Tag Archives: Godfrey Lee Public School

School News Network: Apple pie sales a real band booster

Freshman Karyna Espinoza and sophomores Mackenzie Griffin and Jose Briones-Maya helped their Lee band raise $13,400 in the district’s largest fundraiser, a 13th annual apple pie assembly and sale. (School News Network)

By Cris Greer
School News Network


Like most marching band students, freshman trumpet player Karyna Espinoza played her part in the annual apple pie fundraiser for the Legends Middle and High band program.

“I cut up the apples and helped peel them,” said Karyna, who also wrestles and runs cross-country and track.

The 13th annual operation in late fall brought together hundreds of band students, parents and other volunteers in the school gym to transform 6,000 pounds of apples into 2,000 apple pies to raise $13,400 for the band program.

The apples came from Band Director Kevin Gabrielse’ 10-acre orchard in Leighton Township.

“This really envelops the entire community, both in the sale and the assembly process,” said Gabrielse, in his 20th year as band director.

He said fundraisers such as the apple pie sale help cut the cost of activities such as band camp, which would set each student back around $450… and also goes to some uniform parts such as shoes and gloves. As a result, students are charged $160 of the band camp’s total cost, and sales of 12 apple pies slices another $50 off per student.

Lee Band Director Kevin Gabrielse plays along with the trombones during concert band rehearsal. (School News Network)

Grandma G and Her Son’s Orchard

“This is how we work to make a difference for families,” said Gabrielse, who praised his mom Judy — “Grandma G” — for her significant role in the fundraiser. “She does a lot of the work out in the orchard, and it’s her secret apple pie recipe.”

He said his mother “works all fall in the orchard picking and sorting apples so we can have enough to give to the band, our kids’ local Christian school and several food pantries in the Greater Grand Rapids area. We also sell fruit at a roadside stand next to our house.”

The orchard leans on retired volunteers from Judy Gabrielse’s church, band students and his two high school-age children to pick apples. Students and parents are invited to help in pie-making and sales, he said.

Gabrielse said the land he and his wife, Karen, bought in 2006 to build their house was “on a nice hill with great sunsets” and also had an active apple orchard. The farmer who took care of the orchard died in a car accident about a year later, so the Gabrielses decided to keep it going themselves.

“Thanks to the MSU Extension and YouTube, we learned how to farm the trees and over the years have been ripping out the old trees and replacing them with the newest varieties,” said Gabrielse, who grows a variety of apples including Honeycrisp, Jonagold, Fuji and Gala, plus sweet cherries and pears.

Band members, parents and other volunteers gathered this past fall in the Lee Middle and High School gym to help make apple pies for their annual fundraiser. (School News Network)

Apples to Amazing

Band booster Deanna Mockerman said the apple pie fundraiser is how most students cover their portion of band camp.

“We never not allow students to be in band because they cannot afford to pay for band camp,” Mockerman said. “We also have several sibling groups in our band; so asking parents to come up with that money for not only one student, but two… they wouldn’t be able to do it. To be honest, as a band parent myself, that is how we were able to afford camp for our daughters.

“Without this fundraiser, I truly don’t believe band camp would happen — or at least it wouldn’t be an overnight camp.”

Mockerman said the fundraiser accounts for 80% or more of the total amount of band funds raised each year, making it what she called the largest “by far” student-involved fundraiser in the district.

“The band program would not be what it is without this event,” she continued. “I also believe our marching band program wouldn’t be where it is now if we weren’t able to have band camp the way we have.

“Band camp is more than just practicing music, learning to march, learning drills, etc. It’s also the opportunity for students to build relationships with the other band students; they become like a family. The juniors and seniors help the incoming freshman learn the routine of the week and the ins and outs of marching.”

And at Godfrey-Lee, family means apple pie time.

“I was more into the manual labor of loading the pies onto the truck,” said Jose Briones-Maya, who also runs cross-country and track and wrestles. “It’s a really great fundraiser to help the band out.”

Gabrielse was named the MSBOA District 10 Band Teacher of the Year in 2019 and earned 19 years of Division 1 superior band ratings, but said it’s about more than the awards.

“When they graduate, it’s more important to me that they’re ready for what’s next,” he explained. “Developing amazing students who are ready to go out into the world, that’s really my passion.”

