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Flags wave at Webutuck

WEBUTUCK — Throughout the school year, students in grades four to six participated in a Reading Around the World program that encouraged reading and created excitement around what the teachers claim to be one of the least popular school subjects. The program concluded Wednesday, June 15, with a flag ceremony held in partnership with the World Peace Sanctuary in Wassaic.All students in grades four through six participated in the ceremony. Each held one of the 195 flags that represented the countries around the world. Since there are more countries than there are students in those grades, some students needed to hold a second flag.Jim Dugan, manager of the peace sanctuary, led the ceremony. He called out the names of each country, alphabetically by region, and encouraged the students to repeat the names of each one. At the end of listing the countries in each region, they called, “May peace prevail” in that region and “May peace prevail on earth!”In the center of the circle of students and flags stood two peace poles, one from the peace sanctuary and one decorated by four Webutuck students: Carly Miles, Rhianna Reed, Taylor Edmundson and Isabella Tomasetti. Dugan said that the peace poles are visual reminders for people to keep peace in their minds and in their hearts.Dugan said that he hopes the ceremony created a broader awareness and understanding among the students that we’re all on this planet together.The Reading Around the World program was organized by Karen Rubin and Jennifer Gdula, both Webutuck staff members.The main purpose of the program, they emphasized, was to encourage reading. They decided to use world travel to peak the students’ interest.“You’ve got to get a hook, and that was the hook,” said Gdula.District superintendent Steven Schoonmaker said that the reading program also bridged subjects, requiring the students to use math, science, geography and history skills to complete tasks that dealt with international-travel-related topics like time zones.The students also created passports to document everywhere they “traveled” during their reading adventures. They created stamps for their passports and gave presentations on the locations they visited and the things they learned there.The students read more than 83,000 pages for the program. They logged 3 miles for each page read, giving them a total distance traveled of nearly 250,000 miles.The co-organizers said they hope this program encourages the students to look outside of their immediate communities and to travel the globe.“It’s easy not to care about [current world events], but travel shows how alike people are and gets [the students] more interested in the stuff going on around the world,” said Gdula. “You’ve got to think globally; it’s the only way.”They also said that even though the students “visited” just nine countries during their reading, the flag ceremony opened the students’ eyes to just how many other countries there are in the world.The organizers plan to continue the program next year, and they hope to add more interactive, international contact, like “e-pals,” which are pen pals that communicate through the internet.To learn more about the peace sanctuary and its mission, visit worldpeace.org. The sanctuary is also holding the A Call to Peace event on Sunday, Sept. 25, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event will be free and open to the public.

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