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School in Scranton celebrates new playground designed with pupils' input
School in Scranton celebrates new playground designed with pupils' input

Yahoo

time07-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

School in Scranton celebrates new playground designed with pupils' input

SCRANTON — Pupils at the John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Side who helped design the transformation of a parking lot there into a vibrant schoolyard with a modern playground also helped cut the ribbon Friday during a grand opening. In the works for the past three years, a former asphalt lot at the rear of the school now has become an oasis for play, as well as a community park space for the 2,500 residents who live within a 10-minute walk of the school fronting on Prospect Avenue. A collaboration of the Scranton School District, the city of Scranton, the local nonprofit Valley in Motion and the nationwide Trust for Public Land, the project two years ago called upon third-graders to give input on what they would like to see in a playground replacing the parking lot along Winfield Avenue. 'This is even better than I pictured. You guys did such an incredible job,' Scranton Mayor Paige Gebhardt Cognetti said to pupils who helped design the new schoolyard and attended the grand opening Friday. Tess Lewis, 11, a fifth grader at the South Scranton Intermediate School, was one of the pupils of the John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton who as a third-grader helped design the new schoolyard at the JFK school and attended the ribbon cutting with classmates. She said she is very happy with the transformation of the space. 'We wanted all the playground parts to be on softer ground,' because the surface previously was all paved. The $775,000 cost of the JFK Elementary School project is funded with $500,000 from the city, from its federal American Rescue Plan Act dollars. The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Moses Taylor Foundation, Scranton Area Community Foundation, The Robert H. Spitz Foundation and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation also contributed. Commenting on the numerous entities and sponsors involved, Cognetti said, 'Everybody put the team together, to put the puzzle pieces in there to make this happen. The most important thing was that you guys got to be involved and we're so proud of the work that you did.' School officials spoke of playtime as a key component of education. 'These are the kinds of things that make coming to school more enjoyable and have that small fraction of the day where you step away from traditional learning to be able to learn in a whole new environment,' Scranton School District Superintendent Erin Keating, Ed.D. said. The poured-in place rubbery surface will need a few days to cure before children can use the playground. 'Play is really the work of childhood,' JFK school Principal Nora Phillips said. 'Our children at JFK are now able to get to work' at play in the revamped schoolyard. Gus Fahey of Valley in Motion noted how the schoolyard is no longer an old-school kind of space. 'We were used to just sort of flat, asphalt playgrounds. Now we're not going to accept that anymore. This is the new standard that we are going to give to the children of the next generation,' Fahey said. Owen Franklin of The Trust for Public Land described the schoolyard as an asset for community development and strengthening connections. 'This is a model for partnership and impact,' Franklin said. Fahey also referenced two similar schoolyard playground transformations ahead, at the Whitter and Willard schools. The city has federal American Rescue Plan Act money earmarked for the Whittier project, he said. A $350,000 federal Environmental Protection Agency grant for the Willard school project was awarded via a nationwide competition, but that funding recently was eliminated, Fahey said, noting he was announcing that loss. 'That money that we won was taken away from us on a national level,' Fahey told the crowd. 'So what are we going to do? Are we not going to build the next playground?' Several people in the crowd responded 'No,' meaning that project will get done somehow. 'We're going to figure it out,' Cognetti replied. * Gus Fahey, president of Valley in Motion, makes remarks at the opening of a new community schoolyard June 6, 2025, at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Scranton. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) * John F. Kennedy Elementary School students listen to speakers talk about a newly build playground at the school. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) * Children who two years ago while in third grade helped design a new community schoolyard playground at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton participated in a ribbon-cutting during a grand-opening celebration of the schoolyard on Friday, June 6, 2025. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) * The new community schoolyard playground at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton during a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening celebration on Friday, June 6, 2025. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) * Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti listens to remarks at the opening of a new community schoolyard June 6, 2025, at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Scranton. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) * Owen Franklin of Trust for Public Land discusses the dedication of a new playground at at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Scranton. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) * Gus Fahey, president of Valley in Motion, makes remarks as Trust for Public Land, Scranton School District and Mayor Paige Cognetti open a new community schoolyard June 6, 2025, at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Scranton. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) * Scranton Mayor Paige Gebhardt Cognetti, at podium, introduces and shakes hands with Gus Fahey of Valley in Motion during a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening celebration of the new community schoolyard playground, in background, at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton on Friday, June 6, 2025. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) * The new community schoolyard playground at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton during a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening celebration on Friday, June 6, 2025. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) * The new community schoolyard playground at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton during a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening celebration on Friday, June 6, 2025. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) * Tess Lewis, 11, a fifth grader at the South Scranton Intermediate School, was one of the pupils of the John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Scranton two years ago while in third grade there helped design a new community schoolyard playground at the Kennedy school. Tess and former Kennedy school classmates participated Friday, June 6, 2025 in a ribbon-cutting during a grand-opening celebration of the new schoolyard. (JIM LOCKWOOD / STAFF PHOTO) Show Caption 1 of 11 Gus Fahey, president of Valley in Motion, makes remarks at the opening of a new community schoolyard June 6, 2025, at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in South Scranton. (CHAD SEBRING/STAFF PHOTO) Expand

