Volunteer takes a bow -- quickly
Michael Miller
Gail Standt is a modest woman. Even when her school honors her for
her work, she wants the work -- not herself -- in the spotlight.
Last Thursday, Newport Heights Elementary School awarded a gift
basket to Standt, a parent volunteer who has started 20 after-school
programs and a physical education unit in the past two years. The
basket contained coffee grounds, rock candy, a book on parenting and
gift certificates from Garduno’s, The Pizza Bakery and half a dozen
other restaurants around town.
So was Standt, who works five days a week at the school, ready to
take a break and celebrate? Not just yet.
“We have softball practice today,” she explained after getting the
basket, “so we’ll probably have leftovers when we get home.”
That, according to her colleagues, is Standt in a nutshell. She’ll
give her time endlessly to make sure the students at Newport Heights
-- her son and daughter among them -- get the right amount of
exercise, vitamins and produce. Last year, she helped start the After
School Enrichment program at Newport Heights, which features classes
in Spanish, chess, dance and more. But give her praise, and she’ll
quickly siphon it off.
“One character trait of Gail is to be humble,” said Newport
Heights principal Kurt Suhr. “She never wants to take too much credit
for the work she’s done.”
At least one member of the Newport Heights community, though, was
happy to give Standt credit. Dawn Kerrigan, the mother of a
kindergartner at the school, set out last month to gather donations
from the community to reward Standt for her services. With a letter
describing the after-school and Coordinated Approach To Child Health
(CATCH) physical education programs, Kerrigan visited businesses in
the Newport-Mesa area and accumulated a basket’s worth of goods.
In all, Kerrigan received donations from seven different outlets:
Celestino’s Meats, Plums Cafe, Garduno’s, The Pizza Bakery, Mi Casa
Mexican restaurant, Where’s the Party and the First Page. While
Standt receives funding for the CATCH program from the district
nutrition services program, Kerrigan wanted to give her an extra
token of gratitude.
“It’s just a way of honoring her for everything she’s done,” said
Kerrigan, whose brother, Marc Africano, teaches sixth grade at
Newport Heights. “Last year, when she put together the PE program,
she worked there every day.”
Standt and others were inspired to start a new physical education
unit at the school after Newport Heights extended the school day for
first through third grades this year. Starting last fall, younger
students got out of school at 2:45 p.m., only five minutes before the
upper classmen.
“Everyone knew there was going to be a longer day for primary
students, and with that came an even greater need for physical
education,” Suhr explained.
To implement CATCH at Newport Heights, Standt contacted Chris
Corliss, the health and physical education program coordinator for
the Orange County Dept. of Education. Working with Corliss,
Newport-Mesa superintendent Robert Barbot and nutrition services
director Dick Greene, Standt organized CATCH as a pilot program for
her school.
The CATCH program, developed in the early 1990s as a nationwide
research project and offered statewide in Texas, features four
components -- physical activity, classroom education, community
involvement and nutrition. At present, one teacher at each grade
level offers the program at Newport Heights, with a number of parents
also volunteering.
“One person doesn’t do anything,” Standt said. “It takes a big
group of people to get something going.”
Among the physical activities offered by CATCH are soccer, tag,
running and jump-roping -- activities, Greene said, designed to keep
all participants moving at once.
In addition to sports, Newport Heights has also implemented a
“produce bar” in the cafeteria this year, offering fresh fruits and
vegetables to students on a daily basis.
“I think one thing that’s happened in California is that physical
education standards were finally adopted by the state board last
January,” Corliss said. “We’ve never had PE standards in California,
so what’s happening now is that the county office is working with the
state office to start the whole process of educating teachers and
administrators about PE instruction.”
Although the school is treating CATCH as a pilot program, Suhr
said that initial feedback on the activities has been positive and
that more classrooms may adopt the program next year.
“I can’t overemphasize how much we appreciate Gail Standt at
Newport Heights Elementary,” he said.
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