High school adds laundry room to help struggling students, combat absences
It's a weekly and often mundane task that many of us take for granted, doing laundry. But that basic chore meant kids were skipping school. So, this Arizona principal decided to take action.
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PHOENIX (KTVK) -- After an Arizona principal found out his students were skipping school because they didn't have clean clothes, he decided to tackle the problem by adding a laundry room.
In the back of a Phoenix strip mall sits an old movie theater, now converted to a high school. But it's not your ordinary school, according to Principal John Anderson.
“Maya High School is an alternative high school. We serve a population that struggled in other school settings," he said.
Anderson says many of his students struggle with things other teens take for granted, like basic housing.
“Over 30% of our students are categorized as homeless," he said. "They may have slept in a park or slept on a friend’s floor or couch -- on a nightly basis.”
On top of all of that, Anderson noticed a new problem. Students did not want to come to school because they didn’t have clean clothes.
A student at Maya High School in Phoenix, Ariz. is seen in the school's new laundry room, which was installed to help teens in need.
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"I relate to a lot of them," former Maya student Andreya De La Torre said. "I come from a homeless background, sleeping in abandoned buildings, having no clothes, washing the same pair of clothes every single day. ... But coming to school smelling, kids don’t want to be by you. They are talking about you. And it’s just really hard to focus on your education when you are focused on your self-esteem.”
For Anderson, it was one former student's determination to conquer his family's bad situation that moved him to act. Anderson describes talking to the student in his office.
“It was when I offered him the detergent and the quarters and what not he said, 'They just don’t care.'"
Anderson was emotional. "And I thought to myself, 'Here’s this young man who is coming to school smelling like cat urine, knowing that as a high school student -- a teenager -- he just wants his diploma so bad that he’s willing to do that.' It tore me up and it was the final kicker to seek out getting a student-access laundry room in our building.”
Anderson says he tried tackling the problem in different ways, but with budgets being tight, he went the grant route. That’s when he said some big-time partners stepped forward. Along with the Leona Group, which manages the school, the Arizona Diamondbacksand the Fiesta Bowlcame through with all the cash to make it happen.
An old closet just off the cafeteria is the new student hot spot, according to seniors Stephanie and Anntania. They explained how it changes their classmates.
"I would say it builds up their self-esteem quite a lot because they would talk with someone and say, 'I don’t have a laundry at home. Can I bring some here?' Instead of worrying about someone talking about you because you smell bad and you don’t have to ask someone to borrow clothes you can just wash them here.”
De La Torre, who now serves in a variety of administrative roles at Maya, says, "We offer them more than academics. We offer them life skills to teach them things that someone is probably not teaching them on the outside of here and to show them love.”
Anderson agrees, saying, “We make them believe in themselves and to want to do it for themselves. The laundry room has created a buzz. Students know that we put our money where our mouth is as far as Maya being a community and saying we are all in."
Being "all in" isn't just a saying at Maya. It's daily life.
"We’re going to take on any challenge and we’re not going to make any excuses together as a community," he said. "I don’t look at it as a handout. It’s a hand up. These kids are survivors; they’re fighters.”