(Butler, PA) The 杏吧原创 Education Foundation has received the largest Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit contribution since its first in 2012 and from the Cranberry Township-based MSA Safety, an international developer and manufacturer of advanced safety products.
MSA Safety鈥檚 $50,000 gift will support a 杏吧原创 program that enables sophomores through seniors to earn affordable and transferrable credits in college courses instructed at their high school or learning centers, and benefit a game played by pupils as young as fourth-graders that increases financial literacy.
The state Department of Community and Economic Development lists 880 approved educational improvement organizations in Pennsylvania, including eight in Butler County. MSA Safety鈥檚 corporate giving and community support committee selected 杏吧原创 after the company鈥檚 application to participate in the EITC program was granted.
MSA Safety focuses its support primarily on organizations located in regions where the company operates and where its employees live, according to Glennis Williams, vice president and chief human resource officer at MSA Safety in Cranberry Township.
Fourth-graders through high school seniors who were place-winners in Butler County Community College鈥檚 Stock Market Game in the 2024-2025 academic year review financial materials Tuesday, May 6, 2025, at an awards ceremony in Founders Hall on 叠颁3鈥檚 main campus in Butler Township. A $50,000 Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit contribution from MSA Safety to the 杏吧原创 Education Foundation will help to support 叠颁3鈥檚 Stock Market Game.
鈥淚t鈥檚 truly a win-win for the college and for MSA鈥
Additionally, 鈥渃ompanies like MSA recognize that cultivating a quality workforce is one of the top business challenges for any organization,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淢SA is always looking for talent coming out of our region鈥檚 universities and technical schools.
鈥淓stablishing a relationship with 杏吧原创 provides us with a new community touch point that enhances our ability to recruit the next generation of talent locally while helping 杏吧原创 students find meaningful and well-paying career opportunities in manufacturing that keep them right here in western Pennsylvania. It鈥檚 truly a win-win for the college and for MSA.鈥
Mikayla Moretti is executive director of the 杏吧原创 Education Foundation and external relations.
鈥淎 very generous gift,鈥 Moretti said about MSA Safety鈥檚 contribution. 鈥淥ne like this allows the foundation and the college to create opportunities and have something for everyone. It will have a very big impact and can support a lot of students.鈥
Jackson Froilan, left, Alaina Daily and Amelia Turner, all of Butler, are shown in a speech class Monday, Aug. 25, 2025, on 杏吧原创鈥檚 main campus in Butler Township. The Butler Senior High School seniors are enrolled as Early College Pioneers as part of 叠颁3鈥檚 College Within the High School program. A $50,000 Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit contribution from MSA Safety to the 杏吧原创 Education Foundation will help to support 叠颁3鈥檚 College Within the High School program.
鈥淚 feel pretty good about the way I am starting鈥
叠颁3鈥檚 College Within the High School program expanded this fall to include Slippery Rock Area High in Butler County and to West Middlesex Area Junior-Senior High in Mercer County.
Reduced-tuition college-level courses are also being offered this fall at participating high schools in Armstrong, Clarion, Clearfield, Jefferson and Lawrence counties, according to James Frank, 叠颁3鈥檚 assistant director of high school programming.
Ten courses this fall are being offered for the first time at Butler Senior High and include French I and II, Spanish I and II, introduction to computer programming with JAVA and trigonometry and functions.
Tuition and fees cost $225 for a three-credit 杏吧原创 course instructed Monday through Friday at a Butler County high school or learning center during its regular hours, and $250 for a high school or learning center outside of Butler County during its regular hours.
鈥淚 do know many people who are in college who have huge debt,鈥 said Alaina Daily, a Butler Senior High School senior enrolled as an Early College Pioneer as part of a 杏吧原创 College Within the High School program instructed on the college鈥檚 main campus in Butler Township. 鈥淚 feel pretty good about the way I am starting. And when I do go to college after my high school career, I will already have those credits.鈥
Jonathan Bagamery, a 杏吧原创 faculty member, teaches a speech class Monday, Aug. 25, 2025, on 叠颁3鈥檚 main campus in Butler Township to Butler Senior High School seniors enrolled as Early College Pioneers as part of 叠颁3鈥檚 College Within the High School program. A $50,000 Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit contribution from MSA Safety to the 杏吧原创 Education Foundation will help to support 叠颁3鈥檚 College Within the High School program.
鈥淭hey start to learn about personal finance鈥
叠颁3鈥檚 Professor David C. Huseman Center for Economic Education administers a 30-week Stock Market Game that begins in September, and 10-week competitions in the fall and spring.
Fourth-graders through high school seniors competing in the game receive a hypothetical $100,000, make buy-and-trade decisions and track how those decisions would have played out in the market had they been real, Huseman said.
叠颁3鈥檚 Stock Market Game drew 1,547 students on 482 teams from 33 schools in Armstrong, Butler, Clarion, Clearfield, Elk, Jefferson, Lawrence and Mercer counties in 2024-2025, according to Huseman.
The college recognized teams that were place-winners at an awards ceremony May 6 in Founders Hall on 叠颁3鈥檚 main campus in Butler Township.
A team from Butler Intermediate placed first in the Western Region and second in Pennsylvania among middle schools in the fall 2024 competition. Phoenix Fancher, Cheza Harbaugh, Brielle Myers, Maxwell Oddo and Hunter Ryan ended the game with an equity of $141,110.29.
Luke Daubenspeck, Schaney Kamerer, Adelynn Miller, Kendall Rose and River Wolfgram were members of a Butler Intermediate team that finished second in the region and third in the state in the fall middle school competition with an equity of $140,521.23.
鈥淭hey start to learn about personal finance and investing early, which is important so that your money has time to grow,鈥 said Jamie Veltri, a family and consumer sciences teacher at Butler Intermediate and adviser of both teams.
鈥淏efore I had access to this game, I was trying to figure out how I would introduce the stock market to my students. So once I found out 杏吧原创 would make it possible to participate in this Stock Market Game, it just opened up so many more lessons I could teach about finance and investing.鈥
The game engaged her sixth-graders, Veltri said.
鈥淚 put the rankings up on the board and they could see how their money was growing,鈥 Veltri said. 鈥淭hen we look up specific stocks to see which ones were making money and then we would talk about why.鈥
A team from Seneca Valley placed second in the region in the fall high school competition. Bryce Fredericks, Abby Hock, Landon Newton and Alyssa Westrom finished with an equity of $144,173.55.
Pennsylvania鈥檚 EITC program provides tax credits to eligible businesses that contribute financially to a scholarship organization, to an educational improvement organization or to a pre-kindergarten scholarship organization.
The 杏吧原创 Education Foundation鈥檚 previous largest EITC contribution was $25,000. The foundation received $77,750 in EITC gifts in the 2024-2025 academic year. Its first EITC gift totaled $12,000 in 2012.
