Education

Peebles Senior Bria Brown Excels in Soccer, Cheerleading, Earns Nationals Bid

Peebles senior Bria Brown earned a cheerleading nationals bid and plans to enroll in Shawnee State's competitive radiology program after graduation.

Marcus Williams5 min read
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Peebles Senior Bria Brown Excels in Soccer, Cheerleading, Earns Nationals Bid
Source: www.peoplesdefender.com

Bria Brown, a senior at Peebles High School and daughter of Brian and Cassandra Brown, has spent her final year of high school earning one of competitive cheerleading's most coveted milestones while laying the groundwork for a career in allied health: she secured a bid to nationals and will enroll at Shawnee State University in Portsmouth to pursue a degree in radiologic technology after graduation.

Brown competes in both soccer and cheerleading for Peebles, but it is cheerleading she names as her favorite sport. The nationals bid stands as her most memorable athletic moment. When asked about the less glamorous side of competition, she singled out "unfair scoring and bad refs" as her biggest grievance, a sentiment that will resonate with any parent who has sat through a close game at Alumni Field. Above the competitive frustrations, Brown said the friendships formed with teammates are the part of high school sports she values most.

Her post-graduation path leads to Shawnee State's Radiologic Technology program, one of the more selective allied-health programs in Southern Ohio. The program awards an Associate of Applied Science degree across six semesters, pairing classroom instruction on the Portsmouth campus with clinical rotations at medical centers throughout Southern Ohio and Northern Kentucky. Admission is competitive: the university ranks all qualifying applicants and fills a fixed number of seats determined by clinical site capacity, with no wait list. Graduates become eligible to sit for the national certifying examination administered by the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists, and the curriculum satisfies licensure requirements in all 50 states.

For Adams County families considering the same path, the practical details matter. Shawnee State's application for the radiologic technology program requires separate admission to the university and then a secondary program application with its own deadline and ranking process. Minimum criteria include prerequisite coursework and GPA thresholds, but because qualified applicants routinely outnumber available seats, competitive candidates typically exceed those minimums before applying. Full admission requirements and the current program information sheet are available directly through Shawnee State's health sciences department in Portsmouth.

The local workforce angle is straightforward. Adams County Regional Medical Center, which serves residents across Adams and Brown counties, depends on a steady pipeline of credentialed imaging professionals. Radiologic technologists with an ARRT credential and Ohio licensure are among the most consistently in-demand positions at regional hospitals. Brown's intended field puts her on a direct line from Peebles High School to the kind of credential that local healthcare employers actively recruit.

Brown lists "10 Things I Hate About You" as her favorite film and Gossip Girl as her go-to TV show, and spends free time with friends and family. She is the kind of Peebles graduate the county tends to want back.

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Bria Brown, a Peebles High School senior and daughter of Brian and Cassandra Brown, leaves her prep career with one of competitive cheerleading's most coveted milestones in hand and a concrete plan for what comes next: enrollment at Shawnee State University in Portsmouth to pursue a degree in radiologic technology.

Brown competes in both soccer and cheerleading at Peebles, but cheerleading is the sport she calls her favorite. Earning a bid to nationals stands as her most memorable athletic moment. On the less glamorous side of competition, she singled out "unfair scoring and bad refs" as her biggest frustration, a sentiment that will land with anyone who has spent a Saturday watching a close bracket. Asked what she values most about high school sports, Brown said the friendships built with teammates rank above everything else.

Her post-graduation path leads to one of the more selective allied-health programs in Southern Ohio. Shawnee State's Radiologic Technology program awards an Associate of Applied Science degree across six semesters, pairing classroom instruction at the Portsmouth campus with clinical rotations at nine medical centers throughout Southern Ohio and Northern Kentucky. Admission is competitive: the university ranks all qualifying applicants against a fixed number of seats limited by clinical site capacity, and the program carries no wait list. Graduates become eligible to sit for the national certifying examination through the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists, with the curriculum satisfying licensure requirements in all 50 states.

For Adams County families considering the same route, the process requires two separate steps: standard university admission to Shawnee State, followed by a secondary application to the radiologic technology program with its own deadline and ranking criteria. Meeting minimum prerequisites does not guarantee admission; in most years qualified applicants outnumber available seats, so competitive candidates typically exceed the stated minimums before applying. Full requirements and the current program information sheet are available through Shawnee State's health sciences department.

The local workforce connection is direct. Adams County Regional Medical Center, which serves Adams and Brown counties from its Seaman campus, relies on credentialed imaging professionals, and radiologic technologists holding ARRT certification and Ohio licensure are among the most consistently recruited positions at regional hospitals. Brown's chosen field puts her on a straight line from Peebles to a credential the county's own healthcare system actively needs.

She lists "10 Things I Hate About You" as her favorite film, Gossip Girl as her preferred TV show, and counts time with friends and family as how she spends her hours away from athletics. Brown is the kind of Peebles graduate Adams County tends to want back.

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