Webutuck elementary students head to Africa

WEBUTUCK — School buses carrying Webutuck Elementary School (WES) students dropped their unsuspecting occupants off in an exciting, unusual and exotic location Monday morning. Backpack-strapped children stepped off the buses into a full-blown African safari, complete with enormous trees, rows of stilt houses and sightings of wild lions, leopards and other assorted beasts.

Such an experience would normally be quite an expensive trip, and maybe a tad dangerous for elementary school children. But thanks to the ingenuity, creativity and perseverance of the staff at Webutuck Elementary, as well as a little imagination on the students’ part, the hallways and classrooms at WES were as far as this field trip needed to go.

Africa Theme Day kicked off Webutuck Elementary’s participation in the People as Reading Partners (PARP) reading initiative program with a bang, offering students a variety of arts, crafts and stories to fill up the entire day.

The school was broken up into 15 groups of 15 students, and the groups rotated from classroom to classroom, each with a different book to read or arts and crafts activity to dive into.

In the gymnasium, students were crossing the Nile River in a large cart, digging bugs and beetles out of large sand pits and mummifying their classmates with toilet paper, among other things. In the classrooms students were reading books, making tube snakes out of cotton and creating clothespin giraffes.

“It’s been a true team effort,� explained Beth Murphy, Webutuck Elementary’s library and media specialist. Staff had been working late Sunday night to transform the school, and Murphy said that despite the setbacks from last week’s wintry weather, it all came together beautifully.

Theme Day is an idea that made the jump from Amenia Elementary School, which closed last year under the district’s building consolidation plans. Murphy, who was the librarian in Amenia,  sometimes appears to keep the program on full throttle by sheer excitement and child-like glee alone. She said that the transition to WES was easier than she ever imagined and that the third-grade teachers jumped right into the mix this year.

Finding the funding for PARP programs also got a little easier for Webutuck this year. After a presentation from Murphy and teacher Lynn Buckley at a February Board of Education meeting, the board voted to ensure that the program receives the funding it needs to keep the program running every year.

The PARP initiative continues to be a bigger and bigger hit for the Webutuck School District. The reading program asks students and parents to read for 15 minutes a day for the month of March. Students win prizes and eventually earn reading certificates at the end of the month for participation. Last year Amenia Elementary had a record 89 percent of its students involved.

Each student also gets their very own hardcover book to keep. Last year’s story was “Snake and Lizard,� by Joy Cowley (that year’s PARP program was jungle-themed). This year the students will each be getting a copy of “Akimbo and the Lions,� by Alexander McCall Smith.

“Everyone is willing to come together to do this,� said Murphy, “and the ultimate goal is to have the kids reading. We’re tying so much in. We keep the conversation going, and hope it continues to hold.�

It’s a lot of hard work, but an effort that the librarian says ends up sticking with the kids long after they’ve left elementary school.

“I’ve had so many kids come up to me and ask, ‘Do you still do Theme Day?’� Murphy said proudly. “They remember this.�

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