CHARLOTTE — Former students of St. Ann School in Charlotte took a special trip down memory lane on Friday morning as they returned to their Elementary school campus for a day full of events.
Nine eighth graders from Holy Trinity Catholic Middle School and 14 seniors from Charlotte Catholic High School visited the school as part of a special event for alumni who graduated as fifth graders in 2017 and 2021.The group also included a few students who graduated from St. Ann but went on to attend other area schools. They attended a Graduates Mass at 8 a.m. in the church which also honored this year’s fifth grade class, and then got to spend time walking the halls of their former elementary school.
“Being here brought back all my childhood memories,” said Charlotte Catholic senior Julia Franze, who will be attending Wingate University in the fall. “I realized how much I really missed all my teachers from St. Ann.”
The alumni were greeted by cascading cheers and applause as the school’s current 359 students stood along the halls to offer high fives and fist bumps as they passed by. The high school seniors smiled as they had to stoop to accept the greetings from the Pre-K students.
Celene Little, principal of St. Ann, wiped away tears as she watched the former students walk into classrooms they once sat in years before.
“It’s so special to see these kids back here,” she said. “I saw many of these students when they were in kindergarten and now they are going to college and doing great things. It’s also fun to see the kids back together as a group like they were when they went here. St. Ann is like a family and it’s wonderful when they can all get back together and walk the halls again.”
The Holy Trinity eighth graders spent time with fifth graders, answering questions about what it will be like to move to middle school next year. They fielded inquiries about how big classes are at middle school, what the atmosphere is like and what it’s like to change classrooms for different subjects.
After the Q&A sessions, Holy Trinity eighth grader Dillon Schnur said he’d enjoyed the chance to visit his old school.
“It’s been good to be back here and see some of the changes that have taken place since I was here,” he said.
The Charlotte Catholic students, meanwhile, read books aloud for students in Pre-K through third grade.
Senior Anna Polking said she first started dreaming of attending Notre Dame University while she was in the fourth grade at St. Ann. In the fall, her dream will come true as she begins her freshman year there.
“It was really nice and nostalgic for me to get to spend time at St. Ann today and see all of my old teachers,” she said. “Going to school here was really a special experience.”
The day also offered a chance for parents of some of the Holy Trinity students to look back on memories as they stood in the hall while their kids visited in the classrooms.
“This school is such a special place,” said Gil McKnight, whose daughter Lily McKnight attended St. Ann. “I feel like we all have formed bonds of faith, family and friendship by having kids who went here.”
— Christina Lee Knauss. Photos by Troy Hull
CHARLOTTE — St. Matthew School students had an opportunity to travel around the world and see some of the works of Leonardo Da Vinci without having to leave their school.
Art teacher Jaclyn Causebrock, with a little help from Teacher’s Discovery, was able to take her students on a journey to visit the “Mona Lisa” and to see Da Vinci’s “Last Supper.”
Students also had a chance to see some of Da Vinci’s inventions that led to the creation of such modern devices as the parachute and the helicopter.
After the tour, students worked on their own interpretation of the “Mona Lisa.”
— Troy Hull