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Some Williamson
County educators recently got an up close and personal view of
what it’s like to experience the grip of poverty. In a program put
on by the UT Extension Service, educators from Westwood and
Fairview elementary schools participated in a poverty simulation at the
Williamson County Rec Center on August 9.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 5.1
percent
of people in Williamson County live in poverty. That’s
compared to 13.5 percent statewide.
"One of the things
that makes Fairview Elementary School such a great place is the
diversity of the community," says Fairview Elementary principal
Ann Lewis. "Part of this is due to the poverty level and
the needs that sometimes come along with that."
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Educators learn their family roles in the
poverty simulation activity August 9 |
The poverty
simulation breaks participants up into family units. Each
participant is then assigned an age and identity. The families
get a budget, a limited number of transportation passes, and
various other resources they need to get through each day.
Throughout the room, stations are set up representing different
agencies and places people can utilize. These include a bank,
grocery, and food pantry. There is also a school, jail, and
even a pawnshop.
A 15 minute
timeframe represents one week. Participants have to take
what they are given in their packet, and essentially, live their
lives on the poverty level for one month.
"The scenarios
really cause you to change your priorities, and its easy to see
how families can discount the importance of education when they
are desperately trying to pay rent and bills," said Fairview
Elementary teacher Cassidy Lovelace. "It
caused me to stop and think about the struggles that our
students carry on their shoulders when they walk into my
classroom and I expect attendance and academic performance from
them."
Although the
activity is just a simulation, it’s not a game. Those
acting as children
must attend school, those acting as parents must feed their families, and bills
must be paid. Participants get frustrated. For instance, no
transportation pass means no trip to the food pantry. That
means a hungry and cranky child. People are told to act the
part. "Children" throw tantrums. "Parents" lash out at agencies that are unable to help. Sometimes
bad judgment takes over.
“A lot of people
don’t seem to realize how quickly they found they resorted to
doing something not positive,” says Patsy Watkins of the UT
Extension Service, who helped facilitate the event. “You get desperate.”
“You become so
frustrated and helpless,” said Alisha Erickson of Westwood
Elementary. “What really hit home was how much your values
change because you are in survival mode.”
“As an educator,
many may think ‘why don’t the kids get their homework to school,
why don’t their parents get involved,’” says Watkins. “I think
maybe by having gone through this, educators just might
understand a little bit more that often it’s a reason. It’s not
that they don’t want to get out of poverty, its just that
they’re caught and its really hard to get out.”
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Participants wait in line at the "Quick
Cash" station during the poverty simulation activity
August 9 |
The intended goal
of providing a better sense of what those in living in poverty
conditions face seems to have gotten through to participants.
“I feel we walked
away with a better understanding of how poverty can impact a
child’s learning,” said Fairview and Westwood assistant
principal Chad Walker, “It was a humbling experience.”
Westwood
Elementary principal Nancy Simpkins says, “I realized our school
community must find ways to access help for our families in
need, such as food, clothes, and supplies. The result is that
we can better serve the students by helping the families.”
Lewis echoes that sentiment. "The simulation we experienced
allows teachers to feel, to some extent, the frustration some of
our families go through on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis.
Hopefully, this will make us wiser in the way we work with
families in our school community." |