Sugarcane Academy shows how to teach children evacuated following catastrophic weather events

As Americans mark the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, we understand that citizens of New Orleans are still in the process of rebuilding their lives and their communities.

As I usually do during times such as these, I ask myself questions about what the teachers were doing during times of upheaval like this. With regards to Hurricane Katrina specifically, I am reminded of a book I read which described a remarkable teacher who opened a school for the children of evacuees following the catastrophic weather event.

When surging flood waters from Hurricane Katrina forced thousands of families to flee from their homes, New Orleans residents had their minds more on survival than on whether their children would be missing school. But when a group of evacuee parents who landed in New Iberia, Louisiana, realized they would not be returning to their homes any time soon, they realized they had to find a strategy to help their children cope with their enforced and unexpected exile. They pooled their financial resources and hired a fellow refugee, teacher Paul Reynaud, to establish a one-room school for their children in an abandoned office building. The story furnishes valuable lessons for dealing with examples of nature’s fury.

The book is entitled Sugarcane Academy: How a New Orleans Teacher and His Storm-Struck Students Created a School to Remember.The author of this intriguing true story is journalist Michael Tisserand, and the volume was published in 2007 by Harcourt. You can find the book on amazon.com.

For other intriguing stories about remarkable teachers in America’s sometimes turbulent history, check out my book Chalkboard Champions. You will find it on the web site for Amazon or Barnes and Noble.