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MN students earn international award while honoring the legacy of Jacob Wetterling

Outside St. Cloud’s North Junior High a plaque hangs with a simple inscription: “This area is dedicated to our friend Jacob and other missing children."

Karla Hult

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Published: 9:57 PM CDT May 29, 2024
Updated: 11:01 PM CDT May 29, 2024

At the very school once attended by Jacob Wetterling, students today are continuing to advocate for child safety.

“Even if we could help one person avoid this issue that would be enough, because that’s one person who didn’t have to go through it,” said Shyla Gordon, a 9th grader at Apollo High School in St. Cloud, who participates in Future Problem Solving, an extracurricular activity that encourages students to develop their own solutions for community problems.

Gordon and her teammate, Apollo senior Fatuma Hassan, welcomed the chance to “have a voice” when it came to a community crisis. The choice of crisis, for them, was easy: They wanted to tackle online safety.

“A lot of our peers had an experience of being groomed online,” Hassan said.

Gordon chimed in: “Most people have gotten really creepy text messages from strangers, but if you respond, it can go way farther and it can look a bunch of different ways.”

After a full year of research – including interviews with safety experts, law enforcement and lawmakers – the team developed their own online safety curriculum. And that very project received the highest possible honors at an international Future Problem Solving competition, with the team earning a first-place finish in their division, along with the “Beyonder Award” – a rare honor selected from all categories and only awarded if a project meets exceptional standards.

“They said it was so far beyond what other projects usually are,” said the team’s teacher and Future Problem Solving advisor, Karlyn Doyle.

Doyle added: “We’ve met many wonderful judges and evaluators over the years, but I’ve never been thanked. And we actually had an evaluator thank us.”

And perhaps you can trace that gratitude back to the legacy of another student who once walked the halls of St. Cloud schools.

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