When This Teacher Lost Her Classroom In A Tornado, DonorsChoose Came To The Rescue

The nonprofit stepped in to provide an oasis for the children.

When Erika Rowell thinks back on her 2013 job interview at Plaza Towers Elementary School in Oklahoma, she specifically remembers the abundance of supplies in her predecessor's classroom.

"I was overwhelmed with how much I would have," says Rowell, who was interviewing for a pre-kindergarten teacher job. "I was very excited about that."

Then, the unthinkable happened. A devastating tornado hit Moore, Oklahoma, killing seven Plaza Towers Elementary School children and completely destroying the school. When Rowell started her new job, she had nothing.

"Tables, chairs, that was it," says Rowell, whose class was housed temporarily in a junior high school. "I had no curriculum yet and no supplies of any kind."

That's when Rowell turned to DonorsChoose -- a nonprofit that allows individuals to donate supplies to schools in need. Through DonorsChoose supporters, Rowell was able to equip her classroom with doll houses, play cars, math games and a pretend center. She turned her barebones classroom into a safe space where children could forget the devastation that bulldozed their community.

Erika Rowell is an elementary school teacher in Moore, Oklahoma, who had to rebuild her classroom after a tornado destroyed the school.
Erika Rowell is an elementary school teacher in Moore, Oklahoma, who had to rebuild her classroom after a tornado destroyed the school.
Photo courtesy of Erika Rowell

"It looked like a class that had been there for years," she says. "This was the first time [kids] could kind of just really be free from all the outside mess and come to school and learn and forget about everything else going on."

Rowell has since moved on to teaching third grade at a nearby building. She still uses DonorsChoose when supplies are running low. When she thinks about how the DonorsChoose community helped her in the months following the tornado, she says she is "astounded."

"Many of these children were without anything because they lost everything. Students had so much to do and so many things to utilize in the classroom from DonorsChoose. They didn’t ever have to go, 'Oh, I don’t have anything,'" Rowell says.

This post is part of #BestSchoolDay, a national fundraising movement to ensure students have the supplies and opportunities they need to succeed. Visit here to see a map of all the classroom projects being funded and join more than 50 actors, athletes, entrepreneurs and philanthropists in supporting classrooms across America. To join the conversation on Twitter, use the hashtag #BestSchoolDay.

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