Welding Metal, Wielding a Chain Saw
By Carolyn Lorié
Valley News Education Writer
Randolph Center -- Amber Horne of Whitcomb High School has
made a fine cookie and Meghan Ashworth, the instructor of the
“cookie cutter” workshop, holds it up for all to admire.
The young women nod approvingly.
A raw wind presses against them, as this is an outdoor workshop
that has nothing to do with warm, steamy kitchens, baking mitts or
batter. The participants are outfitted in chaps, work boots and
hardhats and the “cookies” they are cutting are slices of a pine
log, lopped off with a chain saw.
Working a chain saw was one of the many skills girls from high
schools all over Vermont, and a handful from New Hampshire, got to
explore at the “Women Can Do” conference held Thursday at Vermont
Technical College. Northern New England Tradeswomen, a non-profit
organization that provides training and advocacy to women in the
trades, sponsored the event.
The conference was started seven years ago by a group of
educators and tradeswomen who wanted all girls to feel they could do
anything: down a tree, wire a house, run a backhoe.
“Our hope is that something about the day will inspire them to
think more broadly about their options,” said Tiffany Bluemle,
executive director of Northern New England Tradeswomen.
The first conference drew 60 girls; last week there were 430.
Among them was Sunsetta Gay, a senior at Williamstown High
School, who took part in a mock felony stop, under the guidance of
the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
Gay, who wants to go into law enforcement, played the role of one
of the arresting officers, shouting orders at a carload of girls
(other workshop participants) who had just been pulled over for a
spree of convenience-store robberies. Some of the participants
hesitated when giving orders.
“You're in control here. They are not in control,” Lt. Tracy
Simon reminds them. “If they (the ‘felons') are doing something you
don't like, you tell them.”
Simon provides the high school students with something she didn't
have at their age: a role model.
When she became a police officer 15 years ago, law enforcement
was still dominated by men, and she describes her first few months
on the job like this: “I felt like a goldfish in a goldfish
bowl.”
But she stuck it out and uses her experience to nudge young women
into believing they too might have what it takes.
Seeing women in the field and being exposed to a trade makes a
difference, says Bluemle. After the 2004 conference, 78 percent of
the participants said their ideas of what they could do had been
expanded.
Though the number of women going into fields traditionally
thought of as “men's work” -- construction, auto repair, law
enforcement -- has risen in the last decade, it remains relatively
low.
In 1995, 75 women enrolled in non-health related programs
(nursing and dental hygiene tends to attract large numbers of women)
at Vermont Technical College, compared to 200 men. Ten years later,
more women enrolled but the gender gap is even greater: 94 women and
330 men.
But last week's conference wasn't necessarily about steering
young women toward attending a technical college or going into a
trade.
Many of the participants have other aspirations, yet considered
the day worthwhile.
Horne, maker of the fine chain saw cookie, is interested in the
culinary arts, as well as the theater. But after years of watching
her father run a chain saw and feeling afraid to give it a go, she
decided it was time.
“It was pretty fun,” she says afterward, with a look of
satisfaction.
Danielle Foley, an 11th-grader at the Randolph Technical Career
Center, isn't uncertain about her career plans, but attended the
conference because she “wanted the opportunity to spend the day
doing guy things.”
One of those “guy things” was welding, taught by metal sculptor
Kat Clear of Burlington.
Clear and Foley worked on what looked like a metal chair made for
a gnome. The two women held torches and wore protective black
helmets that made them look like futuristic knights.
“I always wish I had the opportunity to be exposed to the trades
when I was younger,” says Clear, a graduate of the University of
Vermont,who spent a year at the California College of Arts and
Crafts to learn welding.
She considers the skill a useful one, even for women who become
accountants or attorneys, as there is a long list of tasks -- such
as repairing a automobile tailpipe -- that can be done with a
blowtorch.
Bluemle believes the conference benefits all girls, even those
who will never pursue a skill beyond the one-day taste the workshops
give them. “Even if they are going to college to major in English,
they will be making a choice from an informed point of view and not
making a choice because they didn't know what the options were,” she
says.
In fact, Meghan Ashworth, the instructor of the “cookie cutter”
workshop, is still a high school student herself and is considering
studying architectural design at Vermont Technical College.
But she is full of praise for the skills she learned in the
forestry program at the Hartford Area Career and Technical Center,
including the one she imparted to Amber Horne.
“It's very empowering. It's a great feeling when you run a chain
saw or a piece of equipment as a girl,” says Ashworth.
Carolyn LoriÐ can be reached at (603) 298 -- 8711, ext. 220,
or clorie@valleynews.com
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