Court
News Ohio
Ashtabula
School Visits Supreme Court for First
Time
By Jenna Gant
November 27, 2012
Sixth
grade students from Superior Intermediate
School drove about 3.5 hours from Ashtabula for a field trip to the
Thomas J. Moyer
Ohio Judicial Center. It’s the first time ever a school from Ashtabula
County
made the trek to Columbus to visit the Ohio Supreme Court.
“The
more that they are hearing about what an
exciting experience this is and that we’re the first from Ashtabula
County,
they really are excited. They didn’t realize how big this is,” said
Maureen
Novak, a teacher from Superior Intermediate School.
The
students’ teacher, Maureen Novak, applied
on a whim for one of the Visitor Education Center’s transportation
grants worth
up to $440. It’s the second year the center provided transportation
grants to
help schools pay for bussing to the Ohio Supreme Court.
Novak
was ecstatic when her class received the
grant, but she was still more than $1,000 short of the total cost for
bussing. Not giving
up hope on the field
trip, Novak turned to the Ashtabula County Bar Association.
“She
was asking me if there was any funds
available through the bar association to make up the difference between
the
cost of transportation and the grant they received from the Supreme
Court,”
said Nicholas Iarocci.
Nicholas
Iarocci is the association’s president
and also happens to be a trustee on the Law Foundation of Ashtabula
County. The
foundation helps promote the public’s understanding of the law through
outreach, and members thought Novak’s request was a perfect fit.
“Having
the opportunity to help a group of
elementary school students visit the education center at the Supreme
Court is
exactly what our purpose is. It’s to help them understand the justice
system,
to learn more about it. They’ll understand it better and they’ll have
more
respect for it,” said Stuart Cordell, the foundation’s president.
Novak
was excited that her students would
finally be able to see the court in person and get a hands-on learning
experience about the judicial system.
“We
are just so fortunate to have this
opportunity,” Novak said. “It would not be possible without the two
joined
together.”
Novak’s
students visited the education center
and participated in a First Amendment mock trial. Aaron Thompson
thought it was
great being the first class from Ashtabula to visit the state’s Supreme
Court,
even if it meant he had to be at school by 7 a.m. in order to make the
lengthy
bus ride.
“It
was long, but it was worth it,” Thompson
said. “I thought that we were really lucky to have an opportunity like
this to
come to such a great place.”
Visiting
a great place like the Supreme Court
is something that Novak hopes becomes a new school tradition.
Read
the article and see the video at Court
News Ohio
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