High School Career and Technical Students Earn Industry Certifications, Cater Regional Tournament
Casey-Westfield School Board Meeting | March 16, 2026
Article Summary: Casey-Westfield High School’s Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS) and Industrial Arts students are translating classroom lessons into real-world professional credentials and community service projects.
Career and Technical Education Key Points:
-
All Culinary Arts I students successfully earned their ServSafe Food Handler certifications.
-
FCS and Culinary Arts II students managed food preparation for the recent basketball regional hospitality room.
-
Child Development students will tour diverse daycare facilities in Terre Haute to observe early childhood education philosophies.
-
Industrial Arts and Carpentry students are completing community service builds and custom sale items.
The Casey-Westfield School Board on Monday, March 16, 2026, received updates on the district’s Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs, highlighting students who are earning industry-standard certifications and providing catering services for large-scale school events.
According to the Junior/Senior High School Building Report, students in the Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS) department have been actively applying their skills outside the traditional classroom setting. Notably, all students enrolled in the Culinary Arts I program recently became ServSafe Food Handler certified. The qualification is universally recognized within the food service industry and is often required by employers to ensure safety and hygiene standards.
The culinary students put those safety skills into practice by playing a key role in the success of the recent basketball regional tournament. FCS and Culinary Arts II students managed the food preparation for the event’s hospitality room, gaining practical, real-world experience in large-scale event catering.
In the classroom, Culinary Arts II students have been mastering yeast breads, practicing kneading and rising techniques for cinnamon rolls and pizza dough. Meanwhile, the Baking and Pastry classes have focused on high-end techniques, creating puff pastry dough from scratch for apple turnovers and mastering choux pastry for cream puffs.
The Child Development classes are expanding their curriculum beyond the school campus. After spending hands-on lab time working with young children at Monroe Elementary, the high school students are scheduled to travel to Terre Haute this month. There, they will tour diverse daycare facilities to observe varying philosophies of early childhood care and education.
Students enrolled in the district’s work-study program are also thriving, according to the report. The work-study placements are providing crucial hands-on experience, and students are consistently earning positive evaluations from their professional supervisors.
In the Industrial Arts and Carpentry departments, students recently completed custom picture frame projects. Carpentry students are also actively building items for the school—which earns them community service points—while simultaneously working on custom items intended for sale.
Latest News Stories
States sue Trump administration over rollback of some air pollution regulations
Energy affordability report ranks Illinois 31st, warns of ‘burdensome’ mandates
Illinois voices weigh in on birthright citizenship case
U.S. rep.: Mexico still not delivering water to South Texas, despite claims
Supporters say will storage option would streamline judicial process
Dallas Fed: Geopolitical conflicts creating uncertainty for U.S. oil and gas industry
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker pushes for E15
Clark County Ambulance Service Faces Critical Level Zero Instances Amid Medicaid Collection Issues
Trump addresses nation on Iran strikes; signals conflict nearing end
IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court
Artemis II heads to the moon with first crewed mission since 1972
Pro-life org to Trump: Taxpayers should not be forced to fund killing of unborn children
Birthright citizenship advocates confident in SCOTUS hearing
College funding bill draws dissent from big Illinois universities