2015 GMS Honorees
Gillespie Middle School honored 35 students from their eighth grade class at the annual Honors Banquet held Wednesday evening, April 24, with the dinner served by seventh grade honorees who are currently eligible to attend next year’s banquet.
Students who earned their way to the middle school honor roll for 11 consecutive quarters were treated to a catered dinner by Fema’s before listening to Robert Fulton Jr. and receiving a certificate. Principal Jill Rosentreter welcomed the honorees and praised them for the “incredible” achievement.
Eighth grade instructors Christina Blevins and Matt Brawner presented students with their certificates. Receiving the award were Rhoni Bernhardt, Kennen Bertolis, Samuel Boedecker, Megan Bray, Jerod Brown, Lexie Bussmann, Emilie Campbell, Colin Caveny, Mark Cunningham, Mikayla Fritz, Andrew Gill, Ashley Gipson, Hadley Hardin, Madison Hedrick, Juliann Hendricks, AJ Heyen, Jessica Jacobs, Jack Jarman, Rylee Jarman, Alex Jasper, Grace Martin, Dominic Maykopet, Mackenzie McMillin, Lindsey Miller, Breanne Mull, Chase Salisbury-Lambert, Zachary Schuette, Florian Seferi, Trenton Segarra, LeSean Starr, Dominik Taylor, Drew Timmermeier, Hannah Trumpy, Collin Tyler and Madolyn Wyatt.
Principal Jill Rosentreter praised them for the “incredible” achievement
The students were delighted by former Gillespie student and guest speaker for the evening, Robert Fulton Jr. Principal Rosentreter identified Fulton as a “success story” saying he graduated from Gillespie High School in 1984. He then went to the United States Air Force Academy for one year, Blackburn College for one year, Army National Guard where he served six years in the infantry and later transferred to Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) where he earned his bachelor’s in biology with a specialization in genetic engineering and a chemistry minor.
Fulton stayed at SIUE as a graduate assistant and teacher’s assistant before earning a master’s degree. As Rosentreter explained, after SIUE, he worked at Washington University part-time before accepting a full-time position in the genetics department. Fulton has been at the Genome Institute at Washington University for 21 years.
His message to the students was laced in humor and quick sighted for the crowd. Fulton highlighted his pleasure of meeting many influential people and traveling during his employment at Washington University, which led him to his main point – learn from the various things important people do.
“They always greet everyone, open the door for you, say ‘please’ and ‘thank-you’, and they are engaged when you talk to them,” Fulton explained. “They ask good questions, they are well-rounded and they know a little bit about everything. I think those things are very important.”
He had the crowd laughing when he spoke of his bathroom experiences while he visited Japan, Malaysia, Italy and Indonesia. “Like going to the bathroom, you’re doing the same thing but there is different ways to tackle it and it’s interesting to see as you travel around the world,” Fulton said.
Fulton closed by saying he hasn’t always been successful and it’s normal to achieve success. He challenged the students to learn from their experiences and overcome their failures to become successful.
See photos from the event here.
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