Kosciusko Girl Scouts Earn Gold Awards; One Wins $10,000 Scholarship
News Release
FORT WAYNE — A Warsaw Girl Scout recently earned Girl Scouting’s highest achievement, a Gold Award, as well as a $10,000 Girl Scout USA Gold Award Scholarship.
Keely Roe, Warsaw, was presented with the Gold Award and the scholarship at a ceremony Sunday, June 25, held by the Girl Scouts of Northern Indiana-Michiana at Goshen College.
Another Kosciusko County Girl Scout, Sara Lynn Northrop, Claypool, also earned a Gold Award at the ceremony.
The Gold Award represents the highest achievement in Girl Scouting, recognizing girls who demonstrate leadership through Take Action projects that have sustainable impact in their communities and beyond. In all, seven girls were honored at the ceremony.
Keely saw that tweens and teens are not taught breast health and how to recognize signs of abnormal breast behavior. Keely created a patch program for older Girl Scouts to educate them about breast development and self-exams. She also held virtual educational workshops and designed an informational pamphlet.
At the end the Gold Award ceremony, Keely also was presented with the Girl Scout USA Gold Award Scholarship in the amount of $10,000. The national scholarship recognizes and provides financial support to one Gold Award Girl Scout per council to be used toward post-secondary education.
Sarah Lynne has a passion for educating others on the Potawatomi tribe and their traditions. When a building at the Fulton County Historical Society showcasing the tribe sustained storm damage, Sarah Lynne worked to rebuild the porch so the building could be used for educational programming again.
Other Scouts honored were:
Colleen Britten, Columbia City: Colleen saw that in her local community there was a strong high school choir, but not a choir for middle school students, and she worried about what happens to students when they don’t have opportunities in the arts. She started a show choir camp for younger students to encourage a love of music and dancing.
Heather Elwood, Leo: Heather recognized that families caring for individuals who are struggling emotionally often need support themselves. Working with Image of Hope Ranch, Heather built benches for a seating area at the Ranch to offer caregivers a place for respite and created a pamphlet with sources of support for these caregivers.
Isabella Habegger, Fort Wayne: Isabella was concerned about children and their mental health, particularly post-COVID. She created pamphlets to help others recognize signs of mental health issues, kits with coping items to help children, and a fun patch so children could be proud and display all they learned about mental health.
Courtney Tobin, Columbia City: Courtney recognized that people in need might not be able to access local food pantries when they are open. She built a Kindness Box containing nonperishable food and other small necessities that is accessible 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Megan Willis, Hartford, Mich.: Megan realized that emergency services personnel don’t often have specific training on how to work with people with sensory challenges during a crisis. She created calming kits for emergency services workers to use in times of crisis and developed a training curriculum to teach these workers how to use the kits.
The keynote speaker at the event was Elise Jones, a Girl Scout alum and 2019 Gold Award Girl Scout recipient. Her primary message was to leave the world better than you found it, a mantra that she has adopted throughout her years in Girl Scouting. The flag ceremony was conducted by Girl Scout Troop 00624 from Elkhart, led by troop leader Melissa Sanchez.