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Strong writers like Alesha Horn, Natalie Gaffney and Jolene
Bruska offer stunning honesty and insight. They help us be more open and
compassionate. That's part of these reason that almost 400 parents,
grandparents, teachers, students, and state legislators came to the steps of
Minnesota's state capitol last week, to honor them.
These and about 20 other young people had written essays judged best from more
than 900 submitted to the Center for School Change, where I work. We are eager
to promote writing and thinking, which is a part of every good piece of
writing.
Large suburban public high schools are good places for some youngsters. But
Natalie Gaffney of Apple Valley
was not one of them. She became " a student who really had to be watched out
for, but the girls with the pretty little faces and evil hearts and sour words
were loved."
Gaffney had been a successful elementary and middle school student. But high
school was tough, mostly NOT because of the classes. Gaffney described the
"race to be the prettiest and the funniest...I was truly locked in a world I
began to hate...."
She's found far more success at Blue Sky Charter where "No judgment is made
here, no dream hidden, no idea crushed."
Alesha Horn of North Lakes Academy
in Forest Lake explained that in her school of
200, "I feel super safe. I don't even have a lock on my locker. " Horn stresses
the value of encouraging students: "... I absolutely love the feeling of being
successful and having the teachers look at me and say ‘Good work Alesha. Keep
it up!'... I look forward to coming to school everyday."
Jolene Bruska of Spectrum High School in Elk River
readily acknowledged mistakes she's made. In her former school, "I did poorly...I
am not blaming the school itself for my low cumulative GPA, because I did slack
off during the freshman year. I take full responsibility."
But Bruska sees huge differences between the district high school she attended,
and Spectrum. At her former school in Monticello, "not a single school
counselor took time to ask me why I was doing poorly...They never wanted to know
who I was hanging out with or what my interests were. I was just a number with
a dollar sign attached."
At Spectrum, a much smaller school, "the faculty cares about its students and
knows each by his or her name...My school is like a family. We look out for one
another. We support each other. There is only one school counselor, who also
happens to be the school director. She is a busy person...but she cares."
Aisha Adan praised a Minnesota
International Middle
School project that brought together Jewish and
Somali students. "At first I thought our discussion was not going to be smooth
because of what is happening in Palestine...I
thought they would hate us because they probably think all Muslims are crazy
terrorists, but I was wrong. They were kind people who were interested in
learning about our culture and religion...At the end of the day I destroyed a
wall and built a bridge."
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