May 22. 2013 2:i’c IJortianh (Dbsertier CAREERS Special Page 7 College Planning Starts Early Big Brothers Big Sisters kids earn savings award L The Oregon College Savings Plan has donated $1,000 college savings accounts to 15 children in the Big Broth­ ers Big Sisters Columbia Northwest program. The awards were the result of the Start Something College Savings Ad­ vantage, a program designed to help Big Brothers Big Sisters kids start think­ ing about college. Five of the winners, 5th graders at Vernon Elementary in northeast Port­ land, are Dorine Cadet, Kobe Glass, Leonardo Johnson, Alyssia Max­ well and Kae’lyn Wright. The Start Something competition invited children in grades one through 12 to creatively describe what they hope to achieve after college. Participants worked with their men­ tors to submit entries in a number of creative formats, including essays, vid­ eos, drawings and books. A panel of judges selected the 15 entries from a P This marked the third year of the G'aS^ ’ 9 5th gr9dGr 9t Vernon Elementary in northeast Portland, starts Start Something partnership between G l a s e r $1’°0° C°"GgG S9V'ngS account Pic^re d with the Oregon College Savings Plan and GaSSare A™*y Nelson (from ,efty Bi8 Brothers Big Sisters Columbia Northwest big Brothers B igT steri Ut'™ ° ™ Cer' B* Brothers Sisters board member and Michael Parker, executive director of the Oregon 529 College Savings Network. • T ri.j-r Dorine Cadet Leonardo Johnson Alyssia Maxwell Kae’lyn Wright ■MM Honored for Mentoring Construction Students Focus on Safety In honor of Building Safety Month, Gresham’s City Building Division received a second floor addition for its educational, small-scale model home constructed with students from the ACE Academy for Architecture, Construction and En­ gineering. Building Safety Month focuses on the need for modern building codes and a well-trained workforce to ensure public safety. The model home lets residents see the under­ side of many home construction systems and learn why and when building codes and inspec­ tions are required for safety. City inspectors will host a demonstration of the home at the Gresham Farmers Market, on Saturday, June 1, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mt. Hood Community College has an­ nounced that Landra Glover has been named the National Head Start Parent of the Year. The mother of a 5-year-old son who is enrolled in a Head Start program, Glover has a “commitment to achieve goals, despite all barriers,” says Jane Adams, National Head Start Association director of projects and partnerships Glover has worked to increase positive male involvement with children in associa­ tion with Portland area organizations, includ­ ing MHCC’s Head Start program and the Healthy Birth Initiative. Glover’s inspiration for being an advo­ cate is personal. “As an adult, I now see how not having a father figure in my life played a huge role in everything I do. I love and appreciate my mother, but I still needed and longed for my father,” Glover says. Glover’s book on the subject, “The Arms That Are Needed - Daughters Reflect on Fatherly Love,” features 37 interviews with. Landra Gloverisrecog women age 16 to 83 who talk about their nized for her advocacy of relationships with their lathers. Gariy childhood education.