A Michigan educator is helping special education students build essential life skills through a virtual cooking class. Stacy Eckstorm of Insight School of Michigan provides live instruction from students’ own kitchens, teaching meal preparation, kitchen safety, healthy eating, and problem-solving. Designed for students earning a certificate of completion, the program offers hands-on, real-world learning. Parents describe the experience as impactful and life-changing, helping students gain confidence, independence, and practical skills for the future.
Related Articles
Three Idaho Technical Career Academy High School Students Earn Artificial Insemination Certification From University of Idaho
Three Idaho Technical Career Academy high school students completed a three-day artificial insemination course at the University of Idaho, gaining hands-on experience and certification. The program taught reproductive anatomy, AI techniques, and industry regulations, preparing students for Idaho’s state licensure exam. Led by ITCA Agriculture Instructor Abigail Heikes, the training builds technical skill, leadership, and real-world readiness, supporting Idaho’s future agricultural workforce and aligning with ITCA’s career-focused, hands-on online education in high-demand fields.
Staff From Online Schools Distribute Gifts to Students in Need
Teachers and staff from Colorado Preparatory Academy and Pikes Peak Online School came together to deliver holiday gifts to more than 100 students experiencing homelessness or housing instability across Colorado. Led by McKinney-Vento Coordinator Kimberly Ashby, the volunteer-driven program provides essential items and meaningful connections beyond the virtual classroom. The effort supports students’ basic needs, builds trust with families, and reinforces that online educators can be a steady, caring presence in students’ lives.
Ovca Teachers Use ‘Zelda’ Livestream To Help Virtual Students Build Key Skills
Two OVCA educators created a weekly Legend of Zelda livestream that boosts reading, problem-solving, and digital communication skills while giving middle schoolers a safe, social space online. Students read text-heavy dialogue, collaborate on puzzles, and learn healthy screen-time habits. The stream has quickly become one of OVCA’s strongest engagement tools, with students reporting higher connection to peers, teachers, and the school overall. Sessions run Fridays for grades 6–8 through the Canvas homeroom calendar.