Texas Coin Dealers Reward Students in Houston

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(Houston, Texas) — Students at Jack Yates High School in Houston who achieved outstanding performance levels this year in standardized tests recently were rewarded with silver coins donated by three Texas rare coin dealers.

Ross, Duncan, Fuljenz & club members
Teacher Ralph Ross (back row, far left), Johnny Duncan of U.S. Coins and Mike Fuljenz of Universal Coin & Bullion (front row) with some members of the Lion Coin Club at Jack Yates High School in Houston, Texas. (Photo courtesy of Ralph Ross.)

Ralph Ross, a physics and math teacher at the Title 1 school, uses old coins to help students understand history, art, politics and science, and he enlisted the dealers’ help to honor high-performing students.

Former school teacher and principal Mike Fuljenz of Universal Coin & Bullion in Beaumont, Johnny Duncan of U.S. Coins in Houston and Steve Ivy of Heritage Auction Galleries in Dallas donated 2010-dated silver American Eagles struck by the United States Mint.

Fuljenz & Duncan at Yates HS, Houston
Mike Fuljenz of Universal Coin & Bullion (left) and Johnny Duncan (right) of U.S. Coins recently handed out 50 silver American Eagles on behalf of their companies and Heritage Auction Galleries to students at the Jack Yates High School in Houston, Texas who performed well on statewide math and science achievement tests. (Photo courtesy of Ralph Ross.)

The one-ounce bullion coins, valued at about $20 each, were given to 50 students who achieved the "commended" level in science or mathematics on this year’s achievement test (TAKS).

 

"The coins are a way to encourage unprecedented academic success comparable to the basketball team triumphs," explained Ross who started a coin club at the school two years ago. The Yates boys’ varsity basketball team won the 2009 Texas and 2010 national championships.

 

Student Gregory Watts, who has two basketball championship rings and was the class salutatorian this year, said: "It meant a lot to me to be an athlete and a scholar. I want to put those stereotypes about African-American athletes to shame."

 

The Lion Coin Club at the school has about 80 members and two objectives, according to Ross: "To advance numismatic knowledge through educational, historical and scientific means, and to promote academic excellence in disciplines such as mathematics and science while preparing students for college and future career focus."

 

Ross has been honored twice with Presidential Awards from the nonprofit, 32,000-member American Numismatic Association (www.money.org) for his educational work with coin collectors.

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