Contra
Costa Times (CA)
Students
at
By
aark Tarte
CHILDREN LEARN IN SO MANY DIFFERENT
WAYS. A fifth-grade class at
It started when a student's
mother brought a book to her child's principal, Denise Nathanson,
called "Three Cups of Tea." It is about a young man's near-fatal
climbing accident on the mountain known as
Out of this near tragedy and
recovery for the climber, Greg Mortenson, grew the program Pennies for Peace. A
The village was so poor that
it couldn't even afford the dollar a day it takes to hire a teacher. The
children would climb to the next village at times to go to school and still
study together even if the teacher didn't arrive. Their writing was done with
sticks in the dirt since they were so poor they couldn't afford pencils and
paper in a country where a penny buys a pencil.
Mortenson did scrape
together the money to build a school and fulfilled his promise. He then wrote
"Three Cups of Tea" with David Oliver Relin about his experience. To
date, he has helped to build 59 schools in
His work is especially
important for girls in a culture where they were not normally allowed to
receive an education and the schools are slowly countering the
Taliban-supported schools where children were taught only to hate.
The story has enthralled
those who read it, and Nathanson asked if anyone at
the Smith school wanted to get involved. Two teachers who job-share took it on
enthusiastically. Erin Summers' and Megan Fletcher's fifth-grade class have
jumped in with both feet and are trying to raise the $12,000 it takes to build
a school in
The class has raised almost
$2,200 in the past month or so toward their eventual goal, and they are working
hard to raise the rest. This is a daunting task for any fundraiser, let alone a
group of young students.
Each week these fifth-
graders go into the other classrooms, update the younger students about the
project and leave behind containers to collect pennies. At the end of the week,
those cans are collected and added to the slowly growing total.
The students have also
written letters to many politicians about what they
are doing and will be making a presentation to the
I learned about this
wonderful project through Charlotte Grabill, the
volunteer publicity chairwoman at the school. The more I looked into what
You can help if you'd like.
Donations are being accepted through the school; you just need to earmark a
check with "Pennies for Peace" when you send it. You can mail a
donation to the
To find out more about the
international project or the book itself, go to http://www.penniesforpeace.org. There, you will find different links to this project and other
projects supported by this group throughout central
Until next week, be alert,
be safe and God bless
Reach Mark Tarte c/o the Times,
http://www.contracostatimes.com/ci_7305968?source=most_emailed
(c) 2007 Contra Costa Times.
All Rights Reserved. Used with permission.