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If It’s Tuesday, Gramma Bobbie and Grampa Hank Will Be There

Nine years ago, former Huntington Woods Elementary Principal Andrea van der Laan was looking for volunteers willing to contribute 45 minutes a week.

Bobbie Bulthuis remembers responding: “If we have to drive 45 minutes to get here, you have to take us for the whole day.”

Bulthuis and Hank Smoker, who live in Shelbyville, have been donating their Tuesdays volunteering at Wyoming schools every since. They spent the first four years at Huntington Woods Elementary. When the school closed, they began volunteering at Gladiola Elementary, where their granddaughter, Caitlyn Bulthuis, attended.

They have three other grandchildren, two who attend Wyoming High School, not to mention the 432 others at Gladiola and all the students they have worked with over the years. Their grandson, Matthew, first scrawled their names on the chalkboard as “Gramma Bobbie and Grampa Hank” at Huntington Woods years ago. The names stuck.Bobbie Bulthuis laminates classroom materials

While granddaughter Caitlyn now attends Wyoming Middle School, they continue to put in their time at Gladiola, copying classroom papers, laminating and labeling Accelerated Reader books.

Shortly after Christmas they head south to Florida where they enjoy the sunshine and volunteer at an elementary school in SarasotaCounty, returning home in the spring

Meeting Needs by Relating

Bulthuis also spends time working on reading and sight words with teacher Sara Beld’s first-grade class and volunteering during kindergarten lunch. She recently sat down with first-grader Karla Munoz to read the book, “Dolphins,” and stopped to explain what “bottlenose” means.

“If it’s a bottlenose what are they talking about? Where did it get its name?” she asked, touching the nose of the dolphin illustration and then Karla’s nose. She told Karla about seeing dolphins in Florida.

Hank Smoker works on copiesBulthuis, who attended former Wyoming schools, Rogers High School, Jackson Park Junior High and Rogers Lane Elementary, is retired from a truck expediting company. Smoker, who served in the Army from 1966 to 1968 and worked as a maintenance man for Canteen Services, was raised in Coldwater.

Smiles and Hugs

For them, volunteering is about supporting the community, lending a hand in a tough school-budget climate and serving as grandparent figures to  students.

“The rewards are seeing a smile on a kid’s face, and in a hug from them, because a lot of these kids don’t have interaction with their grandparents,” Bulthuis said. “It’s fun to see the kids grow from the beginning of the year to the end of the year, to see how much they have grown and matured.

“I always tell them our pay is a smile and a hug”

Principal Craig Hoekstra said it’s great to have Smoker and Bulthuis in the building and to see students respond to them. They are individuals of all ages offering support. “It cements the point … that we have a great group of individuals in our community to help meet the kids’ individual needs,” he said.

Fourth-grader Matthew Schaefer has known Gramma Bobbie and Grampa Hank since first grade. “They help the kids,” he said. “Gramma Bobbie helps us learn stuff, and she makes all the copies with Grampa Hank.”Materials to be copied await the efficient Hank Smoker on Tuesday mornings

Para-educator Chris Berg said one of the most impressive things about Bulthuis goes beyond papers and books. “She’s a great cook,” she said, referring to the spread of broccoli cheese soup, decadent desserts and fresh salsa the couple provides for teachers each year.

Bulthuis said she loves the school community. “These teachers are fabulous to work for, and with Mr. Hoekstra’s leadership the school has blossomed,” she said.

CONNECT

How grandparents can support schools

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Erin Albanese
Erin Albanese
Erin Albanese is managing editor and reporter, covering Kentwood, Lowell and Wyoming. She was one of the original SNN staff writers, helping launch the site in 2013, and enjoys fulfilling the mission of sharing the stories of public education. She has worked as a journalist in the Grand Rapids area since 2000. A graduate of Central Michigan University, she has written for The Grand Rapids Press, Advance Newspapers, On-the-Town Magazine and Group Tour Media. Read Erin's full bio

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