“It takes a real team effort,” said principal Greg Lamer, to coordinate such an event, which coincided with Education Week.
While teacher Billie-Jo Grant’s grade four students have been participating in the project for the past three years, this is the first time the whole school has worked together on it. In cross-curricular and cross-grade groups, students were grouped according to their chosen category and required to produce a piece of writing and a piece of art about their hero.
The project kicked off with an assembly and then the work began. The students had various guest speakers as they worked through the My Hero project, including dance troupe Fly Girlz, the Edmonton Humane Society, the Morinville Museum and Edmonton resident Lucille de Beaudrap who climbed Mount Everest last year at the age of 45.
In Lamer’s sports heroes group, he found he had to differentiate with the students between their favorite players and sports heroes. They talked about a sports hero being someone who is good in their sport but who also does something for people, such as Wayne Gretzky who was an excellent athlete but did a lot of charity work. Grant said that by the end of the project, which is Internet-based, “the kids should realize they have things in common with kids all over the world” and the work is an opportunity to celebrate diversity and commonalities.
The May 2 presentation at the school exhibiting the culmination of the students’ creations proved them to be varied, extensive and occasionally carrying a fundraising aspect. The musical heroes group, for instance, recorded a CD, the profits of which will be donated to disaster relief in Japan; it was the students’ idea. Other works included stepping stones, self-portraits, collages, solar-powered cars, dioramas and a student dance performance. Phys Ed teacher Tina McKinnon said that dancers are often viewed only for their entertainment value but pointed out that many dancers, such as Luke Geldert, hold performances and then donate the money to charity
Because of their scheduling difference, the Kindergarten students did not participate with the bigger groups but still wrote about who their heroes are and had their work displayed at the presentation.Teacher Helen Cyr said the project was about teaching the kids “to use the talents you have to make a difference”.
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Last edited 9/13/2011 3:19:14 PM