Monthly Archives: November 2010

Oak Park Elementary School: “Bridging the Parks”

Seasonal fundraisers provide consistent support and teach students about local and global citizenship.

At Oak Park Elementary School in Lansdale, PA, students and staff are discovering creative ways to care for their own community while building connections with people thousands of miles away. Brett Baker, 6th grade teacher, explains that Oak Park students and staff have always been responsive to meeting the needs of others. “Our school family is community minded,” he says. “Whether the needs are in our own backyard or far away, we rally around the cause.” He notes that Oak Park families have supported local food banks, adopted a school ravaged by Hurricane Katrina, and provided resources for residents of Haiti.

“Bridging the Parks” represents the school’s latest effort to act locally and reach globally by building a bridge between Oak Park Elementary and Ivory Park, South Africa. In October, Bob Tryanski – founder of the Keep It! Campaign – traveled to Oak Park and acquainted students with the challenges facing Ivory Park residents. He explained that donations from Oak Park will help to support the feeding program at the Sedimosang Day Care Center and will also provide books for the new library. A $200 check presented by students at the orientation assembly will pay for meals for 20 Ivory Park children for an entire month. 

Baker explains that throughout the school year, students and staff will be participating in the “Bridging the Parks” campaign through a variety of simple, fun, and profitable initiatives. As the campaign catalysts, sixth graders will be driving the fund raisers and learning important service lessons in the process. The monies raised will be shared by the Oak Park and Ivory Park communities throughout the coming year.  

October: “You are Gourd-geous Fundraiser to Squash Out Poverty”

In this fundraiser geared toward the autumn season, Baker mobilized his sixth graders to take orders for colorful gourds. For $1, students could order a gourd and request that it be delivered to a fellow student or staff member along with a note reminding the recipient that he or she is “gourd-geous”. In this three day sale, dedicated students sold more than 500 gourds.

November: “Friendship Grams”

This fundraiser allows students to celebrate Thanksgiving by showing thanks for special friends and staff members. For just 25 cents, students can purchase a friendship gram – a small note of gratitude adorned with a piece of candy.

December: “Spirit of Giving”

In an important life lesson about generosity, the Oak Park staff will embrace the spirit of the season by asking for donations in lieu of more traditional holiday gifts from their students. The gifts received will be used to support children in the local community and in Ivory Park.

February: “You Rock”

Students and staff will be able to purchase a polished pet rock in a box – a keepsake designed to let that special Valentine know that he or she is not taken for “granite”.

Through creative, seasonal fundraisers, Oak Park Elementary School is providing consistent opportunities for students to affirm friendships and to become good citizens in their own community and across the globe, in Ivory Park.  

North Allegheny High School Students Plan It, Dodge It, and Keep It!

“Our mission is to help build a community of hope in Ivory Park, South Africa.  Helping us to reach our goal is a network of social entrepreneurs – people who work together to develop sustainable projects that will ultimately give the people of Ivory Park control over their lives and their future. The results of these efforts are measurable; the projects are sustainable; the outcomes are scalable; the models are replicable. ” 

Bob Tryanski

 

At North Allegheny High School in Wexford, PA, students are social entrepreneurs. Through a recent dodgeball tournament, organizers of You throw it; I dodge it; They keep it!  did more than just raise funds for the people of Ivory Park, South Africa. They also developed a scalable, replicable project model – a tangible template of success filled with clear-cut strategies that other schools can apply.

Akshaya Arjunan, currently a senior at North Allegheny, served on the planning committee for the dodgeball event. She was introduced to the concept of social entrepreneurship and the Keep It! Campaign while attending an Advanced Gold Workshop sponsored by the Pennsylvania Association of Student Councils. After learning about the hardships facing Ivory Park residents, Arjunan was inspired to take action.  She encouraged a committee of classmates to act locally and reach globally by including Ivory Park as a beneficiary of the high school’s upcoming tournament. Committee members agreed, and with the Keep It! seed firmly planted, organizers got busy cultivating an event that would provide the perfect mix of fun and fund raising.

Patti Dzambo, student council adviser, notes that the committee, composed of twelve student council officers from both the intermediate and senior high schools, met on a weekly basis during the two months preceding the tournament. While developing and executing their plans, students focused on designing a blueprint that was measurable, scalable, and replicable. “By brainstorming and paying attention to the details, students learned to solve problems before they occurred,” says Dzambo. “They knew that if they were detailed and well organized, then the project could be duplicated the next year and the next. Their work raising money for worthy beneficiaries such as Keep It! would live on at North Allegheny High School and beyond.”

Tesin Gnalian, a recent graduate of North Allegheny, served as a cabinet head for the student council service committee in charge of organizing the event. Gnalian explains that she and her peers were excited about the opportunity to make a difference and acknowledges that organizing the tournament required time, patience, and teamwork on the part of everyone involved. Still, she believes that the end results made it all worthwhile. “We get so caught up in our own lives that we forget that there are people out there who need things that you and I take for granted – basic necessities like food and water,” she says. “We need to take a step back from our own lives and give to those who need our help. The Keep It! Campaign gave me and my peers the opportunity to make a commitment and to give back.”

The efforts of student planners and participants resulted in a successful tournament with 23 teams taking the court. And, while tournament play may have appeared to be all fun and games, the final score resulted in life-changing benefits for the people of Ivory Park. The $1,108 in event proceeds has already been used toward the completion of a working library in Ivory Park. In addition to providing a variety of books to school children, the library will also be the site for an intergenerational literacy program.

With the assistance of North Allegheny students and staff and PASC assistant director Kathy Coll, the secrets to planning a successful dodgeball tournament have been documented in a “how to” manual that will be available to schools in Pennsylvania and throughout the country. “The wonderful thing about North Allegheny’s contribution is the way in which they have provided us with a replicable project model that is supported with written materials that other organizations can follow,” says Bob Tryanski, Keep It! founder. “Look at the organizations that have had tremendous success mobilizing high school students to support their cause through special programs — organizations like Habitat for Humanity, Special Olympics, or the American Cancer Society and their Relay for Life –  and ask yourself what these organizations have in common.  I think the answer is that each of them has an involvement template that any organization can follow.  If other schools embrace the idea and implement the strategies outlined by the team at North Allegheny, the Dodgeball Tournament could turn out to be our Relay for Life.  The possibilities are exciting!”

 By providing a replicable project model, North Allegheny has achieved one of the hallmarks of social entrepreneurship. Keep It! encourages other schools to embrace the ideal and implement the strategies outlined by the team at North Allegheny. By working together to build a network of social entrepreneurs, there is no limit to the positive impact that students can create. . .in their own communities and across the globe in Ivory Park.