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Apr 5, 5:05 PM
Students learn value of giving to community
BY KIMBERLY C. MOORE FLORIDA TODAY
ROCKLEDGE -- With a camera rolling, 13-year-old
Allie Stepina announced, "I'm sad and tired. I have no friends
and I don't know if I want to live anymore." Nothing could
be farther from the truth, but Allie made the declaration as part
of a public service announcement she is producing for Brevard County's
HELP line. People who are troubled and need help can dial 211.
"I know
kids don't relate to adults, so I thought it could be a way to help
other teens," she said, adding the PSA will run on the government
channel once it is finished.
Allie's PSA
is one of many projects prompted by seventh-grade social studies
teacher Amanda Van Ess.
This 1997 teacher
of the year at Kennedy Middle School in Rockledge showed the movie
"Pay It Forward" to her class at the beginning of the
school year. She challenged students to do something to help any
living thing three times during the school year.
"People
need to see that kids don't always think about themselves,"
Van Ess said. "It just makes me so proud to see this assignment
be so productive."
The theme of
the movie is that each person should do something kind for three
people and ask them not to pay it back, but to "pay it forward"
by helping three other people.
The students'
projects have ranged from visiting seniors at a nursing home to
painting a neighbor's door to making blankets for animal cages.
In addition,
the students in Van Ess' class banded together to help raise funds
and collect goods for the Humane Society of Central Brevard. A recent
"Rock-A-Thon" at Merritt Square Mall raised $3,000 when
100 students rocked in rocking chairs for 11 hours in front of Dillard's.
The Humane
Society's executive director said she thinks it's great.
"Rock
on," Theresa Clifton joked. "The benefits are two-fold.
They're learning how to help non-profits in our area and they're
reducing the animal population in the community. To say nothing
of how it enriches their lives."
Even "Pay
It Forward" author Catherine Ryan Hyde is applauding the students.
"I'm a
huge animal lover, and I think it's a terrific project," Ryan
Hyde said. "I think she's a terrific teacher and we really
appreciate what she's doing to keep the Pay It Forward idea going."
This is the
second year Van Ess assigned the Pay It Forward project. She said
she is always amazed at the level of commitment some students have
about the project.
"Some
of the kids' projects move me so much, I have to keep a tissue box
on my desk," she said.
Heather Gaugeo
was in Van Ess' class last year. Her project involved personal sacrifice,
especially for a then-13-year-old girl.
"I cut
my hair and sent it to Locks of Love," Gaugeo said. Locks of
Love is a nonprofit organization that makes wigs for children with
medical hair-loss, such as cancer patients.
Gaugeo's brown
and blonde mane stretched all the way down her back, but one day
she walked into class with a bob, sheared at about chin level.
"I thought
it was pretty cool because I wouldn't want to be bald," she
said.
Van Ess said
her students are learning the value of giving.
"This
is what teaching is all about," she said. "To me, it is
the ultimate lesson that I have been trying to teach my students
this year -- it is better to give than to receive."
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