Development

Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Carnegie Elementary cereal dominos activity benefits free store | TribLIVE.com
Allegheny

Carnegie Elementary cereal dominos activity benefits free store

Kellen Stepler
8297414_web1_sig-carndomino1
Kellen Stepler | TribLive
Carnegie Elementary student Andrew Plavetsky knocks down cereal boxes like dominos at the school March 7. The school held a cereal box drive to be donated to its Free Store.
8297414_web1_vnd-CarDomino2
Kellen Stepler | TribLive
Kalil Ibrahim, a second-grade student at Carnegie Elementary, cheers on the cereal domino fall during an event at the school March 7.
8297414_web1_sig-carndomino4
Kellen Stepler | TribLive
Carnegie Elementary students James Johns, left, and Arsen Honskyi, right, carry cereal boxes collected by their school to be donated to the Free Store.
8297414_web1_sig-carndomino5
Kellen Stepler | TribLive
Carnegie Elementary student Raven Vetter, front center, packs cereal boxes with the help from friends, from left, Addison Brady, Colten Coulter, Logan King, Mohammad Haidari, Jonah Spitzer and Levi Fisher.
8297414_web1_sig-cardomino3
Kellen Stepler | TribLive
Carnegie Elementary student Colten Coulter stacks cereal boxes to be placed in the school’s free store during an event March 7 at the school.

The twists and turns of the cereal domino lineup on Carnegie Elementary’s gym floor proved to students that there is a bonus to helping others.

The school held its second-annual cereal drive domino fall on March 7, which coincided with National Cereal Day.

Over the prior month, students brought in 452 cereal boxes to donate to Free Store 15106, located at the school.

One student, third-grader Andrew Palvetsky, brought in more than 120 boxes.

“Helping others can be fun,” said Julie Lewis, fourth-grade teacher and coordinator of the cereal drive. “Together, we can — that’s our school motto — and this is all possible because everybody helped.”

Lewis said collecting cereal boxes was an easy buy-in for students: the domino concept is fun, and cereal is a nonperishable item.

The school’s free store is a fully functioning food and clothing pantry housed in the school, where students and families can “shop” for their needs. Each week, volunteers pack and send home bags of food with students on Fridays.

A total of about 160 students at Carnegie Elementary use the free store weekly — which accounts for 39% of the school’s student body.

Student Raven Vetter, 10, said she enjoyed seeing how many cereal boxes the school collected. This year’s collection had 123 more boxes than last year.

“Seeing all the boxes fall down is fun,” she said.

Kellen Stepler is a TribLive reporter covering the Allegheny Valley and Burrell school districts and surrounding areas. He joined the Trib in April 2023. He can be reached at kstepler@triblive.com.

Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.

Get Ad-Free >

Categories: Allegheny | Carnegie Signal Item | Local
Content you may have missed