoming parade. Their community event reached teens, children, par-ents, teachers, and retirees. Oakleaf High School FCCLA set a great example of youth peer to peer education and impacted their community through their creative outreach. Congratulations again to Oakleaf High School FCCLA! We can’t wait to see you in Washington, D.C., this summer!

FCCLA Waits2Text Winner Announced!

Page 7: Teen Times January/February 2015

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 5

/NationalFCCLA

/NationalFCCLA

/NationalFCCLA

FCCLAleadership.tumblr.com

/NationalFCCLA

NationalFCCLA1945

Twitter

Instagram

Facebook@MNFCCLA: Is your Chapter making big plans for #FCCLAWeek coming up February 9-15?

@shungerford: A special #TBT in honor of National FCCLA, an organization that helped me become the leader I am today.

@wheatonmnFCCLA: Wheaton FCCLA has FCCLA spirit! Show your spirit during National FCCLA Week!

@togethercounts : Take the pledge to bring your family back to the table. #FCCLAatTheTable

@ncgwishi: Planning committee/officer meeting for #FCCLAWeek. These kids do a great job... #FCCLA #NCFCCLA

@lscearce311: Bringing families closer, one meal at a time! #fccla #fcclaatthetable #texasfccla #texasfcclaat-thetable #family

@COFCCLA: FCCLA will be 70 this year and we want to know what your chapter is doing to celebrate.

@IdahoFCCLA: Will you be joining us in Washington, D.C. this summer to see this monument? We can’t wait for NLC!

Page 8: Teen Times January/February 2015

6 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

New Year…Know You (and Them)

The holidays are over. You’ve eaten your fair share of goodies. You’ve given and unwrapped gifts. You’ve spent time with family and friends. And you’ve probably learned more about your relatives than you possibly ever wanted to know.

But what do you really know about your family? Use these activities to help you discover what makes your family special. It’s a new year. Help them get to know you (while you also get to know them)!

NOTE: You can do each activity with your immediate family, your extended family, or a combination of both. You choose!

Take Time to Learn More About Your Family

Page 9: Teen Times January/February 2015

Family Showdown

Divide your family into two groups, and you’ll also need a host. (You can have someone play and double as the host if everyone wants to participate in the game.)

Gather paper and pens or pencils. Each person should write his or her name on a piece of paper. Put those pieces of paper into a hat.

To start the game, each team sends two people per team to the front of the room. The host pulls the name of a family member out of the hat and then reads the question, inserting the family member’s name in the question. Each person then writes his or her answer on a piece of paper. If the two members of the team write the same answer, they earn one point. After each question, put the family member’s name back in the hat. Have two new members from each team come to the front of the room, and repeat the process. Play until you run out of questions.

Write your own questions and also use the questions below to get started. Have fun!

If _______ were a fruit, what fruit would he/she be?

If ______ could go on a dream vacation, where wouldhe/she go?

If ______ could meet one celebrity, who would he/shechoose to meet?

If ______ were a movie character, who would he/she be?

If ______ could choose any job in the world, what wouldhe/she pick?

What is _____’s most prized possession?

What traffic sign best describes ________?

If you gave ______ $10, what would he/she buy?

If you gave ______ $1 million, what would he/she buy?

If _____ were an animal, what would he/she be?

What’s the best thing about ________?

What’s the weirdest thing about _______?

What does/did ____ want to be when he/she grow/grew up?

How would ______ most likely spend a Saturday (if he/shehad no other commitments)?

If _____ could only eat one thing for the rest of his/her life,what would he/she choose?

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 7

Page 10: Teen Times January/February 2015

The Family Game

Family Scavenger Hunt

Have all of your family members start at the entrance of an indoor mall. Divide everyone into teams of two. Then give each pair a list of the items below. Explain that the items are all worth different points. Remind everyone to be respectful and to ask permission before getting items if they come from a store. Then share that they have 60 minutes to gather as many items as they can. If they are late getting back to the starting point, deduct 5 points per minute.

Ready…set…go!

