Human Interest Stories

An elementary student entered a coal fair project in the Math category that became a family project to determine the financial impact to their family, local area and region that leasing property to a local coal company would provide. This family was heirs in property that the coal company needed to lease in order to continue their mining operation in that particular area. Other family members were opposed to leasing, but after this student and her family completed her coal fair project they were convinced themselves and were subsequently able to convince the other family members that leasing their property to the coal company for the purpose of mining would be in everyone’s best interest.

 


 

A high school senior competing for a CEDAR scholarship experienced an attitude change after researching and discovering the important role the coal industry plays in his neighborhood, region, state and the nation by providing more than half our nations electrical generation. After realizing how much of his local and state economy is dependent on coal he began to change his attitude about the coal trucks that would pass his house around three o’clock every morning awakening him by the loud noises they made when hitting the potholes in the road. He stated that before his research he always, “sat-up in bed and cursed those trucks every time they woke me up”, but after learning about the importance of every truck, driver and load of coal, he now has a new appreciation for the industry and those who makes their living in the industry causing him to no longer curse those trucks, rather he realizes their importance to his community, region and state.

 


 

A teacher applied for and received a CEDAR grant for the purpose of creating, developing and implementing a Coal Study Unit in her classroom. This particular teacher was a known environmental activist who had been fighting a local coal company who was receiving coal ash by train from a utility that the company was shipping coal to and they were disposing of it in a fill area. The teacher committed to use the grant money for its intended use and not for any personal agenda. At the end of the unit implementation she made the comment that after creating, developing and implementing her study unit she had come to the conclusion that she was still an environmentalist, but unlike before she was now a pro-coal environmentalist.

 


 

An elementary student and three of his classmates entered a coal project in the Social Studies category of the CEDAR Regional Coal Fair. This student had recently loss his father in a mining accident and had withdrawn to the point he would not mention his fathers name nor have in his possession any pictures or other items relating to his father. As part of the teaching unit that their teacher was implementing the class went on a field trip to a mining complex that happened to include the mine where this young boy’s father had died. The first part of the field trip was spent in the company’s mine engineering office with the chief engineer giving a presentation about the mining industry in general and their mining operation in particular. At the end of his presentation, the engineer asked if there were any questions at which time this young boy began asking a lot of questions, not revealing the reason for his interest. After a considerable amount of time the engineer started becoming agitated because the session was running over the allotted time plus the persistence that this child continued asking questions. After this session ended, the teacher had noticed the agitation of the engineer proceeded to inform him of the situation with this young boy, that his father had been killed in a mining accident on this particular property. The group toured the complex on a bus with the company representative as a guild and when arriving at the very mine site where the boy’s father lost his life; the teacher informed him that this was the mine where his father was killed. The boy began asking more and more questions which the representative was more than pleased to spend the time necessary answering. This experience began the closure process that the boy had not yet been able to face. As a result of this field trip the group decided to do as their coal fair project a tribute to all miners who have lost their lives in the mines and with the focus being on this boy’s father. Together the class participated in the making of a quilt listing all coal miners who had lost their lives in the mines. This quilt, at one time, hung in the state capital in Frankfort, Ky. as a tribute to the Kentucky coal miners who had lost their lives in the mines. This young boy began wearing a tee shirt displaying his father’s picture that up to the time of the field trip he would never even acknowledge.

 


 

A man approached the president of West Kentucky CEDAR on the street one afternoon and asked him, “Are you that coal education man”? Yes he replied, how can I help you? The man, who obviously had just gotten off work from working in the mines evidenced by the black soot that covered his face and clothes, said “I want to thank you”. Not knowing what he meant the CEDAR president asked him why he was thanking him. He stated that he operated a roof bolter in the mines and that he had a daughter in the eight grade that had always been ashamed of the work he did, but she recently asked him to come speak to her class to explain to them what he did in the mines. The miner looked square in the man’s eyes and with a tear running down his cheek said, “I don’t believe she’s ashamed of me anymore”.

 


 

A teacher who implemented a Coal Study Unit in her classroom stated that her husband works in the mines and that prior to her involvement in CEDAR she had no interest in learning anything about his job. During her unit’s implementation, which included a visit to the mine, she gained an appreciation of the mining industry that she had never had before. She said that one of the benefits she received from doing the unit was that now at the dinner table her and her husband have something in common that they can talk about, which is his day’s work, making their dinner time more enjoyable.