Luncheon highlights districtâs âlegacyâ plans
May 7, 2008 · Updated 12:27 PM
The Lake Washington Schools Foundation (LWSF) held its third annual Legacy for Learning Luncheon April 30 at the Juanita High School Field House. Master of ceremonies, KING 5 TV news anchor Dennis Bounds -- himself a proud Lake Washington School District (LWSD) parent -- introduced speakers who shared good news about projects made possible through LWSF grants.
The foundation was created in 2005 to fund programs and services that arenât covered by taxpayers or the PTA/PTSA. In spite of its perceived affluence, the district receives significantly less funding per pupil than most school districts statewide.
Kim Axelrod, LWSF president, and Tracy Hoien, LWSF executive director, spoke about the importance of supporting new teachers and how a career symposium arranged with resources from the foundation helped a flustered high school senior choose an employment path.
Hoien excitedly noted that âthis year we have more than doubled the number of businesses sponsoring the foundation.â She said many businesses came forward with unsolicited donations.
LWSD superintendent Dr. Chip Kimball talked about âmaking differences in the lives of children or an opportunity to change the life of a single childâ through enrichment programs that are separate from the regular curriculum.
A video presentation, âOpening Minds to the Possibilities, Opening Doors to the Future,â highlighted such programs.
Carla Moreno, music specialist at Horace Mann Elementary in Redmond, used money from the LWSF to buy instruments for a world music class and commented, âI believe theyâre becoming better global citizens,â through exposure to arts and cultures of other nations.
Chris Taylor, a junior at Juanita High School in Kirkland, appealed to the foundation to buy equipment for a drumline. Most of the schoolâs music budget goes to basic instrument repair, but the new drums have ignited school spirit.
âI want this to go on forever and be a tradition at our school,â Taylor said.
Brian Burdon, a science teacher at Redmondâs Evergreen Junior High, purchased telescopes because âabstract concepts (about outer space) donât make sense.â Many kids had never used a telescope before. Seeing whatâs out there in the night sky is believing in the vastness of our universe.
Another educator, Monica Adair of Kirklandâs A.G. Bell Elementary, said she had 30-31 students in her third class this year, including seven English language learners, and her studentsâ reading levels ranged from first through sixth grades. With grant money from the LWSF, she bought kid-oriented anthologies of poetry by Maya Angelou, Langston Hughes and Emily Dickinson.
Kathleen Marshall, a second grade teacher at Juanita Elementary, used LWSF grant money to bring a play about Civil War freedom fighters to her school. Two of her students read aloud how it made them want to treat other people with kindness and compassion.
And Lisa Starr, a sophomore at the Futures School on the Juanita High School, campus told foundation representatives and guests about how she had âlost her wayâ and found renewed purpose through a forensics class that used state-of-the-art materials funded by the LWSF.
âNow weâve been able to replace text books from 1996,â Starr said.
If you didnât attend the Legacy for Learning Luncheon, you can still contribute to the cause. To learn more, call (425) 702-3414, e-mail info@lwsf.org or visit www.lwsf.org.
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