8-year-old girl uses pencil to fight off attempted kidnapper, New Jersey cops say
8-year-old girl uses pencil to fight off attempted kidnapper, New Jersey cops say

Miami Herald

time20-03-2025

  • Miami Herald

8-year-old girl uses pencil to fight off attempted kidnapper, New Jersey cops say

An 8-year-old girl managed to get away from an attempted kidnapper with the help of a pencil, New Jersey officials said. On March 19, Berlin police officers responded after the girl told staff at John F. Kennedy Elementary School that while she was walking to school, a stranger came up from behind her and tried to grab her, according to a Facebook post by the Camden County Prosecutor's Office. After she escaped, she ran the rest of the way to school, officials said. The girl said fought him off with a pencil she was carrying, stabbing him in the face, prosecutors said. The man was wearing black clothes and a baseball cap, officers said. Investigators believe he'll have a facial injury because of the stabbing. The girl was not injured in the incident. Anyone with information about the attempted kidnapping is asked to call 856-952-7460, the release said. Camden County is about a 30-mile drive southwest of Trenton.

8-year-old girl stabs man with pencil to escape abduction attempt: police
8-year-old girl stabs man with pencil to escape abduction attempt: police

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • Yahoo

8-year-old girl stabs man with pencil to escape abduction attempt: police

The Brief Police are searching for a suspect they say attempted to abduct a child in Berlin Township. The 8-year-old child said the incident occurred while she was walking to school Wednesday morning. BERLIN TWP. N.J - An eight-year-old girl says she was nearly kidnapped while walking to school in Camden County. Police are looking for the suspect. What we know On Wednesday, Berlin Township Police Department officers responded to the John F. Kennedy Elementary School located at 228 Mt. Vernon Avenue for a report of an attempted child abduction. They say an 8-year-old girl told school staff that an unknown man approached her from behind and attempted to abduct her while she was walking to school. The incident occurred at around 8:45 a.m. in the area of Washington and Grove Avenues. The victim said she was able to fight off the suspect and ran to the school. The child told police she believes she stabbed the suspect with a pencil. Therefore, the suspect may have a facial injury. The suspect is described as an African American male with dark skin and a dark beard, wearing black clothes and a baseball cap with an unknown symbol on it. No injuries to the child were reported. This investigation is active and ongoing at this time. What you can do The Camden County Prosecutor's Office asks the public to remain vigilant and to contact detectives about any suspicious individuals or activity they may have observed in this area. Anyone with information is asked to contact Detective William DeFoney of the Camden County Prosecutor's Office Special Victims Unit at (856) 952-7460 and Detective Sergeant Colin Kelbaugh of the Berlin Township Police Department at 856-767-5878, ext. 668. Tips can also be sent to The Source The information in this story is from The Camden County Prosecutor's Office.

'She was a gift': Community mourns death of teacher whose heart was 'filled with joy'
'She was a gift': Community mourns death of teacher whose heart was 'filled with joy'

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

'She was a gift': Community mourns death of teacher whose heart was 'filled with joy'