• ketchup packet (1 point)• blue hanger (2 points)• price tag that reads $5.99 (5 points)• single square of toilet paper (1 point)• the signature of someone who shares the first

letter of their first name with someone on your team (5 points)

• movie ticket stub (3 points)• perfume or lotion sample (3 points)• sugar packet (1 point)• paper with the word “SALE” in all caps (5

points)• pin or needle (1 point)• napkin with a lip print on it (2 points)• paper bag (not plastic) large enough to hold

all items (2 points)

• a business card from someone you don’t know (3 points)

• an empty cup (2 points)• a receipt with yesterday’s date on it (5 points)• the signature of a mall security officer

(3 points)• a mall map (2 points)• a bag from a store that starts with the

letter B (3 points)• the signature of the mall manager

(10 points)• something from a vending machine

(2 points)

Add your own items (including points values) to the list!

8 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

Give each family member paper and pencils. Assign a family member to read each question aloud. After the question is read, everyone should write his or her answer. When everyone’s answers are in, children and parents turn their whiteboards around and see if they have a match. As noted on the document linked below, parents and children take turnswriting down their answers and guessing what the other person wrote down. You also can brainstorm more questions to add! If you want, you could split into two teams and award one point for each matching answer.

Check out the online printable below for questions to use with the game. Who will match the most and be the family champion?

http://momitforward.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/The-Fami-ly-Game-1.pdf

Page 11: Teen Times January/February 2015

When I Was Your Age...

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 9

• What was your first school like?• What school subject did you like best?• What school subject was the hardest for you?• What are you proudest of accomplishing?• Tell about a school prank or an adventure that you remember.• Tell about your best friend.• Did you go to high school and/or college? If so, tell about it.• What special occasions or events do you remember from when

you were younger?• Where did your family come from?• When and where were you born?• What was the house (apartment, farm, etc.) you grew up in like?

Did it have electricity? Indoor plumbing? Telephones?• What is your earliest childhood memory?• What kind of games did you play growing up?• What was your favorite toy and why?

• What was your favorite thing to do for fun (movies, beach, etc.)?• Did you have chores? What was your favorite chore? What was

your least favorite chore?• What was popular while you were growing up?• What historical events do you remember being the most

important when you were growing up?• How is the world today different from what it was like when you

were a child?• Are there any stories about famous or infamous relatives in our family?• What did your family enjoy doing together?• What was your profession, and how did you choose it?• If you could have had any other profession, what would it have been? • Of all the things you learned from your parents, which do you

feel was the most valuable?• What is the one thing you most want people to remember about you?

Pick a grandma, grandpa, great-grandma, or great-grandpa from your family (or another family members that fits well with the activity) and interview them, asking them questions like the ones below. What can they share with you? What’s interesting about your family? Find a way to share what you learn with the rest of your family members.

Page 12: Teen Times January/February 2015

10 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

As an FCCLA member, every day brings incredible opportunities that expand your horizons, grow your leadership capabilities, and increase your knowledge. Add to that the skills you’re developing — from critical thinking to interpersonal communications. Congratulations for getting on the right track early in life.

But, some youth aren’t as fortunate. That’s why you need to “pay it forward”. And there’s no better time than February, which is Career and Technical Education (CTE) Month.

FCCLA has joined the Association for Career andTechnical Education (ACTE) and the entire CTE communityto celebrate CTE. This year’s theme is “Recognizing Classroom Innovators, a chance to tell the stories of leadership andexcellence from classrooms across the country”.

What better way to celebrate than educating youth and adults who are unaware of the critical role that CTE plays in preparing our nation’s workforce and shaping the country’s economic success!

Here’s how you can pay it forward: • Be in the know. Increase your knowledge of Career and Technical Education and share it with local and state leaders.

• Get involved. The opportunities are as endless as your imagination. You could do a presentation for elementary school students, getting them excited about taking CTE classes when they go to middle and high school. Or how about giving a speech to a local service organization about the profound impact of CTE on your community?

• Spread the word. Use every means available all month long —Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube, among others. Traditional newsmedia outlets — local newspapers, radio, and television stations — always are looking for “good news”, so contact them early to pitch a compelling story that clearly demonstrates the impact of CTE on one’s family, career and community.

• Be an advocate. Connect with your mayor, city manager, and other elected officials. Ask them to designate February as CTE Month. You also might want

2015 CTE Month

to stage a proclamation-signing ceremony at your school and invite local media to cover it.

Most importantly, tell YOUR story. Facts and figures can build a strong case for Career and Technical Education, but nothing has power like a personal story told from the heart. Who was that special CTE teacher who saw potential in you and gave you the encouragement (and gentle push) to take some risks? You grew from that experience, became more confident in your abilities, and are better for it.

