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Carmel Elementary School
Photo by Beau Yarbrough
Juniper Elementary School Principal Stephanie Poindexter was duct-taped to the door in the Carmel Elementary School cafeteria after Carmel students out-read Juniper students this school year.

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Carmel wins reading contest, Juniper principal duct-taped to door

Staff Writer

"Tape her up, tape her up, tape her up!" the horde chanted, with the volume and pitch that only a mob of elementary school students can muster.

"What?" Stephanie Poindexter called back defiantly. "I can't hear you!"

The principal of Juniper Elementary School was duct-taped to a door in the Carmel Elementary School cafeteria Wednesday at lunchtime, her feet suspended off the ground as students and teachers put additional layers of tape to bind her to the green door.

Amazingly, this was all Poindexter's idea. She and Carmel principal Chris Mauger had previously been the assistant principal and principal of summer school, and have been friends ever since. And to get both of their schools reading this year, the two agreed to a little wager.

Each school earned Accelerated Reading points for books read by the students. The points were based on the difficulty of the book, from half a point for the simplest below-reading-level books up to 26 points for the thickest Harry Potter novels. Students input the books they read into computers at each site.

If Juniper won, Mauger would have had his legs waxed at an assembly at Juniper. But the final score was 22,422 points for Carmel, versus 18,002 points for Juniper. So Poindexter found herself taped to a door, with an assembly line of Carmel Cougars streaming up to apply more duct tape, or simply to give a low-five to the principal suspended a foot off the ground.

"OK, stick it on there, right across her legs," Mauger directed two students. "OK, next two!"

The challenge worked out well for both schools, as Juniper students read more books than they had in any previous year. To reward them, Mauger will be paying up on his half of the bet -- sort of. On Friday, he will have his legs shaved at Juniper Elementary, instead of having them waxed.

And in a way, this was a bit of payback by Carmel's readers: A week before, at the Clue Me In competition, where Hesperia Unified School District elementary school students sought to prove who had the best reading comprehension of a set of previously agreed upon books read over the course of the year, Carmel's and Juniper's 4th grade and 6th teams had gone head to head.

"They just spanked us," Mauger said.

Wednesday's taping won't be the last time Carmel's and Juniper's readers try to outdo each other:

After a little more than an hour, Poindexter was freed, with the tape coming off her arms, shoulders and torso first. With her upper body freed, the remaining duct tape could no longer support her, and she hopped off, the rest of the silver coat of tape coming with her.

"Oh, yeah, I'd do it again," Poindexter laughed, shaking life back into a left hand that had fallen asleep.

"I'll hold you to that," Mauger grinned.

Beau Yarbrough can be reached at 956-7108 or at beau@hesperiastar.com.


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Reader's comments




I think this story is great! Bottom line is they got the kids encouraged to READ!

hesperiamom - May 13, 2008 08:53:33 AM Remove Comment

 
ninny go home tiredofdoublestandard is the name I use for all my posts regardless of the subject As far as harm to the children, the harm is done when children look at would be role models and positive authority figures as nothing more than playmates, clowns or characters.

tiredofdoublestandard - May 12, 2008 08:06:14 PM Remove Comment

 
Please explain the double standard being alluded to. This was all good fun with NO possible harm to the kids.

ninny go home - May 12, 2008 06:22:04 PM Remove Comment

 
beenthere We see and read the results of such thinking everyday, and it is not positive. Children are behaving better today? Children are more likely to follow rules and listen to an authority figure? Right. You can be a role model without being a fool. You get respect NOT by acting as a child or a clown but as an adult. Children have plenty of "friends" and playmates. Many have few if any positive role models or authority figures in their lives. When one stoops to such low levels, it detracts from you and what you are trying to accomplice. The shame is the people involved seem like quality, caring educators. They just have to motivate another way. If so many do the same type asinine stunts, is it really thinking out of the box?

tiredofdoublestandard - May 12, 2008 12:44:01 PM Remove Comment

 
Having been in this role before, I never had one kid disrespect me as a result of doing any of these type of activities. Those adults who think kids won't respect them after "humbling" themselves are out of touch with today's or even yesterday's kids. Respect is earned and is not lost by doing a motivational activity such as this. Respect is only enhanced!

beenthere - May 12, 2008 10:45:27 AM Remove Comment

 
Thanks SO much for pointing that out.

Mr. Mauger - May 12, 2008 10:24:03 AM Remove Comment

 
Brilliant idea! Plus you couldn't do anything involving hair since the Carmel principal is bald! I think Mr. Mauger should use rogain for a year to make next year's challenge even bigger!

nottiredoffun - May 12, 2008 08:53:52 AM Remove Comment

 
Anyone who finds this degrading or unprofessional doesn't understand kids or how to work with kids.

me - May 12, 2008 08:15:24 AM Remove Comment

 
Being bound in duct tape is being a role model? Give me a break. Having to humiliate oneself in the name of education is ridiculous. There are other ways to get children motivated to reach a goal besides, being taped to a wall, cutting ones hair off, dying it colors, kissing a pig, on and on. Unprofessional behavior on these peoples part. You wouldn't allow children to do that to other children would you? But it is OK for the schools principal to be made a fool? Many children need role models as well as positive authority figures in their lives. Having people who could be just that stoop below the line of acceptable behavior serves no one in a positive way. A loss for the children no matter how much they squeal with approval, and a loss for all the "adults" who work at our schools.

tiredofdoublestandard - May 10, 2008 09:48:02 AM Remove Comment

 
Negative? Humiliating? Did you see the picture? No one could look more beautiful and delighted in duct tape than Mrs. Poindexter. She is a role model to our students. It's all about positive attitude!

Colleen - May 10, 2008 09:19:37 AM Remove Comment

 
Great story? The reading for sure. The rest? Degrading, humilaating and a negative to all people in position of authority. What is next? Shameful IMO

tiredofdoublestandard - May 09, 2008 07:18:03 PM Remove Comment

 
This is a great story. Going the exxtra mile to encourage students to read. Cool

Lynnie - May 09, 2008 05:50:06 PM Remove Comment
 

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