Children In Need Of Basic School Supplies: Books, Markers, Paper

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First Posted: 10-19-09 07:36 PM   |   Updated: 10-20-09 08:57 PM

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In her blog post about Donors Choose, Livia McRee talks about why she created a Giving Page featuring programs promoting literacy in high-poverty classrooms across America, and her belief that no student in America should be deprived of an education for want of the proper materials, especially books.

Yet that is exactly what is happening in classrooms all across America.

Donors Choose tells some of these stories and allows donors to specifically target who their funds are going to benefit and see the impact they are having on the kids they help.

UPDATE: This morning, Impact turned the spotlight on some of the special projects Livia chose and the HuffPost community came out in strong numbers. In under 10 hours, you contributed over $3,300 dollars to educational projects through Donors Choose. Thanks for making an impact!


Poetry Comes Alive for ELL Kindergartners

Mrs. V wants to expose her kindergarten class to poetry and encourage students to create their own for display. This is a low-income Massachusetts classroom, where English is the second language for most of her students. She asks for 11 different poetry books and an organized display. From Mrs. V:

By donating to this project, you will help young English Language Learners develop a love for poetry. You will help them develop their vocabularies in both English and Spanish. You will give them a better understanding of language. Best of all, you will give them a chance to explore and express what is in their hearts!

Give to Mrs. V's class:

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Becoming Bilingual and Bicultural - Southern California:

Ms. M's first grade students in Southern California are learning to read, write and speak academic Spanish at their dual immersion charter school, where the student population is 95% Latino and African-American. To aid them on their bilingual and bicultural journey, they need Spanish materials in addition to the ones prepared by Ms. M - a Spanish Literacy Family Involvement Kit and a copy of "Baby va de Compras." From Ms. M:

"For this project, I have requested a set of LeapFrog materials that are in Spanish. This will give my students the experience of having an interactive book to read and hopefully continue to motivate them to read more. I will use this material for literacy groups where students will be given a story and will have to do a project about the story based on the standard for that week. I will also use the LeapFrogs as motivation for students who are showing exemplary behavior and work. Your help will motivate my students to continue reading and will allow all students to see how stories can come to life."


Literature Circles Feed the Mind and Spirit - Georgia

Ms. A's low-income classroom in Georgia is using outdated textbooks, and her students' reading levels are two to three grades below the national average. She is asking for several copies of classic children's literature to teach her current students as well as future classes. From Ms. A:

We are in need of exciting literature that can captive and engage our students. Books such as Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing and James and the Giant Peach, take children to far away places that they might never visit or imagine exist. These books will engage our children's imagination while encouraging them to improve their skills in reading. Better readers prove to become successful in all other subjects and arenas in life.

This project has been completed. Thank you!

LiteratureCircles


Creating a Vision: Preparing Young Women For The Real World - Florida:

Ms. W is a high school science teacher in Florida who volunteers her time sponsoring a club aimed at junior and senior females. The club is designed to support the girls on the path towards becoming strong and successful women as they head off to college and young adulthood. The girls need 40 copies of the book Letters to a Young Sister, which addresses issues like love, family, relationships and finance with inspiring tales from women such as Michelle Obama.

Ms. W. says:

"The girls in our club all face obstacles, both in school and their personal lives. The club is meant to give them strength. The book Letters to a Young Sister lets the girls know that they are not alone in their struggles. Other girls are facing the same obstacles and have the same questions...Along with scheduled speakers, community service, and journals; the book will reinforce the efforts of the club."

This project has been completed. Thank you!

CreatingAVision


Big Books To Make Big Gains! - Alabama

Ms. B is trying to help the third grade students in her Alabama classroom catch up to students across the country. Many of her students come from impoverished households and are not exposed to literature in their daily lives. She's asking for a set of "Big Books" to be read aloud in class.

Because of the financial situation many of our families face in our community, many of these children do not have books at home. Many parents are uneducated and many of them have parents who work two or more jobs and are never home to read with them. Many of my students are lacking the literacy skills we sometimes take for granted. They have not experienced read-alouds before bedtime, discussions around the dinner table, or problem-solving with siblings.

This project has been completed. Thank you!

BigBooks-BigGains


Read Write - Jackson, Mississippi, Mr. R's classroom

Students in Mr. R's 11th grade English class need 30 copies of Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. The students in this class in Jackson, Mississippi, typically read at below their grade level. In Mr. R's words:

"Your help will motivate reluctant readers to read on their own by showing them that reading can be fun and educational...I need a class set of books that my kids would like to read. If they have an interesting book, they will read it and want to talk about it. I want my students to read the book Things Fall Apart because they will be interested in this book based on our conversations and how they felt about other texts we have read. They also want fun, hands-on activities to accompany the texts, which is why we need markers."

This project has been completed! Thank you!

