“A Premise of Building Hope:” Lewis HS Grads Return to Open Sixth Grade Time Capsule

By Office of Communication and Community Relations
Spotlight
June 15, 2023

 For eight years, Wendy Casual, a former sixth grade teacher, has returned to Lynbrook Elementary School with newly-minted high school graduates who were once her students.

While in her classroom years six years earlier, Casual had her students build time capsules to be opened in June of their graduation year. The boxes included photos of the then-sixth graders, kind notes to friends, important elementary school projects, and letters to their future selves.

 

A time capsule box made by Lynbrook Elementary School students in 2017 holds photos, kind words from classmates, academic projects and letters from students to their future selves.
A time capsule box made by Lynbrook Elementary School students in 2017 holds photos, kind words from classmates, academic projects and letters from students to their future selves.

“The whole thing was based around a premise of building hope,” Casual, now a resource teacher and instructional coach at Ravensworth Elementary School, says. “It was a secret on my end to try to get them to get through high school and graduate. There are a lot of different pieces to this, but really the whole thing is grounded in getting them to think, to dream about their own futures.”

There were 32 students in Casual’s sixth-grade class of 2017. More than a dozen replied to an email from their former teacher in the spring of their senior year, inviting them to meet her in their elementary school cafeteria and open the time capsule.

 

A former Lynbrook Elementary student, now a Lewis High School grad, hugs their one-time sixth grade teacher Wendy Casual.
A former Lynbrook Elementary student, now a Lewis High School grad, hugs their one-time sixth grade teacher Wendy Casual.

Kathryn Cao, an 18-year-old who just graduated from Lewis HS, laughed as she walked into the cafeteria.

“The only thing I remember was putting in my detention slip,” Cao said. She found it in the time capsule. “It says `Your student has missed too many homework assignments and must attend detention on three Fridays to make up their work.’”

She groaned upon learning from current Lynbrook Principal Kathleen Sain that the school has since adopted a “no-homework policy” meaning current students wouldn’t have met her fate.

Casual, her teacher, said she has grown as an educator and would not follow this practice herself today.

“Kids deserve to be free after school so no homework now is a great practice,” Casual said.

“Sixth-grade me is like me right now,” Cao said. “I do my homework but maybe turn it in a tiny bit late? At the end of the day, I graduated and I’m heading to Northern Virginia Community College  first, then on to art school after I get my associate’s degree to major in graphic design.”
 

Lewis HS grad Kathryn Cao, who wants to major in graphic design, shows off sketches she did in sixth grade that were in the time capsule.
Lewis HS grad Kathryn Cao, who wants to major in graphic design, shows off sketches she did in sixth grade that were in the time capsule.


Cao sifted through her mementos, including old sketch books and a biography project she had done of Sojourner Truth, complete with a hand-drawn portrait of the abolitionist and activist on the front.

“I love creating aesthestics in sketch books, I have always found it very calming since I was young,” Cao said. “Now I’m finding old sketches and saying “Oh wow, I drew that.”

Josue Delarca, also freshly graduated from Lewis HS, picked up his “Hopes and Dreams: Letter to My Future Self” done in sixth grade in Casual’s class.

 

Former Lynbrook ES student Josue Delarca displays a letter he wrote in sixth grade to his future self, in which he dreams of being able to one day speak English.
Former Lynbrook ES student Josue Delarca displays a letter he wrote in sixth grade to his future self, in which he dreams of being able to one day speak English.

“My hope is to learn English,” he reads from the letter he had written in 2018, no hint of an accent as he speaks.  “At this point when I wrote this I couldn’t even spell English right, in fact probably half of the letter to myself is spelled wrong. Six years later,  I think I did all right. Speaking English, I’ve got it down.”

Wignar Manzanares, another recent Lewis HS grad, looks down at her sixth-grade paper and is surprised.

“I see I said that my dreams are that I want to be a doctor or a police officer,” Manzanares says. “I don’t remember writing that but now I’ve graduated and I’m actually hoping I will be accepted into the police academy. Standing here reading that is pretty crazy.”

 

Former Lynbrook Elementary students sift through photos, projects and memories from their sixth grade year stored in a time capsule since 2017.
Former Lynbrook Elementary students sift through photos, projects and memories from their sixth grade year stored in a time capsule since 2017.

Casual says these are the types of reactions she hoped to see when creating the time capsules.

“I want the kids to say `I had a journey, I was successful and hopefully they recognize that Lynbrook Elementary played a part in it,’” she says. “I want them to look back and say what was my ideology when I was 12 years old and does it agree with my ideology now? They’re never too young to think about the future, we were always trying to get kids to think about the world beyond their sixth grade classroom.”

Watch WJLA/ABC 7’s coverage of the time capsule opening