Thursday, February 18, 2010
Bake Sale At Best
There was also a bake sale to follow the meal. Everyone brought in cookies or some baked good, for the bake sale, even people from other grades who just wanted to help. They made posters to advertise for the bake sale.
5th grader Augie quotes "It was a phenomenon". Another says "it was the longest line I have ever seen ever seen".
The line of the bake sale had about 75 people in it. They sold cookies,cupcakes, things called 5 Bars,and etc. In total they made $1200.75, 100% of that is going to Haiti.
Haiti's problem
On Jan. 12,2010 at noon in Haiti something happened to change the lives of over 200,000 people and putting out the flames of hope for many others.
Just out side of Por-au-prince the capital of Haiti over 200,000 people died when the 7.0 magntude earthquake hit. With Haiti biening one of the poorest places in the world.
Not many buildings were not able to with stand the earthquake the capital was the only building thought to stand if a natural disaster now is in ruins.
"i wanted to help, and i think it brought a lot of attention to Haiti that it needed." says Ella Kiwala
A fifth grader at CLC in Tallahassee F.L. Her friend Abby Stone says "it had not sunk in yet it was so'rta out in the air and i did not pay much attention to it."
Now Abby and Ella are working full force to help Haiti at CLC. In Haiti the money they made will help lots. It could save meny lives. "iam happy we raised $1,400 and I know it's going to Haiti so I feel even better." said Ella. "After all Haiti needs every last bit it can get! Please help Haiti now." added Paige Machie one other student at CLC. As i walk a way from CLC I am touched how a hand full of kids in there second to last year of elementary school to kids about to go into middle school and kids about to go to high school all working to gether to help Haiti.

- help Haiti recover

Haiti Fundraiser Interveiw
On Jan,29 CLC, "A private school with a public mission," took on the job of helping Haiti in a Haitian food for Haitian life's fundraiser. The three classes of 4th, 5th and 8th grade made a great Haitian meal and held an awesome bake sale. Which includes red beans and rice, fried plantains and a bean salad. The bake sale and meal included earned about $1,300.
My job was to interview a 4th grader about the event and Haiti. I asked "Omie Coyne", ( A 4th grader from CLC ) a couple of questions.
Q: Did you ever know anything about Haiti, before the earthquake hit?
A:"No, I did not even know that Haiti existed."
Q: How do you feel about what you did to help?
A: "I feel Great and I'm glad I did it!"
Q: How do you think the fondraiser went?
A: Great, I think it went very well.
Omie told me that a lady came into her classroom and talked about Haiti. The lady had been to Haiti one month before the disastrous earthquake hit. Omie said that the lady talked about Haiti's history. Omie thinks that the $1,300 dollars should go to Doctors without Borders and Red cross.
You can help too!!!
The Science of Earthquakes
From beginning to end an earthquake is deadly, from collapsed structures to cracks in the earth.
But nothing is more fascinating then the scientific aspect to them. For instance here are some things I found out.
- Not all earthquakes are felt by people.
- The majority of earthquakes occur in the lithosphere of an area that lenthens 100km downward from the Earth's crust.
- Earthquake vibrations come from an area in the lithosphere called the focus
- Earthquake tremors move at 2.5 miles a second traveling in waves
- Earthquake shock waves can travel right through the Earth itself, these waves can also create tsunamis
- Earthquake tremors bend were the Earth's composition changes
- Two scales can be used to measure earthquakes; the Richter scale and the Mercalli scale. The Mercalli scale measures the power of an earthquake. The Richer scale measures the seismic force of an earthquake, you can measure this with a seismometer.
- Earthquakes are ranked 1-10, each rank higher is 30 times more deadly than the one below.
- Earthquakes are caused when two of the Earth's "Continental Plates" slide by each other creating stress, as stress levels rise the ground will shake. This is when the stress is realeasing from the the epicenter creating a wide crack in the ground, as a reminder of a tragic incident.