Read-Write

We are Survivors - Los Angeles, CA

Ms. H's 10th grade classroom in Los Angeles is full of "survivors," students who are following through on their education despite the obstacles their inner city upbringing has put in their way. The classroom needs 40 copies of Ken Kesey's One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest to further the class's focus on survival and autonomy. From Ms. H:

"You will help my students 'survive' their circumstances. Your donation will make them college ready, life ready, and ready to turn over a new leaf in their communities. You can make a difference in these kids' lives...Of the 60,000 people who have entered this inner city school in the past 40 years, 2,000 have graduated from college. My students will succeed as adults, but they need exposure to texts that dignify their interests and ability levels."

This project has been completed! Thank you!

WeAreSurvivors


Help, We Have No Library! - Oklahoma

"My kids have to read and have no library!! I work in a high need community with 8th graders. I am trying to model how to read a chapter book to them however I don't have enough books for the kids!

Ms. H's Oklahoma students are on a mission to read one million words throughout the school year. The problem: they don't have a library. Contributions go directly to providing this classroom with enough books to share and read throughout the year.

This project has been completed! Thank you!

HelpWeHaveNoLibrary


A Second-Chance: Reading Instruction for Teen Mothers - Washington D.C.

At a high-poverty school in Washington D.C., Ms. G is teaching a "reading intervention class" for special education high school students. She's asking for a set of children's books to give the students a basic literary education and make the culture of reading a part of their daily lives.

From Ms. G: "You can help teen mothers and their children learn to love reading together and increase their literacy skills for a lifetime. This project will strengthen our students' classrooms, families, and community in more ways than we can measure. What could be more rewarding than the potentials of lifelong family literacy?"

This project has been completed! Thank you!

ASecondChance - MA
In her blog post about Donors Choose, Livia McRee talks about why she created a Giving Page featuring programs promoting literacy in high-poverty classrooms across America, and her belief that no stud...
In her blog post about Donors Choose, Livia McRee talks about why she created a Giving Page featuring programs promoting literacy in high-poverty classrooms across America, and her belief that no stud...
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We've been spending more and more, in real dollars, to educate the kids, and yet all the money vanishes before it's time to buy basic supplies. We live in a great neighborhood, with middle class tax dollars, but are constantly being harassed for even more money. Remember, the public schools are getting DOUBLE the per pupil money as private.

"Between 1994 and 2004, average per-pupil expenditures in American public schools have increased by 23.5 percent (adjusted for inflation). Between 1984 and 2004, real expendi­tures per pupil increased by 49 percent."

(U.S. Department of Education, Digest of Education Statistics, Table 171.)

If the districts themselves were really hurting I'd be first in line with an open pocketbook. They're not, though. I don't want to pay for some school board member's seminar on "meeting the needs of American Indian lesbian students from single parent homes" or what have you. At least not when I have to ante up to buy paper towels and kleenex for the classroom.

These teachers are doing wonderful things for the kids. Perhaps they would be able to pressure the administration for an adequate budget if we had a vigorous school choice program. When the students are suddenly consumers and not inert clients, suddenly the guys at the top can't afford to look the other way when the consumers aren't getting what they want. Inject a little competition in the system - and please, pay these talented teachers what they're worth, regardless of seniority.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 10/21/2009

For those of you who see the value in helping classrooms, our Teen Trendsetter reading mentor program is trying to collect 25,000 gently used Mystery Tree House books to use as part of our volunteer efforts across the southern US where teens mentor struggling 2nd and 3rd graders weekly. See www.volunteerusafoundation.org or our fan page.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 10/21/2009
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how about the parents supplying the needs for their kids?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 AM on 10/21/2009
- Cye I'm a Fan of Cye 22 fans permalink
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I don't wish to detract from the wonderful and necessary job these volunteers are doing in the US school system, but when I read the title of this article I assumed it would be a story on Africa or some third world country where students are always in need of basic school materials.

But no, its about the US. How bizzare. But then I come from Australia - a country of universal/public education and universal healthcare. Or what the GOP calls a communist state.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 10/20/2009
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It is bizarre, but as people throughout the thread have said, it wasn't always the case.

The first part of my education was in Detroit, and let me share to you that no one would assume that to be one of your better places to go to school, but I never recall us being without books or art supplies. In fact, I seem to recall an allotment of pencils and papers per quarter, and then parents paid for anything over and above. Text books were covered, novels for class were covered, etc.

My family then moved to the suburbs, and I don't actually recall a big difference.

Clearly, this changed at some point.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 PM on 10/20/2009
- SteveS I'm a Fan of SteveS 12 fans permalink
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In the two months since school started, my daughter's class has had 4 fundraisers. One with Chili's to assist St. Judes childrens hospital, one with Coldstone Creamery to assist for school supplies, one to combat breast cancer and one more for field trips. Plus, the PTO harasses the parents to join and wants you to pay additional money for field trips. It's gotten out of control.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 10/20/2009
- SteveS I'm a Fan of SteveS 12 fans permalink
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My daughter is in the California public school system. I pray for the day when I can afford to put her in private school. The public school system out here is a joke.

California has the 7th largest economy in the world, and 30% of it's budget goes to education. Yet, her days are spent about 50% on the English language, 30% on math, 20% on fundraising for the school and 0% on science, art, p.e., music, social studies, etc.

