Sacajawea PTA News
The happenings around Sacajawea
Proposed Budget and Exec Board for 2021-2022
We have proposals for our exec board and budget for 2021-2022. Come to the June Awards Ceremony to vote on these proposals.
At our May PTA board meeting, we reviewed and voted to put forward our budget committee’s proposed budget to a membership vote in June. The budget is roughly $80K (3% smaller than last year) and is fully funded through a combination of donations from this school year and roll forward from our current budget. The two biggest buckets of expenditure are Staff & Support ($38K) and Arts & Culture ($26K).
Also at our May board meeting, we reviewed the nominating committee’s slate of nominees for our executive board. Each position has one nominee, and our members will vote to approve these nominees at our June general membership meeting.
The slate of nominees is:
Laura Riley: Co-chair, 2nd year of a two-year term
Karen Murphy: Co-chair, 1st year of a two-year term
Nicole Mackenzie: Treasurer, 2nd year of a two-year term
Karla Sclater: Secretary
We’ll vote as a membership on these items during our June 10th, 2021 Awards Ceremony and General Membership meeting. The meeting will be held at 7pm on Zoom. Please check your email for registration information.
Stand in Solidarity AAPI Community Members
Asians, Asian Americans, and Pacific Islanders have a long history in the United States, and are an integral part of our diverse cultural history.
Asians, Asian Americans, and Pacific Islanders have a long history in the United States, and are an integral part of our diverse cultural history. Unfortunately, anti-Asian American and anti-Pacific Islander sentiment also has a long history that reverberates to this day. We are witnessing an expression of this painful legacy as fear and misinformation generated from the coronavirus pandemic has led to an increase in threats or acts of violence against the AAPI community. According to a recent study of police departments by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernadino, anti-Asian hate crimes in major American cities escalated by 150 percent in 2020 (CBS News).
The Sacajawea Parent Equity Team stands with our Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander community members and neighbors. More than this, we want to offer accessible ways to take action to stand in solidarity and provide information to learn more. In that spirit, we present the following links:
Take Action by Gathering Information
If you have 2 minutes, Kim Sauer, President of The Washington Immigration Network offers a brief statement and ways to support our AAPI community: Response to Hate Crimes Against the AAPI Community, March 24, 2021.
If you have 3 minutes, Karen Maeda Allman’s list of readings on Asian American experiences. Allman, of Elliot Bay Book Company, offers books on local history as well as broader American history: “15 books to read to learn more about Asian American history and experiences, in Seattle and elsewhere,” by Naomi Ishisaka, Seattle Times Columnist.
If you have 7 minutes, read “A Seattle doctor reflects on Atlanta and anti-Asian racism,” by Amy Zhang.
Deep-dive: A History Bursting With Telling: Asian Americans in Washington State, A curriculum project for Washington schools, developed by Mathhew W. Klingle, Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest, University of Washington Department of History.
Take Direct Action with Your Voice and Your Support of Local Businesses and Nonprofits
Take action to help STOP AAPI HATE. Click on the “Act Now” button. This site offers information and several easily accessible resources in multiple languages, including safety tips, how to report crimes, and donate to local efforts.
Greater Seattle Chinese Chamber of Commerce - The Greater Seattle Chinese Chamber of Commerce
https://capaa.wa.gov/asian-pacific-american-directory/
2021 Sacajawea PTA Award nominations
Each spring, Sacajawea PTA seeks nominations for our Golden Acorn, Outstanding Educator and the Roy Norman S.H.I.N.E. Award. These awards celebrate the people in our community who have gone above and beyond to make Sacajawea a wonderful place for our students and families. Please submit your nomination by Friday, May 28th.
Nominations Open for Sacajawea PTA Awards
Deadline: Friday, May 28th
Each spring, Sacajawea PTA seeks nominations for our Golden Acorn, Outstanding Educator and the Roy Norman S.H.I.N.E. Award. These awards celebrate the people in our community who have gone above and beyond to make Sacajawea a wonderful place for our students and families. Please submit your nomination by Friday, May 28th. Awardees will be announced the week of June 14th.
Golden Acorn Awards
Every year three deserving volunteers receive a Golden Acorn Award. The Golden Acorn is a Washington State PTA award given by local PTAs recognizing exemplary and outstanding volunteerism and service to the PTA. Golden Acorn nominees should be active volunteers in PTA, our school and/or our Sacajawea community.
Outstanding Educator
This award is given to an individual (teacher, instructional assistant, staff member, administrator -- anyone on staff at school!) who has made significant contributions to our school and community and has helped to enhance the educational, social-emotional outcomes and well-being of our students.
Roy Norman SHINE Award
We are proud to continue the tradition of presenting the Roy Norman SHINE Award, in honor of Roy Norman, Doreen Norman’s late husband. Roy exemplified the SHINE values that are at the heart of our Sacajawea community (safe, helpful, inclusive, neighborly, engaged). Nominees for this award will also have demonstrated SHINE values in how they have supported our school and community.
