By
Keith Sharon
Orange County Register
PLACENTIA
If
the students at Golden Elementary School needed an example of how
their generosity had inspired others, they found it Friday.
On the day
that last year's 6th-grade class was honored with the first Pay
It Forward Foundation award, the school learned that an anonymous
donor followed the students' example and promised $1,500 to Melody
Ybarra, the only surviving member of a Placentia family whose lives
were taken in a fire. The $1500 donation matched what the Golden
students raised -- mostly from their own bank accounts -- for a
Brea family whose house burned.
"You've
probably inspired people in places you've never been or may never
go," said author Catherine Ryan Hyde, whose novel "Pay
It Forward" is about a student who devises a plan to make the
world a better place by doing good deeds for others. "today,
you raised another $1,500, and you didn't even know it."
About 100 students,
parents and school officials met in the school's multipurpose room
Friday to cheer last year's 6th-grade class and their teacher, Lisa
Burgess.
Last March,
the home of special-education student Kenny Bamber was gutted by
fire. In the two days after the fire, several members of Burgess'
class emptied their bank ac- counts, collected gift certificates
from local businesses and gathered food and clothes to give to the
Bamber family.
Hyde, whose
novel became a movie starring Kevin Spacey, Helen Hunt and Haley
Joel Osment, presented the school with a check for $2,000 that will
be used to buy new library books.
Burgess, a
popular teacher who works lessons about character and philanthropy
into her curriculum, gave a tearful talk after receiving the award.
"All I
did was ask them, 'Who's going to step up to the plate?"' she
said.
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