Pictured above (L-R): KAA scholarship winners Mikayla Nuhn, Brianna Shipman, Kyra Figuerelli and Emily Jennings. (Not present: Brianna Livingston).
For the second consecutive year, five Haddam-Killingworth High School seniors are recipients of Killingworth Ambulance Association scholarships.
Emily Jennings, Kyra Figuerelli, Brianna Livingston, Brianna Shipman and Mikayla Nuhn were honored Tuesday at Haddam-Killingworth High’s 2019 senior awards night, with all but Livingston present for the awards and all but Shipman planning to pursue careers in nursing.
The KAA annually grants scholarships to high-school seniors who reside in Killingworth, have been accepted to a two-or-four-year colleges, plan to major in the medical, emergency services or allied fields and have GPAs of 3.0 or better.
The five honored Tuesday checked all those boxes, and the roll call, please:
EMILY JENNINGS – Emily will attend Rivier University, where the second largest major is nursing. And that’s precisely what she intends to pursue. A member of the Haddam-Killingworth volleyball team, she says that during her high-school career she recognized the importance of obtaining a health-care degree in college. And so she will pursue a Bachelor’s of Nursing, with the hope of becoming a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit or Labor-and-Delivery Nurse.
KYRA FIGUERELLI – Kyra is a prospective nursing student who plans to attend SUNY College at Brockport next fall. Kyra completed hours of community service by volunteering at the Killingworth Congregational Church and the town library and with programs within the Haddam-Killingworth Middle and High Schools. A USA Junior Olympic gymnast the past 12 years, Kyra says she was inspired by her mother, who, as an elementary teacher, touched the lives of children. Kyra is hoping she can … and will … do the same as a nurse.
BRIANNA LIVINGSTON – Brianna plans on majoring in nursing at Mt. St. Joseph, and, like Emily Jennings and Kyra Figuerelli, wants to work with children … and she knows just how much. That’s because she put in over 200 hours of community service in her high-school career, including an internship the past year at the Westbrook ER. It was there, she said, that she decided to pursue pediatric nursing because “it made me excited for the next chapter of my life.”
BRIANNA SHIPMAN – The past four years Brianna has been associated with the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company – which is just across the parking lot from the KAA. In fact, she’s president of the Junior Volunteer Fire Company. Following in the footsteps of her father, who’s been a volunteer firefighter and EMT for 35 years, Brianna hopes to pursue a career as a firefighter paramedic. She spent over 300 hours volunteering at the Fire Company and is on her way to study at the University of New Haven.
MIKAYLA NUHN – Mikayla also accumulated over 300 hours of community service and plans to major in nursing at Endicott College. That should come as no surprise to anyone who knows her. Hospitalized as a child, Mikayla remembers how patient and compassionate nurses were – saying that they “inspired me not only to go into nursing later in life … but to aspire to be just like them.” Mikayla wants to have the same impact on children, mostly because she said she knows — first-hand — what they’re experiencing.
A sixth recipient, Grace Murphy, was awarded a scholarship late this week at Mercy High School. Grace completed over 200 hours of community service, including mission trips with Mercy and St. Peter’s Church.
The Killingworth Ambulance Association would like to congratulate all recipients and wish them the best of luck with their careers.