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Before
we could blink, he had upended the bag and dramatically thrown
trash all over the library floor. We all gasped— sacrilege, the library floor defiled!.
Jonathan
had created fake garbage and used it to capture, in that one decisive
movement, the rapt attention of everyone in the room. He began
what turned out to be a compelling telling of the Earth Defenders’ story,
etching in our minds each detail as he pulled from a canvas bag
visual cues to each part of the story. When he spoke of the long
hours of sacrifice, he pulled out a clock. When he talked about
the community affected, he pulled out a map for all of us to see
just where the Earth Defenders lived and did their work. There
must have been a dozen items in that bag.
When
he finished and put the empty bag down, the room was silent. Everyone
looked at each other and then erupted into wild applause. Jonathan
had done an incredible job of winning our attention, of motivating
the children, and of demonstrating that he, indeed, had the right
stuff. I knew that Jonathan had done far more than a good job;
he had done a superlative one—he even managed to touch on
the Seven Neckbones of the Giraffe program.
And
Jonathan—Jonathan was ten feet tall. This too-shy-to-speak
teen said, “Once I started, I found out I could do it.”
We
all learned a lesson that day; we all learned how powerful storytelling
can be in capturing the hearts and minds of an audience; the children
learned about telling the story; the student teachers learned to
give their best in what they attempted; and Jonathan learned that
he could indeed do something that seemed impossible. He basked
in everyone’s admiration and showed himself eager to take
on more tasks. And as for me, I learned that what I knew as a Giraffe
trainer really was true, that everyone has Giraffe qualities.
Jonathan
asked me to write letters of recommendation when he applied to
colleges. Given his less-than-perfect grade point, he was concerned
that he might not be accepted. It was a pleasure to be able to
write about Jonathan’s experiences as a teen teacher of Giraffe
Heroes that summer, to tell “To Whom it May Concern” about
his subsequent service work, to describe his wonderful spirit,
and his courage.
Jonathan
is now in college in Colorado, and doing very well. The
Swamp Kids
Kids
today just watch television and make trouble, right? Wrong. Consider
the swa mp Kids, 12 sixth and seventh graders in Franklin County,
Georgia. swa mp stands for Solid Waste Management Plan, which is
what these kids wrote and delivered to their county government!
Implementation of their 756-page plan has extended the life of
Franklin County’s dump by at least 20 years.
It
all started when the kids brainstormed ways they could help lighten
the loads of trash going into the dump. They could do recycling
projects in their town, and an educational campaign on using less
and re-using what people already had. But State law said every
county must have a plan for dealing with its solid wastes; Franklin
was months away from a $10,000-a-day fine for having no plan.
The
kids decided they could write the needed plan. Presenting their
case to startled officials, they proved they already knew more
than anybody around about waste management—they’d done
plenty of homework. They got a green light and set to work.
As
they got deeper and deeper into Franklin’s trash, the kids
challenged the county’s data on how much waste was being
generated. They countered a plan to close the dump and pay high
fees to truck wastes out of the county, proving that wise use of
the landfill would keep it going—their plan reduced intake
at the site by 25%.
Repeatedly,
the kids were greeted with something less than enthusiasm when
they came up with information and ideas that conflicted with those
of adults. But today, Franklin County can thank 12 of its kids
for saving not only the dump and the $10,000-a-day fine, but also
the mega-dollars that a consulting firm would have charged to write
the highly-praised plan.
Kyle
The
effect of the Giraffe Heroes Program on students can be profound.
My name is Kathy Frazier and I’m an elementary/middle school
gifted teacher in Kent, OH. Let me tell you about just one of the
many kids I’ve guided through the Program.
Kyle
was in my third grade class, and he reacted immediately to a Giraffe
story I told about a Giraffe hero named Trevor, who started sticking
his neck out when he was not much older than my students. Trevor
was concerned about the homeless and insisted on giving a blanket
to a homeless man. Then he kept going, getting hundreds of people
to share his concern and do what they could to help.
The
class sat in silence for several seconds after the story. Then
Kyle raised his hand.
"My
mom, my sister and I stayed in the homeless shelter right here
in our city for a whole month. It's a very nice place, but I think
maybe they could use some blankets too." He looked around
the class. "What do say? Do you think we should help them?"
The
class was inspired both by Trevor and by Kyle. Before the bell
rang they decided to do “Project Blankets.” The next
day they created a plan and in no time they had made a big donation
box and created posters and announcements.
But
it didn’t work. After two weeks of promoting their project,
the blanket box held only two blankets . The kids were frustrated
and disappointed. It was time for me to ask, “Why do you
think kids aren’t donating to our project?”
It
turned out that most of the students in the school didn’t
have any extra blankets at home nor the money to buy new ones.
