Rangely

Students earn trip to visit Rifle Falls

Sixteen fifth-grade students from Parkview Elementary School in Rangely earned a patrol program trip to Rifle Falls and the fish hatchery on May 10. Each week, students were evaluated on homework, classwork, participation and behavior to earn patrol duty, while students who made the patrol list the majority of weeks during the semester earned the trip. In the back row are: XXXX Sheppard, Tytus Coombs, Zoey Peck, Leighton Pedlar, Mark Mercado, Hunter Hanvey, Del Garner, Lisa Hanna, Jorge Carrasco, Jayleen Kenney, Angela Gonzalez, Dalton Dembowski and Barbara Combes. Kneeling are: Justin Rusher, Dylan LeBleu, Tiffany Holmes, Cia Buxton and Dillya Wagner.
Sixteen fifth-grade students from Parkview Elementary School in Rangely earned a patrol program trip to Rifle Falls and the fish hatchery on May 10. Each week, students were evaluated on homework, classwork, participation and behavior to earn patrol duty, while students who made the patrol list the majority of weeks during the semester earned the trip. In the back row are: XXXX Sheppard, Tytus Coombs, Zoey Peck, Leighton Pedlar, Mark Mercado, Hunter Hanvey, Del Garner, Lisa Hanna, Jorge Carrasco, Jayleen Kenney, Angela Gonzalez, Dalton Dembowski and Barbara Combes. Kneeling are: Justin Rusher, Dylan LeBleu, Tiffany Holmes, Cia Buxton and Dillya Wagner.
RANGELY I Sixteen fifth-grade students earned a day trip to Rifle Falls and the Rifle Falls fish hatchery May 10 after demonstrating outstanding performance in the patrol incentive program begun by fifth-grade instructor Lisa Hanna last fall.
The program, which Hanna researched online and adapted from similar structures at other schools, rewards students who excel in homework, classwork, participation and behavior. Each week, students with high marks put up and take down the flag, pick up the playground, take messages to the office and read to the kindergarten classes, among other duties.
“I put this together to give the students something to look forward to in fifth grade,” said Hanna, who ran the program with fellow fifth-grade teacher Barbara Combes. “It is also putting them above the other students in the school and making them role models. All of this will help them later in life.”
At the end of each semester, students who have made patrol the majority of weeks in the semester earn a reward day sponsored by an EnCana mini-grant. In December, 10 students earned the accelerated reward and spent a day scaling Colorado Northwestern Community College’s climbing wall, making pizzas at Giovanni’s Italian Grill and enjoying an afternoon at the recreation center.
This spring, the number of students earning the trip went up by more than 50 percent, a jump Combes said is worth noting.
“We went from 10 to 16 students being able to attend the patrol trip,” Combes said. “I think this in itself says that (the program) was motivating. Also, they were not all high-achieving students, but they proved they could be responsible students. We were happy to see those students find that success.”
Success came partly from Combes and Hanna meeting with students who were close to making the patrol trip requirements several weeks before the end of the semester. Together, teachers and students strategized how kids would meet their goals and earn the trip.
“Our first patrol trip was a huge success and the kids had a great time,” Hanna said. “I think this helped some try harder for the second semester.”
Students who earned the spring trip ate lunch at Rifle Falls, hiked around the area and posed for a few photos. Then they hiked up to the fish hatchery, where they saw newly-hatched fish, fed hungry trout and learned more about the work done by Colorado Parks and Wildlife to manage fish populations.
Hanna said she hopes this is the beginning of a years-long challenge for students to demonstrate excellence to younger kids who are already looking up to them.

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