nothin “Cheer” Squads Welcome Students Back | New Haven Independent

Cheer” Squads Welcome Students Back

Markeshia Ricks Photo

Squad greets Lincoln-Bassett students with cheers.

Lucy Gellman Photo

Kids arrive for day one at John C. Daniels.

The little boy in the dark blue polo and khaki pants looked stoic and also a little perplexed as a line of adults cheered and smiled to welcome him to his first day of school Monday morning. at Lincoln-Bassett Community School.

The boy gave one a tentative palm-slap to Kyisha Velazquez one of the adult volunteers welcoming brigade. Not quite a high-five, but five nonetheless. And then he locked eyes with Sen. Gary Winfield, who also was asking him for a high-five.

The little boy opened his arms for a hug from Winfield instead. And that’s what he got. So started the first day of a new school year of Lincoln-Bassett, a pre-k_8 school in Newhallville that has won statewide recognition for a turnaround effort.

Markeshia Ricks Photo

Lincoln-Bassett students file off the bus to kick off their first day of school.

Thousands of New Haven Schools students headed back to school Monday. Winfield and a cheer squad of more than 20 people were there to greet the new and returning students with cheerful greetings of Good morning,” Have a great day at school!” and I love that backpack.” Similar welcoming scenes took place at other schools around town, including at the Hill’s John C. Daniels School, which has a new principal. (Scroll down in the story to read about that event.)

Schools Chief of Operations Will Clark said there won’t be an official enrollment count until Oct. 1, but the school system is expecting enrollment to rise slightly from last year to about 22,000 students this year.

A moment of calm for Vice Principal Jenny Clarino.

State Rep. Robyn Porter had her own special words of encouragement Monday at Lincoln-Bassett, reminding students to turn up for education.”

Little girls with freshly braided hair adorned with colorful beads and barrettes bounded down the sidewalk with big smiles, while the boys many with newly cut hair and superhero backpacks kept it cool as they slapped the hands of the cheering adults.

Some of the children and their parents who entered the school’s campus from a side opposite the cheer squad walked all the way down to where the cheering adults to make sure that they got a dose of the energetic feeling before heading into the school.

Once they cleared the runway of cheers, high fives and compliments, many made a beeline to Clarino for a hug.

Winfield said he and a group of adults from the neighborhood have been making their way to the city’s K‑8s and high schools twice a month to greet students throughout the school year for at least three years now.

The first time we did it, we had no plans to keep going,” he said. We just wanted to do something nice at least once and we started at Lincoln-Bassett. It always starts here.”

Laura Mason,7, gets a high five while her mom, Alison looks on and dad, Melvin, records the moment.

Winfield recalled a moment at a morning greeting the first year his group launched the practice. The boy had had a bad experience in pre‑K and was apprehensive that his new school would be more of the same. Winfield and crew didn’t know that as they ushered him through their line with cheers and good wishes for the school year.

When he went through the line, he knew that this is where he belonged,” Winfield recalled. Once I heard that, I knew we had to keep going, and I have story after story [like that.] We have young people who are about to graduate from high school who have said they’ve never had anyone really say anything to them in the morning to get them up and going.”

Winfield said it his and the other adults’ responsibility to be out there cheering students on whether the cheer crew is 20-plus or just two.

It’s free,” Winfield said of the cheer squad. It doesn’t take a lot. We can’t talk about community and not do something like this. It doesn’t matter how many are out here, I’m going to make sure you think there are 40 people out here.”

Winfield is the self-professed head cheerleader.

Parents like Alison and Melvin Mason appreciate the effort. Their 7‑year-old daughter Laura enthusiastically went down the line and greeted the adults with high fives and a bright smile.

It’s uplifting to see that they have a support system,” Alison Mason said. The expectations for them are very high. They’re going to achieve and they’re going to do well. They have all these supportive adults around them on their learning journey and that is really cool.”

Melvin agreed. I think it lifts their spirits and gives them the idea that someone cares beyond their mother and father,” he said. That someone is looking for them to achieve, and hoping that they will excel in the classroom. I think it’s fantastic and I think it sends a good message.”

This little guy was a little stunned by all the attention.

Lincoln-Bassett Community School Vice Principal Jenny Clarino said having a welcome committee of concerned adults from the community sets the school year off on the right foot.

