Waiopehu College students with some of the shoeboxes they filled with donations for local children as part of the Fill A Shoebox Horowhenua initiative.
Waiopehu College students with some of the shoeboxes they filled with donations for local children as part of the Fill A Shoebox Horowhenua initiative.
Waiopehu College students have been getting behind a local appeal designed to help bring Christmas cheer to Horowhenua children in need.
The college held a special mufti day recently for Fill A Shoebox Horowhenua, which provides boxes of gifts and useful items to children in the district who may otherwisego without this Christmas.
Teacher Sarah Ryan said a total of 41 shoe boxes were filled by students with items ranging from toys and gifts to hats and other necessities some children in the district do not own and may go without otherwise.
Students at the college wore mufti for the day and brought in certain items that had been allocated to their year group, or a cash contribution in return.
Ryan said the school ended up with enough funds to be able to purchase any items needed to complete the boxes.
It was also a thoroughly enjoyable experience painting the boxes and packing them up, she said.
Fill A Shoebox Horowhenua was created by Oranga Tamariki social worker Therase Apatu and Levin Police Senior Sergeant Beth Purcell.
The pair have been running the charitable initiative for five years, growing it from 250 shoeboxes being distributed to children in 2014, to 1500 last year.