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Tag: Anna Maria Elementary School

Dolphin Dash

Dolphin Dash draws 200-plus runners

HOLMES BEACH – The 13th Annual Dolphin Dash today was a success, thanks in part to weather that was cool enough for the runners, but not too cold.

Organizer Kelly Gitt of the Anna Maria Elementary (AME) School PTO said more than 200 runners participated in the 5K competition, sanctioned and timed by the Bradenton Runners Club, and the one-mile “fun run” for youngsters.

This year a number of runners for the 5K race were children, many of them from Anna Maria Elementary School. One AME alumnus, Trina Rizzo, was competing for the first time. She’s a college graduate headed for a career in law.

Ellen Jaffee Jones, a former columnist for The Sun, said she has run the Dolphin Dash many times and enjoys it because it “Never changes. I love it because it’s a block from the beach and there are so many kids running,” she said. “I like to be around children.”

The fastest male was Corey Peryark, a board member of the Bradenton Runners Club who came in first by quite a margin.

The fastest woman was Wendy Hudson of Apollo Beach. She said she ran the race because she used to live on the Island.

Seven-year-old Ezra Goble ran the 5K and finished and some kindergartners ran the one-mile run.

It was all in fun, and designed to encourage the kids to make running a part of their lives.

Becky Walter

Runner mom inspires kids to dash

HOLMES BEACH – When the runners take their places for the 13th Annual Dolphin Dash 5K race on Saturday, Jan. 19 at 8:30 a.m, they’ll have a persistent and loving mom to thank.

Rebecca “Becky” Walter joined the Anna Maria Elementary School PTO when her twin daughters were in kindergarten and her sons in second and third grades. She volunteered and sometimes substituted as she was a certified teacher. While at the school, she made a disturbing observation.

“I noticed most of the kids weren’t wearing sneakers or laced up sneakers, even though they had PE every day,” she said. “I heard a lot of kids talking about video games and noticed a lot of these kids were spending a lot of time inside.Dolphin Dash

“I started running right after my kids were born,” she said. “It is so great – basically free and you can do it anywhere.”

When she was at a PTO meeting, they discussed fundraisers and she suggested a 5K.

“Everyone was completely on board,” she said. “The principal said ‘yes,’ and I had a ton of support and volunteers.

“Ellen Harte and Else Hellem-Brusso helped a bunch with early days organization and figuring out how to even start,” she said. “We contacted the Bradenton Runners Club and met with them. We mapped out a course and the police said they’d help out. We started securing sponsors and donations and support.”

Walter started a Runners Club at the school.

“Two mornings per week, a ton of kids would show up early to run laps in the back of school,” she said. “We printed training cards and after the kids trained at school and at home for a certain number of miles, they earned Dolphin Dash shoelaces.

“I held a T-shirt contest at the school and ordered shirts. We had goodie bags and things to put in them.”

That first year, they didn’t have online registration, so people had to mail in entries or drop them at school. And they did.

“We decided to keep entry cheap for kids 18 and under and to have awards go five deep in age levels,” she said. “We decided to also do a one-mile fun run at the end of the race.”

Art and music teacher Gary Wooten supplied the music.

“To this day, every time I hear ‘Beautiful Day,’ by U2, I think about the Dolphin Dash,” she said. “Rainia Lardas would stay over every night before the race to help with last minute details.

“On race day all these people showed up a super early time to stand on the race course, hand out goodie bags, clap for finishers. The custodians and principal would show up early and open the school. Maggie Cucci always showed up to help. Jerry Kern woke up and drove the guy around on his golf cart to set out cones. It was a beautiful day.”

Interest in the Dolphin Dash grows

“Every year it kept getting bigger and more people came out to run,” Walter said. “The kids all have such a sense of pride as they finish – it is really a great lesson in setting and achieving goals and a chance to experience self worth.

“I loved hearing people talk about training. We had a guy run the race after a kidney transplant. One year, a mom and her teenage son came in dead last, beaming. Her son had received a new heart that year and I remember her saying that she didn’t care how long it took them to finish, she was so thankful to be there with her son.

