Keeping on straight, narrow
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Jeff Benson
Even the best and brightest teens can make some dumb choices from
time to time. It pretty much goes with the territory of being an
adolescent.
But nine sophomore boys attending Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor high schools -- all childhood classmates who attended Mariners
Christian School together from kindergarten on -- have found the
secret to making smart decisions:
Nine heads are better than one.
Their club, High School Students for Humanity, meets at one of the
boys’ houses twice a month, so the students can help keep one
another’s heads on straight. They talk about the temptations of sex,
drugs and alcohol, among other teen issues, and refer to the Bible
for guidance.
“We talk about Scriptures a lot, and the Bible,” said Corona del
Mar High School sophomore Matt Byers, 16. “It just reminds us, when
we’re under peer pressure, to make the right decisions.”
Newport Harbor sophomore Kyle Kula, 16, agrees.
“I’m able to trust them,” Kyle said. “We’re really close friends,
and we’ve known each other a long time. We can come and talk about
stuff. We talk about getting through high school, what we struggle
with, peer pressure and grades.”
Along with Matt and Kyle, High School Students for Humanity
comprises Corona del Mar High School students Chris Horton, 15; Luke
Brown, 15; David Applebee, 15; and Brad Smith, 15; and Newport Harbor
High School students Carson Carpenter, 16; Ryan Hilts, 15; and Brian
Beaudette, 15.
The students’ immediate goal is to incorporate clubs into their
two high schools, a process now underway. After that occurs, they
might look to get the club organized at other high schools.
When the club formed two years ago, the students also enlisted the
help of two adults, Mariners Christian teacher Tim Bahadoor and
volunteer football coach Chuck Brummett.
“To be honest with you, I learn more from them than they do from
me, because I remember what life was like as a kid,” Bahadoor said.
“This is a very unique situation, because the kids basically came to
us good. We just try to keep them on the same track they’re currently
on.”
The club thrives because of strong parental upbringing, he said.
“We don’t want to replace their parents when they come to us, but
sometimes we’re able to steer them back to their parents,” Bahadoor
said. “But if anything threatens their safety, we definitely try to
get the parents involved.”
The boys met at a Newport Beach Stater Bros supermarket Saturday
to collect food for Orange County’s hungry, said Carson’s mother,
Kathleen Carpenter. They collected about 200 bags of food and
supplies to give to Second Harvest Food Bank in Orange.
“There were so many comments from others on how nice it is to see
young men doing this,” Kathleen Carpenter said. “People were really
taken by this. The reality is that there are people who are hungry.”
Bahadoor approached Brummett in 2003 with the idea of the pair
volunteering to mentor the boys. Brummett’s concern was how the pair
would ease the boys’ transition from a Christian school environment
to a public high school environment.
The practices of praying before games and practices and good
citizenship on the field aren’t as prevalent at the high school
level, Brummett said. But the students would become model citizens if
they remembered their upbringing and were able to express their
feelings openly to people who’ll listen, he said.
“I told them not to be surprised if there was cursing on the field
where they were going,” Brummett said. “Basically, they were going
from a protective environment to one that’s more open. There are
problems you don’t encounter here.”
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