You’re well on your way to even more success and are ready to tackle new goals. Make sure one of them is paying it forward.

For more information on CTE Month, visit http://bit.ly/1Jd4hG6.

Page 13: Teen Times January/February 2015

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 11

During winter, nothing warms the heart more than a healthy, home-cooked meal. Add to that lively con-versations, and you have a winning recipe for a memora-ble family dinner. But, more importantly, it builds stronger families, one meal at a time.

There are other significant benefits for families who eat dinner together. In surveys with American teens and their parents, the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University has “consistently found that the more often children have dinners with their parents, the less likely they are to smoke, drink or use drugs”.

For those and many other reasons, FCCLA has launched FCCLA@TheTable, a national initiative for our 200,000+ members who are being urged to take a pledge to plan, prepare, and share dinners for their families. It can be a one-time commitment or more.

To make @TheTable even more special, we are challengingmembers to pledge 70,000 meals — in honor of FCCLA’s 70th anniversary — before the 2015 National Leadership Conference in Washington, D.C., where states with the greatest percentage of pledged meals will be recognized.

Members who have taken the pledge have told us that their enthusiasm for FCCLA@TheTable has inspired other youth, peers who also want to join the campaign.

So, we issue you another challenge: recruit other youth to take the pledge, helping us reach our lofty goal of 70,000 pledged meals. Be sure to share the one-page flyer at the top of the “Resources” list on the FCCLA@TheTable website, and encourage youth to check out more details and resources, including winning conversation starters.

Help spread the word by taking a picture of your family meal, posting it on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, and tagging #FCCLAatTheTable!

Visit the website here: http://fcclaatthetable.org

Take the pledge here: http://bit.ly/1CFje3N

Help FCCLA Build Stronger Families …One Meal at a Time!

Page 14: Teen Times January/February 2015

12 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

2/9: Media Blitz Monday- NEC will visit “The Plaza” at the TODAY show on NBC.- State and local chapter officers are encouraged to leverage that exposure or create their own by visiting local news stations.- Use press release template on FCCLA website to promote your activities.

2/10: Partner Advocacy Tuesday- “10,000 on the 10th” - encourage members to collect 10,000 pledges toward our goal of 70,000 meals pledged as part of the FCCLA@TheTable initiative.- Budget, prepare and share a meal with your family, then contribute the same amount of money they spent on that meal to Share Our Strength.

2/11: Red Out for FCCLA Wednesday- Change your social media cover to the official “Together We Are United” cover (available here)then “spread the red” with photos and accounts of your favorite FCCLA memories and initiatives.- WEAR RED and share photos of others wearing red in group shots to show we are “United”.

2/12: The Ultimate Throw Back Thursday- Capitalizing on “The Ultimate Leadership Experience” and our 70th anniversary, join the social media-wide appeal (#TUTBT).- Members past and present should share photos of themselves and others from far back in FCCLA’s 70 year history.

2/13: Member Recognition Friday- National office will post video of staff thanking our amazing members, advisers, BOD, partners, etc. thanking them for being part of FCCLA family.- Chapters/members encouraged to create /post videos and share their thanks via social media; decorate schools, set up “FCCLA” tables at lunch, etc.

2/14: Share it SaturdayDid you know that our organization’s official flower is a red rose? In honor of Valentine’s Day, give an FCCLA red rose toa family member, to a loved one, or to members of your community. Why not go a step further and get your whole chapterto visit a local senior center and hand out red roses! Post pictures on social media, and be sure to tag #FCCLAWeek!

FCCLA WEEK: February 9-14

Page 15: Teen Times January/February 2015

Hey, FCCLA!

At the start of a new year, we usually think about the past 365 days and make a plan for the upcoming 52 weeks. There are 12 months ahead of us, and just what we will do in this new year is completely up to us. A new semester of school stretches before us. One has already passed. It is a milestone for sure, and I encourage you to make it a new start in your commitments to your family, your future career, and your community.

With the theme of the National Leadership Conference this year being “Together We Are Healthy”, I think it is an excellent time to start preparing with a few resolu-tions. I’ve considered my health, and I’ve set a few goals and encourage you to, too. I have resolved to reboot my physical fitness program, and I’ve set a goal to run a mile in five minutes. I hope you hold me to it!