“I love seeing Dolphin Dash shirts around town and hearing people say that the Dolphin Dash is a great run to start the year.

“I am so proud how we all came together and organized this cool event. My kids are still runners. I see a lot of kids from the early Dolphin Dash days who still run. It is kind of a lifelong gift, to learn the benefits of running early and to learn how to do it and that it can be fun.”

To sign up, go to runnergirl.com. Call Kelly Gitt at 941-357-4488 to become a sponsor or volunteer.

Dolphin Dash returns to AME

HOLMES BEACH – The Dolphin Dash begins on Saturday, Jan. 19 at 8 a.m. at Anna Maria Elementary School (AME), 4700 Gulf Drive, with a 5K run timed and sanctioned by the Bradenton Runners Club.

The runners go through residential neighborhoods with traffic control by the Holmes Beach Police Department.

Afterward, there’s a one-mile “fun run” where all the runners are acknowledged. Proceeds from the Dash go to the AME PTO.

Physical education teacher Terri Ruise trains some of the students at school for the Dash and fun run, with help from art teacher Gary Wooten.

The race is open to all ages and awards go to male and female finishers as well as the top three finishers in each age group. Ten awards are given in the 9 and under age group to encourage and reward the kids who participate.

Kelly Gitt is the coordinator for the PTO and she had praise for the support from the Bradenton Runners Club.

“They’ve been super supportive in getting permits and the police protection,” she said. “They have also been a big help in getting the medals.”

Gitt said she would like to find a sponsor who could provide snacks and liquid refreshments for the runners.

She said participants can sign up at the school and at the Bradenton Runners Club on Facebook.

“The cost is $35 per person or there is a group discount for 20 or more, to encourage runners from other schools,” she said.

Call Gitt at 941-357-4488 to become a sponsor or volunteer.

Turtle kids

Young artists work to protect dunes

HOLMES BEACH – Student artists in Mary Miller’s fifth grade class at Anna Maria Elementary School will soon see their artwork on signs posted on Anna Maria Island beaches to educate people about why it’s important to stay off sand dunes.

The artists were treated to a reception on Thursday, Nov. 15 at the Waterline Marina Resort, where more than 50 of their masterpieces were on display.

Turtle kids
Signs like this soon will be installed at Coquina Beach and Cortez Beach to alert people to keep off the sand dunes. – Cindy Lane | Sun

Walking over dunes crushes native plants that hold the dunes together and erodes the dunes, which provide a barrier against storm-driven high tides, according to the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program, which provided funds for the project to Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring.

Gulf Drive alongside Coquina Beach and Cortez Beach, where the first signs will be posted, is particularly susceptible to flooding, and is the hurricane evacuation route for Longboat Key and Bradenton Beach. Ropes and bollards protect the dunes there, but have not deterred all beachgoers from walking across them instead of using beach walkovers, Bradenton Beach Mayor John Chappie said.

With the theme of “Choose the right path,” the signs will illustrate why using walkovers is preferred, both for erosion control and for wildlife, like sea turtles, shorebirds and even beach mice.

The artwork will be enlarged to make about 60 18- by 24-inch signs. Signs will be available for beachfront vacation rental owners who would like to purchase them for $50 each to help educate visitors about the importance of not disturbing dunes. For more information, call Turtle Watch at 941-778-5638.

Peace Day sign

Students sing praise of peace

HOLMES BEACH – Anna Maria Elementary (AME) students expressed hopes for peace at the school’s 17th Annual Peace Day last Friday on the front lawn of the campus.

The annual celebration began after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon when thousands of Americans lost their lives. The Rotary Club of Anna Maria Island helped the school’s effort by purchasing a Peace Pole, a monument that displays the message “May Peace Prevail on Earth.”

The theme of this year’s celebration was “The Right to Peace” and after speeches by AME Principal Jackie Featherston and Rotary Club Past President Judy Rup, the attendees stood for the Star-Spangled Banner and Pledge of Allegiance.

