gmhTODAY 29 gmhTODAY Jan March 2020 | Page 76

School Days: Gilroy Unified School District Abilities Awareness: Teaching Empathy By Melanie Corona, Public Information Officer, Gilroy Unified School District E 76 GILROY • MORGAN HILL • SAN MARTIN Third Grade students participating in Abilities Awareness program in Mr. Perez’s class at Luigi Aprea School. Activities including writing with their non- dominant hand to mimic dysgraphia, and answering riddles using Braille. program as well. Fourth Grade teacher Heather Beard was the first teacher at Luigi Aprea to welcome the program to the school. According to Beard, “Abilities Awareness focuses on the positives of differences in people and celebrates their abilities. Because of this program, our students can view people in a different, more positive light. The more we expose kids to differences the more they become comfortable [with] them.” Miss Judy has offered to bring the Abilities Awareness program to the greater Gilroy community regardless of grade level. Her mission to teach kindness toward all people is deeply personal, inspired by her love for her own son. “Aleksi has autism and I know his friends sometimes wonder about some of his behaviors, Rosti said. “I believe edu- cating people will make them more tolerant and empathetic.” WINTER 2020 gmhtoday.com very year at Luigi Aprea Elementary, a small group of volunteers presents a week-long Abilities Awareness program to the students in every grade level at the school. This program enables students to connect with the experience living with disabilities, both seen and unseen. Former Luigi Aprea parent, Judy-Ann Rosti, introduced the program to Luigi Aprea after discovering it at her children’s former school district in 2015. Abilities Awareness teaches empathy, provides opportunities for students to experience challenges that their differently-abled classmates may be living with, and offers suggestions on how to support them as they deal with their challenges in school settings. The program curriculum is tailored for each grade level: Second Graders spend part of their program stringing cereal onto a piece of yarn while wearing socks on their hands to experience what someone with fine motor skill challenges may have. Third Graders practice using American Sign Language and Braille as ways to communicate in their classroom, by answering riddles and spelling simple words. Fifth Graders sit back-to-back to give a partner verbal cues to draw a design they’ve never seen before. Each lesson is accompanied by short videos that reinforce the learning. A lot of research and preparation go into each lesson, with attention to detail and focus on the program’s over arching goal. Miss Judy, as Rosti is affectionately called, no longer has children of her own at the school, she is passion- ate about sharing Abilities Awareness with all students. Her son, Aleksi, has autism, and Judy wants to make sure that students develop understanding and empathy toward classmates who may be differently-abled. During her week on campus she coaches parent volunteers on how to help present the program, and coordinates with teachers to deter- mine logistics. She too volunteers, and spends hours on the playground during lunch giving students the opportunity to move about using crutches, walkers, and wheelchairs, to experience how students with limited mobility might move around campus. She gives each classroom library a book about children with various disabilities. Like the rest of the program, the books are grade-level appropriate and encour- age students to learn more. For the past two years, the program has received grant funds from the Santa Clara Firefighters Foundation. The school’s parent club has also provided tremendous support financially and in volunteer time. Luigi Aprea staff and leadership see the value of this