To have parents and staff and students see that welcoming community ignites a fire, a passion that is going to continue this whole year for student achievement,” she said. Students feel the love, the staff feels the love. It means so much to us.”

Winfield went in for the high-five, but the little one preferred the hug.

Clarino said that part of the school’s mission is to revitalize the surrounding community.

Monday’s cheer squad plans to be back on Thursday for the kindergartners.

We want happens here to impact everywhere,” she said. We’re just starting to see the amazing achievements. [Smart Balance Assessment] scores this is the second year in a row of double digit gains. And that is just one area. It’s a blessing to be here to watch this and be part of it.”

A New Day At Daniels

Lucy Gellman Photo

Daniel Bonet, the new Daniels principal, at a Day 1 event Monday morning.

When her alarm rang around 7 a.m. Monday, Mary Jasmine Lopez pulled out a tiny pink hat with black lace, fastened it to her ponytail, and headed to the front door. She had a very important date with Annette Cox, the crossing guard at John C. Daniels School of International Communication, and didn’t want to be late.

Good morning!” Cox shouted as Lopez, her mom, and siblings approached on Congress Avenue. Welcome back to school!”

Lopez is a third grader at John C. Daniels, a bilingual magnet school located in New Haven’s Hill neighborhood. Monday morning, she, her brother Miguel Lopez and cousin Abraham Perez were just three of some 7,325 students to return to New Haven’s magnet schools for the first day of a new academic year.

This school year begins with the goals of cutting both dropout rates and the achievement gap in half, said NHPS Superintendent Reginald Mayo at a press conference outside the school Monday morning.The student body at John C. Daniels is approximately 580, going from kindergarten through eighth grade. This year, the school welcomes Daniel D. Bonet as its new principal, with NHPS veteran Nicholas Perrone serving as assistant principal.

Recruited by NHPS from Puerto Rico, Bonet said that his priority will be fostering cross-cultural understanding among students and teachers, pushing the school to understand its place as a global” institution in the city. As a step in that direction, the school has added Mandarin to its middle school curriculum, where Spanish and English are already taught side-by-side.

We are working hard as a team to develop our students and to develop our schools to unify cultures and to have the next future of New Haven,” he said at a press conference held at the school around 8:35 a.m., just before a mass of yellow school buses made their way into the parking lot. This is the greatest compromise — to help our communities, to help all the students growing up, to give them a chance … to be what we want for citizens for this state and this country.”

As students trickled in, those words were just beginning to catch on. In her fifth year as crossing guard at the intersection of Congress Avenue and Hallock Street, Cox said she’s never seen students so disappointed to return to school — but is holding out hope for Bonet’s remarks. By 8:30, she’d seen only a fraction of the faces she’d expected to, and they were looking a bit glum. 

They’re not smiling this year,” she said as she waited for students and families on foot and bike. By this time last year, all the buses had arrived. Students had arrived, and they were excited.”

Then Mary Lopez came bounding across the street, holding bags of popcorn and orange juice to get her through the day. She waited for Abraham Perez to give Cox a hug before waving wildly, the bag of popcorn bouncing up and down in her small, closed hand. Cox helped her make it to the other side of the street, where her pink hat caught the sunlight and glowed for just a moment.

I’m so excited,” she said, adjusting the hat. Nervous, because I don’t know who my teacher is yet. But excited.”

I’m excited about writing,” Miguel Lopez chimed in. He said he’d spent the summer catching up on his favorite series, Captain Underpants. Now he is hoping to improve writing, cause I need it for everything and I’ll feel better when I’m better at it.”

Eighth-graders Kuaun Silva and Marrion Jackson helped welcome fellow students.

As students walked to the door for first period, a group of assembled citywide political and education leaders erupted into cheers, applause and fist bumps to welcome the students back. Then they headed inside, to where an all-school assembly was planned in the school’s courtyard.

I’m trying to get all human beings to believe that we are one,” Bonet said as students marched into the courtyard drumbeats, cheering and hoisting grade-specific signs above their heads. With her pink hat fastened tightly to her head, Mary Lopez cheered and smiled from the front row. Bonet climbed onto the playground to address the crowd. 

In the end,” he said after students had assembled, we are one big family.”

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