Peace Day garden
The area around the Peace Pole was decorated with colored eggs and the lawn was decorated with pinwheels made by the students at the school. – Tom Vaught | Sun

The Manatee High School Drumline performed as AME students marched with them with flags of other countries, many of them home nations of Island students.

Students of each grade performed songs or read essays and poetry of peace.

AME Guidance Counselor Susan Tabicman organized this year’s celebration and said it went well, adding that events like these could hopefully plant the seeds for a better world in the future.

AME peace day 2017

AME prepares to celebrate peace

HOLMES BEACH – Anna Maria Elementary (AME) School teachers, staff and students are preparing for the 17th Annual Peace Day celebration, on Friday, Sept. 21, starting at 9 a.m. in front of the school.

The celebration serves as a lesson for students that violence is not the way to solve disagreements.

AME Guidance Counselor Susan Tabicman said this year’s celebration involves pinwheels and students’ thoughts on what peace looks like and means to them. The theme is “The Right to Peace,” according to Tabicman.

The event will begin with an introduction by AME Principal Jackie Featherston and Rotary Club of AMI Past President Judy Rup. Fourth- and fifth-graders will present the colors while the Star-Spangled Banner plays. The Manatee High School Drumline will perform as students plant the Peace Flags around the Peace Pole.

Select students will read poetry and essays on peace, and it concludes with everyone singing a song of peace.

Peace Day began after then-AME Guidance Counselor Cindi Harrison realized two new students had moved here from a school in New York near the Twin Towers that were destroyed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The Rotary Club of Anna Maria Island provided AME with the Peace Pole in March 2002 and the teachers decided to use it as a part of the celebration.

Anna Maria Elementary Lauren Sato

Another school season starts at AME

HOLMES BEACH – Motorists got a bright reminder that another school year had begun Monday morning from emergency lights on a patrol car and Police Chief Bill Tokajer’s vehicle in front of Anna Maria Elementary School. As a bus pulled up, Tokajer greeted the kids as they stepped off. Inside, AME School Resource Officer Josh Fleischer was watching the parents and their children. With the advent of new security steps, visitors to the school won’t be admitted without some identification, and they will be required to wear a visitor’s pass as long as they are inside the school.

Anna Maria Elementary back to school
Parents and kids wait to get into the school Monday morning. – Tom Vaught | Sun

For now, all doors are locked and those who want in will have to use a call box on the entryway wall. A staffer will then come to the door and let the visitor in.

“We’re getting a buzzer soon, so they can let the visitor in without having to go to the door,” said AME Principal Jackie Featherston.

Lauren Sato and her husband, Jason, dropped off their son, Dylan, in the crowded hallway.

“He’s a little worried, but he’ll be okay,” she said. This year, the parents of kindergartners dropped their children off at their classrooms and there were some tears on the parents’ cheeks and worried looks on the kids’ faces, but everybody was greeted by the teachers and many of the parents headed for the auditorium to attend an AME tradition: the “Boo hoo Breakfast.”

ame Karaline Berzowski
Karaline Berzowski wears a bright belt as she helps with parent drop off and pick up. – Tom Vaught | Sun

One concern is the presence of red tide in the Gulf of Mexico three blocks away and possibly in the bay. Will they keep students inside?

“If we can smell it, we’ll limit their outside access,” said Featherston. “The students will have gym in the auditorium.”

There was no smell Monday and no dead fish were visible in the bay behind the elementary school.

AME kids explore estuary

HOLMES BEACH – The students at Anna Maria Elementary School learned firsthand about sea life last week when volunteers from Around the Bend Nature Tours held a class under a playground shelter, then took the students out with dip nets to capture critters and study them before returning them to the waters.

In the past, second-graders got the experience, but this year, school officials decided to expand the program to all the students, one grade at a time.

Around the Bend Nature Tours was founded by naturalist Karen Willey, and she has expanded her tours and added classes for all age groups to educate them about the flora and fauna of our part of Florida.

