Students take on pet project
Lindsay Sandham
Some hungry pets in Orange County will be fed, thanks to Wendy
Jawor’s first-grade class at Harbor View School in Corona del Mar.
For most, the 100th day of school is probably just another school
day, but for the first-graders it marks a major milestone.
“For the 100th day of school we went into counting and doing math
and all sorts of activities with numbers,” Jawor said. “So we thought
we’d combine it with a service project and help animals and shelters
in the area.”
Her class started collecting pet food donations Jan. 14, and
Renee Carleton of the Pet Food Bank planned to come to the school
today to pick up the more than 800 cans and bags.
The Pet Food Bank is a local organization that collects animal
food and brings it to the neediest animal shelters.
“This is our third year that we’ve done this, but this year we’ve
had so much extra support,” she said. “Our principal’s just been
wonderful. We’ve had probably twice as much as we get normally.”
Every day since the project started, the kids have been counting
the donations, learning place values and how to carry numbers in
addition and subtraction. They also got some practice in marketing
and public speaking by making posters and visiting all the other
classes to promote their pet food drive.
The students moved the food out of their classroom and into the
school’s multi-purpose room Tuesday.
“It was fun carrying them up and down,” said 7-year-old Claire
Robertson of Newport Beach. “I’m so glad there’s going to be some
happy pets -- there’s going to be some real happy pets.”
Bonnie Robertson, 7, of Newport Beach also said carrying the food
was a lot of fun.
“I learned how to count by twos,” she said.
Jawor said the 100th day of school is a big deal to the
first-graders because of a program called Math Their Way.
“It’s teaching patterning and place value and all sorts of math
concepts to children through the calendar,” she said. “They’ve been
counting for so long and 100 is a big number.”
Harbor View Principal Mellissia Christensen said the initial goal
for pet food donations was 100, and the number kept growing and
growing.
“This is the most generous school I’ve ever seen in my life,” she
said. “It’s part of the culture here I think. You know people are so
generous, because they have so much more than most people.”
Jawor said this is the third year her class has conducted this
drive, and every year the numbers have almost doubled from the year
before.
“It’s truly because of our principal,” she said. “We would have
never have gotten this far without her.”
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