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A Moore resident took a picture of the monstrous twister as it barreled towards the heavily-populated Oklahoma City suburb.

(by Deborah Hastings, NYDailyNews) – The teachers of two devastated elementary schools went far beyond the call of duty when Oklahoma’s horrendous twister wiped out the suburban enclave of Moore. They threw themselves over their students, stayed with them for hours and carried them, bleeding, to safety.

Parents and authorities hailed them as heroes and credited them with saving the lives of students.

“I was in a (bathroom) stall with some kids and it just started coming down, so I laid on top of them,” said sixth-grade teacher Rhonda Crosswhite at Plaza Towers Elementary School, where seven students were confirmed dead Tuesday by the Oklahoma City Medical Examiner’s Office.

“One of my little boys just kept saying, ‘I love you, I love you, please don’t die with me.’ But we’re okay. We made it out,” Crosswhite told the “Today” show. All of the children with her are now safe.

“I never thought I was going to die,” she said. “The whole time I just kept screaming to them, ‘Quit worrying, we’re fine, we’re fine.’ And I’m very loud, so I just hoped they could hear me, because I could hear them screaming.

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A Briarwood teacher embraces a student after he was pulled to safety.

“One girl, she’s in my homeroom, was sobbing and I was like, ‘We’re going to be fine, we’re going to be fine, I’m protecting you.’ And then I said a few prayers. ‘God please take care of my kids.’ And we’re fine.”

At nearby Briarwood Elementary, teachers faced the same devastating chaos as the tornado touched down at 3 p.m. – when students should have been going home.

“We practice tornado drills and things like this, and I had to tell them: ‘This is not a drill and and we need to be safe,”’ Briarwood teacher Cindy Lowe said. Lowe ended up “just laying my body on top of as many kids as I could to help out,” she said Tuesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Fellow instructor Sherri Bittle said teachers carried out dozens of children at Briarwood, which suffered no fatalities. An unknown number of kids were hurt. She was on the verge of tears describing the emotional scenes of desperate parents searching for their children. “It was just heartbreaking to see the tears of joy, how happy they were that their child was safe,” said Bittle.

Because of closed roads and dangerous debris, parents were forced to walk miles to the evacuation center set up outside the school.

“They were out of breath and crying but so happy to see [their children] and just know that they were safe,” Bittle said.

Reprinted here for educational purposes only.  May not be reproduced on other websites without permission from the New York Daily News.

Watch an interview with the two first grade teachers:

Questions

1. Why are parents of students at the two Moore, OK elementary schools destroyed by Monday’s tornadoes calling their teachers heroes?

2. a) What time did the tornado touch down?
b) How could a different time have made it worse?

3. List at least 2 adjectives you would use to describe the teachers’ demeanor during the tornado. Explain your choices.

4. The tornado that struck Moore, OK on Monday was classified by the National Weather Service as an EF-5 (the most severe a tornado can be). Wind speeds were estimated at between 200 and 210 mph. The tornado at some points was 1.3 miles wide, and its path went on for 17 miles and 40 minutes.
Plaza Towers and Briarwood Elementary schools were demolished.
Educationbug.org states that Plaza Towers Elementary has 484 students, and Briarwood Elementary has 642 students. The population of Moore, OK is over 50,000.
To what do you attribute the fact that the number of fatalities was not as high as expected?

5.  Many of the people who lost everything: their homes, cars, clothes, possessions — but survived the tornado — had similar reactions.  When interviewed, read what several had to say:

  • “The last thing we lose in a situation like this is faith. We have to hold onto faith and trust God every moment.”
  • “You salvage what you can salvage. You thank God that he has another plan for you.”
  • “I’m a believer in Jesus, and by the grace of God, me and my children are alive, and our house is — we can repair it.”
  • “We prayed that God would save our house. We also prayed that if God didn’t, he would get us through, and he will.”
  • “My security isn’t in the things I own. My security is in the Lord.”
  • “By the grace of God, it’s just amazing.”
  • “We know that God is good, and we know that there’s people out there who are still alive, and we’re gonna find ’em.”

Would you have had a similar response in their place?  Explain your answer.

Background

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Aerial photographs show Plaza Towers Elementary School before and after it was hit by the tornado.

After hearing that the tornado was headed toward…Briarwood Elementary, David Wheeler left work and drove 100 mph through blinding rain and gusting wind to find his 8-year-old son, Gabriel. When he got to the school site, “it was like the earth was wiped clean, like the grass was just sheared off,” Wheeler said.

Eventually, he found Gabriel, sitting with the teacher who had protected him. His back was cut and bruised and gravel was embedded in his head – but he was alive. As the tornado approached, students at Briarwood were initially sent to the halls, but a third-grade teacher – whom Wheeler identified as Julie Simon – thought it didn’t look safe and so ushered the children into a closet, he said.

The teacher shielded Gabriel with her arms and held him down as the tornado collapsed the roof and starting lifting students upward with a pull so strong that it sucked the glasses off their faces, Wheeler said.

“She saved their lives by putting them in a closet and holding their heads down,” Wheeler said. (from the New York Post)

Resources

Where do tornadoes strike?

  • The United States sees the most tornadoes in the world, with an average of more than 1,000 tornadoes each year.
  • Canada is second, with around 100 per year, and all other countries combined experience another 100 to 200 tornadoes annually.
  • Measuring by land area, the United Kingdom has a higher rate than any other country, but most of the twisters there are relatively weak.
  • Tornadoes occur when land is wedged between dry air on one side and warm, moist air on another — exactly the circumstances the central U.S.’s so-called “Tornado Alley” unfortunately finds itself in.
  • America’s is also a much longer tornado season — the storms can happen year-round here — while countries like Bangladesh have brief, turbulent seasons that are just a few weeks long.
  • But other parts of the world have suffered through their fair share of twisters; every continent has been struck except for Antarctica (where no warm air means no tornadoes).  [Read more at theatlantic.com]

Though no state is entirely free of tornadoes, they occur more frequently in the plains between the Rocky Mountains and Appalachian Mountains. According to the storm events database of the National Climatic Data Center, Texas reports more tornadoes than any other state, though the very large land area should be taken into account. Kansas and Oklahoma rank first and second respectively in the number of tornadoes per square mile. Florida also reports a high number and density of tornado occurrences, though tornadoes there rarely approach the strength of those that sometimes occur in the southern plains. (from wikipedia)

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