School’s not very cool
A line of fourth-graders waited patiently for a turn at the classroom
drinking fountain while their teacher, Freyja Thompson, read aloud
over the whir of fans used to ease the afternoon heat at McKinley
Elementary School.
McKinley is one of three schools in the Burbank Unified School
District that are without air-conditioning in many of their
buildings.
“It’s miserable,” Thompson said. “The children have such a hard
time paying attention.”
All three of the schools -- McKinley, Providencia Elementary
School and Monterey Continuation High School -- are waiting to be
modernized.
Members of the school’s faculty and administration agree that
students have a harder time learning when they are distracted by
temperatures that can reach over 100 degrees in the classrooms,
McKinley Principal Sue Holliday said.
“The worst time of day is the afternoon, after the kids have been
playing outside,” said Holliday. “It’s hard to have real productive
time with kids when its very hot, it’s a problem.”
Teachers try to find way to bring down temperatures -- most use
the district’s large metal fans, and others bring small spritzer
bottles to spray a mist of water on the children when they come in
from recess or lunch.
This will be fourth-grader Skyler Nelson’s second year without air
conditioning.
“It was awful [last year],” she said. “One kid got dehydrated and
he had to go to the office. It was kind of upsetting.”
Skyler agreed that the heat in the classroom makes learning more
difficult.
“Sometimes it can be very frustrating, you can’t concentrate,” she
saidThompson is one of several teachers who use their own money to
buy fans that are powerful and quiet -- many find it hard to be heard
when the district-provided fans are set on their highest setting.
Finding ways around the heat takes up time that could be better
spent, teachers said.
“It cuts into teaching time,” first-grade teacher Diana Wong said.
“Teachers with air conditioning don’t have to worry about how to keep
the kids cool.”
Students are encouraged cut back on their physical activity during
warmer months.
“We encourage them not to run around outside at lunch time,” said
Thompson. “They come back inside and get headaches then they can’t
pay attention.”
Parents are also frustrated at their children having to endure hot
classrooms during the warmer months.
“I know that she comes home sweaty,” Suzanne Weertz said of her
daughter Madeline, who attends McKinley. “I wonder how effective
learning can be later in the afternoon when the classrooms are so
hot.”
After hearing concerns from parents, school board member Larry
Applebaum brought the issue to the head of the Chief of Facilities
Craig Jellison at the school board meeting Thursday, asking him what
could be done to have air conditioning placed in the schools this
fall.
“I asked him to come back with a feasibility plan for getting roof
and air-conditioning work done at the remaining four sites that have
yet to be modernized over the course of next summer,” said Applebaum.
“I believe it’s worth going after, and it’s something we can
hopefully accomplish.”
Jellison could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
But Holliday is worried that the air conditioning can’t be
installed ahead of schedule because of the complexity of the future
modernization.
“I don’t think they can put in air conditioning until they do the
whole thing, it’s part of the structure of the building,” she said.
The district’s facilities team is considering options on how to
move up parts of the modernization to allow for the installation of
air conditioning, said Chuck Colgan, the district’s maintenance and
operations compliance manager.
“We’ll take a look at it and we’ll just have to go from there,”
Colgan said. “We’ll have to see whether it makes good sense to do so.
There’s a lot of pieces in the puzzle that have to happen to put air
conditioning in.”
In the meantime, students and teachers will continue to find
innovative ways around the heat and wait to see what the district
decides.
“Modernization takes time,” said Holliday. “It’s hard when your
school is last. Its hard for the families of the kids who come home
and tell there parents how hard it is in the afternoon. They get hot
and miserable.”
Parents also hope that a plan will be enacted fast.
“I want to make sure its in the forefront of some people’s mind so
they don’t forget the schools that haven’t been dealt with,” said
Weertz.
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