USA TODAY US Edition

Teacher makes scarves for almost 650 students

- Arika Herron

Jeffrey Thomas wanted to do something nice for his students.

In his first year at Lew Wallace School 107, the special education teacher said his fellow teachers and their students took him in. They made him part of the family, Thomas said.

After watching his students arrive in near-freezing temperatur­es sometimes wearing nothing more than a sweatshirt, Thomas wanted to do something nice for them. “Scarves,” he thought. Nearly 650 of them.

Over a few months, Thomas clipped coupons and shopped Black Friday sales at fabric stores. He went through two cutting mats, several pairs of scissors and cut more than 100 yards of fabric down into 8-inch-wide fleece scarves. He made them in more than 50 patterns, so the kids would have a choice.

This week, Thomas handed out a scarf to all 600-plus students at the elementary school.

Sha’Unnah McWhirter picked out one that was pink, yellow, blue and teal with a little bit of white. The first-grader had the pretty plaid piece of fleece wrapped around her neck two days later as she headed to lunch.

The school held an assembly and talked to the kids about kindness, then Thomas, wearing one of his scarves, told the room full of students they’d all get one.

“I felt like Oprah,” Thomas said. “You get a scarf, you get a scarf, you get a scarf.”

He had all the scarves lined up, by pattern, on shelves and tables in his classroom and let each students come in — five at a time — and “shop.”

When first-grader Hassan Bello got to pick something out for himself, he choose one with monster trucks on it. Bello said it’s the only scarf he has.

Lew Wallace is a unique school. Part of the Indianapol­is Public Schools district, it sits on the northwest side of the district. After a recent transfer, the school has students from 34 different countries. Many of them are warm countries, Thomas said, and this is their first exposure to snow.

Many of Lew Wallace’s students are learning English for the first time, and most of them come from poor homes where their families may not be able to afford scarves and Christmas gifts.

“The school’s socioecono­mic status is hard,” school counselor Sherri Barrow said. “This time of year ... it’s especially hard.”

 ??  ?? Kindergart­ners Manasseh Smith, from left, Larry Palmer and Ti’miya Summers wear scarves made by Jeffrey Thomas. JEFFREY THOMAS
Kindergart­ners Manasseh Smith, from left, Larry Palmer and Ti’miya Summers wear scarves made by Jeffrey Thomas. JEFFREY THOMAS

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