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Cancer won’t keep biz teacher from national competition

Costa Mesa High School seniors, from left, Catherine Kricorian, Jeirany Chavez, Matthew Brown, Sophie Nguyen and Zaira Lopez, representing the Business Academy's business plan team, created a make-believe company called Go-Tect, which placed second in a statewide competition last December. The team is headed to New York City, in April, for the national competition.
Costa Mesa High School seniors, from left, Catherine Kricorian, Jeirany Chavez, Matthew Brown, Sophie Nguyen and Zaira Lopez, representing the Business Academy’s business plan team, created a make-believe company called Go-Tect, which placed second in a statewide competition last December. The team is headed to New York City, in April, for the national competition.
(KEVIN CHANG / Daily Pilot)
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A winning project has grown into a meaningful lesson for some seniors at Costa Mesa High School.

Five students are heading to a national competition in New York City in April. And for the first time in three years, their teacher, who has battled stage 4 cancer since 2012, will be right there with them.

The teens are enrolled in the school’s Business Academy, a three-year program that teaches entrepreneurship, finance, marketing and more. As part of the lesson, students dreamt up a virtual company, Go-Tect, and put their business skills to work, such a finding customers and paying bills.

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The business plan for Go-Tect, which sells wearable GPS-enabled devices, took second in a statewide competition in December.

Now, the five teens behind the business plan — all seniors — will be pitted against roughly 100 teams from across the country. Teacher Cheri Sheldon will cheer them on.

Sheldon’s presence makes the contest “more meaningful,” said team member Jeirany Chavez, 17. “She’s like our mom.”

It was nearly three years ago that Sheldon learned she had cancer. The diagnosis came a week before Business Academy students, ones on an earlier team, were set to fly to New York to compete.

Sheldon said she told her doctor she was taking the trip, but his response was “oh, no you’re not,” Sheldon said.

“She keeps thanking us for a second chance to go to New York, but honestly she deserves the thanks,” said Chavez, who is Go-Tect’s chief of internal affairs.

Teaching “real world skills” was the reason Sheldon started the business academy 20 years ago, she said. A teacher for 29 years, Sheldon describes herself as a “hands-on kind of person,” and she said that students learn by doing.

In New York, the five seniors will face an intimidating panel of judges made up of Wall Street financiers and business experts. As part of the competition, they’ll present their business plan and answer questions before an audience that numbers in the hundreds.

Mike Milchiker, who teaches the Business Academy class with Sheldon and one other teacher, said students regularly spend nights and weekends at work on their virtual company.

Sophie Nguyen, the team’s CFO, said they’ve incorporated the feedback from the judges in the statewide competition. Nguyen said they have strong odds of placing in the top five, or at least the top 10. In the last five years, Business Academy students have reached nationals four times.

As for Sheldon, she continues to wage her battle against cancer. She said the students have supported her through rounds of treatment. This trip is significant for them — and for her. “It’s kind of like their comeback and my comeback.”

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