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Writing on the Wall
I may be wrong—and I'm sure you, our readers, will let me know—in
believing that penmanship is tremendously egalitarian. It doesn't definitively
reveal a student to be rich or poor, studious or not, or boy or girl (OK, until
you see little hearts dotting the I's). It's only the words themselves that
offer clues about the author. And recently, we received word from students in
West Virginia that told us a lot.
For the holidays, NEA employees donated hundreds of toys, books, and school
supplies, plus money for food vouchers to students in poor areas. In mid-December,
the unwrapped gifts were delivered to West Virginia's Kimball Elementary, among
others, and laid out for the children. Now, anyone who's been to, say, a mall
would reflexively fear that chaos would ensue. But no, the children were quiet,
contemplative, as they walked among the gifts. One child selected supplies that
could be shared with a sibling, a packet of barrettes (and was gently sent back
to choose a toy, too). Another took only a few pieces from a building set before
being told he could have the whole package.
"Thanks for my game," wrote one little girl in a packet of thank-yous
sent to NEA. "I chose this because I had been wanting that. You are a blessing
to us because I would not have got any toys."
"Thank you for the gift," wrote another. "I play with it. I
put it back in the box when I'm done. And I hope you come back to our school
again. The stars will shine for you!"
These children, rich in spirit, were poor in pocket. But if you were to post
their writings on a wall, at first glance the poverty of their situation would
be masked. Their handwriting was as nice as any seen in schools in middle-class
or wealthy areas. Maybe it's that kind of superficial scrutiny of school situations
that's led politicians to fall short on funding for Head Start and the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act (see page 10), which will shortchange millions of
poor children.
We here at NEA felt great that we brightened a holiday by whipping out our
credit cards a few extra times. But helping these children on a larger scale,
by working to change laws and get adequate funding for education and conveying
your frontline issues to policy makers and the public, is what drives us year-round.
And the letters from Kimball Elementary students have spurred us on—because
we can read their writing on the wall.
Editor-in-Chief Leona Hiraoka
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