Go to main contentsGo to search barGo to main menu
Wednesday, January 15, 2025 at 12:05 PM

OSD Students Receive 1,300 Postcards From Around The World

School Participating In Postcard Exchange Program
OSD Students Receive 1,300 Postcards From Around The World

Oklahoma School for the Deaf elementary students have received 1,300 postcards from as far as away as Jordan and New Zealand through a new postcard exchange project at their school.

The theme is Hearts Around the World.

Thirty-two students in the preschool Baby Bison class through fourth grade are participating in the project.

“At first our students didn’t understand why they received a lot of postcards and letters.” said Pamela Fylstra, OSD elementary lead teacher. “They became excited to look at the postcards or cards to read the message, see where they came from and use the map to mark it down.”

“It is a great project for OSD Elementary kids to learn geography about maps, states, countries and continents,” Fylstra said. “Maps not only help students navigate their way around the world, but they also help them locate where they are, what they have been doing and where they might go in the future.”

OSD’s fourth grade class created data to figure out the percentages and fractions of the cards coming from states and countries as a part of math skills.

Karen Ferrantelli with Elegant Fused Glass in Peyton, Colorado reached out to donate colorful glass hearts for OSD students and teachers when she saw their Facebook posts about Hearts Around the World.

She lived in Oklahoma as a child and told Fylstra the state has a special place in her heart.

“This project is a wonderful opportunity for our students to see the outside of the world from their classroom” OSD Superintendent Dr. Heather Laine said. “I am proud of our students and their teachers.”

“Our students never lost their excitement or gratitude for the senders,” said Savannah Hester, OSD fourth-grade teacher. “They loved each card and were great about wanting to read them all, so it took some time some days, but (was) worth it.”

Getting so many cards made fourth-grade student Arubree Hearell feel “Cherished.”

Kaiden Cunningham, a fourth-grader, said HeartsAround the World proved OSD students were “seen and important (because) people care.”


Share
Rate