Rebecca Berg and Denae Yuros – Highlands Ranch, Colorado … When students arrived back on campus after Christmas Break, they soon recognized that the teachers and staff had planned something very special for the beginning of 2023. Mile High Academy (MHA) dedicated the month of January to celebrating and sharing kindness on and off campus.

Preschool through 12th-grade students participated in the kick-off assembly with kindness definitions, quotes, poetry, and songs. Guest speaker, Heidi Carpenter, shared her own personal stories of kindness and demonstrated how words and actions are lasting. That same day, MHA began putting together its kindness chains in the upper, middle, and lower school buildings. Whenever anyone observed or received a kind act, they wrote it down on a paper strip and looped it to the chain. The brightly-colored chains quickly took shape as kind acts spread among students and staff.

The theme of kindness continued into the second week with all-school spirit days. Each day was dedicated to another aspect of kindness: Positivity Day, Acts of Kindness Day, Don’t Judge Others Day, and Support Each Other Day. Students showed their “kindness spirit” by wearing certain colors on designated days while worships, morning meetings, and chapels emphasized the daily themes and brought them to life.

During the week of January 23-27, MHA took part in the Great Kindness Challenge. Hundreds of schools all over the nation participate in this yearly challenge to complete various acts of kindness in their communities. MHA students passed out thank-you cards, hung “Kindness Matters” posters in the hallways, brought flower bouquets to administrative staff, gave apples and bananas to teachers, made bookmarks for others, and changed the world for good in other simple ways. In all, the MHA student body shared more than 5,000 acts of kindness during the five-day challenge.

“MHA is committed to making this an annual part of our school programming,” said Denae Yuros, lower schoolteacher. “Kindness Month inspired students and staff to uplift each other through daily meaningful acts of kindness. We hear what the world says—kindness is weakness; one cannot be both compassionate and strong. Yet, we know, as Christ’s followers, that we are called to a much higher way of living. Colossians 3:12 says, ‘Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.’ We pray that this kindness grows in our school, moves to the community, and spreads through the world.”

—Rebecca Berg is an upper schoolteacher and Denae Yuros is a lower schoolteacher at Mile High Academy. Photos provided.