- The Haiti earthquake was measured with the Richter scale; a magnitude of 7.0.
After reading this article I hope you'll agree that not all earthquakes are as deadly as they seem.
Thank you
sources: The Usborne Encyclopedia of Planet Earth, DISASTER! Catastrophes That Shook the World
Behind the Scenes: Two-Hour Event Title Decision (Interviews)
Here are the responses I got to some questions about the title decision :
"Jay, were you surprised by-"
Jay"I have no feelings so this is irrelevant to me."
OK...
Here is what Zach had to say.
"Zach, were you surprised by the 2 hrs. it took, and why?"
"Well, Ethan, I'll admit I was a little bit surprised about how long it took to come up with the title for our event. I thought it would take awhile, but not that long. I think the reason it took that long is because it takes a long time to come up with the best title we can."
"Yes, because we did our best."
Zach's Feelings:
Happy(Before and After the Event)
Excited(Before and After the event)
"All right then, let's go ask Augie a question or two (really, only one)."
"Augie, do you think 2hrs. is resonable and why?"
"NO!"
"And because, I mean, 2hrs? Really???!!!
It just shouldn't take that long to come up with a good title.
Like, 1hr. is reasonable, but 2hrs.??? Are you kidding me??!!!"
Augie's Feelings:
Happy (Before and After the Event)
Sad (After the Event)
Excited (After the Event)
Other: Good (Before the Event)
Well, folks. You heard it from Augie himself.
Now lets see if Aliyah can answer my next question.
"Aliyah, how did you feel about the final title?"
"I felt it was very good."
"Why?"
"It stated exactly what we were doing/did."
"Thank you, Aliyah."
Aliyah's Feelings:
Happy (Before and After the Event)
Sad (After the Event)
Excited (Before and After the Event)
Now let's get Liam's imput on the situation.
"Liam, how effective do you think the ads were in pulling people in?"
"Well, Ethan, I think they worked well because we placed them well worldwide. And around Tallahassee, like, as people drove by they would see the sign on our school billboard, and it was on the blog, which is worldwide, so, lots of people saw it and at the time people were feeling emotional towards Haiti, so, I feel the ads were very effective at pulling people in."
Liam's Feelings:
Happy (After the Event)
Sad (After the Event)
Excited (Before the Event)
Thank You for taking your time to read this.
Again thanks.
You just heard from Behind the Scenes: Two-Hour Title Decision (Interviews).
Please Comment!
Cornerstone's "Haitian Food for Haitian Lives" by ella kiwala
the cold wind blows against a young 5th grade girl; her long dark brown hair blowing in the wind, the leaves swirling around her, as she adds lemonade powder to a large cooler while fourth, eighth and fifth graders prepared for their fundraiser for Haiti, “Haitian food for Haitian lives". It was a lunch and bake sale to raise money for Haiti at cornerstone learning community,(http://www.cornerstonelc.com/). on jan 29th. about 3 weeks after the earthquake hit Haiti.
"100% of proceeds will got to a non-prophet orization helping Haiti.” says Augie Soder
“The lunch is only $5.00 for an adult and $3.00 for a kid, but yet we made about $1,400 to give to Haiti!”said Paige Machie.
”It was a fundraiser to help Haiti recover from the earthquake. By doing that we had a bake sale and a Haitian meal." says Paige Huewan
" i dont know why we didn't start doing this sooner." Liam Martin
under a covered area there are random teachers and some parents who volunteered to help; also some eight graders and some more parents are frying the plantains while the fourth graders are helping the fifth graders and bringing down the ladles and large forks and wooden spoons from the Slader house, "a house at the top of the quarter-mile track" Paige Machie describes. the fifth graders are arranging the paper plates, plastic forks, and getting the lemonade ready, laying out the cold salad and the beans and rice, and getting ready to man the bake sale's stampede of hungary people with a serious sweet teeth.



