St. Kitts and Nevis on parade
Michael Miller
Tim Salvino wants his students to know that the world is a diverse
place. So when his class had to represent a nation for Newport
Heights Elementary School’s annual Parade of Countries, Salvino chose
the most obscure one possible.
“Every year we’ve been doing this, I’ve tried to pick a country
that’s not well known,” Salvino said, “to remind people that there
are countries other than the big superpowers.”
While other classrooms around the school studied Canada, France,
China and other well-known entities, Salvino’s fifth-grade class
learned the history and fashion of St. Kitts and Nevis, a pair of
microscopic islands in the Caribbean, which together form one
sovereign state.
No one in the class knew quite how residents of St. Kitts and
Nevis dress, but Salvino told them simply to wear tropical-style
clothes to school.
In preparing for the parade, students learned a number of fun
facts about St. Kitts and Nevis: for example, that Christopher
Columbus named the second island after the Spanish word for “snow,”
and that the British and French co-owned St. Kitts for nearly 100
years.
St. Kitts and Nevis are so small they’re not even marked on
Salvino’s classroom map.
“I was surprised that it was not on the map, because I have a map
and it has a lot of stuff on it,” said student Antonio Ortiz. “I
thought it was interesting that it was ruled by the French and
British.”
On Friday, then, the tiny island country joined the annual parade
on the field of Newport Heights. On a rain-slicked ground, 26 classes
proceeded under a red, white and blue balloon arch, with students and
teachers dressed in foreign outfits that left Newport Beach far
behind.
Each class dressed in the garb of its chosen country and also
carried construction-paper flags.
Teachers were in charge of their classes’ costumes, and some found
creative means of obtaining them. Second-grade teacher Eleanor
Dickson has an Indian student in her class whose mother, Ivy
Persichini, provided traditional dresses, complete with jewelry.
“We’re learning how all children are the same as Newport Heights
children and how they’re different,” Dickson said. “One theme is that
everyone in the world has feelings, needs to learn, loves to play and
needs love.”
After the parade, the school held its annual “Olympic” jog-a-thon,
in which students raised over $27,000 for the PTA -- an all-time
record -- in pledges and sponsorships.
Wilson Lubeck, a kindergartener, raised $1,128 from family, friends and neighbors.
Students wore their regular school clothes to run around the
track.
“It really is a huge multicultural celebration,” said principal
Kurt Suhr, who began the day’s festivities by carrying a torch onto
the field.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Michael Miller visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about his experience.
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