Date: Fri 01-May-1998
Date: Fri 01-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-school-community-team
Full Text:
Ed Ink: Kids And The Community
It's difficult to say how, why, or when a person becomes selfish and narrow in
his view of the world. Certainly very young children who are made to feel
supported, secure, and loved, quickly move out of themselves to take an
expansive view of life. Their attraction to play, small animals, and any large
being willing to get down on the floor with them helps them explore the
possibilities of how the world can get better and better through
understanding, kindness, and careful attention to others.
For some people, sadly, that process stops and is replaced by a self-centered
isolation that cuts them off from their innate sense of community. Somehow the
Golden Rule gets perverted along the way to be: Do unto others before they do
unto you. The school community at Head O' Meadow School, however, is taking
steps to ensure that it doesn't happen at their school. Fifth-grade teachers
and students have teamed up to form a School Community Team (SCT). The team
has initiated a number of projects designed to help improve the lives of
others. These include everything from replacing institutional posters with
children's artwork to make the school more welcoming and warm to collecting
food and making placemats for the food pantry that helps needy families in
town.
The teachers working with the SCT report that the kids are coming up with more
ideas for improving life in their school and community than can be reasonably
accomplished given the time and resources they have at school. But even if
everything doesn't get done, the attitude of giving has taken hold; the kids
are thinking of others, helping others, and making a difference in the lives
of others. And they are finding that when they apply their intelligence and
creativity for the benefit of others, it makes them feel good. Of all the
lessons we expect our schools to convey, that is perhaps the most important.
