“Destiny has a very strong work ethic and is extremely organized,” said welding instructor Ryan P. Good, who conversed with the student prospect’s parents while Barto gave her impromptu lesson. “She also does an excellent job in bringing out the best in others. Her passion is contagious.”
Barto discovered welding when seeking refuge from her high school, where she excelled academically but felt like an outcast. A tour of her school district’s career and technical center prompted her to register for “metal engineering” during her junior year. She enjoyed playing with Legos and building things as a child, and her mother had recently suggested engineering as a career path.
"I decided at that moment that I was going to be a welder. I had no idea what welding was,” she said with a laugh. “Before investing $500 into equipment, my mom made me go back and watch welding for a day to make sure it was the right thing for me. I was like, ‘Yeah, that’s cool.’ I got the equipment, and off I went.”
Barto’s lack of experience caused initial heartache. She admitted to bouts of hiding and crying in a welding booth, overcome by anxiety generated by the loud environment and fear of the unknown. Eventually, she said some classmates acted as “big brothers” in assisting her, and the teacher “went out of his way” to build her confidence.
“He taught me that if I sang while welding that it was like the rhythm of welding,” she recalled. “I got to be really good at that, singing while welding.”
Her welds became a hit. By the time she graduated, Barto was among the best welders in her class, thanks in part to 12 welding credits she completed through Penn College NOW, the institution’s dual-enrollment program allowing high schoolers to earn college credits for free. That positive experience led her to enroll at the college for welding and fabrication engineering technology.
Her first year was a struggle. Earning high grades proved difficult, and social interactions remained a challenge, despite her work as a Sunday school teacher and Girl Scout leader. Tempted to leave college, Barto sought help from Counseling Services.
Today, she is the one helping. Barto guides the Open House visitor as he successfully lays a couple weld beads on her bench project. The prospective student is grinning ear to ear when he removes his welding hood and thanks Barto for enthusiastically sharing her expertise.
Nearby, Good concludes his conversation with the young man’s parents.
“His mother and father were so amazed, as this was a side of their son that they had never witnessed before,” Good said. “The experience left an impression that they will never forget.”
Moments earlier, the mother revealed to Good that her son is on the autism spectrum and typically has a hard time dealing with people and coming out of his shell.
Barto can relate. She shares the same diagnosis. She discovered that when she followed the suggestion of Counseling Services and contacted Autism Diagnostic Evaluations Resources & Services, which diagnosed her as autistic. Barto finally had an answer to why she was “different.”