Healthy Teeth, Hearty Coils And the 100th Day at KCS


KENT — You never know what you’re going to get at Kent Center School.

A recent visit to Mrs. Ackerman’s first-grade class found the students doing some serious number crunching, with special pencils for day 100 of the school year.

But they cheesed the math when Dr. Mike the Dentist arrived (along with Mrs. Scruton’s first-graders from next door).

Dr. Mike had a 5-foot toothbrush with him, in case somebody missed the point.

"Does anybody know what tooth germs are called?" he asked the group.

"Plaque," said one intrepid student.

"Very good," said the doctor, visibly impressed.

February is Dental Health Month. School nurse Betsey Levesque said Dr. Mike (Monsarrat) and Dr. George Hetson make the presentation on alternate years.

"The program is about eating healthy foods and the importance of brushing," said Levesque. "It’s preventive in nature."

Meanwhile, up the hall in teacher Al Coffil’s art room, Nicole Kennedy, grade five, was scoring a coil of clay to add to a pot she was creating.

A visitor, remembering his grade school days and the succession of failed pottery projects that with the judicious addition of a couple of grooves became ashtrays, asked Nicole what scoring was.

"It’s a technique," she explained patiently as she jabbed the clay with a wire arrangement on the end of a short stick, "that allows the layers of clay to bind to each other better."

Later on, she added, she would be shaping the bottom to prevent moisture from gathering and damaging the final product.

The pot will be colored; the glazing is the last thing, after the pot is fired in the kiln.

Nicole warned of the dangers of the speckled green glazing, which apparently comes off in liquid and is therefore unsuitable for use in drinking vessels.

"Mr. Coffill has taught us well," she said matter-of-factly.

Renato Oliveira was using skinnier coils on his pot, for aesthetic reasons.

"I like the way it looks," he said.

On the way out of the school, it’s worth noting that currently displayed just off the main lobby are four student artworks that were part of a recent show in Hartford. Two of the paintings won awards in a statewide competition, and all four of the still-life pieces show a maturity and understanding of form, color and composition that belies their provenance. They alone are worth the trip.


— Patrick L. Sullivan

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