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Seneca High School’s DECA  fashion show celebrates 10 years of prom styles on Feb. 5

Seneca High School’s DECA fashion show celebrates 10 years of prom styles on Feb. 5

Seneca

New York, Paris, London, Barcelona, Seneca.

With its 10th annual DECA fashion show scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 5, Seneca High School is quickly moving up the list of most fashionable areas in the world.

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The event provides a learning experience for those involved but also a preview of styles for the upcoming prom for friends and parents in attendance.

Students are given the challenge of marketing the occasion to the target audience.

“It’s a whole semester of learning,” said Grace McCloskey, a business education teacher at Seneca who oversees the event. “The students need to decide the best form of promotion for the event.”

Organizers utilize their personal social media accounts to help reach the target audience comprised of peers and their families.

“These kids are so quick these days, especially with technology,” McCloskey said.

Additionally, they send emails, tweets and Facebook posts informing anyone about the upcoming event.

“As they learn something, then they actually apply it,” McCloskey said, noting students have made commercials in the TV technology department. “They work hard.”

Having the TV technology has been “phenomenal,” she said. The students also utilize the media center.

“The kids just work so hard on this project. They really stepped up to the plate,” McCloskey said.

Part of the assignment was creating a budget for the event as well as reaching out to local businesses to donate goods for a silent auction. Close to two-dozen baskets will be provided for attendees to bid on, with prizes ranging from restaurant gift certificates to candles and kitchen needs.

For McCloskey, managing the large group of students was a challenge.

“It can be tough,” she said, noting an increase of students from years past. “It’s hard to keep them focused sometimes.”

McCloskey allowed the students to take the reins, acknowledging she lends them guidance throughout the process.

“They can’t learn unless they make mistakes, which they do,” McCloskey said.

The night is comprised of students strutting their stuff across the auditorium stage while student hosts and Gene Mosca of Formal Expressions Tuxedos explain what the kids are wearing. The event not only raises money for the school’s marketing class but also gives parents an idea of what their child can wear to the prom.

McCloskey said the best part of the show is when the event is over and the students see what they did. The show is recorded and each student gets a digital copy to show prospective schools or employers.

“I’ve learned that if you give the students a challenge, they will meet it,” McCloskey said.

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