Kyla Burton was the teacher you dream of having at your school. Her kindergarteners at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Indio, California, ran across the playground to her, happily shrieking her name. Her classroom was colorful, warm, and the walls burst with learning and love. Heart-shaped paper chains draped across a whiteboard alongside a bulletin board filled with smiling students' snapshots. To the right, a simple message read: You Belong Here. Now, her family, friends and colleagues are grieving, trying to explain to her young students what they can't fathom themselves. Burton died unexpectedly on Feb. 2 of complications of influenza and pneumonia. She was 57. "I don't know if the tears will ever truly stop. How can they, when you have lost a best friend?" colleague Allison Cyr said. 'Although sadness is not how I know she would want us to feel. When thinking of Kyla, a smile automatically comes to my face. … Kyla made every job she held look seamless and magical. She captivated the minds and hearts of all she crossed paths with." Those sentiments are shared by many. For her hallmark devotion, Burton was named Teacher of the Year in 2023 at her school by her colleagues. A hard worker her entire life, she went out of her way to show her care for others with gestures small and large, said Cyr and her husband, Greg Burton, whether gamely tackling the Grand Canyon despite an aversion to camping or comforting an overworked colleague with laughs over bag lunches. Greg Burton is the executive editor of The Arizona Republic and a regional editor for USA TODAY in the West, leading newsrooms in Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Nevada and California as well as Arizona. He is a past executive editor of The Desert Sun in Palm Springs. Those close to Kyla Burton fondly recount her growing a small garden with her students, just outside their classroom windows. Children of the digital age, she believed, had lost touch with and "needed to learn the life cycle of seed, soil, water and sun, and the genesis and rebirth of food from nature," her husband said. After harvest, she and the children ate salted pumpkin seeds she baked at home and students kept watch over a pumpkin under glass as mold and decay returned it to water and earth. Growing food was in her blood. Born Dec. 27, 1967, in Moscow, Idaho, Burton was the youngest child of Larry Torvil BeVan and Donna Belle (Davie) BeVan, farmers in a fertile cradle between Moscow Mountain and Paradise Ridge. She spent her childhood close to nature, her husband said, riding her family's horses bareback in the summers and flying down snow-covered hills on toboggans in the winter. Burton worked from a young age, first on her family's farm and later cleaning houses, waitressing and working at the local hospital and a dentist's office to save enough money for college. She earned her elementary education degree in 1992 from the University of Idaho. Her first professional teaching job was at A.B. McDonald Elementary School in her hometown. Burton's mother briefly taught elementary school, and her grandmother was a lifelong educator who read storybooks for hours to her when she was a toddler. While in high school, one of Burton's elementary school teachers asked her to volunteer in her classroom, a gesture she pointed to as instrumental to her future, according to her husband. Smiling Kyla BeVan met shy Greg Burton at a restaurant where they both worked. On breaks, they snuck away for lattes and bean soup elsewhere. He rode his motorcycle regularly across state lines to court her before moving to Moscow, "ditching pretense and saving gasoline," he said. In 1988, they were married in Newport Hills, Washington, and honeymooned for one night in a Seattle hotel. Burton urged her husband, an introspective student, to pick one career, any one, and he chose journalism. Over the years, as they moved to Delaware and then California for his newspaper jobs, she earned her teaching license in four states, mastering conflicting bureaucracies and requirements. She gave birth to their son, Blake, in 1996 at the same small-town Idaho hospital where she was born. Daughter Adria was born in 2000. Both Blake and Adria were International Baccalaureate scholars at La Quinta High School, and their daughter was co-valedictorian in 2018. Her colleagues remember Burton as someone who wanted the people around her to feel recognized, while holding them to high standards. "One thing that I know for sure is, her students loved her. The way they yelled her name and ran to her across the playground was pure joy. She opened their minds," Cyr said. "She brought life to the classroom in a way most only dream of doing. ... When students didn't get something quite right, she breathed relief into them that made them feel like failure was only temporary and great success was possible if you keep trying." On long, sometimes tough, school days, Burton found a way to bring smiles to her students and fellow educators. "From singing songs to learning the alphabet, to counting while dancing, to sitting on the floor at her feet to listening to a story, to dress-up days, her class was pure magic," Cyr said. "From coffee and lunch and every other adventure in between, there was never a dull moment. Laughter really is the best medicine," her colleague said. "There will forever be a Kyla void from here on out. She was irreplaceable." In Indio, Burton began as a substitute teacher at Lyndon B. Johnson Elementary School, then became an intervention teacher and eventually landed a kindergarten teaching position at Kennedy. Burton was the comforting presence students turned to when they were feeling down. 'Even years later, the kids still remembered things they did with her,' said Niccole Demke, Burton's colleague at Kennedy Elementary. 'When the kids found out that she had passed, it was a very emotional thing for us, and a way for the kids to sit and talk about memories and things they had done with her. She made a big impact.' Burton's infectious enthusiasm shone through in the weeks just before her unexpected illness and death, including during a holiday team-building game with other teachers, which she triumphantly and laughingly won. She made sure to join colleagues from Kennedy Elementary at the Desert Sands board meeting on the evening of Jan. 21 to cheer on their school nutrition specialist as she was recognized with an employee of the month award. Days before she died, her husband said Burton picked out the shoes her daughter, Adria, would wear to match her gown at her wedding this spring. "Her heart was filled with joy," he said. "She was a gift to children and friends in the schools and communities where she taught. She was beloved by family and gave every spare ounce to improve this world, small selfless act after small selfless act," Greg Burton wrote in an emotional Facebook post. "She was my joy and inspiration … There is a hole in my heart that leads to heaven." Fourteen pieces of handmade artwork by tiny hands still hung in two neat rows in her classroom — winter mittens painted by her students, each one uniquely decorated. A letter, pinned among other treasured keepsakes, stands out above her desk. In the unmistakable handwriting of a child, it reads: Best Teacher Ever. In addition to her husband of 36 years, her children and mother, Burton is survived by her brother Torvil BeVan and his wife of Viola, Idaho; sister Leah Mahaffy and her husband of Phoenix; brother Erik BeVan and his partner of Cave Creek; in-laws, uncles, aunts, nieces, nephews and cousins, as well as countless friends, students and families whose lives she touched with a smile and warm greeting: "Welcome to our school.' Memorial services will be planned for the spring in the Coachella Valley in California and the summer in Idaho. To honor Burton's memory, her family asks that donations be made in her name to a University of Idaho scholarship fund they created for aspiring teachers. To donate, visit the university's giving page at and type "Kyla" in the search field to find her scholarship. Donations by check may also be made payable to the University of Idaho Foundation Inc., 875 Perimeter Drive MS 3143, Moscow, ID 83844-3143, with "Kyla M. Burton Scholarship Endowment" in the memo line or a brief cover letter. To donate by phone, call 208-885-4000. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Kyla Burton, beloved California kindergarten teacher, dies at 57

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