As the three classes cook and prepare, the rest of the school remains shivering up in front of the stage as they watching the FAMU director for the international student program talk about what FAMU is doing to help Haiti. He talked about how they were going to give Haiti some supplies and that they would need people like us to donate some
- Blankets
- Towels, Washcloths and Toothbrushes
- Hygiene Products (soap, toothpaste, feminine products, alcohol swabs, diapers etc.)
- First Aid Kits (self contained)
- Antibiotics (ointment)
- Medical Supplies (bandages, gauze, peroxide, etc.)
- Bug Spray
- Flashlights and Batteries
- Detergent
- Toilet Paper
How do you feel about giving Haiti $1,400?
"It thinks it was encouraging that we knew someone other than us was taking charge, helping Haiti.” said Paige Machie.
"I feel good, because they will use the money in a good way to help all of the people who need allot of help" Aliyah Kimelman
"I think it’s a big accomplishment." said Abby Stone
"I feel good." Lilli Hanks said.
"A big success!" Oscar Patterson noted
"Awesome" said Noah Wise.
"I thought we would only rise like, $100 dollars, but we made a mind blowing $1,400!" Paige Machie commented.
They brought cameras and microphones and they made us feel like we were seen, like we were really helping like we were making a real difference. We were; we made a difference. We made a $1,400 difference.

Big thanks to:
Paige Machie ,Augie Soder, Abby Stone ,Paige Huewan ,Oscar Patterson, Noah Wise, Lilli Hanks, Liam Martin and Aliyah Kimelman
Haiti's problem
On Jan. 12,2010 at noon in Haiti something happened to change the lives of over 200,000 people and putting out the flames of hope for many others.
Just out side of Por-au-prince the capital of Haiti over 200,000 people died when the 7.0 magntude earthquake hit. With Haiti biening one of the poorest places in the world.
Not many buildings were not able to with stand the earthquake the capital was the only building thought to stand if a natural disaster now is in ruins.
"i wanted to help, and i think it brought a lot of attention to Haiti that it needed." says Ella Kiwala
A fifth grader at CLC in Tallahassee F.L. Her friend Abby Stone says "it had not sunk in yet it was so'rta out in the air and i did not pay much attention to it."
Now Abby and Ella are working full force to help Haiti at CLC. In Haiti the money they made will help lots. It could save meny lives. "iam happy we raised $1,400 and I know it's going to Haiti so I feel even better." said Ella. "After all Haiti needs every last bit it can get! Please help Haiti now." added Paige Machie one other student at CLC. As i walk a way from CLC I am touched how a hand full of kids in there second to last year of elementary school to kids about to go into middle school and kids about to go to high school all working to gether to help Haiti.

- help Haiti recover

Haitian Fundraiser
On Friday Jan. 29, 4th, 5th, and 8th grades put on a fundraiser to raise money for Haiti by making a meal and inviting kids and adults. I am here to tell you about it with some of the 8th graders who helped make the fundraiser happen! It all started in the 5th grade room at Cornerstone thinking of a name and the kind of event we were going to put on.
I sat down with a few of the middle schoolers to hear what they thought about the "Haitian Food for Haitian Lives" meal. One of the 8th graders said, "I think cooking for the Haitian meal was very important because it was the main part in the money making." Another 8th grader said, "Every one person helped in making a difference in the fundraiser."
Cornerstone has pulled together once again to help make a difference in the world where we could help!
Learning 'Bout Haiti
Haiti Treaty of Ryswick and Slave Colony:
France and Spain settled hostilities on the island by the treaty of Ryswick of 1697 which divided Hispaniola between them. Many french colonists soon arrived and established plantations in saint Domingo Due to high profit potential. From 1713 - 1787, approximately 30,000 french colonists emigrated to the western part of the island.
Haitian Health:
Half of the children in Haiti are unaccented and just 40% of the population has access to basic health care. Even before the 2010 earthquake, nearly half the causes of death have been attributed to HIV/AIDS, respiratory infections and meningitis.
