Issaquah/Sammamish Reporter, April 13, 2012

Page 8

Page 8

www.issaquahreporter.com

Friday, April 13, 2012

funding education

Two concerned parents sparked the Issaquah Schools Foundation that now benefits 14,000 students BY CELESTE GRACEY

Issaquah Schools Benefit Luncheon

cgracey@issaquahreporter.com

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Luncheon, noon-1 p.m., May 10 Silent auction, 11 a.m.-noon Issaquah Community Center, 301 Rainier Blvd. S., Issaquah To sign up call 425-391-8557 or email info@issaquahschoolsfoundation.org Pre-registration required. The suggested donation per seat is $150.

Maureen and John Shaw saw a small need in their son’s classroom that was symptomatic of a larger problem. To help, they started a foundation where private dollars could help public education. celeste gracey, Issaquah & Sammamish Reporter

Mock trial team places in state Eastside Catholic’s Mock Trial team took seventh place at the state competition on March 25 in Olympia. The three-day event had 22 high school teams from across the state. Mock Trial is part of the

“No one wanted to feel like they were moving into a sinking ship,” John said. Even as the district improved, the Issaquah Schools Foundation continued to find needs. Today it supports nine programs, including robotics clubs and financial literacy courses for all of the district’s eighth graders. It gave $75,000 this year in classroom enrichment grants, which provide special equipment and curriculum. This year alone it expects its money to impact 14,000 students. The foundation exists to bridge the gap between basic education, which is limited in Washington state, and the education stuYMCA Youth & Government program. The following Eastside Catholic students were recognized as outstanding attorneys: Michael Abraham, Kate Benecke, Lucas Heflin and Tennley Noble. The following Crusaders were recognized as outstanding witnesses: Michael

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dents need to achieve their potential, said Robin Callahan, the foundation’s executive director. The state only pays for curriculum changes every 18 years. The district needs to replace it every 8-10 years, but has to come up with money on its own to do so. Last year the foundation raised enough money to help the district fully implement a new elementary science curriculum. It hopes to do something similar this year by helping pay for an elementary literacy curriculum. Issaquah’s basic education has always been outstanding, but it doesn’t mean that teachers should continue to work with worn out books, Maureen said. For the Shaws, education was the most important thing they thought they could give their children. It also helped them put an emphasis on education at home. “I would guess that the foundation is going to do really well in the future,” John said. Maureen added, “It’s unlimited, it’s shown to be that.”

Abraham, Matt Callans, Katie Hurlbut, Shelby Newell and Chloe Salatino.

Issaquah student honored at BC Issaquah resident Casey Pinckney, a second-year student at Bellevue College, has been named a 2012 Coca-Cola Community College Academic Team Bronze Scholar by Phi Theta Kappa, a national honor society for commu-

nity college students. Pinckney is the fourth BC student since 2010 to earn a Coca-Cola scholarship. Additionally, she has been named to the All-Washington Academic Team for their academic performance and community service. As a Bronze Scholar, Pinckney will receive a $1,000 scholarship and recognition in the April 23 issue of USA Today.

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The Issaquah/Sammamish Reporter HA M IS AMM is published every Friday and delivery H -/ S Q UA R IS S A E T tubes are available FREE to our readers REPOR who live in our distribution area. The tube can be provided to you to install at your convenience next to your mailbox receptacle or at the end of your driveway. Pick up your FREE tube at our Bellevue office, located at 2700 Richards Road, Suite 201, Bellevue, WA 98005 during regular business hours. (Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)

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superintendent to resign, John said. “It got everyone stirred up.” The administration was looking for something positive for the district when the financial chief called John back with a list of people who could help. “Part of the magic of the early years is that it was all volunteer. All of the money went into the classroom,” John said. The founders picked a need – globes and maps – and held its first phone-a-thon. The group raised $63,000 that first year. “We were thrilled,” Maureen said. The Shaws came to the Plateau on the front wave of suburbanization. As more families moved into the area the levies began to succeed.

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or John and Maureen Shaw, the Issaquah Schools Foundation started with a dirty kindergarten rug. The filthy square, where her son and his classmates gathered, was long overdue for replacement. The 1980s were rough for the district, which saw a string of levies fail. It was lacking even basic material updates. “That rug was symptomatic of what was happening in the district,” John said. The couple offered to buy the class a replacement, but much to their surprise the principle turned them down. It was against the district’s policy to accept gifts for only specific schools. Otherwise there could be heavy inequality for those in wealthier neighborhoods. However, the Shaws weren’t good at taking “no” for an answer, especially when it came to their children’s education. After the district’s financial chief confirmed the policy, John asked, “Is there away around that?” The finance officer, who liked the question, responded, “Well, if we had a schools foundation.” Now, 27 years later, ISF is holding its annual luncheon May 10 and the foundation relies on the fundraiser for most of its $1 million budget. “It wasn’t even in our dreams that it would be this big,” Maureen said. The schools foundation didn’t have a quick start. The Issaquah School Board turned them down the first year. It took a financial fiasco in the district, before John’s idea would garner enough support in the community. On the whole, the issue wasn’t as big as people made it out to be, but it forced the

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