Buchtel masonry students give back to APS, Helen Arnold CLC with new cement flower boxes

The wood panels around the garden beds at the front of Helen Arnold Community Learning Center had crumbled to the point that staff didn't put much effort into gardening anymore.

Ryen Finney-Kimble, 18, a Buchtel Community Learning Center masonry student, uses a concrete saw to trim the edge of a formed concrete side for a better fit of a new garden bed at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday.
Ryen Finney-Kimble, 18, a Buchtel Community Learning Center masonry student, uses a concrete saw to trim the edge of a formed concrete side for a better fit of a new garden bed at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday.

Principal Lamonica Davis was sitting at an Akron Public Schools board meeting one night when she had the perfect idea for who could remedy that problem: Buchtel CLC students in the school's masonry program.

Davis saw a presentation about the program at that meeting and thought they should come to Helen Arnold elementary. She pitched the idea to masonry program instructor Matthew Simpson.

"I said anything that's a real-world project, I'm all for," Simpson said.

Former Helen Arnold CLC student James Bethune, 18, left, and his Buchtel CLC masonry classmate Zyaire Lewis, 18, lift a decorated section of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday. The Buchtel CLC masonry students were installing concrete planters they created to replace the wooden ones at Helen Arnold CLC.
Former Helen Arnold CLC student James Bethune, 18, left, and his Buchtel CLC masonry classmate Zyaire Lewis, 18, lift a decorated section of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday. The Buchtel CLC masonry students were installing concrete planters they created to replace the wooden ones at Helen Arnold CLC.

The students this week installed the boxes they designed and built over the last two months in Simpson's lab at Buchtel high school.

It took them two days and multiple hands to fit the pieces together, a bit like playing with 250-pound Magna-Tiles, constantly digging dirt out from one end or pounding the other to make each piece level. It was as much math and problem solving as it was hands-on dirty work, Simpson said.

Students are constantly asking him when they will use what they learn in school, he said. This was their chance.

For senior Mekhi Rice, it was much an exercise in soft skills as it was math. Working with other people on a project like this required communication, he said, and a lot of patience.

Those are skills, Mekhi said, that he learned first at Helen Arnold. He wasn't the best student, he said, and didn't always behave, either. But the teachers and counselors at Helen Arnold didn't write him off, he said.

"They talked to us one-on-one," he said. "Asked us, 'How are you feeling?' Asked us about our emotions every day."

Former Helen Arnold CLC student Mekhi Rice,18, left, works with his Buchtel CLC masonry classmate Justin Clane, 18, as they install the side of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday.
Former Helen Arnold CLC student Mekhi Rice,18, left, works with his Buchtel CLC masonry classmate Justin Clane, 18, as they install the side of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC on Wednesday.

Now, Mekhi has a full-ride scholarship to Kent State University in the fall. He credits those Helen Arnold teachers for laying the foundation for him to go on to academic success.

"I really appreciate them, how patient they were with us," he said.

As part of the flower box project, Mekhi and other Buchtel students met with Helen Arnold fifth graders to talk to them about middle school and having a plan for after high school, and staying away from things that would get in their way.

Senior James Bethune, who also went to Helen Arnold, said he told the students not to fall behind in school.

"Just listen to your teachers," he said. "Be on top of your work."

Davis, the principal, said the kids were listening intently.

Buchtel CLC masonry students, from left, Jequelen Harrell, 18; Ryen Finney-Kimble, 18; Wylie Chears, 18; and Zyaire Lewis, 18, work together to install the the back two pieces of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC Wednesday.
Buchtel CLC masonry students, from left, Jequelen Harrell, 18; Ryen Finney-Kimble, 18; Wylie Chears, 18; and Zyaire Lewis, 18, work together to install the the back two pieces of a planter at Helen Arnold CLC Wednesday.

"To hear it from their peers made a world of difference," she said.

The masonry program at Buchtel is one of the pathways under College and Career Academies. The lab in the school allows students to learn to mix and pour concrete with rebar and make stencils out of plywood. They spent two months designing and constructing the panels used at Helen Arnold.

The program's juniors built smaller versions of the boxes, with just one panel on each side. The seniors built longer ones that said "Helen Arnold" and others that had a flower design.

Simpson said it was important for the students to not only learn real-world skills but also give back to their community. Mekhi said he would love to see the Helen Arnold students get to paint the boxes and make their own memory.

Davis, who said the new boxes make her smile every morning on her way into school, said she knows her former students' legacies will now live on at Helen Arnold for years to come.

"It makes your day so great to see our name on it. Our kids that went here did something for Helen Arnold," she said. "They gave back to APS."

Contact education reporter Jennifer Pignolet at jpignolet@thebeaconjournal.com, at 330-996-3216 or on Twitter @JenPignolet.

This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Buchtel masonry students build new flower boxes for Helen Arnold CLC