Please Submit your nomination online by Friday, May 28th.
Thank you!
Sacajawea PTA Awards Committee
(Seth Bridges, Laura Riley & Charlene Shanahan)
Preparing Children for Changes in School Routine
To help our school community navigate the many school routine changes coming up our very own school counselor, Ms Ximena Grollmus has prepared some helpful tips that will help set us up for success.
Click here for Spanish Version
Preparing Children to Return to “In Person” School
Talk with your child about how school will look different (e.g., desks far apart from each other, teachers maintaining physical distance, playing at recess while maintaining social distance).
Help your child identify their worries and fears, and then provide child-friendly, fact-based information to address those issues
Anticipate behavior changes in your child. Watch for changes like excessive crying or irritation, excessive worry or sadness, unhealthy eating or sleeping habits, difficulty concentrating, which may be signs of your child struggling with stress and anxiety.
Create a routine of practicing mindfulness/breathing exercises many times a day (They have learned many at school. Ask them to lead these exercises)
Establish normalcy and a routine. Children do best when they know what to expect. Create a calendar that outlines which days are online versus in-person learning, and then break down what will happen during each of those days.
Practice with your child washing their hands before they leave and when they get home; before and after eating; after using the bathroom; and after sneezing or blowing their nose.
Practice putting a mask on every time you leave the house. Show your child the correct way of using the mask so that it covers from the top of the nose to the bottom of the chin.
Reassure your child that their teachers will be there to help
Encourage your child to take “coping breaks” when they feel anxious, such as deep breathing exercises, doodling for a few minutes, moving their body, imagining a favorite place, or repeating coping statements such as, “It’s normal to be nervous, but I’m OK, and I’ll make it through the day”
Attend school activities and meetings. Schools may offer more of these virtually. As a parent, staying informed and connected may reduce your feelings of anxiety and provide a way for you to express any concerns you may have about school.
Preparing Children to Stay in “Remote School”
Talk with your child about your decision to keep them at home.
Help your child identify their worries and fears, and then provide child-friendly, fact-based information to address those issues. (e.g., heath risk factors of child or family member, not being vaccinated, etc)
Validate your child’s feelings about staying in remote learning. Plan dedicating some special time with them doing some fun activities together.
Reassure your child that their teachers will be there to support them and maintain the connection they have created during the year.
Maintain normalcy and review with your child the new routine that will be provided. Children do best when they know what to expect.
Update a calendar that outlines the schedule for synchronous and asynchronous times.
Ask for Help. If you have doubts about your child’s mental health, let the school know. Talk to teachers and counselor. We can provide support and information about services to students in need of extra support.
Contact the school counselor, Ms Ximena Grollmus. In her Seesaw page or by e-mail ixgrollmus@seattleschools.org
Black Lives Matter at School - Year of Purpose: Student Activists Highlight the Power of Empathy and Loving Engagement
This month, the Sacajawea’s Parent Racial Equity Team celebrates Barbara Johns, a Black youth activist in the early 1950s, along with present-day student activists Thandiwe Abdullah, Jerome Foster II, and Marley Dias who continue her work to achieve racial equity and justice.
Dear Sacajawea Community,
This month, the Sacajawea’s Parent Racial Equity Team celebrates Barbara Johns, a Black youth activist in the early 1950s, along with present-day student activists who continue her work to achieve racial equity and justice. This month’s guiding principle focuses on engaging others with the intent to learn about and connect with them, as well as practicing justice, liberation and peace in our interactions with others. We share the determination of Barbara Johns, Thandiwe Abdullah, Jerome Foster II, and Marley Dias with the intent to encourage our community’s continued engagement with Black Lives Matter at School Year of Purpose. Our goal is to empower parents and students to do the necessary work to achieve racial equity and justice.
Barbara Johns Powell (1935-1991) ~ I walked out of school this morning and carried four hundred and fifty students with me.
Barbara Johns’ story is not well known, but it should be. In 1950, she was 15 and a student at Robert R. Moton High School in Farmville, Virginia. Barbara grew increasingly frustrated with the sub-standard conditions at her school. She was well aware that Farmville High, the all-White school in her hometown, had modern-day heating, state-of-the art classroom facilities, a cafeteria, and an auditorium with sound equipment.
Moton High, on the contrary, was a small brick building hemmed in by temporary classroom structures made of wood and paper coated in tar. Students often referred to the ad-hoc buildings as chicken coops. Inadequate construction led to rain-seeping ceilings and cold conditions during the school year. Barbara discussed her concerns with her favorite teacher who rather than offering a solution, asked her a question: “Why don’t you do something about it?” she asked.