There were a lot of long faces in the room until Kyle again spoke
up.
"The
Homeless Shelter needs other stuff besides blankets. Why don't
we give them a call?"
The
kids got a list of needed items such as light bulbs, Kleenex, and
tooth-paste. They changed the project name to “Project Stuff." Now
everyone could contribute and the donation box began to fill up.
In June, the "stuff" was delivered to the Social Service
Agency by 23 beaming third-graders.
School
was out, the Giraffe Project was over—I thought. But in July
I got a call.
"Hello,
this is Kyle ... you know from Project Stuff?
Students
don’t usually call me at home, and I don’t think any
of them had ever called in the summer.
"We
have a real mess out here at my apartment complex,” Kyle
explained. “There’s litter everywhere and the landscaping
is all sand, rocks, and weeds. I think this is a job for the Giraffe
Project!”
“Kyle,
remember the stories about Giraffes? They see a problem and they
get to work on it. I think you’re just the person to stick
your neck out and fix this one.”
In
the fall, Kyle told me that he’d done just that. "That
set me off!” he reported. “I called everyone I know
and went around my neighborhood to ask for volunteers. I also called
a garden club and they were glad to help me out. They donated 50
flats of flowers!"
After
two weeks of hard work by Kyle and the people he enlisted, the
unsightly environment had been transformed into a beautiful garden
of mums and marigolds.
And
it didn’t stop there. Jason Crowe, a young Giraffe who started
a kids’ newspaper that rallies them into service, spoke at
our school. Kyle, inspired all over again, started a school newspaper
called TheAdvocate that reported good news about kids
in our school. The paper received such rave reviews that he won
a $900 grant to continue it the following year.
That’s
how the Giraffe Heroes Program has affected just one of my students.
It goes right to their hearts, involving them in their world in
a giving, valuable way and helping them achieve more than they
ever imagined. There are a lot of Kyles out there who know how
competent they are, because they’ve done this program.
The
Wizard of Wartsville.
My
name is Tujner Prewitt and I’m a businessman who’s
been helping facilitate the Giraffe Heroes Program in Seattle schools
for the last four years. Each year when we choose a problem that
will become the Giraffe service project, I have my doubts we will
choose something we can really accomplish and that will have an
impact. Fortunately, I’ve learned that these are my own fears,
because the kids and their teacher just forge right ahead and do
just fine!
Two
years ago our 2 nd grade class at Lafayette Elementary in West
Seattle
decided
that they wanted to do something about littering. This turned into
a two-part project. The first part was a neighborhood litter pick-up.
The kids thoroughly enjoyed being outside, running down any piece
of trash they could find. Their enthusiasm was elevated to near
frenzy when one boy, Ceferino, found a $5 bill in the bushes. Word
spread quickly among the teams that there was “GOLD “ to
be found out there.
As
we walked along the sidewalks, business owners of several small
shops came out to ask what we were doing. The kids shouted that
they were picking up litter. Smiles replaced the concerned looks
on the owners’ faces and they showered the kids with Thank
you's.
Soon
we approached the neighboring high school, which the class already
had determined to be the home of the worst litter bugs of all.
This turned out to true. The kids picked up a lot of litter, especially
from the bushes around the school.
In
fact, the littering at the high school was so bad that it sparked
the second part of the kids’ project—writing and performing
a play about litter, based on the book, “The Wizard of Wartsville.” The
gist of the plot is that Mother Nature gives the Wizard a special
power to make litter stick to people who throw it, just by pointing
his finger at them.
I
helped a group of eight children write the script. The writing
went well, with much input—sometimes all at once! Susan,
the kids’ teacher, helped them finish the job. The play had
parts for just about everybody in the class, including a narrator,
the Wizard, the Sheriff, Dr. Splint, a lady who litters and gets
a bag of garbage stuck to her bottom, and the gourmet motorcycle
club and senior citizens football team, both of whom have picnics
and make big messes.
Any
kids who didn’t get parts helped make the props and stage-managed
the rehearsals and the performance.
The
kid performed the play twice, once for their own school and parents,
and again for the high school. About fifty high schoolers came
over to the elementary school cafeteria, which doubles as the theatre.
They all sat on the floor and watched the play—which ends
with the whole cast yelling, "You better watch out what you
throw down on the ground “‘cuz it might come back and
stick to you!”
The
performance was followed by a question and answer session. Several
high
schoolers
asked why the kids choose littering as the subject for their play
and what they learned from their experience. The 2 nd graders answered
unabashedly that they got the idea for the play after they found
so much garbage outside the high school. What they learned was
that teenagers were the worst litter bugs!
There
was laughter from teachers, adults and 2nd graders— and an
embarrassed silence from the teenagers. The project had made its
point—that awareness is 90% of the solution.
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