ITED, Charles MS partner against cyber-bullying

 

Meme Styles with students at H.E. Charles Middle School

Integrated Test and Evaluation Directorate employee Meme Styles, right, operates sound equipment during the taping of an anti-cyber-bullying campaign video at H.E. Charles Middle School in El Paso. Soldiers, Department of the Army civilians, middle school students, University of Texas at El Paso athletes and former El Paso Mayor John Cook volunteered to help with the project. Photo by Dennis McElveen, Special to the Fort Bliss Bugle.

“In my generation, a rumor was horrible,” said Meme Styles, executive assistant to the commander, Integrated Test and Evaluation Directorate. “But it could only go as far as the school yard; today a rumor can reach the other side of the world at just the click of a button.”

Cyber-bullying is the number one issue plaguing kids today, Styles said her teenage daughter and two of her friends confided to her. That’s all it took to propel Styles into action, and the anti-cyber-bullying campaign “Cyber-bullying? Nobody’s got time for that!” was born.

“These kids live in a cyber world that many parents are clueless about,” Styles said. “Luckily, I’m nosy enough to ask the hard questions and get honest answers.”

Recruiting some of her colleagues to work with H.E. Charles Middle School students, Styles and her committee have generated an anti-cyber-bullying campaign that will be used by both Fort Bliss school liaison officers and the middle school to educate parents, students and faculty.

In addition to Styles, volunteers who produced the video and posters included Operational Test Command’s Fires Test Directorate’s Capt. Andrew Rieck; ITED Staff Sgts. Matthew Bates, and Robert Hazell and Sgt. 1st Class Brandon Sanders, and Department of the Army Civilian employees Cheryl Seymour and Dennis McElveen; H.E. Charles MS students; University of Texas at El Paso athletes; and former El Paso Mayor John Cook.

Carlos Martinez, EPISD Partners in Education director, said the school district is always supportive of ideas that spring from PIE, a joint project that helps foster excellence in education and support local schools’ Campus Improvement Plans. ITED and H.E. Charles MS have been partners since September 2012, with ITED employees volunteering at the school as mentors, tutors, science fair judges and role models, according to Styles.

“There is no separation between El Paso and Fort Bliss,” Martinez said. “There are five EPISD campuses on Fort Bliss, four elementary school and one high school. Out of the 63 thousand EPISD students, six thousand are military.”

“The anti-cyber-bullying campaign is a combined effort between the military and civilian communities that demonstrates how close we are,” Martinez said.

Deborah Trexler, Fort Bliss school liaison officer, has collaborated with other post LNOs on an implementation plan.

“We will use the video for the Partners in Education Kickoff event in September as well as during the professional development training in August,” Trexler said.

“We have provided copies to the EPISD governmental relations director, and we plan to provide the Socorro Independent School District school transition counselor a copy to use on their website as they deem appropriate,” Trexler continued. “We will also provide a copy to the military family life consultants to use during parental and student group lessons.”

Trexler said they will make the video available to other school groups to use in their anti-cyber-bullying campaigns.

“I will also provide a copy to our garrison staff with a recommendation that it be forwarded to the Army’s Installation Management Command as a best practice in Partners in Education,” she said.

Styles said ITED employees are proud to support the school’s teachers, clubs and administration. In addition to the anti-cyber-bullying campaign, she said Hazell started a student chess club.

ITED is a subordinate command of the U.S. Army Operational Test Command, headquartered at Fort Hood, Texas. USAOTC, the Army’s independent operational tester, tests and assesses systems in a realistic operational environment using typical soldiers to determine whether systems are effective, suitable and survivable. USAOTC’s higher headquarters, the Army Test and Evaluation Command, is located at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.


Source:  Fort Bliss Bugle, August 16, 2013

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