Past projects 2
Making Learning Accessible
Funded Dec 31, 2018Thank you for taking the time to donate to our children. I appreciate you and they will too. Your donation continues to help children who are in need of essential resources for learning in addition to helping me the teacher ease some of the cost of educational opportunities for our inner city students. This gift will make the students happy and will also provide them with more schoolwork because now I have paper!”
With gratitude,
Mrs. Girma
Greatness Begins With the Basics!
Funded Jul 24, 2018Dearest Friends and Family Members:
Thank you for contributing to Room 405's version of stone soup. Scroll down for a copy of the story! I am truly in awe by your generosity, your open mindedness, and your trust in me. Sincere and heartfelt thanks go out to those who gave of their personal resources, to those who shared this message and inspired others to give, and to those who held thoughts of our classroom close to their hearts.
Today, our project was fully funded! I am excited to bring these materials to our students.
I will continue to update you with pictures, letters, and notes from the students and specific information and receipts about how your funds were used. Once the school year gets rolling, you'll hear from us again!
The Story of Stone Soup
Once upon a time, there was a great famine. The people in one small village didn't have enough to eat, and definitely not enough to store away for the winter. People were afraid their families would go hungry, so they hid the small amounts of food they did have. They even hid their food from their friends and neighbors. One day a wandering soldier came into the village. He asked the different people he met about finding a place to eat and sleep for the night. "There's not a bite to eat in the whole county," they told him. "You better keep moving on." "Oh, I have everything I need," he said. "In fact, I would like to make some stone soup to share with all of you." He pulled a big black cooking pot from his wagon. He filled it with water and built a fire under it. Then, he reached slowly into his knapsack and, while several villagers watched, he pulled a plain gray stone from a cloth bag and dropped it into the water. By now, hearing about the magic stone, most of the villagers were surrounding the soldier and his cooking pot. As the soldier sniffed the stone soup and licked his lips, the villagers began to overcome their lack of trust. "Ahh," the soldier said aloud to himself, "I do like a tasty stone soup. Of course, stone soup with cabbage is even better." Soon a villager ran from his house into the village square, holding a cabbage. "I have this cabbage from my garden." he said as he held it out for the soldier. "Fantastic!" cried the soldier. The soldier cut up the cabbage and added it to the pot. "You know, I once had stone soup with cabbage and a bit of beef, and it was delicious." The butcher said he thought he could find some beef scraps. As he ran back to his shop, other villagers offered bits of vegetables from their own gardens--potatoes, onions, carrots, celery. Soon the big black pot was bubbling and steaming. When the soup was ready, everyone in the village ate a hearty and nutritious bowl of soup, and it was delicious and heartwarming. The villagers offered the soldier money and other treasures for the magic stone, but he refused to sell it. He had many offers for a cot to sleep on that night. The next day he traveled on his way. (Adapted from the classic folktale from the Aarne-Thompson folktale system)
Ask: What is the moral of the story? (Hint: By working together, with everyone contributing what they can, a greater good is achieved.)
Without a doubt, you rock!
Anasha Prashad and students of Room 405
You can't change the fruit without changing the root.
-Steven Covey”
With gratitude,
Mrs. Girma