Although Barbara felt frustrated and let down by her teacher’s response, she kept thinking about the conditions of her school and her teacher’s response to the unfair conditions. She also reflected on the everyday racial discrimination she experienced. She resolved to do something about her school.
In 1951, Barbara gave a speech that fellow classmates described as “electrifying” and inspiring.” She led 450 classmates on a two-week strike that resulted in becoming one of the five cases in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education lawsuit argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Twenty-first Century Black Student Activists
Thandiwe Abdullah ~ I want to transform the systems that we live under from ones that oppress us to ones that empower us.
@BLMLAYOUTH on Twitter
Thandiwe Abdullah founded the Black Lives Matter Los Angeles Youth Vanguard, an advocacy group of kids that fights for justice for black youth. Thandiwe also helped to create the Black Lives Matter in Schools program, which was adopted by the National Education Association. She spoke in front of more than 40,000 people at the March for Our Lives and later at the National School Walkout, to remind crowds about the near-constant loss of Black lives to guns and how Black people are targeted for searches in a way that white people are not. After joining forces with the student advocacy group Students Deserve, she succeeded in ending random searches in 28 schools around L.A.
Jerome Foster II ~ Change starts in the streets and ends at the polls.
@OneMillionOfUs on Twitter
Jerome Foster II organizes and strikes with Fridays for Future to demand legal action on climate change. Jerome also founded OneMillionofUs, an organization dedicated to getting out the youth vote. He argues that his multiple projects to combat climate change are not due to his passion about the subject, but due to his fear for our future, and that we need to change our behavior at home and advocate for sweeping legislative change.
Marley Dias ~ …We can become optimistic – in a realistic way – if only we knew that there really are people out here fighting, trying to change the world.
@iammarleydias on Twitter
Marley Dias started the #1000BlackGirlBooks campaign to make stories with strong, Black, female leads available to students all over the world. Marley also wrote her own book, Marley Gets It Done: And So Can You!, encouraging kids to pursue their passion and use it to make the world a better place.
“Frustration is fuel that can lead to the development of an innovative and useful idea.”
We encourage you to learn more about Barbara Johns and the student activists discussed in this newsletter. Young people are sparking political, environmental, economic, and social change by finding their voices, speaking their truths to those in power, and devising solutions to problems they didn’t create. Like Barbara Johns’ teacher asked her when she complained about inequality and injustice, these children responded with action to the question, “What are YOU going to DO about it?”
What ignites your passion and what steps can you take to initiate action?
Write a letter or call an elected official’s office, march in protest, gather petition signatures, post educated opinions on social media, or join an organization that supports furthering your cause.
What can you do and how can you learn more?
If you have 3 minutes, read Thandiwe Abdullah’s op-ed in Bustle, “What a Black Lives Matter Teen Activist Says #NeverAgain is Missing from the Gun Debate.”
If you have 4 minutes, read this article on Jerome Foster II: “This 16-Year Old is Taking the School Climate Strike to the U.S. Capitol” in Yes!
If you have 5 minutes, read “‘They just wanted us to read about a white boy and his dog’: Why Teenager Marley Dias Fought Back” in The Guardian.
If you have 7 minutes, read “Overlooked No More: Barbara Johns, Who Defied Segregation in Schools,” in New York Times.
If you have 12 minutes, watch this segment from “The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow” on PBS Learning Media: Barbara Johns of Farmville, Virginia
If you have 15 minutes, watch this conversation with Thandiwe Abdullah about youth activism and BLM: Patrisse Cullors and Thandiwe Abdullah on Bing Daily Digest
Check out these books focused on loving engagement, empathy, and student activism:
The Girl from the Tarpaper School: Barbara Rose Johns and the Advent of the Civil Rights Movement by Teri Kanefield (Ages 10-14 yrs)
Generation Brave: The Gen Z Kids Who Are Changing the World by Kate Alexander (Ages 10-15 yrs)
My Brother Martin: A Sister Remembers Growing Up with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by Christine King Farris (Ages 6-11 yrs)
March On! The Day My Brother Martin Changed the World by Christine King Farris (Ages 8-11 yrs)
I Am Human: A Book of Empathy by Susan Verde (Ages 4-8 yrs)
A is for Activist by Innosanto Nagara (Ages 3-7 yrs)
All the Colors We Are (Todos Los Colores de Nuestra Piel) by Katie Kissinger (Ages 3-6 yrs)
Can You Say Peace by Karen Katz (Ages 4-7 yrs)
The Other Side by Jacqueline Woodson and E. B. Lewis (Ages 5-8 yrs)
With gratitude,
Sacajawea’s Parent Racial Equity Team
Jennifer Sunami, Becky Beard, Dana Robinson Slote, Robin King, John Delfeld, Karla Sclater, Sophie-Shifra Gold, Lori Phipps, Jenna Buzzard, Ara Swanson
Article written by Becky Beard and John Delfeld