Council for Unity--
A Lesson in Character
Education
Students work
together to keep RHS a peaceful learning environment
for all of the school’s students.
With diversity often comes
division. Riverhead High School has worked hard this
year to erase lines of demarcation and division
among its student body and to strive for unity. A
new organization called the
Council for Unity is one
outgrowth of this effort to achieve student unity.
With enrollment at its highest level ever and with
the threat of organized gang movement from Nassau
into Suffolk County, RHS principal John Merone
started looking for a way to prevent the threat of
gang activity and violence from claiming any of his
students or spilling over into the school. (See
February 4, 2004 Newsday Article on
GANGS ON LONG ISLAND.)
“We don’t ignore our problems. We will do everything
we can to provide our children and our staff with a
safe environment,” relays Mr. Merone.
Character Education, Peer Mediation,
RHS PRIDE, assemblies and the Council for Unity
are all efforts at keeping the high
school a safe haven for learning. The RHS Council is
modeled after
The National Council
for Unity, a nonprofit group founded in
1975.
At the high school level,
the Council brings
representatives from every ethnic, racial and
natural grouping of students together to learn how
they can collectively and individually work for
unity at their school. They meet after school
for 45 minutes every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
to follow a curriculum that helps them learn how to
listen to and respect one another’s point of view.
The Council at RHS meets in a small room in the
upper library of the high school to discuss a unit
of the national curriculum. The discussions center
on why people join groups, how peer pressure works
within a group, and how that pressure impacts high
school kids in general and themselves in particular.
National organizer Robert DeSena is an occasional,
but very important, participant in the group. In
addition to white hats and t-shirts, Mr. DeSenna
brings with him honesty and a sense of the history
of the national group that keeps the RHS Council
vital and focused on their mission of unity within
their own school.
Earlier in the year, Council helped sponsor a
reception for an assembly entitled,
“Breaking the Cycle”
that brought together police officers, community
leaders and State Assemblywoman Pat Acompora on
stage with NYC Det. Steven MacDonald, who had been
attacked and paralyzed by a group of teens in
Central Park, and writer John Christoph Arnold. Det.
MacDonald and Mr. Arnold addressed
student violence and how to stop it. Through
their supportive presence on stage, student members
of the school’s new
Council for Unity gave voice to their own message of
unity, respect for each individual in the midst of
diversity and the importance of sustaining peace in
this their place of learning.
When necessary, members take a stand in their
respective groups for mutual respect.
“I like Council because it brings all the students
together without looking at only our ethnic
backgrounds,” shares Council member Quadrae Mims.
Lasheena Harris, nodded in agreement, “It makes us
all for one and gives us a peaceful place to learn.”
Seniors Mike R, and Jessee M., who are also both
mediators in the school’s Peer
Mediation program, see the Council for Unity
as a natural extension of their peer mediation work.
The school had over 25 mediations in the first third
of the year according to advisor, Lisa Donato.
“I would like to help the community and the school
come together,” states Jessee, who plans to major in
communications at Five Towns College. “Some students
come to school and feel separated from the other
students. I’d like to help them feel they’re part of
the community.”
Juniors Micahel Parada and Mario Puluc see the
Council as a place for them to make friends with
kids from all kinds of backgrounds.
“It’s a fun group of students,” states Mario.
“It works,”
states Theresa Drozd, the school’s K-12 Violence and
Drug Prevention Specialist. “Just a couple of
months into the school year, there was an incident
in gym class where a Hispanic student felt slighted.
It caused some tension. We brought the parties
together with the Council and they helped talk it
out and settle the dispute. Just recently, two of
the Council members, who were butting heads last
year in the cafeteria, met together to talk about
Council with an interested adult, and they were
there together as friends.”
The biggest testament to unity in a
high school is often in the hallways as students
pass between classes. It’s no coincidence, that
there are a lot more handshakes in the hallways
these days between all sizes and colors of hands.