For more stories about area schools, visit the School News Network website schoolnewsnetwork.org.

Lee Band Director Kevin Gabrielse prepares the concert band for the upcoming MSBOA Band Festival. (School News Network)

Welcome back! First day of school just around the corner

Those big yellow buses will soon be hitting the road. (Wikipedia)

WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org



Believe it or not but those rare large yellow vehicles will be back on the road in only a couple of weeks as students return back to school.

Curious when your school is going to start? Well here is a quick rundown.

Aug. 19
Godfrey-Lee Public Schools
Godwin Heights Public Schools
Kentwood Public Schools
West Michigan Aviation Academy

Aug. 20
Kelloggsville Public Schools
Wyoming Public Schools (half day)
Caledonia Community Schools
Calvin Christian Schools

Aug. 22
Catholic Central High School

Aug. 26
South Christian High School
The Potter House School
Forest Hills Public Schools

Aug. 27
Tri-Unity Christian School
Byron Center Public Schools

Sept. 4
Grand River Preparatory School

As for the first football games, most schools will have those either the Thursday or Friday (Aug. 29 or 30) before Labor Day.

School News Network: ELL apps ‘open doors’ for early childhood

Researcher Dr. Twila Tardif, far right; and Dr. Carol Lautenbach, Godfrey-Lee’s Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning Design, second from right; pose with Tardif’s research assistants and family

 

By Birdie Bereza

School News Network

 

Adrian Lara-Lopez is a spirited 5-year-old. His favorite thing about school, he says, is playing Legos. He zooms out of sight of his mother, Maria Lopez, on the playground outside of the Early Childhood Center, where he is a kindergartner. But when it’s time to sit still for a few minutes and work on an educational mobile app designed specifically for English-language learners, he happily obliges.

 

“I like the games!” he exclaims.

 

Adrian is one of eight English-language learners at the school who are participating in research led by Dr. Twila Tardif, a developmental psychologist, professor and researcher at the University of Michigan.

 

Tardif has spent the last two decades studying how children develop spoken language and reading, with a focus on bilingual children. She helped develop a set of animations for teaching English as a second language for abcmouse.com, a digital learning resource for children ages 2-8.

 

Tardif said the broad goal of the research is to understand how children learn from apps and animations. She hopes to see whether or not carefully scaffolded apps and animations that support classroom learning can help ELLs grasp academic English.

 

Using the abcmouse.com platform, Adrian and other study participants work one-on-one with a parent outside of school. They spend about 10 minutes a day viewing a series of games and videos on a tablet, computer or mobile device. The animations teach them about things like colors, numbers, and the alphabet. They then talk with the parent about what they viewed.

 

“He’s learning a lot,” said Lopez, who speaks Spanish, as Jose Lara, Adrian’s father, translates. “He’s getting better at learning his numbers. He’s watching and and learning every day.”

 

Lopez said she thinks the work Adrian is doing on the app has improved his understanding of his homework and of what he is learning in school.

 

Adrian’s sister, Lizbeth Lara, 9, chimes in: “Sometimes he gets frustrated with homework but with this, he is entertained.”

 

 

Kindergartner Adrian Lara-Lopez uses the abcmouse.com app with his mother, Maria Lopez

Partnering for Success

 

Roughly 75 percent of families in the district are Hispanic and 50 percent of students are ELL, said Dr. Carol Lautenbach, the district’s assistant superintendent of teaching and learning design. Lautenbach said  Spanish-speaking parents who are monolingual may not feel like they have enough ways to help their students learn.

 

“Parents are willing and eager to help, but they need the tools. This provides an opportunity to increase parents’ efficacy over a child’s success,” said Lautenbach. “We do the best we can at school with the time we have, but we know that students need more than the time at school.”

 

Godfrey-Lee students are the first wave to participate in this particular study, which will last two months. Tardif connected with GLPS through Kathy Hirsh-Pasek who, along with Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, co-authored the book “Becoming Brilliant.” GLPS has embraced the principles detailed in the book and worked with the authors to implement those principles in its schools.

 

“The district made a great partner because the families we are working with don’t necessarily have a lot of native English speakers to help at home,” said Tardif.

