Students lauded for hard work
Michael Miller
Emily Birchfield was chosen as one of Newport Beach’s top 31 students
this year. But her education hasn’t taken place only in Orange
County.
Twice in the last four years, the Newport Harbor High School
senior has traveled with a St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church group to
Egypt, visiting slum cities and leading Bible schools for the local
children.
After visiting the Middle East the summers before her freshman and
senior years, Birchfield never saw Newport Beach the same way again.
“It really taught me how to be grateful,” Birchfield said. “One
time we walked into a school and there was this one little girl who
was praying out loud. Our translator said she was thanking God for
all the things he had blessed her with.”
Students in Newport Beach may be among the nation’s most
privileged, but as the 44th Annual Scholarship Awards Breakfast on
Tuesday showed, outreach is the first thing on many of their minds.
The event, sponsored by the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce,
spotlighted students’ community service as well as their academic
achievements.
Every year, Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high schools select
15 seniors with the highest grade-point averages to be recognized at
the ceremony. This year, the schools honored 31 total students, as
Corona del Mar had a tie.
The winners, who received certificates as well as complementary
laundry bags, included Girl Scouts, Hoag Hospital volunteers, and
members of Newport Harbor’s Student Political Action Committee. Some,
such as Newport Harbor senior Tami Alkosser, have given back to their
own schools.
Alkosser, an Action Committee and lacrosse team member, also
serves as a mentor for struggling freshmen at Newport Harbor. Every
second period, Alkosser meets with a group of first-year students who
have had difficulties adjusting to high school.
“We help them with areas where they’re struggling, and we
encourage them to take part in activities -- sports, dances, the
battle of the bands,” Alkosser said. “We want them not to be those
kids who fall through the cracks.”
Among the honorees at Corona del Mar were Ahlia Kattan, president
of the Newport Beach Youth Council; Nathan Punwani, president and
founder of the Young Democrats Club; and Kristin Collins, vice
president of Youth Against Hunger.
“Commitment is the key word for these young people,” said Corona
del Mar Principal Bob Metz. “To achieve at the level they’ve
achieved, their commitment to instruction is outstanding.”
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