Subscriber Services
Shop Local
Publish your Stuff
Need Help? Click Here
Search: Site   Web
Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size
Click to Enlarge
Exchange student Maartje Van Den Berg waits in line before the Wheatland High School graduation ceremony Friday.
Ana Pimsler/Appeal-Democrat
Exchange student Maartje Van Den Berg waits in line before the Wheatland High School graduation ceremony Friday.

Other Articles in this Category

  • East Linda man indicted for mail thefts
    39 minutes ago
  • YC fined $6,000 for Hillcrest mailers
    40 minutes ago
  • Driver in fatal eludes manhunt
    43 minutes ago
  • They’re thinking about thinning
    41 minutes ago
  • Human bones still need a face
    45 minutes ago
  • What is this?

    Save & Share this Article

    Wheatland webcast worldwide

    Comments 0 | Recommend 0

    Beale personnel in Iraq, Afghanistan watch children graduate

    A live webcast Friday of the Wheatland High School graduation allowed members of the United States military serving in Iraq and Afghanistan to watch their sons and daughters receive diplomas.

    "That's an awesome opportunity for our people," said Sgt. Zachary Wilson of Beale Air Force Base, less than 10 miles from the school. "A lot of events get missed overseas."

    Students cheered Friday when plans for the webcast were announced, said Patty Agles, a counselor at Wheatland High.

    About 30 percent of the students have parents who are deployed from Beale. More than a dozen airmen were expected to view the webcast, first undertaken in 2005, and watch the graduation from halfway around the world.

    Agles recalled the reaction of an airman in Iraq who in 2006 was able to watch his son graduate.

    "It was very emotional to be able to see that," Agles said of the airman viewing the webcast.

    Mick Shatswell, director of technology at Wheatland High School, began the effort that sent video and audio to airmen in Iraq and Afganhistan as well as South Korea.

    "They're going to hear the music playing," Shatswell said of the graduation ceremony. "When they say the names they'll hear."

    Scott Brown, systems engineer for wireless network and videostreaming provider VistaNet in Chico, said "You see everybody who graduates."

    Capt. Natasha Waggoner at Beale said the school event is "one of those life defining moments" that airmen would miss without the webcast.

    "For them to provide this is great," Waggoner said of Wheatland High. "Deployments are hard. It's things like this that make them easier."

    Shatswell, 40, who started working with computers as an 8-year-old in 1976, is still dazzled that technology allows military stationed overseas to see what happens in Wheatland.

    Along with the airmen watching their children graduate, families of two foreign exchange students from Germany and the Netherlands who will graduate from Wheatland High are expected to watch the event on the live webcast.

    Counselor Agles, who began teaching at Wheatland in 1969 and has been to almost every graduation since, said student enrollment rises and falls at the school to match activity at the military base.

    The number of students peaked at 994 during the height of the Vietnam War in the 1970s, she recalled.

    Graduation Friday involved about 125 students in the senior class, she said.

    Technology that allows a webcast of a high school graduation to be seen by military parents stationed around the world would once have been thought impossible, Agles said.

    "I went to high school and used a slide rule," she said. "We didn't even have pocket calculators."


    See archived 'Local News' Stories »
     


    Reader Comments
    We welcome comments from registered users of our Web site. (If you're not registered, click here.) We ask that users exercise good judgment and tolerate other people's views. Your comments should be free of libel, profanity, personal attacks and racist or offensive language. Inappropriate content will be removed without notice. Repeat violators of our user agreement will be barred from making future comments.

    Weather
    Traffic
    News Alerts
    ADVERTISEMENT 
    Publish Your Stuff
    ADVERTISEMENT 
    Poll
    Games
    Puzzles
    TO DO LIST
    What should President-elect Obama's top priority be when he takes office Jan. 20?
    Tax cuts
    Job creation
    The Middle East
    Home foreclosures
    Enter The Code To Vote
     
    powered by
    google
    Search
            Search: Web    Site
    • Help
    • Site Map
    • Contact Us
    • Subscriber Services