Haitian languages:
One of Haiti's two official languages is French, which is the principal written and spoken in schools and administratively authorized language. The second is recently standardized Haitian Creole.
Haitian Education:
The literacy rate of 65.9% is the lowest in the region. Haiti counts 15,200 primary schools, of which 90% are non-public and managed by the communities religious organizations or NGOs, the enrollment rate for primary school is 67% and fewer than 30% reach 6th grade. Secondary Schaools enroll 20% of eligible age children. Charity organizations are currently working on re-building schools for children as well as providing necessary school supplies.
History:
Haiti was explored by Columbus on December 6th, 1492, Haiti's Native Arkwaks fell victim to Spanish rule. In 1697, Haiti became the french colony of saint-Dominique, which became a leading sugarcane producer dependent on slaves. In 1791, an insurrection erupted among the slave population of 480,000, resulting in a declaration of dependence by Pierre - Dominique Tossant I'ouverture in 1801.
Haitian Culture:
The Haitian culture encompasses a variety of Haitian traditions, from Native Taino, Customs to practices imported during french colonisation and Spanish imperialism. As in the cases of Cuba and the Dominican Republic (but to a much larger degree) , Haiti is a nation with strong African contributions to the culture as well as its language, music and religion.
I hope you have learned about Haiti and the Haitian culture.
sources: wikipedia
5th Grade Cooking for the Haitian Food for Haitian Lives Project
The Haitian Food for Haitian Lives Project is a project for Haiti that takes place at Cornerstone Learning Community , because Haiti had a 7.0 magnitude earthquake.
'' So for the cooking we, um, we cooked the carrots when we were on the playground, when we came in the carrot cooker had boiled all over the place (well not everywhere).
We got all the other cans like peas,beans,corn stuff like that, we had this really terrible can opener so we had to use Mr. Jason's knife. two people (Eathan and I) cut ourselves because the can's lids were really, really sharp.
So we needed to make onions for the dressing (because we were making Haitian salad), so some people went out side to cut them, they had goggles on because the onions made their eyes water.
While people inside made the dressing with olive oil,balsamic vinaigrette,parsley and stuff like that, then we put the onoins in.
We drizzled the dressing over the salad and mixed it up.
So then we were finished with the salad.
Some parents brought in some bake sale items like brownies. People loved it.'' Zachary Jackson said
On January 29th, 2010 we made 1400 dollars from selling beans&rice, Haitian salad, and plantains.The Bones of the event.
Now I will tell you about our human resources. The parents really helped and made great stuff for the bake sale. The Middle School made the rice and beans. The fifth graders made the salad and the dressing. The fourth graders made the made the plantains.
Another resource used was graphs to show how many the people live in Haiti. The graphs showed the population of Haiti broken out by races of people. The last and finally physical resource we used was music so people could get a sense and the mood of Haiti. The sounds of the island played as people walked through the event and that was the bones of the event.
By Ross
Behind The Scenes Marketing "Scheme"
I am writing on how they got they got the word out . Its the day before the event, children are scurrying around the room putting last min touches on there posters, now some quotes from the kids,5th grade student Jay,"Well, you know its for a good cause and well you know its a GREAT way to stay in shape and well you know its for a good cause. Other student Wilson Abshire, does concer.
For most children this was not a horrible experience.The poster making was fun as student Lilli Hanks said "It was fun running around the school hanging up posters and what not." Personally I thought getting the word out was easier than it would be, but it was still fun, with a total earning of $1200. With a total number of 75 students, in my perspective that's a lot of money. student Augie Soder quotes ,"It was hard but it was fun." That's how we, the 5th,4th and 8th grade ,GOT THE WORD OUT.
How We Helped Haiti
Here is what her responses were "I thought it was lots of fun and a great gathering of the community. The many parents who attended was a good sign of the shared mission of the school. Plus the food was good and the money was raised."
