The Day

Norwich school receives National Blue Ribbon honor

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer

Norwich — School officials here couldn’t afford to travel to Washington, D.C., in October to attend the luncheon to receive the National Blue Ribbon School plaque designatin­g the Thomas Mahan School as a top school for improving education for immigrant and minority children.

So U.S. Rep Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, came to Mahan School to present the plaque and congratula­te students and teachers in person Monday. U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., will visit the school Tuesday to deliver his congratula­tions as well.

Mahan was one of four Connecticu­t schools to receive national Blue Ribbon awards from the U.S. Department of Education on Sept. 28. For Mahan, the designatio­n recognized the school’s efforts to close the so-called achievemen­t gap between minority and special education students and their classmates on standardiz­ed tests and other measures of student success.

Principal Donna Funk said the school put extra effort to help En- glish language learners and special education students in younger grades — kindergart­en through third grade — reach grade or goal levels in reading, writing and math. Funk said the school offers after-school tutoring for groups of four students to help them reach grade level.

“We get a lot of kids who come to kindergart­en with zero skills,” Funk said.

Mahan also has a dwindling special education population, because those students have reached goal levels and are in regular classes.

Courtney on Monday stood quiet-

Thomas Mahan School was one of four Connecticu­t schools to receive national Blue Ribbon awards from the U.S. Department of Education on Sept. 28.

ly as students in kindergart­en and first grade continued with lessons as the congressma­n, reporters and school administra­tors entered the classroom. The lesson in one first-grade class focused on use of pronouns I, they and you.

“He and I shop at the mall,” student Ramirah Warner read aloud.

Later, students in third, fourth and fifth grades crowded into a classroom to see Courtney present the plaque to Funk and Superinten­dent Abby Dolliver. They waited patiently until they got their chance to pepper the congressma­n with questions: Who was your favorite president to work with? What was your favorite class in school? Who was your favorite teacher? What do you do in Congress?

Courtney, first elected in 2006, effectivel­y skirted the “favorite president” question, telling the students he has worked with three presidents, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and now Donald Trump. He worked with Obama for the longest time, eight years, he said, so he knew that president best.

Teachers and Dolliver were pleased when Courtney said reading and writing were his favorite topics, as those are areas city schools also are focused on.

The Blue Ribbon plaque will hang in a glass display case near the school’s main entrance. The case is a place of honor, Funk said. In the left corner is a folded American flag in a triangular case. The flag was flown in Afghanista­n in October by Air Force Capts. Erik and Kristin Nelson, a married couple who have spent tours of duty in Afghanista­n, Iraq and Syria. They visited the school prior to their deployment while the school has sent packages to troops deployed overseas.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Karen Anastasiou, of East Lyme, takes a walk Monday along the Niantic Bay Boardwalk. Anastasiou says she walks the boardwalk often, listening to podcasts and audio books, but “more in the summer.”
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Karen Anastasiou, of East Lyme, takes a walk Monday along the Niantic Bay Boardwalk. Anastasiou says she walks the boardwalk often, listening to podcasts and audio books, but “more in the summer.”

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