Students at Belton New Tech @Waskow volunteer
February 19, 2026
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Students at Belton New Tech @Waskow dedicated Dec. 18, 2025, to meaningful service during their annual Purple Heart Servant Leadership Day, carrying forward a long-standing campus tradition rooted in compassion, leadership and community responsibility.
Throughout the day, students stepped away from their regular coursework to participate in hands-on service projects designed to meet real needs across the Belton community. One project took place in Michelle Ciccariello’s classroom, where students created handmade hats and fidget items for veterans living at the Olin E. Teague Veterans’ Medical Center domiciliary in Temple, many of whom are living with Alzheimer’s disease and other cognitive conditions. Students continued working on these items over winter break, with the completed projects delivered in January to help provide comfort and support during the colder months.
For eleventh-grade student Ryleigh Harvey, Purple Heart Day represents the heart of the New Tech culture.
“Purple Heart Day means prioritizing service to help the community and others,” Harvey said. “Assignments and schoolwork are pushed to the side so we can focus on helping people. It shows that service is something we truly value here.”
Harvey chose to participate in the crocheting project because it combined service with a personal passion.
“I learned to crochet in fifth grade and have loved it ever since,” she said. “When I heard we could crochet to help seniors, I jumped at the opportunity. It makes me happy knowing I can help someone by doing something I enjoy.”
Students say the experience helped them better understand leadership and sacrifice beyond the classroom.
“Serving others means sacrificing your time and effort to benefit someone else,” Harvey said. “It helps you understand leadership by putting people’s needs before your own and helping others succeed.”
In addition to supporting veterans, students participated in a wide range of service projects throughout the day. These included pantry distribution and food packing, cleaning and organizing shared spaces, resetting classrooms and school grounds, and assisting with park cleanups, including efforts at Heritage Park. Students also helped organize the Belton ISD Resource Center, cleaned and sanitized toys in play areas, organized clothing closets, hung banners in the annex and supported a Winter Wonderland experience for Belton Early Childhood students.
Other projects focused on creative- and advocacy-based service. Students designed pet adoption posters, wrote letters for the Glamour Gals Foundation, and helped document service efforts through photos and video to support ongoing community outreach.
Service learning is deeply connected to the legacy of the school’s namesake, Captain Henry T. Waskow, a Belton native and Purple Heart recipient remembered for his devotion to his soldiers and his inclusive leadership style.
“Service is an important part of New Tech’s culture,” said Tab Lloyd, a teacher at Belton New Tech @Waskow. “Leadership is not about being out front or seeking recognition. It is about understanding people, meeting real needs and being willing to do the work that matters.”
Michelle Ciccariello emphasized that service at New Tech is not treated as a single event but as an ongoing expectation.
“We were the nation’s first Purple Heart School, and our dedication to service has always been a source of pride,” Ciccariello said. “Repeated experiences like this teach students that helping others is the norm, not the exception. It becomes part of who they are.”
Ciccariello added that Captain Waskow was remembered for creating a family-like environment among his troops, welcoming newcomers and ensuring everyone felt valued.
“We reinforce that legacy by embracing a ‘we are family’ mindset,” she said. “Strong communities grow when people care for one another. Our students learn that leadership means inclusion, compassion and giving back consistently.”
Through Purple Heart Servant Leadership Day, students not only support community partners but also develop empathy, teamwork and leadership skills that extend far beyond the classroom.
“Each time students serve, their perspective grows,” Lloyd said. “They gain understanding, compassion and leadership skills that only come through real-world experience.”
Belton New Tech @Waskow continues to honor Captain Waskow’s legacy by ensuring service remains central to campus life, empowering students to lead with humility, purpose and heart.








