All Bluffton Icon News

Financial Advisor Brandon Blackford of the financial services firm Edward Jones in Bluffton has received the Certified Exit Planning Advisor®, or CEPA®, designation through the Exit Planning Institute(TM).

This designation provides specific education on how to help business owners have a successful exit by discussing business readiness, strengthening personal financial strategies and aligning them to personal goals. The course of CEPA® study expands a financial advisor's knowledge base in the following business-focused areas:

BLUFFTON, Ohio—Dr. Tasha R. Dunn, associate professor of communication at the University of Toledo, will share “Social MEdia: The Challenges and Possibilities of Authenticity in the Digital Age,” at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 28 in Yoder Recital Hall.

During the presentation, Dunn will highlight the increasingly dynamic relationship between social media and authenticity, along with the challenges and possibilities of this phenomenon for civic engagement.

TERRE HAUTE, Ind.--Day two of the 2022-23 Heartland Conference Swimming and Diving Championship saw freshman Riley Bruns (Maria Stein/Marion Local) earn three points with his 12th place finish in the 100 yard breaststroke. He swam a 1:25.70 in the prelims and then a 1:23.48 in the finals, shattering his previous personal best by nearly five seconds.

Bruns' times place him 3rd and 4th all-time for the 100 yard breaststroke at Bluffton. Bruns will cap off the Heartland Conference Championship on Saturday, Feb. 11, when he swims the 100 yard freestyle.

Last week, Sergeant Tyler Hochstetler and K-9 Unit Kato of the Bluffton Police Department visited 5-7 year old Brownies in Girl Scout Troop 2109. The scouts had all their questions about the police dog answered and learned that, just like some of them, Kato is seven years old. 

Bluffton High School Band director Dave Sycks reports that students attended Solo and Ensemble Adjudicated Events on Saturday, February 11, at St. Mary’s High School. The following ratings were earned:

Class A

Hannah Davis - Trumpet Solo - Superior rating
Alyssa Hoffman - Clarinet Solo -  Excellent rating

If you’re part of Gen X, chances are you tried to avoid death by dysentery and debated how many bullets to take with you on your Oregon Trail trip, provided courtesy of the still-popular pixelated video game. First released in 1971, the game, which has undergone several adaptations since then, was designed to help teach younger students about 19th century pioneers who journeyed along this historic westward route.

But it’s what the game, particularly its original version, doesn’t teach and show, however, that captured the interest of Ohio Northern University professors Dr. John Estell, professor of computer engineering and computer science, and Dr. Stephany Coffman-Wolph, assistant professor of computer science.

The two turned those game gaps into research and learning opportunities that continue to resonate with and benefit engineering majors. Their success with intersecting the science of digital gaming with fuller and accurate historical knowledge about Oregon Trail realities resulted in a redesigned Programming 2 course that students love, so much so that enrollment in the course doubled. A pedagogical spinoff being introduced in spring 2023 will be an interactive fiction course for both computer science and English students that Estell will be teaching with English professor Dr. Lisa Robeson.

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