Special mural is tactile training
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Michael Miller
Even before she began working on a mural for the Blind Children’s
Learning Center, Costa Mesa High School junior Kathryn Anne Connell
had gotten acquainted with the world of the visually impaired.
That contact came through a seventh-grader on the other side of
the school: Sarah Ann Brazer, who is blind in one eye and has no
peripheral vision in the other.
“I have seen her around school a lot because I go to choir, which
is on the junior high side,” said Connell, 16, a member of the
National Honor Society. “I always wanted to say hi to her, but I
didn’t want to trip her or anything.”
As luck would have it, Brazer soon auditioned and won a part in
the school’s spring musical, and she and Connell became fast friends.
However, they soon had a deeper connection. This spring, Costa Mesa
High’s National Honor Society participated in Disneyland’s Show Your
Character community outreach program, a countywide event in which
high schools work with nonprofit organizations on public service
projects.
Costa Mesa High’s project was building a “sensory mural” for the
Blind Children’s Learning Center in Santa Ana -- the preschool that
Brazer attended as a child. With her new knowledge of the blind,
Connell was better able to understand her target audience as she
helped to attach feathers, reeds, and other textural objects to the
4-by-20-foot canvas.
“I like doing artistic things and helping people,” Connell said,
“so when there’s the opportunity to do both at the same time, it’s a
lot of fun.”
Connell was one of more than 40 people who contributed to the
creation of the mural, which features a rain forest scene filled with
monkeys, spiders, snakes and assorted plant life. Today, students
will install the mural on the playground of the Blind Children’s
Learning Center.
“We wanted something that would give a lasting impression,” said
senior Carley Millian, 18. “As nice as after-school tutoring is, we
wanted something that would last for years and years.”
This year, to celebrate its 50th anniversary, Disneyland worked
with Volunteer Center Orange County to create the Show Your Character
program. Each high school entering the competition, aided by a local
nonprofit group, chose a project from a list of 45 that Disneyland
compiled. Costa Mesa High’s National Honor Society voted for the
mural project.
School counselor Ann Brown led the project in the garage of her
Costa Mesa house. Starting in December and finishing last week,
students crammed Brown’s garage and driveway to paint and apply
objects to the canvas. Participants bought some of the materials at
Michael’s, Home Depot and Sterling Art, and found others lying around
at home.
The purpose of a sensory mural is to recreate a scene both with
sight and texture, and students got creative on a number of the
pieces. For vines, they wound tape around rope, while vinyl served as
a monkey’s skin. Some youths at the Blind Children’s Learning Center,
who have limited vision, may be able to see the bright colors as well
-- but only barely.
Jackie Havens, Costa Mesa’s National Honor Society president,
noted that the jungle scene on the mural would complement the outdoor
area of the learning center.
“The wall has this backdrop of lush leaves, so we thought it would
be appropriate,” said Havens, 17.
With the project now completed, Costa Mesa High will submit it for
final judging in the Show Your Character competition. Each of the 50
high schools in the program will already receive $1,000 for
competing, while their nonprofit partners will get $5,000. In May or
June, judges will select one winner to receive the Show Your
Character Excellence Award for $25,000, which will go to the
nonprofit group.
“They’re looking for a project that’s really well-planned and
implemented, and can document the results of how they benefited the
community,” said Music McCall, a spokeswoman for Disneyland. “The
Disneyland resort focuses our community efforts on children and
families, so most of these projects involve children and families as
well.”
Brown said that, true to its name, the Show Your Character program
was designed to help instill values in students -- and Connell, at
least, found more than one lesson. In a reflection essay that she
composed about the mural project, she claimed that the experience had
taught her not just about charity, but also about disability.
“I have since tried to walk around with my eyes covered except for
one tiny hole,” Connell wrote, “and I’ve found that it’s really not
very helpful to only see that much.”
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