Hear Ye, Hear Ye!

Huzzah!!

Welcome to the sixth annual ECS Medieval Fair!

As part of the middle school’s study of Medieval Literature, we welcome you to our    re-creation of a trade fair, a common event in town squares during the Middle Ages.  Held on this feast day of St. John Berchman, in the year of our lord 2013, our fair offers you handcrafted wares and authentic food and drink in exchange for your pennies.  At 10 am, the bell will ring, signaling the start of our mystery, miracle, and morality plays.  Until then, please shop, eat, drink, and be merry!!

Let the Fair Commence!!  God speed!

Medieval Fair 2013 on PhotoPeach

What about living in the Middle Ages is better than living in modern times?  What is worse?  If you could live in any time period, which would you choose and why?

Serving Others

The Unlucky Twin

Photo Credit: ReSurge International via Compfight cc

Part of our mission statement as a school states that we are “building a caring community that serves others”.  We try to live up to that standard by helping people in our local, national, and global communities.  Every year we send our accumulated 25 cent “lost and found” fines, as well as any other donations, to the Smile Train.  The Smile Train funds operations to fix cleft lip and cleft palate in developing nations.  The surgery costs $250 and takes as little as 45 minutes.  Every year for the last six years we’ve sent our money to The Smile Train.   We began this fundraising because the 7th graders read the novel Crispin: At the Edge of the World  by Avi; one of the characters in the story suffers from an untreated cleft lip.  Last year one of our students donated over $200 herself; it was money she had been saving for new clothes.

On the 10th anniversary of 9/11, we held a fundraising baseball game at our school,     “9 Innings for 9/11.”  Families donated a few dollars to play baseball; we sold hot dogs and popcorn, held a bake sale, and ran a raffle.  We raised a little over $800 that afternoon and donated the proceeds to The Smile Train, St. Jude’s Hospital, Share our Strength, and Our Mother’s House.

This year after reading the book, A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park, we visited the website Water for South Sudan.  We talked about ways to help the people in South Sudan dig and maintain wells for drinking water, but we haven’t yet put any plans into action.  We are glad for this week’s Student Blogging Challenge to remind us about our resolve and brainstorm some ideas so that the children and families in South Sudan can have safe drinking water, something we in America take for granted.

What are some ideas that we can do as a middle school to raise money for Water for South Sudan?

Watch this video from Disney’s Bridget Mendler called We Can Change the World and be inspired to take one step at a time…