Gleaming new Willard School a 40-year dream

September 08, 2010|By Martha Woodall, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • It may be the end-of-day bell that first grader Damian Vega would rather hear, but surely he'll soon find the new Willard School a delight.
  • It may be the end-of-day bell that first grader Damian Vega would rather hear, but surely he'll soon find the new Willard School a delight.
  • Before the first day at Willard School, students, teachers, and family gather.
  • Ringing bells at Willard: Mayor Nutter (left) and schools chief Arlene Ackerman, escorting second grader Shermya Ancrum- Brown.

Storyee Robinson couldn't believe what she saw when she stepped inside the new, $30.3 million Willard Elementary School in Kensington Tuesday morning.

There was a gymnasium. An instructional music room. A science lab. An auditorium. Classrooms with electronic whiteboards. And an inviting cafeteria with soaring, clerestory windows.

It had taken more than a decade to replace the outmoded and overcrowded 1907 Willard School where children had to eat lunch at their desks and were tutored in hallways. The new school opened too late for Robinson's three oldest grandchildren, but at least her youngest, Keaira Rankins, 9, would attend.

"The wait was worth it," Robinson said. "This is beautiful!"

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Mayor Nutter and Superintendent Arlene Ackerman opened the 2010-11 academic year for 163,000 Philadelphia students Tuesday at Willard in a ceremony that combined the district's traditional bell-ringing with a ribbon-cutting of the gleaming building at 1930 E. Elkhart St.

"What a wonderful way to start this new school year," said Robert L. Archie Jr., chairman of the School Reform Commission, who participated in the program with commission member Denise McGregor Armbrister.

Nutter congratulated the Willard students.

"This is what happens when parents, the community, the school district, and everyone gets involved," he said. "The result is a beautiful new school."

Hundreds of thousands of area students returned to school Tuesday. The 72,000 enrolled in Roman Catholic schools in the five-county Archdiocese of Philadelphia are scheduled to start classes Wednesday.

After attending the ceremonies and a reception for parents and community members at Willard, Ackerman visited Vaux High School and Dunbar Academy. The two North Philadelphia schools are among six new Promise Academies that will receive extra resources and support as part of Ackerman's academic-improvement initiative.

Also Tuesday, fathers, grandfathers, and other male relatives accompanied children to their first day at city schools in the fourth annual Million Father March sponsored by the House of Umoja Inc. in West Philadelphia.

"It is encouraging to see the community give support," said Queen Mother Falaka Fattah, founder and executive director of the House of Umoja, which organized the event in conjunction with a nationwide effort promoting violence-free schools. "It lets the kids know that this is something special."

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