A number of students have been around the water if they live on the Island, but for those who haven’t been so fortunate, they find out there’s a lot of sea life just under the surface of the water.

They also learned about the birds and larger animals of the area.

Anna Maria Elementary is one of a very few public schools located on the water, giving school staffers an excellent opportunity use it to their advantage.

Kindergartners wait to go out into the bay to catch critters with dip nets. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Kindergartners wait to go out into the bay to catch critters with dip nets. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Before wading into the water, students look at small crabs brought by Around the Bend Nature Tours volunteers. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Before wading into the water, students look at small crabs brought by Around the Bend Nature Tours volunteers. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Anna Maria Elementary School students stand in water almost to their waists while exploring the estuary. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Anna Maria Elementary School students stand in water almost to their waists while exploring the estuary. - Tom Vaught | Sun

A volunteer from Around the Bend Nature Tours helps with a student's net. - Tom Vaught | Sun

A volunteer from Around the Bend Nature Tours helps with a student's net. - Tom Vaught | Sun

Turtle Watch notecards

Students paint environmental watercolors for cause

HOLMES BEACH – Anna Maria Elementary School students are picking up their paint brushes to help support a nonprofit and protect the local environment.

In conjunction with Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring, students spent a few days with Executive Director Suzi Fox and artist Lucinda Hathaway working on original notecard-sized watercolor paintings.

amitw ame notecards
Students in Mrs. Constanzo’s fifth grade class work on designs for their watercolor artwork. – Kristin Swain | Sun

Once completed, several of the paintings will be selected as notecards to be sold at the school, benefiting Turtle Watch. Designs that are not chosen as notecards will be used to decorate dune information signs to be placed on beaches around the Island.

Hathaway, an artist and instructor from Longboat Key, did a detailed demonstration for students before guiding them through developing and painting their own creations. Watercolor paintings feature local wildlife including sea turtles and the Island’s several species of shorebirds.

Turtle Watch notecards
Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring Executive Director Suzi Fox shows off her sea turtle artwork. – Kristin Swain | Sun

While funding for the notecard project is already set by Turtle Watch, Fox said the nonprofit is still seeking funding for the dune sign project. She said that while Manatee County has approved the project to replace the standardized signs located near some Island dunes, no government funding is currently approved for the project. As funding is found, Fox said new signs outlining the “dos and don’ts” of interacting with dunes featuring the student artwork will be printed to replace the outdated signs.

“All of these cards are winners,” Fox said.

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Katie O'Connor

Some Island students lose bus rides

HOLMES BEACH – Nine Anna Maria Elementary School (AME) students who live on the mainland and ride a school bus were recently given letters saying they would no longer be eligible to ride the buses.

One of them went to the son of Katie O’Connor, who works at Sato Real Estate on the Island and lives on the mainland. Her son gets on the bus at Palma Sola Presbyterian Church.

When she received the note, she said she was mortified.

She wrote an e-mail to school Superintendent Dr. Diana Greene.

She pointed out they live in an area where she could have sent her son to AME through the School Choice program, but did not, applying instead under the “hardship” program. School Choice students will continue to ride the buses. The period of time to change her son’s eligibility has lapsed until next year.

Dr. Greene answered her e-mail saying the school administration is dealing with high absenteeism and bus driver shortages, and one of the solutions was to combine the two bus routes that serve AME into one. She pointed out that bus transportation for hardship students is not guaranteed, but that the district had allowed hardship students to ride the buses anyway. By combining the buses, the remaining bus would be too full to allow the hardship students.

In her response, O’Connor said, “This mid-year change is unacceptable to many families. Many of us would have changed our child’s status had we known such decisions would be made mid-year. According to the school board employee I spoke with last week, there is no reason that my son shouldn’t be labeled a School Choice student other than the form I filled out three years ago. Obviously, had I known this would prevent him from being a bus rider, I would have changed his status last year during the provided window.”

O’Connor said she would address the situation at the Manatee County School Board meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 14.

More than half of the students who ride buses to and from AME each school day don’t live on Anna Maria Island.