I also asked some questions to administrator Sandy Eggars here are her responses
"Happy to see the turnout and people willing to give to others" 8th grade math teacher Suzanne Ferrel-Locke who also has a word on that
"It seemed well orginized and effective"
This fundraiser has been a fantastic contribution to all of the Haitians that are in the Earthquake and I think everyone is happy with how we helped Haiti at their time of need.
This was a very succesful fundraiser due to how much money we have raised. Our predictions on how much money we would actually raise was way lower than our actual turnout which was $1400. Bake- sale employee Augie Soder quotes "Well like- um, it was frustrating that people were yelling what they wanted at you. At the same time it was fun to actually be sort of in charge of something."
Despite the lack of orginization in the swarm of rabid kids stampeding down the hill at the "CommunitySing" all of the employees were having a silent party with tuns of celebration, just that everyone was phenominally reliefed and extremely tired.
As a conclusion, we all contributed a good $1400 to go to Haitians in need.
Behind the Scenes: Cooking for the Haitian Fundraiser
Local Private school leads Fundraiser to help-Haiti-heal!
Cornerstone Learning Community's 4th, 5th and 8th grade classes have performed a huge fundraiser on Friday, January 29th, to help-Haiti-heal!
The 4th grade (with the help of some parents and their teacher, Anmerie Small) lead a big canned food drive and cookedthe fried plantains right before the event took place. "Our aim was to make them taste just like the one's that get served at restaurants, and we did!" 4th grader Riley Bohnstengel stated. "I think that it was a great experience and now I know how to cook fried plantains!" Theo Scott said. "It was the taste of teamwork" Riley added. "first we got got whole, fresh plantains, then we stripped them and cut them in to bite sized pieces and then fried them. When that was finished, we got paper plates and squished them into a more "pancake" form, then some salt and they were off to the serving table!!!" 4th grader Thomas Einerson explained.
The 5th graders made the salad and made all the media to advertise for the event. "We made the salad using green beans, carrots, onions, parsley, pea's, corn and then the dressing (which we made too)" 5th grader Peter Sass said. "Well it's for a good cause and I feel like it's Haiti's gain, my gain because I enjoyed doing it and had fun, and I'm sure Haiti is going to like the $1,400 we raised for their recovery. So over all I think that it was fun, helpful, exiting, and it's a great way to stay in shape!" 5th grader Jay Fillmore added. The 8th grade made the vegetarian and non-vegetarian rice and beans as the main coarse the day before, just like the 5th graders.
The fundraiser took place on the hill at 12:00 pm on Friday, January 29th at Cornerstone Learning Community. All of the raised money raised went to Red Cross and Doctors without Boarders. "We all went home thinking about what a big difference we had made and about the lives we saved" Zachary Jackson said...
"Haitian Food For Haitian lives" Money
- What did you think when you heard how much money we raised? (we made $1200) ----Noah said "How did that happen?"
- How much money did you think we were going to make?----Noah said "$300
- What did you do to help raise that much money--------- Noah said "I worked at the Bake Sale."
- We had the option to double the money by sending the money to Cardinal Health or send the money to Red Cross
- Did you vote to double the money or not?-------- Noah said "I can't remember."
- What problems did you face along the way?------ " People swarmed us they did not follow the ways of a line, a simple line."
Haitian money
Haitian Coins, dollar bill
money facts about Haiti
- Haiti is the poorest country in the western hemisphere
- Haiti is the poorest country in the world
- Most Haitian lives on a dollar a day
- dictators steal money from Haiti
Hope you enjoyed this.
sources
wikiansers
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Haitian Meal for Haitian Lives
Haiti Earthquake Fundraiser Student Video from Jason Flom on Vimeo.
In the end, the students raised over $1,400 and gathered nearly half a ton of goods at their event. All proceeds were donated to Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders. Tanya Roscorla of Converge Magazine, covered the students' efforts in this article.Looking ahead, another group of students in the 6th and 7th grades are organizing a Dance Marathon at a local ice cream shop, Brusters, who has agreed to donate a portion of proceeds from that night to the students' fundraising efforts.