Gold Medal Served up at Worldskills Competition
Gold Medal Served up at Worldskills Competition
Christchurch woman Kimberley De Schot is justifiably proud to have won gold in restaurant service at the “Olympics of trade skills”, the 2016 WorldSkills New Zealand competition.
“Winning the gold medal made me more nervous than the competition itself,” said Private (PTE) De Schot, 20, who was representing the New Zealand Defence Force at the competition in Wintec, Hamilton, from 30 September to 1 October.
“Walking up on stage, in front of everyone – with cameras flashing – I didn’t know what to do. The feeling took a while to sink in.
“But knowing that I was one of the top
restaurant service workers in New Zealand was a very proud
moment.”
PTE De Schot, a former Villa Maria College
student, is now a steward/caterer in the New Zealand
Army.
WorldSkills New Zealand is the country’s premier
work-skill competition. Most winners go on to represent New
Zealand WorldSkills International, which is held
biennially.
The competition featured 67 regional
finalists showcasing their work skills across 14 industry
categories. Each competitor completed a project over two
days, replicating “real-world” problems and
tasks.
PTE De Schot will now go to the selection phase to
represent New Zealand next year at WorldSkills Oceania in
Melbourne, followed by WorldSkills International in Abu
Dhabi.
She said the national competition followed two-and-a-half weeks of training at the Defence Catering School in Devonport, Auckland, which gave her confidence going into the intense, two-day competition.
“The
competition was really enjoyable – it was an experience
within itself,” she said. “Representing the NZDF made me
feel really proud, and I knew I had to put 100 per cent into
each task that I did.”
PTE De Schot is posted to No 3
Combat Service Support Battalion, at Burnham Military Camp,
near Christchurch. She joined the Army in March 2014,
attracted to the prospect of a “hands-on”
career.
“I was always a practical worker and thought it
was an awesome idea to get qualifications while serving my
country.”
Her daily tasks can be anything from making
salads to setting up the dining room, serving a meal, taking
orders, making coffee, taking food out, or making omelettes
in front of diners.
“I love being out front and
engaging with other people,” she said. “And the best
thing about being a steward in the Army is that we could be
doing our day-to-day job or we could be doing something
completely different, like playing sport or training for a
competition.
“The thing I enjoy most about the Army is
being part of a big family with a sense of pride, and being
surrounded by lots of different people who are passionate
about different
things.”
ENDS