Your goal may not have to do with running or exercising, but I certainly hope it stretches you and helps you become a better leader in your communities today and in the world tomorrow. Perhaps you will resolve to spend less time in front of a screen and more time sleeping. Maybe you will resolve to do one act of kindness each day for the coming year. Whatever you decide, I’m one hundred percent behind you! FCCLA provides plenty of opportunities for us to grow and develop in 2015, and I want you to find ways to develop yourself and your chapters. Let me hear about it! If you want to participate in my challenge, just take a picture of your-self or your chapter participating in you resolution, and post it to social media with the tags #JonesRes2015 and #FCCLAFamily.

Remember, the best goals are SMART goals. They are Specific, Measurable, Attain-able, Relevant, and Timely. You will be more successful in achieving your goals as you share them with others, so be sure to let your friends and family members know about your resolutions. And don’t forget to tell me (#JonesRes2015)! The past year has been amazing, and I can’t wait to see where we take FCCLA in 2015. Keep up the great work!

I’m going to be posting updates about my own efforts, and I would love for you to join me! Let me know how you resolve to make FCCLA and yourself better in 2015.

Here’s to a happy and healthy 2015!

Connor Jones | Vice-President of Public Relations

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 13

Keeping Up with the Jones

Page 16: Teen Times January/February 2015

14 Teen Times www.fcclainc.org January/February 2015

Take an Interest

1. Don’t Hit SnoozeScientists have found that hitting the snooze button can

actually make you MORE tired. So hide your alarm clock

out of reach and use that early morning scavenger hunt to

help you greet the day!

2. Start with an AffirmationYou’re awesome! We all know you are, so tell yourself that.

Each day is an opportunity to start a new page in the book

of life, so make it count.

3. Stay Unplugged for an HourYou want to reach for your phone. You know you do, but

don’t! Instead of catching up on all the “real world” hap-

penings from the overnight hours, listen to some music,

spend time with your family, or get ahead a few pages in

that book you’re reading.

4. Exercise EarlyResearch says that morning exercise can lead to better

sleep, and exercise before breakfast can even help keep

those extra pounds off. Need another benefit? If you get

that workout in early, you don’t have it hanging over your

head the rest of the day.

5. Eat BreakfastSeriously, it’s the most important meal of the day. And

what better way to wake up than to make your tummy

smile? That yummy start to your day can also improve

your mood and reduce the afternoon doldrums.

5 Things Happy People Doin the First 5 Minutes of the DayAre you a morning person? Do you wake up with pep in your step? Let’s be honest: many

people struggle to get out of bed in the morning and face the day with energy and enthusiasm.

But there are some things you can do in the first 5 minutes of your morning to improve the

outlook of your day. Check out these tips!

Page 17: Teen Times January/February 2015

FCCLA in Action!

The Family, Career and Community Leaders of America

and FFA chapters held their annual winter formal dance

on December 13, 2014. The theme for this year’s dance

was “Frozen in Time” with tons of icicles and snow that

made the room sparkle. This is the second decade that

the formal has been happening, thanks to organization

sponsors Jay Sherrod and Pam Busch. The helpers for the

formal were Amy Sherrod, Jerris Conway, Stephanie Adee

and Bobby Busch.

There were 91 members in attendance, which made for

a fun-filled night of dancing and refreshments. Mike

Lyons has been the DJ for several years and always does a

wonderful job selecting music for the dance. Mary Ann

Bauman took fantastic pictures again this year. Emily

Depew, chapter president, said, “This has been one of the

best formals we have ever had. The dance had lots of student

participation to prepare for the formal in advance, and the

majority of students stayed the entire night.”

January/February 2015 www.fcclainc.org Teen Times 15

FCCLA/FFA Frozen in TimeBy: Allyson Busch, State Vice President of Recognition, Kansas

Page 18: Teen Times January/February 2015

Family, Career and Community Leaders of America (703) 476-4900 www.FCCLAINC.org

FCCLA will bring more than 8,000 of its student

leaders, members, and advisers to the Walter E.

Washington Convention Center in Washington,

D.C., on July 5-9, 2015, for its National Leader-

ship Conference.

The FCCLA National Leadership Conference

provides opportunities for students and advisers

to come together to hear inspiring speakers,

expand leadership skills, and explore career

pathways. The theme for this year’s conference

is “Together We Are Healthy” and attendees will

focus on peer leadership opportunities to

address their generation’s health, wellness,

nutrition, and fitness concerns.