Request letter for juniors interaction to the principal
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How to Ask Your Principal for Anything
By Caralee Adams
All it takes is the right time, the right place, and a little forethought.
Grades
PreK–K, 1–2, 3–5, 6–8, 9–12
Brenda Sebastian wants a school garden. The fifth-grade teacher at Soaring Eagles Elementary School in Colorado Springs first mentioned it in passing to her principal, Kelli O’Neil. O’Neil didn’t say no, but she didn’t say yes, either.
Sebastian’s next move was to involve her students in convincing the principal. “When they saw Kelli in the hall, they told her why they wanted the garden and how it would help them in school,” says Sebastian. They also wrote persuasive essays about it.
To address O’Neil’s concerns that the garden would be vandalized, Sebastian proposed applying for grants for a greenhouse. The class did research, interviewing gardening experts via Skype. Sebastian also got estimates on water and electricity costs from the district. Eventually, the students’ enthusiasm brought O’Neil around.
The key, says Sebastian, was not to push too hard, but also not to give up. “Rather than asking Kelli to fund something that she isn’t passionate about, I sought out other ways to pay for the garden and problem-solved ways to address her concerns along the way.”
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