Students show teachers they care
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- The tables were turned Thursday morning when teachers took
their seats and students ran the show at the second annual Costa Mesa
Teacher Appreciation Breakfast.
Teachers from Costa Mesa’s two high schools were honored by students,
parents, business and religious leaders at a breakfast held in OCC’s
Captain’s Table restaurant.
Once seated, teachers were told to stay put while students catered to
them -- bringing them coffee, juice and the breakfast plate of their
choice.
Members of all these sectors of the community voiced their deepest
gratitude for the dedication, time and hard work that teachers put in
each day.
“The teaching profession is the only way we will survive as a
civilization,” said Dave Cline, president of Balboa Instruments.
The event is sponsored by the heads of three local organizations: Balboa
Instruments, the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and Harbor Trinity
Church.
Leaders of the groups work closely with the schools and decided that
accolades were long overdue.
“We want to do something to let them know we care,” said Stephen Scherer,
CEO of Balboa Instruments. “We want to make sure there is specific
recognition of their fabulous job with our youth.”
Besides hosting the event, members of the chamber, church and company hit
the pavement to get contributions from the community. Upon entering the
breakfast, each teacher received a fat envelope of gift certificates,
including dinner at Maggiano’s, merchandise at the Grant Boys and
admission to the Orange County Fair, among many others. Although the
event is meant to honor all the teachers, the principal of each school
handpicks 15 teachers to participate each year.
The idea is to rotate through the faculty staff so that all teachers
eventually have a chance to go, said Andrew Hernandez, principal of Costa
Mesa High School.
“We try to be as representative as we can, since we have both middle and
high school at Costa Mesa,” Hernandez said.
That intimacy is part of what makes the day special, said Marian Dickey,
an English teacher at Estancia High School.
“This is really nice because it’s the two Costa Mesa schools being
recognized and working with the community,” she said. “And to have the
kids come and do the speaking and the serving is the most rewarding. It’s
moments like this when we realize what we’re really in education for.”
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