Every crush begins at lunch
Erica Shen
With the girls dressed in different shades of pink and boys holding
onto boxes of chocolates, sixth-graders at Eastbluff Elementary
School in Newport Beach gathered at the community park to celebrate
their day of roses, chocolate and cards.
Every year, sixth-grade teachers June Elsten and Juliet Hilde
designate the lunch hour on Valentine’s Day as a friendship lunch
exchange, encouraging students to show appreciation for their peers.
“Today is not only about demonstrating our love and emotions, but
it is also about appreciating others, being thankful and remembering
the less fortunate,” Elsten explained to her class.
The week before the lunch exchange, students each filled out a
list of things they would like in the lunch. The teachers collected
and redistributed the lists randomly so that each student had a
secret gift-exchange partner.
When it came time for the students to do the exchanges, they ran
across the room anxiously, finding their partners to give and receive
their secret lunch packages.
Students enjoyed the array of candy, chips, drinks and sandwiches
in their packages while sharing them with their classmates.
Although most of the students simply viewed this event as a great
way to receive a special lunch and a good excuse to play at the park,
some students took advantage of the event as a way to express their
admiration toward classmates of the opposite sex.
“He got me this bracelet and I got him the Muse CD,” said
12-year-old Hannah Hagemann, sitting next to her gift giver,
11-year-old Tyler Wright, while showing her bracelet to her
classmates.
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