MCLA Announces First Recipients of the Henry B. and Mary D. Holt Scholarship

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — MCLA announced the first recipients of a new annual scholarship created to support the College's students. The Henry B. and Mary D. Holt Scholarship was established in 2021 to honor the Holts for their lifelong commitment to the arts, and is supported by Frederick and Renee Keator of the GRFHM Foundation.   
 
A total amount of $4,000 will be distributed through multiple awards for the Fall 2021 semester. Scholarships are limited to current and active MCLA students who are in good standing and first-generation students (excluding first-year students) who are pursuing an undergraduate or graduate degree in the arts or humanities.  
 
"Renee and I are pleased to honor two great individuals who have demonstrated true commitment over 70 years of marriage," said Frederick Keator. "We wanted to give back in a way that reflects such a commitment in our current times of disappearing Snapchats and 10-second Facebook and Instagram stories."
 
The Fall 2021 recipients are Mardochee (Mardo) Bouanga '23, Jaydn Dunham '24, Erin Sears '22, and Veronica Johnston '23.  
 
By earning a bachelor's degree in sociology from MCLA, Bouanga hopes to inspire others in his home country, the Republic of Congo. 
 
Dunham is studying psychology and sociology to better understand and help those suffering from mental illness. 
 
Sears, a radiologic sciences major, aims to combine knowledge from the medical and humanities fields to be a better patient advocate. 
 
An interdisciplinary studies degree will allow Johnston, a bilingual educator and business owner originally from Peru, to access "the American Dream."   
 
"We also wanted to honor my father, who was a first-generation college student, and do what we could to assist our current first-generation college students. My father's family arrived on a boat from the Netherlands shortly after Peter Minuit plunked down 60 guilders to the local Lenape people in the early 1620s," Keator said. 
 
When his father became the first in his family to enter college, at the College of the Holy Cross, in 1953, it had been more than three centuries since that branch of the family tree had settled in America. 
 
"Renee and I are pleased to be able to assist those who believe that education is the master key that unlocks virtually everything, and we look forward to what these individuals will do in the future." 

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Teacher of the Month: Kimberly Rougeau

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Kim Rougeau of Clarksburg School is January's Teacher of the Month.
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — Clarksburg Elementary School third-grade teacher Kimberly Rougeau has been selected as the January Teacher of the Month. 
 
The Teacher of the Month series, in collaboration with Berkshire Community College, will run for the next five months and will feature distinguished teachers nominated by community members. You can nominate a teacher here.
 
Rougeau attended Clarksburg School from kindergarten through eighth grade and fell in love with its small school feel and strong support system. 
 
Since then, she has returned to her alma mater to provide her students with the same fun, supportive, and great educational experience she had, she said. 
 
She has spent her entire 26-year career at Clarksburg Elementary, aside from a few small educational positions while attending Providence (R.I.) College for her bachelor's degree and Simmons College at The College of St. Rose for her master's degree.
 
Rougeau said she continues to learn from her students, co-workers, and recently finished the Leadership Academy program at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. 
 
"I just have a love for this school. It's special and unique. It's more like a family," she said. 
 
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