Spooks and ghouls invade Holmes Beach

The parking lot at the Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce looked like a nightmare Saturday as ghosts, monsters and some odd creatures gathered around. Judges decided who were the scariest and most original. So went the start of Anna Maria Elementary School’s Fall Festival.

AME fall fest creepy crawlies
Students marched in the parade behind classroom banners, like Mrs. Costanzo’s Creepy Crawlies. – Tom Vaught | Sun

After the judging, the kids lined up behind their classroom banners for the parade to the Holmes Beach City Hall field for presentation of the awards with fun and games afterward.

This annual event has been going on for years and it was recently modified to limit the exposure the kids had to traffic by changing the parade destination from the school to the field.

The field had bounce houses, a water slide, food, refreshments and a number of games sponsored by the classrooms and staffed by parents for kids to play. It’s a fundraiser for the PTO.

AME Teacher of the Year

AME educator in running for Teacher of the Year

HOLMES BEACH – Fifth-grade teacher Michele Costanzo is crossing her fingers that she might represent more than Anna Maria Elementary School in district and state competition for the 2017-18 Manatee County Excellence in Education Teacher of the Year award.

She recently found out she has been named AME Teacher of the Year.

In addition to teachers, non-teaching employees can be nominated for Support Employee of the Year.

Nominees could be chosen by anyone – parents, fellow teachers, staff or members of the community. Principal Jackie Featherston said she did not know who nominated Costanzo.

The winner of the honor on the district level will advance to the state finals.

Originally from Connecticut, Costanzo has been teaching for 13 years. She has taught at elementary school levels during her career.

“I’ve taught first grade, fourth grade and fifth grades and I love the upper grades,” she said. “It’s easier to establish a rapport with the kids.”

She previously taught in Oneco and Myakka, and she’s delighted she came to the little school by the bay.

“There are some awesome kids here, beautiful kids,” she said. “The parents are great as well, offering help and support.”

She said she’s honored that somebody thought she deserved the award.

“You work hard and do what you have to,” she said. “Somebody thought enough of what I do to nominate me, and I am grateful.”

Hurricane makeup days set

The Manatee County School Board has approved a new schedule to make up for school days lost because of Hurricane Irma.

According to the new schedule, 10 minutes will be added to the end of the school day for all students, starting Monday, Oct. 2 through Wednesday, Dec. 20.

Wednesday, Oct. 4 and Wednesday, Dec. 6 will no longer be Professional Learning Early Release days. Students will attend school for a full day on both days.

Thanksgiving break will begin on Wednesday, Nov. 22. On Monday, Nov. 20 and Tuesday, Nov. 21, students will attend school for a full day; these dates were assigned on the 2017-2018 academic calendar as “hurricane make-up days.”

Dads dine

Dads dine

Anna Maria Elementary School participated in “Dads Have Breakfast with Their Kids Day” on Wednesday. More than 30 dads signed up, including West Manatee Fire Rescue firefighter Alex Flores, who enjoyed an outdoor table with his sons, Xane and Ulyses.

AME students miss school for solar eclipse

Solar eclipse entices students from school

HOLMES BEACH – The classrooms at Anna Maria Elementary were all but deserted on Monday, Aug. 21, the day of the solar eclipse.

“Sixty-six percent of the 268 students registered here missed school or were taken out early, apparently to catch the solar eclipse,” said AME Principal Jackie Featherston on Tuesday. “We had some classes that had only two students present. We combined some classes into one for the day.”

Featherston said the students who stayed in school didn’t miss much.

“A lot of the classes had fun eclipse-related activities planned,” she said. “Some of them watched live coverage on the NASA Channel, and kindergartners made ‘eclipse hats.’ ”

She said 59 percent of the students called in absent.

Local student enrollment shrinks

Featherston said that the percentage of the enrollment coming from off the Island increased to 52 percent, up from 51 percent last year. The loss of Island resident students is being blamed on the rising cost to live on the Island and homeowners moving off the Island after selling their homes to developers, who replace them with vacation rental structures.