With 30% of the state budget going to education, there should be plenty of money for supplies, but it all goes to administrative costs (pay for upper management) which is completely destroying the system.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 PM on 10/20/2009
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I had a stint in private school -- trust me that you aint seen nothing yet for fundraisers and an expectation of parent participation. Hope there aren't uniforms. :)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 10/20/2009
- SteveS I'm a Fan of SteveS 12 fans permalink
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We had her in the private Montessori system in preschool. (she's in 2nd grade now). Not a single fundraiser all year, excellent education and no uniforms.

Private schools will all be different, but you can guarantee the public school system has educating at the bottom of the list.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 10/21/2009
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Some teachers not only pay out of pocket, they pay with their lives.
A teacher was stabbed to death in the classroom in Texas last month.
Read it and weep...

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/101809dnentstabbing.3ffc24c.html#slcgm_comments_anchor

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 10/20/2009

I thought I would share what our union has done in our community. Vallejo, California has been hard hit by the economy, bankruptcy of the city and fiscal mismanagement in our school district. As a result of all of these actions, many teachers have seen a definite increase in our kids coming to school without basic school supplies. Our union decided that we could help 2000 of our students by purchasing almost $12,000 in school supplies.

You can read about this here: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ci_13599669

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 PM on 10/20/2009
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“To acquire the habit of reading is to construct for yourself a refuge from almost all the miseries of life.”

- Somerset Maugham

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 10/20/2009

chelle, as a self-confessed bibliophile, i second that emotion....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 AM on 10/21/2009

If you want your kids educated, then YOU buy the books and other supplies!
If you can't afford the supplies for their education....then you can't afford to have had the kids in the first place!
Why should I have to pay for your kid because I had the sense to do the basic financials before getting knocked-up and bring a kid into the world I couldn't properly take care of?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 10/20/2009
- RedGinger I'm a Fan of RedGinger 19 fans permalink
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well becca, since you come across as a greedy kind of me me me person, maybe you can "think" long term. If we have an educated work force (our younger generation) you will be able to collect your social security....THEY will be paying into it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 PM on 10/20/2009
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So, Becca, if you've got a good job and can afford kids, only to be laid off and rack up some medical bills, do you just send the kids back? Is there a special shipping rate?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 10/20/2009

If you had been properly responsible and thought ahead, you wouldn't have either 1) had the kids you potentially could not afford, or 2) prepared properly for such a situation.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 AM on 10/28/2009
- galaxian I'm a Fan of galaxian 2 fans permalink
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But it's called Public Education. My parents, for instance, were never asked to buy the textbooks public education was there to provide.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:18 PM on 10/20/2009
- crzy I'm a Fan of crzy 14 fans permalink

Bitter much? Basic financials aside, how lucky your kid is to have you, the self described, 'knocked-up' mommy.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 10/20/2009

That's the whole point...FINANCIALS! If you can't afford to have children - DON'T HAVE CHILDREN! Your kid is NOT my responsibility. Now THAT is greedy....thinking someone else should be responsible for YOUR mistake. And yes, if you cannot afford to properly take care of your children, then they were YOUR MISTAKE!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 AM on 10/28/2009

I read that a huge bunch of textbooks are warehoused in Plano, Texas and other Texas school districts. If they are any good, maybe you can get a hold of them for cheap or free.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 10/20/2009
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Huff Po, you need to create a non-profit corp that we can donate too, that way we can write off donations. Come on, you can certainly afford it!!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 10/20/2009
- cupcake65 I'm a Fan of cupcake65 5 fans permalink

It is absolutely disgraceful that teachers have to supplement school costs out of their own pockets. My sister-in-law is a Special Ed. teacher, so I know how devoted they are. Easy way to solve the problem - eliminate 75% of the administrators and 95% of the Federal paperwork. The cash left over should be more than enough to meet their needs.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 PM on 10/20/2009
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now here me out here:

i go to the dumpsters behind stores alot to see what they are throwing out.

and Walgreens has thrown out enough school supplies to provide for needy kids in the entire school district where i live....
imagine how much stuff wal-mart throws away! i can't tell you because they use "compactors", machines that crush all the "trash."

this is the logic of capitalism. they'd rather throw things away that people need than give them to those who have a need for it.

i think arianna should just ask those companies to stop throwing that stuff away and give it to poor kids instead!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 10/20/2009
- 3blueeggs I'm a Fan of 3blueeggs 8 fans permalink
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A shout out to teachers who for years and years have been spending their own money to subsidize the needs in their classrooms. I have friends who are teachers and I can say that they do not hesitate to go clothes shopping for needy students or contribute snacks that don't show up at snack time or donate to needy families of students. It is SO easy to criticize teachers because we all have had at least one teacher we didn't like when we were in school or one who pointed out some parenting flaw that we didn't want to face as adults! No one wants to bring work home, but teachers do it routinely. Many go in early, stay late and take classes during their breaks. So, HURRAY for teachers and if you can read this...THANK A TEACHER!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 PM on 10/20/2009

...And if you CAN'T read this.... blame a bureaucrat.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 PM on 10/20/2009
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