It was early in the morning on Nov. 23 — the last day of school before Thanksgiving break — and Washougal High School students stood outside their school, next to a large cart filled with cups of hot chocolate, waiting patiently for school buses to arrive.
When the buses started to pull into the high school’s parking lot, the students greeted the bus drivers with smiles, words of appreciation and hot cups of cocoa.
Now, those same students are the ones receiving appreciation for their kindness.
Jostens, a Minneapolis-based school memorabilia manufacturer, named Washougal High School as one of three winners of its “Culture Challenge,” a national competition that aims to empower students to work with staff members to create a welcoming and inviting school community.
“When I told (the students) we had won, they were so excited. They started clapping and cheering,” said Kyla Ritchey, Washougal High’s Associated Student Body (ASB) advisor and leadership in project management teacher. “We’re the first school on the West Coast to win, so it’s super exciting. Because I knew that there weren’t any schools on the West Coast that had won, I went into it, like, ‘We’re probably not going to win, but this is a good opportunity for them to take ownership of a project.’ They ran with it and worked so hard on it.”
More than 90 schools entered the competition, which was coordinated through Jostens’ Renaissance Education platform, a framework for building a culture where educators and school staff love their jobs and students thrive in school, Ritchey said.