West Chicago
school class working on safe rails
The students in Kathy Grogan's gifted class at
They are also award-winning community problem solvers. Last year,
their Hug in a Bag project to help the homeless took first place in a state
competition and qualified for internationals.
Grogan's class the previous year took first in the state and
third internationally for a playground-improvement project at Pioneer.
Now, her talented fifth- and sixth-graders are working on a new
problem - the railroad tracks that run through a field near their school.
Children often play there, and
a 3-year-old girl was struck and killed two years ago. The goal of Project
ETA (Eliminating Train Accidents) is to get fencing or warning signs in English
and Spanish put up around the tracks.
"
This week the students learned from Mayor Michael Kwasman that plans for the fence are already underway, part
of the city's settlement after the Canadian National Railroad's merger with the
EJ&E. The 5-foot-high cyclone fence is expected to go up in the field this
spring.
A new pedestrian tunnel on
In a letter to the Pioneer class, Kwasman
complimented the students on their dedication to making the community safer.
"When kids have an interest in the city they live in and
take the initiative (as they did), that was very impressive," Kwasman said.
Learning that the fence was going to be built anyway hasn't
derailed the students' enthusiasm for the project, Grogan said.
"They are very excited," she said, adding that students
were prepared from the start that the fence might not happen at all.
The eight students in the Gifted and Talented Education (GATE)
class - sixth-graders Gabby Gallegos, Lourdes Rosales and Nayeli
Lara and fifth-graders Theresa Carriveau, Taylor Dehaeseleer, D'riah McCarroll, Guillermo Orizaba and Christopher Reyes -
started by researching pedestrian-train accidents.
"We found out
They measured the field and figured out how long the fence should
be. Then, they put together a detailed list of parts and tools - from 720 feet
of 111/2-gauge mesh galvanized chain link fencing for $1,286 to four 23/8-inch
rail end bands at $1.01 each - for a total budget of $4,000.
They collected more than 100 signatures on petitions, and wrote
the mayor, the head of the Canadian National Railroad, President Obama, Gov. Pat Quinn, both
Now, they are working on the six-page paper that will be part of
their entry in the Community Problem Solving category of the Illinois Future
Problem Solving competition.
Last year, most of the same children worked on the Hug in a Bag
project, filling bright green bags with toiletries, a first-aid kit and a
blanket, and delivering them to a local homeless shelter. After winning first
place in the junior division for
Several students admitted that even they have played around the
tracks in the past, but they all know now how dangerous it is.
"It does make them think about train safety," Grogan
said.
And even after the fence goes up,
"The trains are here and they are protected by federal law;
there's not much we can do about that," Kwasman
said. "Hopefully, we can teach children how to stay away from them."

Back row from left: Lourdes Rosales, Gabby Gallegos, Nayeli Lara and Taylor Dehaeseleer; front row from left: Christopher Reys, Guillermo Orizaba and Theresa Carriveau
http://www.dailyherald.com
by Anna Madrzyk