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By By Larry Lehr, Marketing Coordinator
Central Technology Center
Megan Martin Leads Motorcycle Tech Team Sweep
The 18-year-old Megan Martin led a team of young motorcycle technicians
to sweep the gold, silver and bronze medals at the recent state-wide
CareerTech Skills USA meet in Tulsa.
Martin, the only female on the team,
claimed the first place gold medal and is now preparing for a similar
attempt at the national competition
in June at Kansas City, Missouri, sponsored by the national SkillsUSA
student organization.
Martin is the fourth member of her family
to receive an education at Central Technology Center’s Drumright
campus and the second member of her family to compete in a national skills
contest.
Megan’s mother, father and brother all
participated in career instruction programs at the tech center. Her mother
competed in
the Health Occupations
Students of America (HOSA) national skills competition after completing
studies as a Practical Nursing student. Martin’s father trained
in the center’s Automotive Technology Program. Her brother recently
completed studies in both Telecommunications and Cyber Security.
After
competing in the Kansas City meet in June, Martin is planning to enroll
at the University of Central Oklahoma where she will be seeking
a degree in Forensic Science and Crime Scene Investigation.
“That is a career I’ve wanted ever since I was a little girl,” says
Martin. “I am a person who has to have constant change in my life.
I can’t stand to be doing the same thing for a long period of time.
That is a job that is always changing and it’s unique.”
The Drumright teen first developed her keen interest in motorcycles at
an early age. She was racing four-wheeled vehicles across the state in
competition sponsored by the Oklahoma Cross Country Racing Association
at the age of 14 and did very well until an untimely two-vehicle crash
on an eight-mile course cut her racing career short.
Martin finished
that race in third place but, after surgery to a knee injured in the
crash, was unable to return to the racing circuit right
away. She wants to return to competitive racing after finishing her college
education.
In the meantime, her interest in motorcycles and skills as a technician
will serve as a source of security and leisure enjoyment if the career
in forensics doesn’t work out.
“I’ll always have this training
to fall back on. This is something that will always be mine and something
I can do very well.”
Now, Martin is studying hard and trying to remain calm as she prepares
for the opportunity of lifetime, the opportunity to compete for the Gold
Medal at the National SkillsUSA competition in Kansas City this summer.
Megan Martin will soon be headed to Kansas City, MO to compete for
top national
mechanic’s award sponsored by Skills USA.
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