DCA Staff Brightens Holidays for Students and Their Families

Dawn Allen and Sally Baker

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Like many workplaces, the staff at Denair Charter Academy often has organized potlucks and small gift exchanges during the holidays. But this year, the professional and emotional bond they share mentoring non-traditional students — many of whom arrive on campus from at-risk backgrounds – led to a different, more personal idea.

Teachers Suzzan Whitecloud and Sally Baker, along with first-year Principal Dawn Allen, imagined a way to positively impact some of their students’ lives outside of campus. They recognized that food, clothing, cooking utensils and other basic necessities often were in short supply. That some young children were without a single toy at Christmas. What if, they thought; we directed some time and money toward those students most in need?

The idea was a hit with the 20-member staff. Friday afternoon, four families were the grateful recipients of special deliveries from the DCA co-workers.

“It is very inspirational,” said Allen. “To work here, you have to be an empathetic person. The whole staff has been contributing.”

Even as they acknowledged that many of their 300 students are confronted daily with difficult financial and/or emotional circumstances, the staff at DCA knew they couldn’t help everyone. They narrowed down their list to these four families:

  • Two DCA students whose family recently lost everything in an apartment fire. They, their parents and two younger siblings are living in a hotel. The Red Cross has helped, but that relief is temporary. The DCA staff collected money to buy clothes and food as well as toys for the younger children. In January, when the family hopes to move into another apartment, Whitecloud said the plan is to help them with furniture.
  • A DCA student whose grandfather just became their guardian. The children range from 4 years old to 17. One of the teen-age girls does all the cooking, Whitecloud said. Among the items the DCA staff donated was a crockpot, a cookbook, and some casseroles they made and froze. “We want them to have home-cooked meals,” she said. Three teachers donated movie tickets for the children – intended to give the grandfather some time to relax. “We tried to give the kids things that would help him,” Whitecloud said.
  • A grandmother and three children ages 10 to 15 years old; one of them is a DCA student. Money was raised to buy presents for each of the children and purchase a $99 certificate for a complete Christmas dinner from Raley’s. On Christmas Eve, the family can go to the store to pick up turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes and other traditional items – all pre-cooked and ready to warm up the next day.
  • A 16-year-old DCA student who lives in a long-term motel in Modesto with her disabled parents. The teen takes three buses to get to the Denair campus once a week and also uses public transportation to get to and from her job at In-N-Out Burger. The family only has a microwave to cook, Whitecloud said, so they will be given an electric fry pan and toaster oven. The girl wanted nothing for herself and only blanket for her mother. “She even came to me and asked if she could help the family of eight (the grandfather and children,” Whitecloud said. Baker and Whitecloud intend to give the 16-year-old two jars of change they have been collecting for months, inspired by the book “Christmas Jars” by Jason F. Wright.

Continue reading “DCA Staff Brightens Holidays for Students and Their Families” »

“I’ll Be Home For Christmas” Rings True in Denair

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Talk about keeping a secret. For nearly a month, Air Force Airman Hannah Pointon, her former teacher Patti Morrissey and Denair Elementary School Principal Sara Michelena had been plotting how to surprise Pointon’s parents, Jody and Roger Jorge.

Pointon grew up in Denair. Her mother is the administrative assistant to the district superintendent. They are as close as mother and daughter can be. “She’s the other half of me,” is how Jody describes their bond.

So when Pointon told her parents before Thanksgiving that she wouldn’t be able to leave her base in San Antonio to come home for Christmas, it was an emotional blow. Jody, especially, was heartbroken. They never had been apart at the holidays. She and her Pointon talked and texted every day, but they didn’t expect to see each other until April.

Then Pointon’s plans changed. Only she didn’t tell her parents.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BAsvgMaLFw

Instead, she reached out to Morrissey, whose fourth-grade students at Denair Elementary had “adopted” Pointon at the beginning of the school, just as Pointon, now 24, had done at the same age years ago to a soldier based in Iraq.

“It was all Hannah,” Morrissey said. “She texted me and said she was coming back, and it took off from there.”

Morrissey enlisted the help of Michelena, the school’s first-year principal, and the plans grew. Michelena had never met Pointon, but saw her mom almost every day. She knew how sad Jody Jorge was that her daughter wasn’t going to be home for Christmas. Continue reading ““I’ll Be Home For Christmas” Rings True in Denair” »

DMS Safety Patrol Helps Families in Need

Gifts for single dad

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Like many good deeds, it started with a small idea.

“What if we do something nice for someone else for Christmas?” campus supervisor Melissa Oei asked her Denair Middle School safety patrol students in October. The sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders brainstormed some worthy causes – help out an animal rescue organization, or donate to a church or homeless shelter. Then Oei suggested adopting a family in need.

“The kids just jumped,” she said.

Step one: Goal identified. But what next?

Oei reached out to Sierra Vista Child and Family Services, a respected nonprofit agency that operates the Hughson Family Resource Center. Oei asked the staff in Hughson for families in the Denair area. Her students, she said, specifically wanted to help single-parent households.

Privacy restrictions prevented the agency from identifying the families, but two were quickly selected:

  • Kelly, a mother raising a 4-year-old daughter and 2½-year-old son
  • Mark, a father with an 8-year-old boy and a 5-year-old special needs son

The 28 safety patrol students went to work. They voted to each donate $5, but that quickly morphed into family and teacher involvement as more people became aware of the cause.

Oei said one student received $120 for his birthday and immediately gave $20. A girl baked cookies and sold them to her friends and relatives. A Denair teacher contributed two $50 gift certificates. Families gathered “gently used” clothes for the children. A local church donated wrapping paper. Continue reading “DMS Safety Patrol Helps Families in Need” »