May is always a whirlwind of activity to close out the school year. It got underway with the finale of Read Deed Run (RDR) for Hadley. RDR is a program that the kids participate in all year. The goal is to read 2,600 pages (H did this within a couple of months), run 26.2 miles (the kids do the last 1.2 miles around two KISD stadiums at this finale), and do 26 good deeds (26 hours - some are done after school together, some are on their own at home) over 26 weeks. She had to keep a log of all of her accomplishments.
These are all the schools that participated this year, gathered on the field for the ceremony. I can't recall the full number of kids that were on the field, but I think it was close to 1000! Hopefully, these kids will keep up all of these great habits as they get older.
May is also a double-whammy for the family with Mother's Day and my birthday usually hitting close together, if not on the same day. This year, we had a day in between, so I requested two separate, delicious meals out with these goobers, fake smiles and all.
For a little trip down memory lane, I made the hour drive to my old high school for their open house before they tear it down. Mostly I went because I ordered a couple of year books (lost mine in the ranch fire), and they weren't shipping them, but it's always interesting to visit your home town and see what's changed.
Some of the high school was familiar, but I have a terrible memory. Other parts definitely showed growing pains, like the band hall that had been tacked onto the end of the school at some point after I graduated and the cafeteria that had been relocated to the auditorium while they constructed the new school where the cafeteria used to be. With this high school goes the last of the campuses I actually went to school in. Elementary, middle, and now high schools have all been torn down and rebuilt in the same location. I guess they all had asbestos, mold, or cramped floor plans. Out with the old, as they say.
Hadley also finished out the year with top grades, and her teacher gave her the Determination Award, which sounded like she persisted, but maybe also was a little unyielding..? She also got Exemplary Performance and RDR certificates. Oma and Papa were able to go to her Celebration of Learning in her classroom.
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