 

In addition, Tardif said, the district has “an extremely supportive staff, from the superintendent to the teachers who are involved.”

 

Adrian Lara-Lopez plays outside the Godfrey-Lee Public Schools Early Childhood Center, where he is a kindergartner

Teaching through Tech

 

Tardif said there is a huge variety of technology learning out there, and that the back-and-forth between the developers and the users is critical to getting it right.

 

“We absolutely need to do much more research about how kids are learning from apps and other technology,” Tardif said. “This kind of teaching is not going to go away.”

 

Ultimately, she said, her team hopes to find ways to improve learning and to provide support to children, families and schools.

 

“Research on how and what children can learn in different settings will help move that forward one step at a time.”

 

So far, Jose Lara is impressed with how the abcmouse.com platform and the animations developed by Tardif and her team have helped his son.

 

“We like this program, because (Adrian’s) really learning from it,” Lara said. “More and more, he’s recognizing letters and numbers. It opens doors for him.”

School News Network: Grant to stock class libraries will be a ‘difference-maker’ for children

A child from a Godfrey-Lee family holds onto a book she received at a recent literacy event

By Erin Albanese

School News Network

 

There’s perhaps no better way to inspire students to read than to put good books in their hands. That’s one message of Reading Now Network, and the motivation behind a $15,000 challenge grant from the Guido A. and Elizabeth H. Binda Foundation to enhance elementary classroom libraries.

 

New books should be on the shelves this fall, said Godfrey-Lee Superintendent Kevin Polston.

 

Enhancing the district’s classroom libraries was a key recommendation of the Reading Now Network earlier this school year, after a team of literacy experts visited classrooms, met with teachers and reviewed the literacy program at Godfrey Elementary School and the Godfrey-Lee Early Childhood Center. RNN is a collective effort of superintendents, school boards and school districts throughout West Michigan to improve early literacy and student achievement across all grade levels.

 

“We are honored that the Binda Foundation and Reading Now Network, in collaboration with Kent ISD, have invested in the students of Godfrey-Lee Public Schools,” Polston said in a press release. “Rich classroom libraries, filled with engaging texts, is a proven strategy to increase literacy achievement. We could not be more excited to do this work alongside our strong partners, to grow the learning of our students.”

 

The gift was given in honor of Vern Boss, retired superintendent of Kent ISD and a retired trustee of the Binda Foundation. The funds were issued as a challenge grant that calls for the school district to raise $15,000 in matching funds from individuals and community partners. Polston said Godfrey-Lee has already raised the funds.

 

The grant should be of great benefit to Godfrey-Lee students, said  Kyle Mayer, assistant superintendent for Instructional Services at Ottawa Area Intermediate School District and a member of the Reading Now Network Leadership Team.

 

“We know that student access to abundant and culturally relevant reading materials is an essential practice in literacy and has been an ongoing focus of Reading Now Network for several years,” Mayer said. “We are so excited and grateful for this support at Godfrey-Lee. It’s going to be a difference-maker for the children. We can’t wait to watch them discover all of the new and interesting reading materials.”

Former Wyoming councilor Pastoor remembered for his love of the city

Richard Kent Pastoor

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma

joanne@wktv.org

 

Former Wyoming City Council member and longtime Wyoming resident Richard Kent Pastoor died Sunday, March 18. He was 79.

 

Pastoor had lived in Wyoming most of his life, noting in a 2016 interview that “he could remember back before Wyoming was a city because I was living here in the Second Ward.”

 

He served on the Godfrey Lee Public Schools Board of Education and the Wyoming Parks and Recreation Commission. In 2001, he was appointed to fill the seat of Jack Magnuson, longtime council member and former mayor who died during his term. Pastoor was re-elected three times to the Wyoming City Council serving the Second Ward.

 

During his 2016 re-election campaign, Pastoor said in his “We the People” segment that “I love this city. I make no bones about that. I have seen so much growth and we have such wonderful people in administrative positions in the city and I feel blessed to have had the opportunity to serve you…” He said the people of Wyoming had proven that by working together, all things are possible and he was proud of the opportunity and growth within the city.

 

“Richard [Pastoor] was a true severant and leader of the City of Wyoming,” said Mayor Jack Poll. “His heart was always with the City of Wyoming. He did a wonderful job representing his district.

