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PTA supports projects through grants

by Jasmine Linabary
| May 4, 2011 1:00 AM

Students and parents rolled dice in the

Lakeside Elementary School gym Thursday as part of an event to

promote family bonding and math skills.

“The goal was really creating family

togetherness and being able to continue practicing math and playing

games together at home,” organizer and teacher Rachel Stevens

said.

Family Math Night, which featured a

series of dice games created by each grade level, was one of a

number of projects funded this year through Leap and Live grants

from the Somers-Lakeside Parent Teacher Association’s

Holidayfest.

The roughly 230 attendees who RSVP’ed

for the event were able to move around to a variety of game tables

and try their hand at games teachers at each grade level came up

with. Every family left with a set of dice and an instruction

packet of all the games played that evening. The event was put

together by a seven-member committee.

“We’re grateful so many community

members responded and came out,” Stevens said. “We’re grateful for

the Leap and Live grants and having that resource for teachers to

use in so many ways. Having that resource is really wonderful for

our community and our school.”

In total, the PTA gave out

approximately $12,400 in grants to projects within the

Somers-Lakeside School District this year.

December’s Holidayfest raised $8,500

and the PTA was able to hand out an additional $3,900 that was

unspent from last year’s distribution.

“We always get more applications than

we have money for,” Holidayfest coordinator Tina Lerum said. “The

application is for things that are above and beyond what the school

takes care of for the classroom.”

This year the grant selection committee

received nine applications with requests totaling nearly $26,000.

Recipient projects in addition to the Family Math Night included

supplies to build and plant a vegetable garden at Somers Middle

School, support for the fifth-grade trip to Big Creek, photography

education materials and assistance with the middle school’s PACE

and Discovery Days programs. The largest amount, $6,000, went to an

artist in residence program at Lakeside Elementary School.

The PTA made a decision to no longer

fund the purchase of SMART boards, which the grants originally

helped purchase for the district. Since additional boards have been

purchased by the school district’s general funds and have become

classroom staples, the PTA will no longer fund those requests.

The first Holidayfest served as a

fundraiser for playground equipment at Lakeside. For years it was

used to fund a variety of projects.

The Leap and Live grant process was

instituted in 2005 and since then more than $85,000 has been raised

through Holidayfest to be dispersed for a wide range of

school-related projects.

Volunteers are currently being sought

to help with Holidayfest planning for this year in an effort to

continue raising funds for these projects.

“All of this takes volunteers to make

it happen,” Lerum said.

Those interested in getting involved

can contact Lerum at 844-3880.

Watch for more about this year’s Leap

and Live grant recipients in upcoming editions of the West Shore

News.