|

PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
19, No.
20 |
Oct. 19 - Nov. 1, 2006 |



School Briefs
By SHAZELLE GOULET
Kids Imagine Playground Into
Reality
For years, PS 246 held phys-ed classes
and recess in a concrete lot behind the school, but on July 24,
construction workers broke ground at the school at 2641 Grand
Concourse school to make way for a brand new student-designed
playground. It’s slated for completion this December.
The new playground will include park space, a track, convertible
tennis and basketball courts, an artificial turf field, game tables,
a stage, and a drinking fountain so students don’t have to run back
inside.
Trust for Public Land, a national non-profit that develops new
community playgrounds for schools and neighborhoods through its City
Spaces program, worked in conjunction with Deutsche Bank to award
the school a $650,000 grant for the state-of-the-art project. The
Robin Hood Foundation and Deutsche Bank, who helped build the
school’s library 15 years ago, recommended PS 246 for the program.
Trust for Public Land was looking to build playgrounds for 25
schools around the city and said they were pleased with PS 246’s
progress.
One class was chosen from each of the fourth, fifth and sixth grades
to be involved in the design process. Students met with Trust
officials and architects during the day and after school, creating
construction paper models of their ideal playground.
“Before work began in the yard, it was pretty much a parking lot,”
said Kritsalak Tangsuwan, a student representative.
Surveys were sent to all PS 246 students asking them to rate their
favorite playground equipment — the top picks would be included in
the final design. According to gym teacher Emily Sanderson, who
played a lead role in the project, many students requested a splash
pool or a rock-climbing wall, but school officials vetoed those for
safety reasons.
For the student designers, it was all about teamwork.
“When we had meetings, we would have to say what we liked about one
idea and what we didn’t,” said sixth-grader Kevin Fich. “We wanted
to include things that would benefit the yard after we left the
school.”
Around the PS 246 campus, anticipation is mounting and construction
appears to be on schedule.
“Students have been very patient.” Sanderson said. “They love
looking out the windows and watching the daily progress. The yard is
for them. It was important we include the things they cared most
about. Part of the idea was if they had a sense of ownership in the
yard, they would take care of it.”
Mentor Group Recruits Volunteers
Technology-based youth mentor program,
iMentor, a city-based nonprofit, is now recruiting volunteers for
their 2006-07 program.
Founded in the fall of 1999, iMentor works to improve the lives of
teens from low-income neighborhoods by approaching youth mentoring
and education through technology. E-mail communication is what
drives iMentor. With today’s technology, e-mail can be accessed
almost anywhere, allowing adults to mentor students even when their
schedules won’t allow them to volunteer in the traditional fashion.
This year, the company is working with 235 students from New York
schools, including many from the Bronx. Students are placed with a
mentor based on shared career goals or personal interest. They
interact via e-mail, one-on-one meetings and job or classroom
visits. Recruiting and training volunteers from a variety of
professional fields enables students to work with, and observe
closely, careers that they otherwise may never have come in contact
with.
To learn how to become a mentor, visit the iMentor Web site at
www.imentor.org/get_involved/be_mentor.php or call (212)
461-4330 for more information.
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