 

“Of the many things, it was his very positive nature that for the city and those who knew him will remember.”

 

At Monday night’s regular city council meeting, several council members echoed the mayor’s thoughts about Pastoor, sending prayers and thoughts to family and friends.

 

Pastoor worked in broadcasting and sales. He started with the Children’s Bible Hour as a teenager and later was an announcer on WFUR and WMAX. He co-hosted the Polka Pops for nearly 20 years on WYGR. He also was a longtime member of the Eighth Reformed Church.

 

He was preceded in death by his wife, Margaret “Maggie” Pastoor, and his sister, Faith Heinrich. He is survived by his children, Scott Pastoor and fiancée, Beth Carroll, Kevin and Susan Pastoor, Deb and Bob Hoyle; seven grandchildren, his nieces and nephews and many other relatives and friends.

 

Visitation with the family is from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, March 21, at Matthysse-Kuiper-DeGraaf Funeral Home, 4145 Chicago Drive SW, Grandville. There will be a visitation from 10-10:45 a.m. before the funeral service which will be held on Thursday, March 22, at 11 a.m. at Eighth Reformed Church, 841 Burton St. SW, Wyoming. Rev. Harry Koops will be officiating. Interment will be at Rest Lawn Memorial Park.

 

Memorial contributions may be made to the Eighth Reformed Church Radio Fund. For more information or to send condolences, visit www.mkdfuneralhome.com.

School News Network: Students bring concerns from classroom to council

East Lee senior Mitzi Hernandez holds a proclamation by the Grandville City Council declaring January “National Slavery and Human Trafficking Awareness Month”

By Erin Albanese

School News Network

 

East Lee High School (part of Godfrey-Lee Public Schools) students recently served as a voice for the millions of victims of human trafficking worldwide, including thousands in West Michigan, by making a presentation to the Grandville City Council in support of a proclamation.

 

Seniors Mitzi Hernandez and Jadon DeBri delivered research prior to the Grandville City Council’s unanimous approval of a declaration proclaiming January “National Slavery and Human Trafficking Awareness Month.” Justin Noordhoek, the students’ social studies teacher, is a council member.

 

Mitzi and Jadon’s presentation was the result of a study last school year on the Holocaust, which Noordhoek and English teacher Sarah Byrne use as a launching point into a collaborative unit on Modern Crimes Against Humanity. Students at the alternative high school chose to study human trafficking, blood diamonds, child soldiers, life in North Korea, and genocide in Darfur.

 

Mitzi said human trafficking is an issue many need to know more about.

 

“It’s a situation we don’t see and we don’t think it is happening, but it really is,” Mitzi said. “It’s crazy how many boys and girls are impacted by this. I felt like it was important for me to go to the City Council because I feel like there should be more awareness about what’s going on.”

 

The students presented the facts, based on estimates from Women at Risk International, which has locations in Wyoming and Rockford, including that 2,400 minors are being trafficked in West Michigan at any time. Michigan ranked second in 2015 for most incidents of human trafficking because its international border makes it ideal for traffickers. It remains in the top 10.

 

People are trafficked for prostitution, forced labor, illegal adoption, forced marriages, drug trafficking and even organ transplants. The average cost of a slave is $90.

 

Making A Difference

For their Modern Crimes Against Humanity projects, students researched facts and news articles, studied the perspective of individuals affected and created newscasts. Noordhoek and Byrne use project-based learning in their teaching, which involves making community connections and working to help solve problems. Noordhoek said his connection with the council offered a great platform.

 

“They can directly connect what they are learning in school to the real world,” he said. “They saw that actual process in action of, ‘Wow, this actually went somewhere. Government is recognizing this topic we are studying and I played a role in that.’

 

“For the City Council,” he added, “I just think it’s really fantastic when you have students, young people, acting as leaders and bringing attention to a topic to people in position of leadership that maybe otherwise no one would be a voice for.”

 

For Mitzi, she’s gained the confidence to address other issues she feels strongly about.

 

“We should do more and bring out more awareness of many things,” she said. “We should be united. We have to start small to make something big.

 

“This is making me a stronger person, showing me I can make a change and encouraging me to do more.”

 

Check out School News Network for more stories about students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan.