Taylor’s sailors hard at work
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Mike Sciacca
The classroom was awash in activity as students, spread to all four
corners, diligently worked on projects.
Although fifth-grade students in Susie Taylor’s class at Eader
Elementary School were a day away from the weekend, the class session
just before the morning recess break indicated otherwise as these
students were fully emersed in a couple of activities. In one spot, Laura
Potter was emersed in her state report project while in another, where
another class event was taking place simultaneously, Justin Croom stood
before his classmates and carefully enunciated what he hoped to be the
correct answer.
He happened to know his stuff, too.
Generally in Mrs. Taylor’s class, Friday is a day set aside for
spelling tests for the students. But on this particular day, due to the
fact that Taylor was coming off recent foot surgery, she had a special
activity planned: a spelling bee.
Students were divided into six groups for the spelling bee and, as the
competition progressed through three rounds and roughly 90 words,
participants were whittled down to a handful of students who continued to
correctly spell their given word.
The classroom was a sea of blue as they all wear blue shirts on
Fridays, which proclaim them Taylor’s Sailors.”Today has been fun,” said
10-year-old Justin, who was one of the last students left standing after
correctly spelling faux pas.
But the spelling bee wasn’t the only thing going on in class. The
students were also working on a state report, which is due in the spring.
Back in September, the students had a say in which state they’d like
to report on. They were each assigned a different state -- with the
exception of California, and began contacting their respective state’s
chamber of commerce. As part of their report, they were to work on
stitching a piece of cloth depicting a map of their state and stitch in
anything else pertinent to that state.
Nicole Beltramo, 10, selected Georgia because her favorite cousin
lives there and comes to Huntington Beach each year to visit her. She put
the finishing touches on her well-designed stitchery just before the
Christmas break, which included an outline of the state, the capital and
the fruit most associated with Georgia, the peach.
“This project has taught me such things as the state capital, what the
state flower is and what is important to the people who live in Georgia,”
Nicole said.
Jaime Nosek, 10, continued to do the stitch work on her state,
Michigan. Kyle Soscia knew nothing about stitchery. Yet, not unlike his
other male classmates, he took pride in the work he has done.
Soscia is responsible for a report on the state of Nevada.
“I didn’t even know how to do stitchery, and now I’m getting better at
it,” Kyle said.
* MIKE SCIACCA is the education and sports reporter. He can be reached
at (714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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