This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

Northshore FBLA Students to Attend National Leadership Conference

Eleven Northshore high school Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA) students will start summer vacation in Anaheim, Calif., competing at the FBLA National Leadership Conference, June 27-30.

Northshore FBLA Students to Attend National Leadership Conference

Eleven Northshore high school Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA) students will start summer vacation in Anaheim, Calif., competing at the FBLA National Leadership Conference, June 27-30. Inglemoor High School students Gary Wang, Jasmine Hawkins and Kevin Jin and Woodinville students Kassidy Bruhn, Joshua Granaada, Michael Aldridge, Heather Brevard, Phillip Dougherty, Robert Luo, Nicholas Taylor and Jacob Yee will be competing for honors and scholarship money.

FBLA chapters from across the country help high school students prepare for careers in business and business-related fields. The FBLA-PBL's National Awards Program recognizes and rewards excellence in a broad range of business and career-related areas. Through the state and national leadership conferences, students compete in events testing their business knowledge and skills.

Northshore FLBA students competed at the State Leadership Conference and the results of their efforts are:

Find out what's happening in Woodinvillewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

First Place
Banking and Financial Systems—Kassidy Bruhn and Joshua Granaada, Woodinville High School
Creed—Srishti Mathur, Bothell High School
Entrepreneurship—Michael Aldridge, Heather Brevard and Phillip Dougherty, Woodinville High School
Health Care Administration—Gary Wang, Inglemoor High School
Introduction to Business Communication—Gary Wang, Inglemoor High School
Management Decision Making—Robert Luo and Nicholas Taylor, Woodinville High School
Marketing—Nicholas Taylor and Jacob Yee, Woodinville High School
Public Speaking I­—Jasmine Hawkins, Inglemoor High School, first place

Second Place
Banking and Financial Systems­—Nicholas Taylor and Jacob Yee, Woodinville High School
Global Business—Brandon Granaada and Robert Luo, Woodinville High School
Word Processing II—Kevin Jin, Inglemoor High School

Find out what's happening in Woodinvillewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Third Place
Banking and Financial Systems— Heather Brevard, Zachery Powell and Ty Winther, Woodinville High School
Business Financial Plan—Scott An and Morgan Wang, Inglemoor High School
Computer Game & Simulation Programming—Joshua Kim, Justin McKissick and Larry Taicz, Woodinville High School
E-Business—Makenzie Ley, Bothell High School
Future Business Leader—Gabrielle Hall, Woodinville High School
Management Decision Making—Syrus Le and Nicholas McAlister, Inglemoor High School
Word Processing I—Hannah Bolotin, Woodinville High School

Fourth Place
Business Law—Anderson Zhou, Woodinville High School
Business Plan—Willa Zhao, Inglemoor High School
Business Presentation—Ellie McCaw and Emily Neubert, Woodinville High School
Computer Problem Solving—Lars Olsson, Inglemoor High School
Economics—Grant Sportelli, Woodinville High School
Management Decision Making—Heather Brevard, Walker Bruhn and Dalton Mann, Woodinville High School
Management Information Systems—Lars Olsson, Nick Pong and Morgan Wang, Inglemoor High School
Technology Concepts—Artem Minyaylov, Woodinville High School

Fifth Place
Community Service Project—Aaron Lutz, Bothell High School
Database Design & Applications—Karthik Ramesh, Woodinville High School
Digital Video Production—Joe Nguyen and Kevin Pham, Woodinville High School
Economics—Zachery Powell, Woodinville High School
Emerging Business Issues—Veronica Guenther, Dalton Mann and Grant Sportelli, Woodinville High School
Management Information Systems—Sydney Burke, Alison Ng and Ethan Tsai, Woodinville High School
Marketing—Katie Arneson and Rachel Fillman, Bothell High School

Bothell High School FBLA won first place for most money raised for a charity—over $8,000 for March of Dimes. And, while Creed is not considered a national competition event, Bothell High School sophomore Srishti Mathur will have the honor of reciting her creed at the 2014 state leadership conference.

 

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Woodinville