Palm Beach County students train to be firefighters, first responders
WPTV goes inside Fire Science Academy at Palm Beach Lakes Community High School
Learning to fight fires before leaving high school.
and last updated 2021-05-06 09:51:19-04
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. â Learning to fight fires before leaving high school.
Palm Beach Lakes Community High School in West Palm Beach is home to one of two Fire Science Academies in the School District of Palm Beach County, giving students hands-on training to become a first responder. Just something about raising it up, itâs fun, Warren said.
The Palm Beach Lakes Community High School senior will become the first student to graduate from the school s Fire Science Academy, and she has some extra motivation pushing her forward.
Sarasota Schools, county consider fire training partnership | Sarasota yourobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yourobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Palm Beach County students train to be firefighters May 6, 2021 at 6:01 AM EDT - Updated May 6 at 10:06 AM
Learning to fight fires before leaving high school.
Palm Beach Lakes Community High School in West Palm Beach is home to one of two Fire Science Academies in the School District of Palm Beach County, giving students hands-on training to become a first responder. Just something about raising it up, it’s fun, Warren said.
The Palm Beach Lakes Community High School senior will become the first student to graduate from the school s Fire Science Academy, and she has some extra motivation pushing her forward.
Alaska’s next generation of firefighters is learning on the job SPONSORED: Not many students can say they save lives as part of their college education, but for these University of Alaska Fairbanks students, it’s all in a day’s work. Author: University of Alaska Fairbanks Board of Advisors Published 1 hour ago
Presented by UAF Paul Miranda was heading into his senior year of high school when, on a whim one day, he walked over to his neighborhood fire station in midtown Anchorage to see what he could learn about firefighting. That chance visit led him to the University of Alaska Fairbanks Community and Technical College Fire Science Program where, a year later, he was a full-time college student and a full-time firefighter responding to real calls for help.